Sunday, 9 March 2014

Vt. bus drivers, union reach deal to avert strike


The union that represents almost 70 Vermont bus drivers is holding a negotiating session with the Chittenden County Transportation Authority in hopes of averting a strike.


As off 11 p.m. Saturday, the drivers who carry about 9,500 people a day in the state's largest county and the Chittenden County Transportation Authority were still at the bargaining table. There is no immediate word on details of the talks.


The drivers say that if no deal is reached they will go on strike on Monday.


At issue are working conditions, part-time drivers, and working hours.


Driver Rob Slingerland says they're hoping for a new contract.


General Manager Bill Watterson says he's hopeful an 11th hour agreement can avoid a strike.



A's considering temporary home if lease expires


Oakland A's owner Lew Wolff is considering moving the team to a temporary location if he can't extend a two-year lease with the Oakland Coliseum.


The San Jose Mercury News (http://tinyurl.com/nk77emv ) reported Sunday that Wolff is considering an existing venue or constructing a temporary stadium somewhere in the San Francisco Bay Area to house the A's if he can't extend the lease.


The lease expires after the 2015 season. Wolff said he hopes to extend the lease, but he needs to make plans in case that doesn't happen.


Wolff co-owns Major League Soccer's San Jose Earthquakes. A new 18,000-seat stadium is being built in San Jose for the soccer team. Wolff said he asked the architect of that project to look into temporary housing for the A's.


San Jose Mayor Chuck Reed said Wolff has on several occasions told him of a desire to find a temporary home for the A's and that Wolff has looked at several venues in the area.


The A's have been searching for a new home for five years, complaining that the Oakland Coliseum is dilapidated and not conducive to baseball. The stadium remains the only venue in the country that hosts a Major League Baseball team and a National Football League team, the Raiders. The government officials who manage the coliseum are planning renovations and are working to keep the A's in Oakland.


Wolff signed an agreement with San Jose city officials to build a new stadium there. But Commissioner Bud Selig informed Wolff this summer that MLB had turned down the team's proposal. MLB considers San Jose to be the San Francisco Giants "territory" and won't let the A's move there without the Giants' agreement.


A judge tossed out the city of San Jose's lawsuit claiming MLB violated antitrust laws in blocking the A's move south.


MLB and San Francisco Giants officials didn't return calls.



Mo. school proposals seek options close to home


Reining in a wide-open Missouri school transfer law could involve first trying to get students into a better school located in their struggling school district if there is space.


Missouri's current law requires districts without state accreditation to pay tuition and provide transportation for students to transfer to an accredited school in the same county or a bordering one. Lawmakers would control out-of-district transfers by redirecting students first from struggling schools to high-performing ones in the same district.


"What we've seen with the transfer situation is that there's not a lot of winners in that," said Senate Education Committee Chairman David Pearce, R-Warrensburg. "You have kids that are on a bus for an hour in the morning and an hour in the evening or the parents have to arrange for transportation. You're reducing community support. You're reducing neighborhood schools. It's not investing in the local community."


The transfer law has led to financial problems for unaccredited districts and prompted concerns about nearby schools' ability to control the number of incoming students. Its focus on entire school districts means students can transfer at their current school systems' expense regardless of how well an individual school is performing.


Senators recently approved legislation that directs state education officials to accredit individual schools in addition to entire school districts. Students who attend an unaccredited school would be allowed to transfer to an accredited one. The option of transferring out of a school district would remain only for students who attend an unaccredited school within an unaccredited district and who cannot move to a higher-performing school within their home school system.


The option of transferring within a district would depend upon space is available at a school.


The Senate legislation also would allow students to attend a non-religious private school located within their home district, with the unaccredited district paying some tuition. Supporters hope that could lead to the creation of new schools in communities with unaccredited school systems.


Missouri currently has three unaccredited school districts: Kansas City, Normandy and Riverview Gardens. Some schools in those districts have performed better than others. For example, several Normandy schools and about 60 percent of Kansas City's schools have scored in the provisional or accredited range.


At the start of the current school year, more than 2,600 students were expected to transfer from the unaccredited Normandy and Riverview Gardens districts in St. Louis County. Education officials say more than 500 of the students are not currently attending schools in the other districts. Explanations for that include students returning to their home districts, never leaving in the first place or simply dropping out of school.


Democratic Sen. Maria Chappelle-Nadal, whose district includes the Normandy and Riverview districts, said the goal is to preserve unaccredited school districts while offering resources to students. She said many families through their actions have indicated they want to stay closer to home.


"We just want to give options within the (school district) boundaries. This is what the families want," said Chappelle-Nadal, D-University City.


A House committee last week reviewed separate legislation that also would require students to move first to a better school in their home system before allowing them to transfer to another district if there is not space. One measure would allow tuition reimbursement for a non-religious private school if there is no space at a nearby accredited public school.


"I think neighborhood schools, if they're accredited, are the best option," said Republican Rep. Rick Stream, of Kirkwood, who is sponsoring one of the House measures.


But that does not mean the option should need to be the first choice for parents, said Kate Casas, state director for the advocacy group Children's Education Council of Missouri. She said a "hierarchy of choices" muddies the process.


"I don't like the hierarchy. I think it creates unnecessary complications for parents," Casas said.



Gas prices may jump from California emissions law


California's greenhouse gas reduction law already has shaken up the state's industrial sector, costing it more than $1.5 billion in pollution permit fees.


It's now poised to hit the pocketbooks of everyday Californians.


Starting next year, the law will force fuel distributors into the same cap-and-trade marketplace as utilities and major manufacturers. The oil industry says it will lead to price increases of at least 12 cents a gallon immediately, while state regulators say any price spikes could vary widely, from barely noticeable to double-digits.


Anticipating angst at the pump, a leading state lawmaker is raising concerns about the uncertainty of the law's impact on prices for consumer fuels, including gasoline, natural gas, propane and heating oil. Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg, D-Sacramento, says the state should scrap the plan to put fuel producers under the cap-and-trade provision of the law and instead institute a 15 cent-per-gallon "carbon tax."


Cap-and-trade sets a limit, or cap, on emissions of heat-trapping gases and requires companies to pay for each ton of pollution they emit, the price of which is determined in an allowance auction. Polluters that cut emissions below the cap can sell their leftover pollution permits, called allowances, to companies that need extra.


The program is a central part of AB32, the greenhouse gas reduction law that passed the Legislature and was signed by former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Republican, in 2006. But it is just one of several provisions of the law — such as requiring lower-carbon fuels — meant to prompt Californians to change their transportation and energy consumption habits as the state seeks to reduce emissions of heat-trapping gases to 1990 levels by 2020.


The California Air Resources Board, which designed and implemented cap-and-trade, differs with Steinberg's assessment and projects no noticeable increase in gas costs after Jan. 1. But the board's own economic analysis of AB32 from 2010 shows that diesel prices could rise from 3 percent to 23 percent, with gasoline prices rising 5 percent to 32 percent, depending on market factors associated with the global warming law's programs.


The industry and some economic forecasts have predicted a 10- to 12-cent increase in the price per gallon at the pump, and Steinberg says those prices could spike as high as 40 cents a gallon.


Still, Mary Nichols, chairwoman of the Air Resources Board, said oil companies have had since 2010 to prepare and are not required to pass on the costs to consumers.


"It would appear to be some deliberate measure on their part if there were to be a sudden rise in (fuel) prices on Jan. 1," Nichols said. "I would expect that they would incorporate the cost of the allowances into their pricing."


Steinberg's idea of charging a flat tax on carbon — rather than having the price change regularly because of cap and trade auctions — does not force polluters to reduce their emissions, Nichols said, which is key to the state's greenhouse gas law.


But it does allow for more stable pricing, said Steinberg, a Democrat from Sacramento.


"Under cap-and-trade, no one can tell us whether fuels will trade at 10 cents or 40 cents a gallon in 2015 or 2016, at any given timing and without a warning. On the other hand, a carbon tax is stable," he said.


He proposed a 15 cent-a-gallon carbon tax to offset what he said would be the indirect tax on consumer fuels once the companies that produce those fuels go into the cap-and-trade program next year.


Under his proposal for a flat carbon tax, introduced in the Legislature as SB1156, the tax would rise to 24 cents a gallon by 2020 and more than 40 cents a gallon by 2029.


About two-thirds of the estimated $3.6 billion raised by Steinberg's carbon tax would go back to households earning less than $75,000 a year in the form of a state-level Earned Income Tax Credit. The rest would go toward mass transit programs with the goal of getting more Californians out of their automobiles.


The legislative prospects for Steinberg's tax proposal, especially during an election year, are uncertain. But the oil industry has greeted his plan warmly.


Catherine Reheis-Boyd, president of the Western States Petroleum Association, said the cost of cap and trade allowances will add $2 billion to the costs of gasoline and diesel, or about 12 cents per gallon.


The group's oil company members are proposing to continue cap and trade on industrial facilities, but using a set carbon tax on fuels starting in 2015.


Jay McKeeman, spokesman for the California Independent Oil Marketers Association, disagreed with the assertion by Air Resources Board chairwoman Nichols that the industry could choose to shield consumers from price increases once it entered the cap-and-trade market.


"That is a bunch of hooey," McKeeman said. "When you're in a competitive market and people are getting assessed a significant amount for participating, (cost increases) get passed on to the customer."


He said the group preferred a flat carbon tax because it would be a stable amount.


The law's author, Democratic Sen. Fran Pavley of Agoura Hills, said projections of price spikes are "worst-case scenarios and scare tactics" developed by oil companies that found an unlikely ally in the Senate leader. She said she believes Steinberg wants to use the money raised by a carbon tax to fund tax breaks for low- and middle-income families.


"Their objective matches very well with Senator Steinberg's, and that is they don't want to be under the cap and they want to pass on the cost to the motorists," she said. "This is like their dream. You've got the Senate pro tem, because of his earned income tax credit, and the oil companies, who see, 'God, this is a win-win.'"


Eric Henry, who lives in the Sacramento suburb of Folsom, said he wasn't in favor of a big spike in gas prices but thought drivers would learn to adapt. He agreed that higher prices are probably needed to force people to be make changes in their consumption.


"No matter what you say to people, unless they see some kind of effect it's not going to prompt a change in behavior," said Henry, who works in sales.


Cap-and-trade is designed to moderate price changes, according to the Air Resources Board, but there is never 100 percent certainty that the cost of allowances or other factors could drive gasoline prices up or down.


Changing to a flat carbon tax now would be too large a task to ensure all of the details would be right by Jan. 1, said Severin Borenstein, a University of California, Berkeley economist who has advised the air board on its cap-and-trade program. Still, he said such a tax could prove useful in the future.


"I think that California has done a reasonably good job of designing a program that won't have wild fluctuations in allowance prices (which would lead to fluctuations in gas prices)," he said in an email.


For example, the system is designed with a floor and ceiling, or "price containment reserve," so that the cost of allowances cannot spin out of control.


But that doesn't mean there isn't still some risk of price spikes, according to a recent study by Borenstein. It found that spikes are possible if, for example, demand for emissions credits were to rise more than expected.



Thompson reported from Sacramento. Associated Press writer Tom Verdin in Sacramento also contributed to this report.


Vietnam says it may have found missing jet's door


International intelligence agencies joined the investigation Sunday into two passengers who boarded the missing Boeing 777 jetliner with stolen passports, as Malaysian authorities said radar images showed the plane may have turned back before vanishing.


More than a day and half after Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 went missing, no debris from the plane has been found, and the final minutes before it disappeared remain a mystery. The plane, which was carrying 239 people, lost contact with ground controllers somewhere between Malaysia and Vietnam after leaving Kuala Lumpur early Saturday morning for Beijing.


A massive international sea search has so far turned up no trace of the jet, though Vietnamese authorities said late Sunday that a low-flying plane had spotted a rectangular object in waters about 90 kilometers (56 miles) south of Tho Chu island, in the same area where oil slicks were spotted Saturday. State media speculated the object might be from the missing plane.


Civil administration chief Pham Viet Dung said Vietnam had informed search teams from Vietnam and other countries to send boats to the area to examine the object. Authorities said earlier that they had spotted an orange object in the area that turned out not to be from the aircraft.


The missing plane apparently fell from the sky at cruising altitude in fine weather, and the pilots were either unable or had no time to send a distress signal — unusual circumstances under which a modern jetliner operated by a professional airline would crash.


Malaysia's air force chief, Rodzali Daud, said radar indicated that the plane may have turned back, but did not give further details on which direction it went or how far it veered off course.


"We are trying to make sense of this," Daud said at a news conference. "The military radar indicated that the aircraft may have made a turn back, and in some parts this was corroborated by civilian radar."


Malaysia Airlines Chief Executive Ahmad Jauhari Yahya said pilots are supposed to inform the airline and traffic control authorities if the plane does a U-turn. "From what we have, there was no such distress signal or distress call per se, so we are equally puzzled," he said.


Authorities were checking on the identities of two passengers who boarded the plane with stolen passports. On Saturday, the foreign ministries in Italy and Austria said the names of two citizens listed on the flight's manifest matched the names on two passports reported stolen in Thailand.


"I can confirm that we have the visuals of these two people on CCTV," Malaysian Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said at a news conference late Sunday, adding that the footage was being examined. "We have intelligence agencies, both local and international, on board."


Hishammuddin declined to give further details, saying it may jeopardize the investigation.


"Our focus now is to find the aircraft," he said, adding that finding the plane would make it easier for authorities to investigate any possible foul play.


Interpol confirmed that at least two stolen passports used by passengers on the plane were registered in its databases. It said no one had checked the databases, but added that most airlines and countries do not usually check for stolen passports.


Hishammuddin said only two passengers had used stolen passports, and that earlier reports that the identities of two others were under investigation were not true.


White House Deputy National Security Adviser Tony Blinken said Sunday that the U.S. was looking into the stolen passports, but that investigators had reached no conclusions. He said it was premature to speculate whether the passengers using the stolen passports had a role in the incident.


In addition to the plane's sudden disappearance, which experts say is consistent with a possible onboard explosion, the stolen passports have strengthened concerns about terrorism as a possible cause. Al-Qaida militants have used similar tactics to try and disguise their identities.


Still, other possible causes would seem just as likely at this stage, including a catastrophic failure of the plane's engines, extreme turbulence, or pilot error or even suicide. Establishing what happened with any certainty will need data from flight recorders and a detailed examination of any debris, something that will take months if not years.


European authorities on Saturday confirmed the names and nationalities of the two stolen passports: One was an Italian-issued document bearing the name Luigi Maraldi, the other Austrian under the name Christian Kozel. Police in Thailand said Maraldi's passport was stolen on the island of Phuket last July.


A telephone operator on a China-based KLM hotline on Sunday confirmed that "Maraldi" and "Kozel" were both booked to leave Beijing on a KLM flight to Amsterdam on March 8. Maraldi was then to fly to Copenhagen, Denmark, on KLM on March 8, and Kozel to Frankfurt, Germany, on March 8.


She said since the pair booked the tickets through China Southern Airlines, she had no information on where they bought them.


Having onward reservations to Europe from Beijing would have meant the pair, as holders of EU passports, would not have needed visas for China.


Meanwhile, the multinational search for the missing plane was continuing. A total of 34 aircraft and 40 ships have been deployed to the area by Malaysia, Thailand, Australia, Singapore, Indonesia, China and the United States, in addition to Vietnam's fleet.


Vietnamese air force jets spotted two large oil slicks Saturday, but it was unclear whether they were linked to the missing plane.


Two-thirds of the jet's passengers were Chinese. The rest were from elsewhere in Asia, North America and Europe.


After more than 30 hours without contact with the aircraft, Malaysia Airlines told family members they should "prepare themselves for the worst," Hugh Dunleavy, the commercial director for the airline, told reporters.


Finding traces of an aircraft that disappears over sea can take days or longer, even with a sustained search effort. Depending on the circumstances of the crash, wreckage can be scattered over many square kilometers (miles). If the plane enters the water before breaking up, there can be relatively little debris.


A team of American experts was en route to Asia to be ready to assist in the investigation into the crash. The team includes accident investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board, as well as technical experts from the Federal Aviation Administration and Boeing, the safety board said in a statement.


Malaysia Airlines has a good safety record, as does the 777, which had not had a fatal crash in its 19-year history until an Asiana Airlines plane crashed last July in San Francisco, killing three passengers, all Chinese teenagers.


Jason Middleton, the head of the Sydney-based University of New South Wales' School of Aviation, said terrorism or some other form of foul play seemed a likely explanation.


"You're looking at some highly unexpected thing, and the only ones people can think of are basically foul play, being either a bomb or some immediate incapacitating of the pilots by someone doing the wrong thing, and that might lead to an airplane going straight into the ocean," Middleton said. "With two stolen passports, you'd have to suspect that that's one of the likely options."


But Clive Williams, a counterterrorism expert at Australia's Macquarie University and a former military intelligence officer, said he doubted the stolen passports were related to the disaster. As of December, Interpol's databases contained 39 million lost or stolen passports.


"Any flight of that size in Asia would be carrying a couple of people with false passports," he said. "When you think about the number of passports that have been stolen or gone missing around the world ... it could be related, but it's probably not."


---


Brummitt reported from Hanoi, Vietnam.



Associated Press writers Rod McGuirk in Canberra, Australia; Didi Tang, Gillian Wong and Louise Watt in Beijing; Joan Lowy in Washington; and Scott Mayerowitz in New York contributed this report.


Recreation company Pool Corp. declares dividend


Recreational supplies distributor Pool Corp. has declared a quarterly cash dividend of 19 cents a share.


The dividend is payable March 27 to shareholders of record on March 13.


Covington-based Pool distributes swimming pool and related backyard products.



Kidnapped nuns’ harrowing ordeal ends


BEIRUT: Thirteen nuns were freed late Sunday by Syrian rebels in exchange for the release by Damascus of more than 150 Syrian women prisoners following Lebanese and Qatari mediation, officials said, putting an end to an ordeal that lasted more than three months and won world sympathy.


Officers from Lebanon’s General Security received the nuns on the outskirts of the Lebanese northeastern town of Arsal.


“Congratulations. The nuns are now in the custody of General Security and are on their way to Jdaidet Yabouss,” General Security chief Maj. Gen. Abbas Ibrahim told reporters late Sunday at the VIP Lounge in Jdaidet Yabouss, a Syrian border post near the frontier with Lebanon. Sitting next to him was Hussein Makhlouf, the governor of rural Damascus.


Upon her arrival at the Jdaidet Yabouss crossing after a journey that took nine hours, Mother Therese, one of the released nuns, thanked God and all those who negotiated their release for their safety before embracing Ibrahim.


One of the nuns was being carried by security personnel as she seemed too weak to walk on her own.


Another nun, Mother Agiah, said their captors had treated them well. “They were very kind and sweet,” she said. “They treated us well.”


Escorted by Lebanese Army vehicles, the convoy of cars carrying the 13 nuns and their three housemaids drove beneath torrential rains from Arsal to Jdaidet Yabouss in the early hours of Monday.


Qatari Foreign Minister Khaled al-Atiyeh said the Qatari mediation succeeded in securing the freedom of the 13 Greek Orthodox nuns and their three helpers in exchange for the release of 153 Syrian women held in regime prisons.


Ibrahim, who had been mediating with Syrian and Qatari officials to secure the nuns’ release, said the kidnappers tried at the last minute to scuttle the deal to free the nuns in a bid to achieve more gains.


He denied that any ransom was paid to the kidnappers. “There was no deal. No money was paid in exchange for the release of the nuns. It is a comprehensive operation and obstacles are normal,” Ibrahim said.


Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri welcomed the release of the nuns and their return to their church and families.


“All kidnappings and detentions contradict the most basic human rights and are condemned, regardless of the pretexts and justifications that the kidnappers hide behind,” he said in a statement released by his office.


He voiced hoped that this step would be a prelude to the release of Aleppo’s Greek Orthodox Archbishop Paul Yazigi and Syriac Orthodox Archbishop Yohanna Ibrahim, who were abducted by rebels in April.


Ibrahim said Qatar was “a mediator” and supported the attempts to secure the release of the nuns. He added that the Syrian government had met a demand of the rebels by releasing more than 150 Syrian women held in prisons.


“A tug-of-war [on the part of the kidnappers] has delayed the release ... The kidnappers tried at the last minute to renege on the agreement and achieve more gains,” he said.


Ibrahim refused to give details of the deal reached with the kidnappers. “What we have committed to will be implemented,” he said.


The nuns, who were kidnapped from their monastery in the historic town of Maaloula in Syria on Dec. 3, were welcomed by Ibrahim, Makhlouf as well as Muslim sheikhs and Christian bishops when their convoy arrived at Jdaidet Yabouss. The release of the nuns followed a rare meeting between two senior Qatari and Syrian officials despite strained relations between the two countries damaged by the 3-year-old war in Syria, reports said.


Qatari Intelligence chief Saadeh al-Kbeisi, who arrived in Beirut earlier Sunday to follow up on the case, traveled to Damascus where he met with Maj. Gen. Ali Mamlouk, head of the Syrian National Security Bureau, to discuss the release of the nuns, security reports said.


If confirmed, it would be the first public meeting between two senior Syrian and Qatari officials since relations between the two countries soured after Qatar supported Syrian opposition groups fighting to topple President Bashar Assad’s regime.


Ibrahim, who played a vital role last year in mediating between the regime and the opposition for the release of nine Lebanese hostages, said he would pursue his attempts to secure the release of the two Greek Orthodox bishops.


Security sources said the nuns were taken to Arsal after they were released by their captors in the rebel-held town of Yabroud, about 20 km to the north. Assad’s troops have launched a major military operation in an attempt to evict rebels entrenched in the town’s mountains.


The nuns went missing after Syrian rebel forces, including Islamist fighters, captured the ancient quarter of the Christian town of Maaloula, north of Damascus. The town is located on the edge of the rugged Qalamoun region, about 60 kilometers northeast of the capital.


After being held in the Greek Orthodox monastery of Mar Thecla in Maaloula, they were reportedly taken to Yabroud.


Maaloula’s historic value lies in its ancient Christian presence and the fact that some of its residents still speak Aramaic, the language Jesus Christ is believed to have spoken.


The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group identified the rebels who took the nuns as militants from the Nusra Front, Al-Qaeda’s affiliate in Syria. The Observatory and a rebel source in the area said the release of the nuns had been agreed as part of a swap in which the government would free scores of women prisoners.



Arab foreign ministers stress Lebanon’s right to defend itself


BEIRUT: Arab foreign ministers stressed Sunday Lebanon’s right to liberate its Israeli-occupied territories and resist Israeli aggression, adding that they would ask Arab states to share the huge burden of hosting Syrian refugees.


Lebanon and the Lebanese have the right to liberate or retrieve the Shebaa Farms, Kfar Shuba Hills and the Lebanese part of the Ghajar village, and to resist any Israeli aggression or occupation with all legitimate and available means,” said a statement by the ministers who met in Cairo to prepare for the Arab League summit which will convene in Kuwait on March 25.


The statement about resistance was made earlier by Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil in a speech during the meeting.


Bassil’s comments came as talks to draft the policy statement for Lebanon’s new government were deadlocked over whether to mention the resistance – or Hezbollah’s right to use its arms to liberate Lebanese territories and defend the country against any Israeli occupation – in the political blueprint.


The March 14 coalition believes that resistance should be under the authority of the government, a demand opposed by Hezbollah and other March 8 parties.


Arab foreign ministers decided to ask Arab states that are members of the Arab League to share the burden of hosting over a million Syrian refugees with Lebanon, stressing that their displacement was temporary.


The foreign ministers hailed the role played by the Army in preserving stability and civil peace, welcoming a $3 billion Saudi grant to the military establishment.


Bassil said that anyone, whether a Lebanese citizen or not, couldn’t but acknowledge the humane and natural right of resistance, derived from the Human Rights Charter, the U.N. Charter, the Arab League Charter and the Constitution approved in the 1989 Taif Agreement which ended Lebanon’s 1975-1990 Civil War.


He appealed to Arab states to help Lebanon with the overwhelming number of Syrian refugees on its soil, and to help the country combat terrorism by funding the Army.


Bassil also spoke about the danger posed by the rise of jihadist groups in Lebanon, saying such a phenomenon threatened the entire Arab world.


“The danger is not only that Lebanon is seeing a rise of jihadist thought, but that it could become a center to export jihad to the East and West,” he said.


“What will become of the Arab world if its cultural door to the West, Lebanon, becomes a passageway for those who seek to destroy all cultures?” Bassil added.


He said terrorism in the region should be fought with “enlightened Arab thought” and regional policies.


“However, combating such terrorism in Lebanon requires a strong army and your support to fund it and arm it so that it can be Lebanon’s shield against all dangers, and yours as well,” he said.


“While we thank Saudi Arabia for its generous grant, we hope that the April conference in Rome under the umbrella of the United Nations will be an opportunity for Arabs to support the Army,” he added.Bassil spoke extensively about the refugee crisis in Lebanon, asking Arab countries to share the burden of sheltering refugees.


“It is not only about social, economic, political, security or national [concerns] for Lebanon; it concerns [the country’s] existence, its entity and its components,” he said.


“It is about the 1.4 million Syrian refugees accounting for a third of the Lebanese population ... every number is a tragedy in terms of economy, security, education, medical care, prisons and even graves,” Bassil said.


“Do you know that Lebanon is sheltering 45 percent of Syrian refugees while refugee centers have not yet received international aid?” he said, noting that Lebanon had taken in more refugees than Iraq, Jordan or Turkey.


He also spoke about the recent World Bank report which estimated that the crisis in Syria had cost Lebanon $7.5 billion, with poverty levels expected to reach 30 percent and unemployment 50 percent.


“The open door policy can no longer be implemented, collapse is inevitable if it continues. Unfortunately, it will affect other countries as well,” he said.


“Demanding [that others] share the burden will no longer be useful if it is not accompanied by a fair distribution of refugees in safe areas in Syria and neighboring and distant Arab countries,” Bassil said.



Rising crime in northern Bekaa Valley hurting Hezbollah


Hezbollah is incurring significant losses in popularity among other sects due to rising crime rates in the northern Bekaa Valley – an area where the party enjoys wide influence and support – a senior political source close to the March 8 camp told The Daily Star Sunday. Since the the conflict in Syria erupted three years ago, organized crime rates, particularly kidnapping for ransom, have grown significantly. Kidnappers usually hail from the deprived, cannabis-growing province of Baalbek-Hermel, where Hezbollah dominates.


Though Hezbollah is believed to have turned a blind eye for years to illegal practices in the area – including cannabis cultivation, drug dealing, kidnappings and car theft to list only a few – in a bid to win the confidence and votes of the area’s clans, last week’s kidnapping of the son of a Lebanese Forces-affiliated Zahle businessman will prove to be a game changer.


When 9-year-old Michel Saqr, allegedly kidnapped by men hailing from the Baalbek village of Brital, was safely returned to his family in Zahle early Saturday, his father Ibrahim thanked LF leader Samir Geagea for making the necessary contacts to secure his release.


“Whether we like it or not, Hezbollah’s leniency toward security breaches in the Baalbek-Hermel area could be interpreted as giving a cover for criminals to pursue their activity,” the source said.


According to him, the abduction of a child was a “grave mistake committed by people who support Hezbollah, unfortunately.”


“Hezbollah has offered the biggest gift to its political opponents,” the source continued. “Hezbollah’s rivals will use this incident as part of their relentless attempts to diabolize the party.”


After Lebanon’s Civil War, Hezbollah struggled to erase the radical image associated with it and embrace a more open, dialogue-based one. The party’s efforts culminated in signing a memorandum of understanding with the Free Patriotic Movement of Michel Aoun in 2006.


The source, however, argued that Hezbollah currently finds itself stuck between a rock and hard place.


“We are all aware of the peculiar dynamics of the Baalbek-Hermel area, where not only Hezbollah but also authorities need to walk a fine line when dealing with the region.”


The families of Baalbek-Hermel are organized into clans, with the typical dynamics of tribal feuds, shifting alliances and vendettas.


Over the weekend, a local TV station was able to interview Michel Saqr’s suspected kidnapper Maher Tleis, but lacking adequate political cover, the authorities did not move to arrest him.


The source, who was once in charge of maintaining law and order in the Baalbek-Hermel region, said it was imperative for Hezbollah to join forces with authorities to come up with a long-term plan to curb crime in the northern Bekaa Valley.


“Let’s be realistic, it’s definitely not the responsibility of parties – Hezbollah in this case – to maintain law and order within their communities, but it is that of the state rather,” he said.


“We must also emphasize here that not all the supporters of Hezbollah, or any other party for that matter, are good or honest people,” the source said.


In order to avoid a bigger embarrassment for the party and taking into consideration the Lebanese authorities’ inability to devise long-term security plans to combat organized crime due the fact that it has exhausted resources in the war on terror, Hezbollah is urged to be proactive, the source said.


“Hezbollah, with the help of security agencies, should weave a solid network of contacts with the leaders of those clans so as to curb as much as possible the criminal activity or unruly members.”


But the source is realistic, saying that Hezbollah and the Lebanese security forces were preoccupied with other more pressing files.


“We should also note that times are changing and notions such as respect for the elderly and the rules of the clan are no longer valid,” the source said.


“Also, the people of Baalbek and Hermel used to grow and produce drugs but not consume them,” he explained.


“This is not the case anymore, and this renders individuals even bolder and more uncontrollable.”



Drastic rise in Hezbollah death toll as party battles for Yabroud


BEIRUT: Deaths among Hezbollah fighters battling rebels in Syria have increased significantly in March, as the party fights alongside the Syrian army in its struggle to capture the rebel-held town of Yabroud in the Qalamoun Mountains. Hezbollah announced that 15 of its fighters died in March, saying they fell while carrying out their “jihadist duty.” Funerals were held in various areas across Lebanon including the Bekaa Valley, the Beirut southern suburbs and south Lebanon.


Facebook pages and websites affiliated with Hezbollah were flooded with photos of the dead fighters, who were mostly young, with relatives and supporters praising their “martyrdom.”


One Facebook page has posted sentences from a letter written by Hezbollah fighter Mohammad Baqer Jaber to his mother before his death.


“My wish is that you embrace me during the last moments of my life, but what relieves me is the fact that I know you will embrace me when I am in my shroud,” said the letter, posted above a photo of Jaber.


“May God help the hearts of mothers who are losing angels that were born to live in the eternal world only,” a woman commented below the post.


Numerous videos posted on YouTube depict Hezbollah gunmen engaged in fierce battles with Syrian rebels in Yabroud. In one of the videos, Hezbollah fighters ask a wounded gunman from the Syrian opposition where the dead bodies of their fellow fighters are located.


Yabroud is the last town granting Syrian rebels access into east Lebanon. Many of the rigged cars that have exploded in Lebanese areas associated with Hezbollah were believed to have been loaded with explosives in Yabroud.


A source close to Hezbollah, who requested to remain anonymous, told The Daily Star that around 500 Hezbollah fighters had been killed since the party joined the civil war in Lebanon’s neighbor.


A website close to the party said that up until March 7, Hezbollah had lost 40 fighters in one month of fierce battles in Yabroud.


In the fall of 2012, Hezbollah, a staunch ally of Syrian President Bashar Assad, announced that its fighters were defending a string of Syrian villages inhabited by Lebanese of various sects, but mainly Shiites, in rural Qusair. The area is close to the Lebanese border.


Hezbollah also acknowledged it was sending fighters to a Damascus suburb to protect the Shrine of Sayyida Zeinab, the granddaughter of Prophet Mohammad, from attacks by Syrian rebels. Sayyida Zeinab is revered by Muslims, particularly Shiites.


But in May 2013, Hezbollah Secretary-General Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah acknowledged that his party was heavily involved in Syria’s war in order to prevent it from falling into the hands of takfiri groups, in reference to radical Syrian rebel groups, adding that these groups posed a grave threat to Lebanon as well. Nasrallah said party fighters would be in any place they had to be inside Syria, expressing readiness himself to take part in the battles.



Rising crime in northern Bekaa Valley hurting Hezbollah


Hezbollah is incurring significant losses in popularity among other sects due to rising crime rates in the northern Bekaa Valley – an area where the party enjoys wide influence and support – a senior political source close to the March 8 camp told The Daily Star Sunday. Since the the conflict in Syria erupted three years ago, organized crime rates, particularly kidnapping for ransom, have grown significantly. Kidnappers usually hail from the deprived, cannabis-growing province of Baalbek-Hermel, where Hezbollah dominates.


Though Hezbollah is believed to have turned a blind eye for years to illegal practices in the area – including cannabis cultivation, drug dealing, kidnappings and car theft to list only a few – in a bid to win the confidence and votes of the area’s clans, last week’s kidnapping of the son of a Lebanese Forces-affiliated Zahle businessman will prove to be a game changer.


When 9-year-old Michel Saqr, allegedly kidnapped by men hailing from the Baalbek village of Brital, was safely returned to his family in Zahle early Saturday, his father Ibrahim thanked LF leader Samir Geagea for making the necessary contacts to secure his release.


“Whether we like it or not, Hezbollah’s leniency toward security breaches in the Baalbek-Hermel area could be interpreted as giving a cover for criminals to pursue their activity,” the source said.


According to him, the abduction of a child was a “grave mistake committed by people who support Hezbollah, unfortunately.”


“Hezbollah has offered the biggest gift to its political opponents,” the source continued. “Hezbollah’s rivals will use this incident as part of their relentless attempts to diabolize the party.”


After Lebanon’s Civil War, Hezbollah struggled to erase the radical image associated with it and embrace a more open, dialogue-based one. The party’s efforts culminated in signing a memorandum of understanding with the Free Patriotic Movement of Michel Aoun in 2006.


The source, however, argued that Hezbollah currently finds itself stuck between a rock and hard place.


“We are all aware of the peculiar dynamics of the Baalbek-Hermel area, where not only Hezbollah but also authorities need to walk a fine line when dealing with the region.”


The families of Baalbek-Hermel are organized into clans, with the typical dynamics of tribal feuds, shifting alliances and vendettas.


Over the weekend, a local TV station was able to interview Michel Saqr’s suspected kidnapper Maher Tleis, but lacking adequate political cover, the authorities did not move to arrest him.


The source, who was once in charge of maintaining law and order in the Baalbek-Hermel region, said it was imperative for Hezbollah to join forces with authorities to come up with a long-term plan to curb crime in the northern Bekaa Valley.


“Let’s be realistic, it’s definitely not the responsibility of parties – Hezbollah in this case – to maintain law and order within their communities, but it is that of the state rather,” he said.


“We must also emphasize here that not all the supporters of Hezbollah, or any other party for that matter, are good or honest people,” the source said.


In order to avoid a bigger embarrassment for the party and taking into consideration the Lebanese authorities’ inability to devise long-term security plans to combat organized crime due the fact that it has exhausted resources in the war on terror, Hezbollah is urged to be proactive, the source said.


“Hezbollah, with the help of security agencies, should weave a solid network of contacts with the leaders of those clans so as to curb as much as possible the criminal activity or unruly members.”


But the source is realistic, saying that Hezbollah and the Lebanese security forces were preoccupied with other more pressing files.


“We should also note that times are changing and notions such as respect for the elderly and the rules of the clan are no longer valid,” the source said.


“Also, the people of Baalbek and Hermel used to grow and produce drugs but not consume them,” he explained.


“This is not the case anymore, and this renders individuals even bolder and more uncontrollable.”



Salam Cabinet’s fate uncertain if policy deadline missed


BEIRUT: Lawmakers and legal experts are split over the fate of the Cabinet if no agreement is reached over its policy statement within the Constitution’s one-month deadline, which expires on March 17. Speaker Nabih Berri, former Speaker Hussein Husseini and a number of March 8 lawmakers contend that the 24-member Cabinet would be considered resigned if it fails to agree on a policy statement by March 17, after which President Michel Sleiman would be obliged under the Constitution to hold consultations with members of Parliament to name a new prime minister.


However, some March 14 lawmakers and legal experts disagree, arguing that the Cabinet would not be considered resigned if the constitutional deadline ends without an agreement on a policy statement. Rather, they say the Cabinet in this case would stay in office in a caretaker capacity until the row over the policy statement is resolved.


The development comes as a seven-member ministerial committee tasked with drafting the Cabinet’s policy statement is slated to meet Tuesday in yet another attempt to agree on a compromise formula to settle the dispute over the resistance issue, the last obstacle holding up the document.


Tuesday’s will be the 10th meeting of the committee, which includes ministers from the March 8 and March 14 parties and centrists, since the Cabinet was formed on Feb. 15.


The factions remain at odds over whether a clause legitimizing Hezbollah’s armed resistance against Israel should be mentioned in the policy statement.


Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri might launch an initiative this week aimed at breaking the deadlock over the policy statement before the expiration of the deadline for the ministerial committee, political sources said.


Finance Minister Ali Hasan Khalil from Berri’s parliamentary bloc tweeted Sunday: “We will deal positively with any idea or draft plan to finalize the policy statement that preserves the right of the Lebanese to resistance to liberate the land and repulse the Israeli aggression.”


Visitors who met Prime Minister Tammam Salam at his Moseitbeh residence Sunday quoted him as voicing hope that some sticking points hindering an agreement over the policy statement could be resolved before Tuesday’s session.


But if no agreement is reached, Salam might refer the issue to the Cabinet, a visitor said.


The failure to reach agreement on a policy statement by March 17 raises questions over the fate of the Cabinet, given the conflicting views of lawmakers and legal experts on both sides of the political spectrum.


Berri, backed by Husseini, has ruled that the Cabinet would be considered resigned if the one-month constitutional deadline ended without an agreement reached on a policy statement.


Salam, in Berri’s view, should announce the resignation of his Cabinet if the deadline expires without an agreement on a policy statement.


Husseini sees that the next step is for the president to begin binding parliamentary consultations to name a new prime minister. Husseini’s opinion is backed by a March 14 minister who is a member of the ministerial committee.


“The Cabinet’s failure to draft a policy statement means that it cannot assume executive authority or agree on a plan of action,” Husseini said.


Future MP Hadi Hobeish disagrees with Berri and Husseini, saying that the Cabinet can still discuss the policy statement even after the expiration of the deadline. Hobeish said a constitutional article does not consider missing the deadline as a reason for the Cabinet’s resignation, but rather as an occasion to urge it to intensify its efforts to agree on a policy statement.


“If the Cabinet presents its policy statement after one month and a half and after winning Parliament’s confidence, it can exercise its full powers,” Hobeish said.


Dr. Issam Ismail, a professor of constitutional and administrative law at the state-run Lebanese University, said that “if the current Cabinet exceeds the 30-day deadline without accomplishing the policy statement, we would be faced with a precedent which Lebanon has not seen before.”


The professor added, “The Constitution did not mention a penalty. Therefore, there can be no penalty without a [constitutional] text.”


In this case, Ismail said, the Cabinet can serve in a caretaker capacity until a solution is found to the policy statement.


“Therefore, the Cabinet cannot be considered resigned immediately because Article 64 in the Constitution has outlined the cases in which the Cabinet is considered resigned, but without mentioning this case,” he added.


Hezbollah, meanwhile, maintained its insistence that the resistance clause be mentioned in the Cabinet’s policy statement.


“The resistance is clearly a solid clause in the policy statement and there is no chance for anyone to sidestep it at all,” Industry Minister Hussein Haj Hasan, one of two ministers who represent Hezbollah in the Cabinet, told a Teachers’ Day ceremony in the Bekaa Valley town of Shmustar.


“We absolutely uphold the resistance clause and the others [March 14 parties] should realize that this matter is in the interests of Lebanon and all the Lebanese,” he said.



Nusra Front reiterates calls for Army defection


BEIRUT: The Nusra Front in Lebanon, an offshoot of a Syrian rebel group, reiterated calls Sunday for members of the Sunni sect in Lebanon to defect from the Lebanese Army, accusing the military establishment of targeting Sunnis and serving Iranian interests.“People of Akkar ... live up to the expectations of all Muslims. This call is addressed to you and to every Muslim eager to defend his religion: We urge you to dedicate all your efforts to defect from this oppressive Army,” said a statement by the group posted on its Twitter account.


Many residents of Akkar, a predominantly Sunni governorate in north Lebanon, are members of the Lebanese Army.


The statement said that the Lebanese Army demonstrated its courage only against Sunnis in Lebanon under the pretext of being the guarantor of the Lebanese people, but accused it of actually standing for Iranian designs for the region.


“If you take a look at prison inmates, you can determine that they are all Sunnis arrested under false accusations,” the statement said. “Does anyone detain a Shiite for fighting in Syria?”


The Lebanese government officially adopted a policy of disassociation, to distance it from the civil war in neighboring Syria. But Hezbollah acknowledged in May 2013 of sending fighters to back forces loyal to President Bashar Assad.


The Nusra Front in Lebanon added that there were some Shiite members of the Army fighting in Syria. “Sunnis of Lebanon, do you accept that Shiite cities be guarded with your sons [who are members of the Lebanese Army] while their [Shiites’] young men go to fight your brothers in Syria?” the group said.


Separately, the Al-Qaeda-affiliated Abdullah Azzam Brigades apologized late Friday for the civilian casualties caused by the bombings for which it claimed responsibility last month, saying its military operations were solely aimed at Hezbollah and its major backer Iran.


The brigade has claimed responsibility for several attacks in Lebanon, including the Feb. 19 attack on the Iranian Cultural Center in Beirut that killed 11 people – none of which were Iranians – citing Hezbollah’s military role in neighboring Syria.


Referring to the Feb. 19 attack, the group said there had been a “technical fault” in the second of the two bombs used in the operation.


“The two bombs were meant to be in a place where the explosion would not reach the main road and cause damage to passersby.”


It said its military operations were directed solely at Hezbollah.


“The military operations of the Abdullah Azzam Brigades do not target regular Shiites, or members of other sects,” the group said. “We stress to our suicide bombers to be careful and to abort operations if they believe others than those targeted will be killed.”


“We confirm to the Sunnis in Lebanon, and other sects, that our war is against Hezbollah and our targets are the party’s interests and military, political and security positions both inside and outside Lebanon,” the group said. “Such targets are legitimate,” it added.



Iraq minister offers to pay for diverted MEA flight


BEIRUT: Iraq’s transport minister is prepared to pay for the losses incurred when a plane from Beirut to Baghdad was forced to turn around because his son had missed the flight. Hadi al-Amiri told a news conference Sunday that he would hand his son over to the authorities and compensate those involved out of his own pocket, if he is found to have been responsible for the incident.


Twenty minutes into the flight Thursday, the pilot of the Middle East Airlines flight was told by the head of MEA in Baghdad that he would not be allowed to land because Amiri’s son, Mahdi, was not on board. The pilot was instructed to return to Beirut to collect Mahdi the following day.


MEA said the flight, carrying 71 passengers, departed six minutes late because the crew waited for Mahdi, who still failed to appear.


The incident caused uproar in Iraq and Lebanon, with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki promising to punish those who were responsible.


Iraqi authorities Friday arrested Baghdad Airport Assistant Manager Samer Kibbeh during a raid on his office in connection with the case.


Amiri arrived in Beirut Saturday in an effort to ease tensions. He was greeted at Rafik Hariri International Airport by Lebanon’s Transport Minister Ghazi Zeaiter and MEA Chairman Mohammad Hout.


Speaking to reporters at the airport, he said: “The purpose of the visit is to strengthen ties between [Lebanon and Iraq] and affirm that the incident that happened recently will not affect the deep ties between Baghdad and Beirut.”


“The visit is also aimed at reaching an understanding [with Lebanon] in order to resolve such instances without a media frenzy,” he added.


“This will pass and our ties will remain as strong. We even have the desire to develop them further.”


He did not comment at the time on media reports regarding the role of his son, but vowed that he would hold those responsible to account.


Meanwhile, Hout said his company welcomed Amiri’s visit and announced the opening of MEA’s new Beirut-Basra route that will run an average of two flights per week.


The MEA chairman added that last week’s incident would not affect Lebanon’s ties with Iraq and emphasized that the airline would continue its flights to Baghdad as usual.



Survey: US average gas price up 10 cents a gallon


The average U.S. price of a gallon of gasoline has jumped 10 cents over the past two weeks.


The Lundberg Survey of fuel prices released Sunday says the price of a gallon of regular is $3.51. Midgrade costs an average of $3.69 a gallon, and premium is $3.84.


Diesel was up three cents over the past two weeks at $4.03.


Of the cities surveyed in the Lower 48 states, Los Angeles has the nation's highest average price for gas at $3.94. Jackson, Miss., has the lowest at $3.18.



Reactions to the death of William Clay Ford


Comments on the death of William Clay Ford:


"The Fords are among Michigan's iconic, founding families, and he was an innovator in the family tradition as well as a strong leader. Like his grandfather, he was passionate about automobiles and the auto industry, the city of Detroit and his family. He embodied the resilience, ingenuity and leadership that brought Ford Motor Co. and Detroit great success, and sustained both through tough times." — Gov. Rick Snyder.


"Not only was Mr. Ford a titan in our business community, he has been one of Detroit's greatest supporters and philanthropists. His commitment to the city was never more evident than it was with his decision to move the Detroit Lions back downtown to the stadium that bears his family's name. That vote of confidence in Detroit was an important piece of the redevelopment of downtown that has since taken place. " — Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan.


"His leadership, integrity, kindness, humility and good humor were matched only by his desire to bring a Super Bowl championship to the Lions and to our community. Each of us in the organization will continue to relentlessly pursue that goal in his honor." — Detroit Lions president Tom Lewand.


"In so many NFL locker rooms, if the owner is around, players put their heads down and hope not to get noticed. In Detroit, I noticed right away that players would go up to him to say hello. One time, I hollered, 'Big Willie is in the house,' when he walked in the locker room. Some guys were looking at me like I was about to get cut, but then Mr. Ford later came over and cracked up about it." — Ex-Detroit Lions, Kansas City Chiefs and San Francisco 49ers receiver Johnnie Morton.


"My father was a great business leader and humanitarian who dedicated his life to the company and the community. He also was a wonderful family man, a loving husband, father, grandfather and great-grandfather. He will be greatly missed by everyone who knew him, yet he will continue to inspire us all." — Bill Ford, executive chairman, Ford Motor Co.



Neb. lawmakers to act on some income tax measures


Lawmakers are poised to act this session on income tax cuts aimed at Social Security recipients and veterans who agree to launch a new career or business in Nebraska after they retire.


Senators will also debate a bill that would ensure Nebraska's income-tax brackets keep pace with inflation, while giving a greater tax break to low- and middle-income Social Security recipients.


The bills were introduced in the wake of a legislative tax study last year, and calls by Gov. Dave Heineman to lower Nebraska's income and property taxes.


The tax-bracket bill would address cost-of-living salary increases that can bump taxpayers into a bracket with higher rates. The proposal would save taxpayers roughly $100 million over a decade that the state otherwise would have collected because of inflation, said Sen. Galen Hadley, chairman of the Legislature's Revenue Committee.


"It's a very significant bill," said Hadley, of Kearney.


Nebraska's top tax rate of 6.84 percent kicks in for married couples once their incomes exceed $70,400. For single filers, the top rate goes into effect at $35,200. The rate only applies to the income received at those levels and higher.


It also would increase the state's tax exemptions for Social Security income. Married couples with adjusted gross incomes of less than $58,000 wouldn't have their Social Security benefits taxed; nor would other taxpayers who make less than $43,000.


Hadley said he wants to follow the recommendations of a Tax Modernization Committee, which released its findings in December after a series of summer hearings. The legislative panel concluded that no major changes were need, because Nebraska's tax system is similar to those in other states.


Hadley said he plans to launch a legislative study this summer of Nebraska's tax exemptions and deductions. Eliminating some of those tax breaks would help Nebraska lower its overall rates while still allowing the state to pay its bills, he said.


"I recognize that our highest tax rate kicks in too soon, and it's probably a little high," Hadley said. "That's something we have to work on. But there's no easy, quick fix."


The future of a more aggressive income-tax measure remains unclear. The bill, backed by the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce & Industry, would lower both individual and corporate income tax rates. It also would eliminate one of the state's tax brackets and expand the others, so that a larger share of income would be taxed at lower rates.


The bill's sponsor, Sen. Burke Harr of Omaha, said he was concerned the proposal wouldn't be sustainable. The original measure would cost the state an estimated $403.8 million in lost revenue by fiscal year 2016, and the amount is projected to grow each year.


"We're still trying to find something that's viable," Harr said.


Harr said he also wants to ensure that any income tax cuts include the lower brackets, so that low- and middle-income families see a benefit.


"I don't think you can just do the top rate," he said. "I think you have to do it across the board. It's a fairness issue."


One bill by Sen. Sue Crawford, of Bellevue, would create a state tax exemption for military retirement pay to encourage veterans to launch second careers or a business in Nebraska.


The measure would exclude one dollar of military retirement pay for every dollar of non-retirement pay earned in Nebraska. The exemption would be capped at $60,000 for married tax filers and $30,000 for singles. Members of the Revenue Committee are finishing their work on the proposal, and will likely send it to the floor as an add-on to another bill.


The bill was inspired by several legislative studies of what the state can do to support Nebraska's military veterans. Crawford said the bill was important for keeping and attracting veterans to Nebraska, and it addresses one of the most common concerns she heard while campaigning for office in 2012. The U.S. Department of Defense also looks at state benefits for veterans when making decisions about where to place its resources.


"This is one of those pieces that show the Department of the Defense that we, as a state, are being attentive to those concerns," Crawford said. "It's an important economic development issue, above and beyond recruiting veterans — to ensure that we're an attractive state for new (military) missions."


Crawford is working with state Sen. Charlie Janssen, a U.S. Navy veteran from Fremont, on final changes to the bill. Hadley said he expects the Revenue Committee will approve it this week for a floor vote.



The bracket-adjustment bill is LB987. The income-tax cut bill is LB1097. The military retirement bill is LB902.


Nebraska Farm Bureau offers farm bill guidance


The Nebraska Farm Bureau Federation has prepared a list to help Nebraska farmers navigate changes wrought by the recently passed farm bill in Washington.


The list is titled the "Top 10 Things to Know About the 2014 Farm Bill."


Farm Bureau President Steve Nelson says the list "provides a baseline of information to help (farmers) get started."


The bureau says a critical component of the new bill for Nebraska farmers and ranchers is the retroactive extension of numerous livestock disaster programs. Livestock disaster signup begins April 15.


The bureau has developed a 2014 Farm Bill Breakdown web offering that includes a way to submit farm bill questions. The website address is www.nefb.org .



Bumps in rollout of cellphone alerts in Washington


A system set up to send emergency alerts to thousands of cellphone users warning them of natural disasters and missing children has experienced problems during its rollout in Washington state, the News Tribune reported Sunday.


The mobile notification system has helped authorities find at least two missing children as a result of Amber Alerts sent to cellphones in the state.


But it also mistakenly warned people in the lowlands of Western Washington of a blizzard that was happening in the Cascade Mountains, and it alerted others in Western Washington of potential flash floods thousands of miles away, in Puerto Rico.


Still, officials said, the weather warnings have saved countless people elsewhere in the country. The system is working, they said, despite the problems.


"To some people these things are annoying. But when you look at it as the big picture of saving lives, as a community as a whole, it's the right thing to do," said Ted Buehner, warning coordination meteorologist at the National Weather Service in Seattle. "These are targeted for immediate, life-threatening, hazardous events."


In Connecticut last July, for example, a camp director got 29 children to safety after getting a tornado warning on her cellphone moments before the storm touched down where she and the campers had been. Tornado warnings in the Midwest also were responsible for saving many lives, Buehner said.


Congress approved the national Wireless Emergency Alert system in 2006 to provide instant warnings from emergency agencies throughout the country. To get the word out, the system uses cellphone carriers to complement other alerts sent out on television and radio.


But in a few cases, the system has confused both cellphone users and the emergency agencies in charge of implementing it, according to the News Tribune.


Three of the eight messages sent in Washington state were sent too broadly, reaching people in the wrong areas. Two others went out before dawn, raising questions about what people were expected to do in the middle of the night once they received those alerts.


Carri Gordon, the Amber Alert coordinator for the Washington State Patrol, said the rollout of the system was especially complicated.


"There's a lot of players in this and a lot of pieces that all have to work together," Gordon told the News Tribune. "There really is no one agency that's in charge of the whole process."


Worried that cellphone users may opt out en masse of getting the alerts, state and federal agencies have made changes. They are also working to educate the public about the alerts.


The committee that oversees the national system decided last year to eliminate blizzards and ice storms from its list of emergency alerts, Buehner said. The list now covers tornados, hurricanes, extreme wind, typhoons, dust storms and flash flooding. The committee also added tsunamis in February.


After an Amber Alert went out to hundreds of people at 3:30 a.m. on April 28, alerting them to a missing child, some who received the message wondered what they were supposed to do about it so early in the morning.


The Washington State Patrol, which oversees the state's Amber Alerts, later said the message wasn't meant to wake up residents. Agency officials said they learned that they were responsible for setting time parameters on the alerts to prevent them going out late at night.


The agency set those time parameters in June. Now, the alert system is programmed not to send alerts after 10 p.m. or before 6 a.m.


Still, the alert served a purpose. The missing 1-year-old boy was found safe in Fife that morning as a result of the cellphone broadcast, Gordon said.


"These are useful, and they've proven very successful in locating these kids who have been abducted," she told the News Tribune.


In December 2012, the National Weather Service in Seattle sent a blizzard alert to people living near the Cascades, but the technology of the national system forwarded it to all the counties in the region. Some people living in Pierce County where the storm never reached were puzzled to get the message.


But Herb Munson told the newspaper he hoped the confusion doesn't dissuade the agency from issuing such alerts.


"I would like to get such messages when there is a threat to nearby areas," Munson told the newspaper.



Lions owner William Clay Ford dies at 88


William Clay Ford, the last surviving grandchild of automotive pioneer Henry Ford and owner of the Detroit Lions, has died. He was 88.


Ford Motor Co. said in a statement Sunday that Ford died of pneumonia at his home in Grosse Pointe, Mich. Ford helped steer the family business for more than five decades. He bought one of his own, the NFL franchise in the Motor City, a half-century ago.


He served as an employee and board member of the automaker for more than half of its 100-year history.


"My father was a great business leader and humanitarian who dedicated his life to the company and the community," William Clay Ford Jr., executive chairman of Ford Motor Co. and Lions vice chairman, said in a statement. "He also was a wonderful family man, a loving husband, father, grandfather and great-grandfather. He will be greatly missed by everyone who knew him, yet he will continue to inspire us all."


Ford was regarded as a dignified man by the select few who seemed to know him well. To the masses in Detroit, he was simply the owner of the Lions who struggled to achieve success on the field despite showing his passion for winning by spending money on free agents, coaches, executives and facilities.


Ford's first full season leading the Lions was in 1964, seven years after the franchise won the NFL title. The lone playoff victory he enjoyed was in 1992. The Lions are the only team to go 0-16 in a season, hitting rock bottom in 2008. After an 11-year drought, the Lions improved enough to make the playoffs in 2011 only to lose a combined 21 games over the next two seasons.


"No owner loved his team more than Mr. Ford loved the Lions," Lions President Tom Lewand said in a statement released by the team. "Those of us who had the opportunity to work for Mr. Ford knew of his unyielding passion for his family, the Lions and the city of Detroit. His leadership, integrity, kindness, humility and good humor were matched only by his desire to bring a Super Bowl championship to the Lions and to our community.


"Each of us in the organization will continue to relentlessly pursue that goal in his honor."


Born into an automotive fortune in 1925 bearing what was already a household name, Ford was 23 when he joined the Ford Motor Co. board of directors in 1948, one year after the death of his grandfather, Henry Ford.


He maintained as low a profile as his name would allow, serving on various executive committees and spearheading the design, development and introduction of the Continental Mark II in 1956. He was elected a Ford vice chairman in 1980 and retired with that title in 1989. Ford remained a company director until 2005, later taking the title of director emeritus.


"Mr. Ford had a profound impact on Ford Motor Company," Ford CEO Alan Mulally said in a statement. "The company extends its deepest sympathies to the many members of the extended Ford family at this difficult time. While we mourn Mr. Ford's death, we also are grateful for his many contributions to the company and the auto industry."


He helped institutionalize the practice of professional management atop the company that began with the naming of Philip Caldwell as Ford CEO in 1979 and as Ford chairman in March 1980, without relinquishing the Ford family's control.


As a board member, Ford helped bring the company back under his family's control in 2001, when the directors ousted former CEO Jacques Nasser in favor of William Clay Ford Jr.


The youngest of Edsel B. Ford's four children, Ford Sr. was first elected to the Ford Motor Co. board in June 1948. He rarely spoke publicly but was reflective during the company's centennial year in 2003. At the annual meeting, he told stories about his grandfather teaching him to drive at age 10, and of being taken for his first airplane ride in a Ford Tri-Motor by Charles Lindbergh.


"I just want you to know that we have tremendous pride in the Ford name," he told the shareholders more than a decade ago. "We have a spirit of working together, and we have a passion for cars. And we also have a great desire to see the Ford name in the forefront of world transportation."


Ford always kept the Lions close to his heart. He knew how much the team meant to people who lived in or grew up in Michigan.


"I think sports are a wonderful diversion," Ford told The Detroit News in 1980. "People can relate to sports very easily. It's a quick study."


But while each of the Motor City's other three professional franchises — the Red Wings, Pistons and Tigers — won at least one championship, the Lions were synonymous with losing under Ford.


He seemed to lead the Lions with a light touch, leaving most decisions up to administrators such as Russ Thomas, Chuck Schmidt, Matt Millen and current general manager Martin Mayhew.


Even though the franchise rarely produced a successful product, the stands are usually filled with fans desperate to witness a winner.


"Detroit, and I'm not blowing smoke at anybody, is probably the greatest fan sports town in the country," Ford told The News in 1980, the year after a 2-14 team set a franchise attendance record. "They'll support anything."


Ford moved the club from Tiger Stadium in Detroit to the Pontiac Silverdome in 1975 before bringing his team back downtown.


Ford Field — a spectacular 65,000-seat, $315 million indoor stadium — opened in 2002 that, coupled with a state-of-the-art team headquarters in nearby Allen Park, gave the Lions the best facilities money could buy.


But a blueprint for consistently winning was elusive. From Ford's first season as team owner to his last, the Lions won 310 games, lost 441 and tied 13.


Ford was married to the former Martha Parke Firestone, an heiress to the Akron, Ohio, rubber fortune. Her grandfather, Harvey Firestone, was a close friend of Henry Ford. They had three daughters, a son, 14 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be private.


---


AP Auto Writer Tom Krisher contributed to this report.



Park service report tracks impact of Trace


Visitors on the Natchez Trace Parkway spent nearly $126 million in 2012, supporting more than 1,550 jobs, a new National Park Service report shows.


The Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal reported (http://bit.ly/MKMkG5) the figures indicate more than 5.6 million visitors used the 444-mile roadway that stretches through 41 communities in Mississippi, Alabama and Tennessee.


"We attract visitors from across the U.S. and around the world," said parkway superintendent Mary Risser.


Risser said National Park tourism returns $10 for every $1 invested in the Nations Park Service.


"And it's a big factor in our local economy as well," she said. "We appreciate the partnership and support of our neighbors and are glad to be able to give back by helping to sustain local communities."


The spending analysis was conducted by U.S. Geological Survey economists Catherine Cullinane Thomas and Christopher Huber and the National Park Service's Lynn Koontz.


According to the report, most visitors' spending supports jobs in restaurants, grocery and convenience stores, hotels, motels and other amusement and recreation businesses.



Wood smoke plan could make new stoves too costly


In the poorest state in New England, where residents already struggle to heat their homes, officials are worried a federal proposal to reduce wood smoke pollution will make new stoves too expensive and prevent Mainers from buying cleaner technology.


Nearly half of all Maine residents rely on some form of wood heat to keep warm in the winter, according to a 2008 study conducted for the Maine Center for Disease Control and the Maine Lung Association. The state ranks among the top five in the nation for residents heating only with wood, according to U.S. Census Bureau figures.


With so many residents relying on the cheap source of fuel, state officials have scrutinized a proposal released by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency that would impose much higher standards on all new wood stoves or wood burning devices. Those rules were last updated in 1988.


The proposal would rely on residents buying new stoves to reduce the pollution in wood smoke that can aggravate lung conditions such as asthma and is linked to health issues including heart disease, bronchitis and cancer, according to government studies. Stoves already in use would be grandfathered in.


Patricia Aho, commissioner of the Maine Department of Environmental Protection, has voiced concern that if no one can afford to buy better stoves, there would be no improvements in air quality.


"As drafted, we believe that the consequences would mean that more people would continue to use more inefficient old stoves, which would do little to reduce wood smoke in our area," DEP spokeswoman Jessamine Logan said.


Wood smoke lingers close to the ground and in homes, making it especially harmful, she said.


The price of new units could increase as much as 25 percent over the old models because of their complexity and production costs, said Mark Higgins, co-owner of EverGreen Home & Hearth, a wood stove dealer with locations in Ellsworth and Brewer.


If that happens, "people are going to clutch to their old inefficient stove," he said.


Aho says the solution to the potentially high cost of the new units would be an exchange program. In such a program, residents would receive a subsidy to trade in the inefficient old stoves for cleaner burning ones, making the cleaner technology affordable.


George Gekas, 66, a Bar Harbor resident and home builder who lives on a homestead, says he would replace his 38-year-old stove "in a heartbeat" if such a program existed. While he supports lowering wood smoke pollution, he says he couldn't afford to buy a new stove without taking out a loan.


"If there were not a subsidy, I would live with what I have," he said.


Those who heat their homes with wood say the low cost is one of the biggest draws. Jessica Fay, 45, says she and her husband installed a highly efficient stove in their home in Raymond five years ago. "It took us one year to pay off the cost of the stove and installation," she said, referencing the money they would have spent on heating oil. The stove cost around $3,500.


Fay said keeping her 1,600-square-foot home warm with wood costs a fraction of the $400 a month she paid for oil heat. Maine is more dependent on heating oil than any other state in the country, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.


The DEP has a stove exchange program that would help residents swap out stoves, but it lacks funding, Logan said. That did not stop one manufacturer from implementing its own exchange program.


The North American branch of the Norwegian stove manufacturer Jotul helped dealers swap out 1,406 old stoves in North America by providing a $300 incentive and recycling the old stoves in 2013. "We would like to see the EPA funding change out programs," Logan said.


EPA spokeswoman Enesta Jones emphasized that the rules in the proposal are just a first step and that the association will seek public input until May 5.


She said the "common sense" proposal would "help make heaters manufactured in the future cleaner and more efficient, leading to air quality and public health improvements across the country."


Jones said concerns that EPA rules would make new stoves more expensive were overstated. Any increase in cost to stoves would be limited to 2 to 6 percent, she said, contradicting Higgins' assertion that prices would skyrocket.


Many wood stove manufacturers already conform to at least some of the proposed rules, she said.


No matter the results of the EPA proposal, Gekas said one thing is clear: "I think they (Mainers) are going to burn wood no matter what. It's part of rural life here and they always will," he said.



Lawmakers revisit Michigan foreclosure rules


Legislation to rewrite or clarify recent changes in Michigan's foreclosure rules has taken a step forward.


The bill approved 107-3 by the House last week retains main elements of a law signed last summer by Gov. Rick Snyder, including taking away someone's right to save his or her property if an inspector discovers the home's in bad shape due to neglect or other reasons.


But the legislation going to the Senate imposes more restrictions on inspections, provides more notice to borrowers before inspections and gives them more chances to fix damage.


When he signed the 2013 law, Snyder called on lawmakers to clarify some issues involving inspections.


One proposed change requires borrowers to get at least 72 hours of notice before interior inspections.


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Online:


House Bill 5277: http://1.usa.gov/1qhgi4H



Louisiana Tech will offer online MBA


Louisiana Tech University's College of Business has developed and is accepting applications for its new online master of business administration degree which will begin this fall.


The Daily Leader reports (http://bit.ly/1gaDyJp ) the online program is identical to Tech's existing, traditional MBA program.


James Lumpkin, dean of the College of Business, says the online classes will have the same content, rigor and quality as the on-campus courses. And, he says, the online program is fully accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business International.


For more information on the program, contact the college's associate dean of graduate programs, Tim Bisping, at 318-257-4528 or visit online at http://bit.ly/O9Mrft .



No consensus on how to notify data breach victims


The data breach at Target Corp. that exposed millions of credit card numbers has focused attention on the patchwork of state consumer notification laws and renewed a push for a single national standard.


Most states have laws that require retailers to disclose data breaches, but the laws vary wildly. Consumers in one state might learn immediately that their personal information had been exposed, but that might not happen in another state, and notification requirements for businesses depend on where compares are located.


Attorney General Eric Holder has joined the call for a nationwide notification standard, but divisions persist, making a consensus questionable this year.


"We're stuck with the state-by-state approach unless some compromise gets done at the federal level," said Peter Swire, a privacy expert at Georgia Tech and a former White House privacy official.


Despite general agreement on the value of a national standard, there are obstacles to a straightforward compromise:


—Consumer groups don't want to weaken existing protections in states with the strongest laws.


—Retailers want laws that are less burdensome to comply with and say too much notification could cause consumers to tune out the problem.


—Congress is trying to figure out how a federal standard should be enforced and what the threshold should be before notification requirements kick in.


The issue gained fresh urgency as part of a larger security debate after cyberattacks on retailers Neiman Marcus and Target. Target, the nation's second-largest retail discounter, said 40 million credit and debit card accounts were exposed between Nov. 27 and Dec. 15.


The company went public with the breach on Dec. 19, several days after it said it learned of the problem and shortly after the news began leaking online. Since then, sales, profit and stock prices have dropped, the company's chief information officer has resigned and banks and retailers are facing continued scrutiny about what more can be done to protect consumer data.


The Justice Department is investigating the data theft, and Holder urged Congress in a video statement last month to adopt a national notification standard that would include exemptions for harmless breaches.


"This would empower the American people to protect themselves if they are at risk of identity theft. It would enable law enforcement to better investigate these crimes and to hold compromised entities accountable when they fail to keep sensitive information safe," he said.


Such proposals have been around for years.


An Obama administration plan from 2011 would have required businesses that collect personal information on more than 10,000 people in a year to immediately disclose potentially harmful breaches and for breaches that affect more than 5,000 people to be reported to credit reporting agencies and the federal government.


Past congressional efforts to agree on a standard have failed. Currently, 46 states and the District of Columbia have their own breach notification laws, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.


Proposals now before Congress would require notification. But there are differences in what information the notification would provide, the threshold for notifying regulators and law enforcement, and the proposed enforcement. Some bills seek criminal penalties for deliberately concealing a breach; others do not.


Consumer groups fear that any national standard could turn out to be weaker than the strongest state laws, such as one in California that requires a business or state agency to notify any state resident whose data was improperly obtained. Other state laws are more lenient, requiring notice only in cases where a risk analysis determines that the breach is likely to have actually harmed consumers.


"From industry's perspective, whether you're a bank or a merchant, you don't want to have to notify consumers," said Ed Mierzwinski, consumer program director at the U.S. Public Interest Research Group. "They want to pre-empt, or override, the best state laws."


Retailers say they do support a federal notification standard that would be triggered when sensitive material has been exposed — as opposed to, say, customers' shoe sizes — and when there's a risk that it will be used for theft or fraud.


"There are different kinds of data. There's data that can lead to an identity theft (or) financial fraud, and there's data that probably doesn't have much utility to the criminals," said David French, senior vice president for government relations at the National Retail Federation. "If you get 20 notices a month, at some point you just turn it off."


Meanwhile, retailers remain at odds with financial institutions over how best to protect consumer data. Retailers say banks need to upgrade security technology on the credit cards they issue. Banks say retailers need to do more to enhance their own security.


"There's no agreement in the private sector among the major players about what their responsibilities are, and that makes it more difficult for us in the Congress to end up on the same page," said Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs committee, in an interview.


He is sponsoring legislation that provides for notification in cases where there is "substantial risk" of identity theft or account fraud.


Carper said he's hoping for a solution, because the "alternative is a patchwork quilt that is a nightmare."