Tuesday, 18 March 2014

London 'draining life' from rest of UK economy


There's London. And then there's the rest of the U.K.


A tale of two Britains has increasingly emerged since the Great Recession. While the government trumpets the country's recovery from the financial crisis and its status as the world's fastest-growing developed economy, the rhetoric hides an increasing divide: One that pits London's boom against the malaise in cities such as Manchester and Birmingham that are struggling to remain vibrant in the 21st century.


Buoyed by foreign investment and a resurgent financial industry, the economy of London and the rest of Britain's South East region has expanded almost twice as fast as the rest of the country since the 2008 financial crisis. A chasm that began opening with the decline of Britain's textile and coal industries a century ago is widening as London's ability to attract jobs and investment leaves the rest of the country struggling.


Britain's economy is, by some calculations, the most dependent on a single urban area among the world's most industrialized nations.


"It's almost the definition of polarization," said Danny Dorling, a professor of geography at Oxford University. "It's pulling apart in a quite dramatic way."


Policymakers are considering a range of ideas to address the imbalance. Among them is building a 43 billion-pound ($71 billion) high-speed rail network to connect London with Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds, helping the northern cities become viable alternatives for businesses to locate. Another idea is for Manchester and Liverpool to merge into a super-city that could better compete with London for investment.


The issue of economic inequality — how to get more people to share the fruits of the recovery — is of growing concern for governments around the world.


It is also central to the political fortunes of Prime Minister David Cameron, whose Conservatives are trying to broaden their base into traditional Labour Party strongholds outside southeastern Britain in hopes of winning next year's election. The Conservatives were forced to form a coalition with the Liberal Democrats after failing to win a majority four years ago after 13 years of Labour governments.


A HOUSE DIVIDED


Measured in terms of geography, Britain's economic divide is among the widest of the seven most industrialized countries, according to figures from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. London and the rest of Britain's South East region account for about 35 percent of U.K. economic output. Only Tokyo and Paris and their surrounding regions rival London for the top spot. New York, the biggest economic center in the United States, generates just 7.3 percent of national gross domestic product. In the case of Britain and Japan, critics note the countries are smaller, making it easier for one metropolitan area to dominate.


When Mayor Boris Johnson recently suggested that London issue its own visas for international artists and technology wizards, critics only half-joked that London might take it a step further and become its own city state, like the Vatican.


That dominance translates into higher wages for workers in London as the city attracts those with skills in high demand. Londoners last year earned an average of 41,143 pounds ($68,297), 51 percent more than the national average.


The gap is even bigger in the housing market, where foreign buyers have snapped up London homes as investments rather than places to live. So vast is the demand for high-end homes that London's skyline is changing, with glass-and-steel apartment blocks sprouting along the banks of the Thames.


Home prices in the most expensive parts of London are now almost 25 times higher than Britain's cheapest homes, up from 10 times in 2007, according to research by the independent Smith Institute.


The capital's supporters note that London's strength benefits the rest of Britain by attracting investment that would otherwise go to New York or Hong Kong and creating wealth that spills into other parts of Britain.


London-based businesses are the biggest private-sector employers in each of the U.K.'s 62 cities, according to the Centre for Cities, a think tank focused on urban issues. And London generates roughly 99 billion pounds in taxes and receives 94 billion pounds in government spending in return — leaving a 5 billion pound subsidy for the rest of the country.


Yet that is not translating into new jobs.


The Centre for Cities found that the capital region, which has about a quarter of Britain's people, accounted for 80 percent of private-sector employment growth between 2010 and 2012. Northern cities like Bradford, Blackpool and Glasgow lost jobs in both the private and public sectors.


Many cities outside London are dependent on public employers. They are losing jobs as the government slashes spending to control a deficit swelled by bank bailouts.


"London is becoming a kind of giant suction machine, draining the life out of the rest of the country," Business Secretary Vince Cable told the BBC late last year. "More balance in that respect would be helpful."


REGIONAL SHIFTS


It wasn't always like this. Northern England used to be the heart of the British economy. The textile mills and coal mines fueled the Industrial Revolution and boomed with the affluence of the British Empire in Victorian times and well into the 20th century.


But globalization hit the aging industries hard. The deregulation of the financial markets in the mid-1980s touched off a boom in London that surpassed anything the others could muster. The city became one of the world's largest financial centers, with banks that reached across the globe.


There was hope that the Great Recession would bring more balance as the government tightened regulations on the London-dominated financial industry after providing tens of billions of pounds of bailouts.


But the financial sector bounced back relatively quickly. And the crisis only magnified London's allure as a safe place for foreigners to invest in property and an island of opportunity for professionals, entrepreneurs and artists from other European countries that are still in the economic doldrums.


Tony Travers, an expert on the capital at the London School of Economics, has likened London to a dark star — attracting all comers and swallowing investment.


"It would be better if there were other, smaller dark stars," he said. "It would be better to have a constellation of dark stars."


The high-speed rail project is one way to stimulate other economic centers. It could allow Northern cities to capitalize on their strengths while giving them access to the financial markets, entrepreneurs and cultural attractions of London. In anticipation of the project, Birmingham last month unveiled plans to build 350,000 square meters (3.8 million square feet) of office space and 2,000 homes near the city's main railway station.


BUILDING FOR SCALE


Jim O'Neill, a former Goldman Sachs economist, notes that Britain contrasts with China, Germany and the United States, all of which have many urban areas fueling their economies. To help counterbalance London's dominance, O'Neill, who is heading a commission on cities, has floated the idea that long-time rivals Manchester and Liverpool might be linked to create a supercity of the north — ManPool for short. The concentration of people, ideas and competition would help drive innovation and growth, O'Neill said.


Civic leaders in England say another way to rebalance the economy would be to give them more control over their own finances.


George Ferguson, mayor of the western port city of Bristol, complains that U.K. cities are allowed to retain only a small percentage of local tax revenue, making them unduly dependent on central government. Giving city leaders more control would help communities generate better ideas to solve their own problems and attract investors, he said.


With Scotland preparing to vote for independence, and Wales and Northern Ireland gaining increasing rights to govern their own affairs, it's inevitable that cities in the rest of the country should start wondering about whether they, too, should get more local control, said Paul Swinney, the senior economist of Centre for Cities.


Essentially, politicians in London need to be persuaded to give up power in the regions. That will require tact.


"Maybe England needs a lobby," said Neil Rami, the chief executive of Marketing Birmingham.


PLAY TO THE STRENGTHS


Perhaps the simplest suggestion is for smaller cities to stop obsessing about London and recognize that they can compete in different ways.


Take the arts, one of London's big selling points. The idea is that people love to have artists around, making run-down areas buzzy with pop-up exhibitions and hip coffee shops. The artists move in, and areas regenerate.


Mike Emmerich, chief executive of the Manchester think tank New Economy, acknowledged that his city can't compete with the sheer number of theater productions, fashion shows and other cultural happenings in London. But it can sell itself as the place where art is created, offering space to paint, sew or sculpt without having to pay sky-high London rents.


"We're a small country with a globally leading city," he said. "It's nonsensical in some way to say, 'We can be like London.' "


In other words, Manchester should be offering incentives to the young and gifted like Jenny Postle and Sam Leutton, who together form the luxury knitwear brand Leutton Postle.


Leutton, from greater Manchester, and Postle, from near Birmingham, bear no grudges against their hometowns. Their label works closely with their sponsor, yarn maker Lurex, which is based in Leicester in central England.


But as they describe their devotion to the capital— its cosmopolitan air, its excitement, its vibe — the struggle of smaller cities to keep the trailblazers is evident. Neither could really imagine being elsewhere.


"London is London," Leutton said.



Bill Cunningham's 'Facade' photos at NYC museum


Bill Cunningham is a familiar presence on the social and fashion pages of The New York Times, and the streets of New York City, riding a bicycle with a small camera bag strapped to his waist.


But long before his images of street fashion became a regular newspaper feature, Cunningham spent eight years, from 1968 to 1976, working on a whimsical photo essay of models in period costumes posing against historic sites of the same vintage.


Astride his bike, he searched secondhand shops for antique clothing and looked for architectural sites across the city to create the perfect tableaux, many of which featured his muse and fellow photographer, Editta Sherman.


The result was "Facades," a book published in 1978.


Now, nearly all of the 88 gelatin silver prints from the series, which Cunningham donated to the New-York Historical Society, are featured in an exhibition there.


"Bill Cunningham: Facades" runs through June 15.


A former hat maker, Cunningham's models are featured in fantastical headdress. In one composition, Sherman wears a fur pillbox that playfully mimics the spiral lines of Frank Lloyd Wright's Guggenheim Museum. In another, a large hat brimming with oversized feathers and flowers perched high on Sherman's head is used as a perfect counterpoint to the sculpture of Hercules, Minerva and Mercury on the clock atop Grand Central Terminal.


"I don't think he ever thought of it as a fashion project," said the show's curator, Valerie Paley. "It's more a social, architectural and fashion history of the city. ... He saw the grace of old architecture, the lines and the architectural integrity."


Architectural preservation in New York City was in its infancy when Cunningham began work on the photo series. Just a few years earlier, two of the city's masterpieces — the original Penn Station and the Hotel Astor (the Waldorf Astoria's predecessor) were demolished.


But while Cunningham may not have been making a statement about preservation, said Paley, "he certainly was seeing beauty where others weren't seeing it."


The exhibition also recounts some of the amusing stories of Cunningham's vintage clothing expeditions. One of his earliest finds was a 1770s mob-cap of white lace and taffeta that a thrift store had mistaken for a chair doily. He paid $2 for it.


A humble and private man, the 85-year-old photographer said at the exhibition opening that he rarely paid more than a few dollars for any of his finds.


"I'm crazy about fashion and I'm mad about architecture," he said. "It was all here in New York City."


Cunningham and Sherman, a celebrity photographer of famous artists and musicians who died at age 101 last year, were neighbors in the Carnegie Hall Studios, once live-work spaces for artists, musicians and actors above the famous music emporium. They often rode the subway to the various locations to avoid wrinkling the costumes. An amusing photo in the exhibition shows Sherman sitting in a graffiti-covered subway car resplendent in Victorian dress.


The "Facades" project demonstrates that Cunningham is "clearly somebody that knows the history of fashion thoroughly and is in love with all aspects of fashion, not just what's trendy this season but the aesthetic value of fashion in any period," said Valerie Steele, director and chief curator of The Museum at Fashion Institute of Technology.


His interplay of fashion and architecture "just shows how much he knows," that fashion has to do with art, style and change over time, she added.


That knowledge is abundantly obvious from the pencil notations he jotted on the back of the prints.


In his evocation of the Civil War era, he wrote that the period's bright colored fabrics were made possible by "the industrial revolution in textile dye from natural to chemical."


"Almost as an anthropologist," said Paley, Cunningham recorded his field notes about the history of the buildings and the costumes.



Rauner Wins GOP Nomination For Illinois Governor


Venture capitalist Bruce Rauner won the GOP primary Tuesday in his bid for Illinois governor, as voters embraced a first campaign by the multimillionaire who flooded the airwaves with vows to run the Democratic stronghold like a business and curb the influence of government unions.


With Republicans eyeing what they view as their best shot in years to win the top job in President Barack Obama's home state, Rauner defeated three longtime state lawmakers — including the current state treasurer. He advances to a November matchup with Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn, who easily won his nomination for a second full term.


"The voters are going to face a stark choice in November, a major decision about the future of our state," Rauner said in his victory speech. "It's a choice between failure of the past and a new day."



Between Quinn and predecessor Rod Blagojevich, now imprisoned for corruption, Democrats have held the governorship since 2003. But Rauner could present a serious threat, partly due to a massive fundraising campaign that included contributing more than $6 million of his own money.


For voters across Illinois, the governor's race represents a potentially transformative battle over union influence, with some voters saying they want to break an alliance between organized labor and Democrats, who have long controlled most statewide offices and the Legislature.


Organized labor battled back out of concern that Rauner could seek to weaken unions in the same way GOP governors have in other states across the Midwest.


Quinn's first re-election ad of the season — focusing on Rauner's evolving stance on raising the minimum wage — hit the airwaves Tuesday evening. Quinn has called for increasing the state's rate from $8.25 to at least $10 an hour. Rauner had initially called for a cut and later said he'd raise it under certain circumstances.


"I'm here to fight for an economy that works for everyone," Quinn said Tuesday night. "Not just the billionaires, but for everyone."


Rauner says he would model his governorship after those of Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and former Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels. Both significantly rolled back union power in what they said were necessary steps to attract business and reduce costs. Rauner defeated state Sens. Bill Brady and Kirk Dillard and state Treasurer Dan Rutherford in the primary.


"Rauner is going to be a bull in a china shop; we need a bull," said Tom Sommer, a 57-year-old real estate broker from the Chicago suburb Hinsdale. "It's not going to be more of the same."


Issues such as a public pension overhaul and high taxes "are coming to the fore and the old guard is not going to handle that," Sommer said, adding that he voted for Rauner because of his tough talk against the unions that represent public sector workers. That sentiment persists despite Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn's push to fix Illinois' finances by overhauling the heavily underwater public pension systems, which earned him the unions' ire.


Rauner has also won supporters with his call for term limits.


Union leaders, meanwhile, sought Rauner's defeat by encouraging members to pull Republican ballots and vote for Dillard, who picked up several union endorsements.


The typically left-leaning unions spent more than $6 million on the GOP primary, both in anti-Rauner and pro-Dillard ads. Rauner raised more than $14 million, including $6 million of his own money — more than any candidate seeking a gubernatorial nomination in state history.


Rauner warned supporters about the unions' efforts, saying Quinn's "allies" were trying to hijack the election. He said legislative term limits could break the labor-Democratic alliance.


The race turned out to be far closer than polls suggested. With nearly all precincts reporting, Rauner's edge over Dillard was slightly more than 2 percentage points.


In southern Illinois, voters had another reason to want to upend the state's political order, saying they felt marginalized and neglected by a political balance weighted toward Democrats and the Chicago region.


In the last 10 years, things have gotten really bad (in the state)," said Marty Johns, 48, of Godfrey. "Throw out all the Democrats in Chicago. All of our money goes up there while southern Illinois gets the crumbs."


Johns said he voted for Dillard to "remove Quinn."


Quinn, who was Blagojevich's lieutenant governor and assumed the office after he was booted amid a corruption scandal, easily defeated a lesser-known primary challenger Tio Hardiman in his bid for a second full term.


Brady won the 2010 GOP nomination, but lost the general election to Quinn. Brady, of Bloomington, argued he built the support during that bid to defeat Quinn this time around.


Rutherford, of Chenoa, did little campaigning recently. He all but conceded defeat after a former employee filed a federal lawsuit accusing Rutherford of sexual harassment and political coercion. Rutherford denied the allegations.


Republican primary voters also chose state Sen. Jim Oberweis, a dairy magnate, to run in November against U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, the Senate's second-ranking Democrat. Oberweis, who defeated businessman and West Point graduate Doug Truax in the primary, has lost five of his six bids for public office.


Also on the ballot were primary races for the U.S. House, Illinois Legislature and statewide constitutional officers.


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Follow Sara Burnett at http://bit.ly/OAiLs9 and Sophia Tareen at http://bit.ly/1cXHWQC


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Associated Press writers Don Babwin in Hinsdale, Ill., Jim Suhr in Godfrey, Ill., David Mercer in LeRoy, Ill., John O'Connor in Springfield, Ill., Michael Tarm in Winnetka, Ill., contributed.



Nepal's capital gripped by fuel price hike strike


The streets were mostly deserted in Nepal's capital of Kathmandu on Wednesday for a general strike to protest a hike in fuel prices.


Schools were closed and shops shuttered in response to the strike called by university student groups as police in riot gear guarded the main streets of the city.


The government increased the price of gasoline, kerosene and diesel fuel because state-owned Nepal Oil Corp. was in debt. Student groups demanded authorities reverse the decision and met with government officials to talk about the matter.


Police detained several protesters in Katmandu who forced shops to close.



Yellen to enter spotlight as new leader of Fed


Investors will be watching closely Wednesday for any hints of how a Janet Yellen-led Federal Reserve might differ from the path set by her predecessor, Ben Bernanke.


The Yellen era will begin in earnest when the Fed ends two days of policy discussions. It will be her first meeting as Fed chair, a position she assumed Feb. 3, after Bernanke stepped down after eight high-profile years.


After the Fed issues a statement at the end of its policy meeting and updates its economic forecasts, Yellen will preside over a news conference. She is widely expected to embrace Bernanke's approach of keeping interest rates low while gradually paring the Fed's economic stimulus.


Most analysts expect the Fed to announce a third reduction in the monthly pace of its bond purchases from $65 billion to $55 billion. Those reductions are expected to continue this year until the bond purchases end altogether by December.


The Fed's bond purchases have been intended to keep long-term borrowing rates low to spur spending and growth. Its decision to continue paring them signals its belief that the economy is showing consistent improvement.


Many analysts think the Fed could make one change in its statement Wednesday. It may drop a reference to a specific unemployment rate that might cause it eventually to begin raising short-term rates.


The Fed's most recent policy statement said it planned to keep short-term rates at record lows "well past" the time the unemployment rate fell below 6.5 percent. The rate is now 6.7 percent. Several Fed officials have recently suggested scrapping the 6.5 percent threshold and instead describing more general changes in the job market and inflation that might trigger a rate increase.


One reason for dropping the threshold, as Yellen among others have noted, is that the unemployment rate can overstate the job market's health. In recent months, for example, the rate has fallen not so much because of robust hiring but because many people without a job have stopped looking for one. Once people stop looking for a job, they're no longer counted as unemployed, and the rate can fall as a result.


"There is a growing consensus to go with more nuance instead of a specific number," said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial. "I think they are just too close to 6.5 percent on the unemployment rate."


Yellen has spoken of seeking continuity with Bernanke, under whom she served as vice chair. That is one reason markets expect a further pullback in bond purchases.


If the gradual reductions were halted, it could raise concerns that the Fed has begun to worry about challenges the economy is facing, from a brutal winter that's depressed growth to fears about how Russia's aggression toward Ukraine might slow the global economy.


Fed officials, including Yellen, have signaled their belief that the weakness in U.S. economic data is temporary rather than a sign that the economy is losing momentum.


The Fed and most private economists foresee faster economic growth later this year. Many think the economy, which grew a lackluster 1.9 percent in 2013, will rebound to around 3 percent this year.


"We had a tough start to the year with the winter storms, but it looks like we are starting to pull out of those weather effects," said David Jones, chief economist at DMJ Advisors.


Economists point to several hopeful signs — from a rebound in retail sales to an increase of 175,000 jobs in February despite continued harsh weather.


Even if the economy strengthens and the Fed ends its bond purchases late this year, it will still be stimulating the economy. It has no plans to start selling its enormous portfolio of bonds — a step that would likely send loan rates up. Nor is it likely this year to raise the benchmark short-term rate it controls.


More than five years ago, the Fed cut that rate to a record low near zero, where it's remained since. Most analysts think the Fed will keep its target for short-term rates near zero until late 2015.


Not all economists expect the Fed this week to drop a link between a specific unemployment rate and an eventual rate increase.


"I don't think they will tweak the language," said Brian Bethune, an economics professor at Tuft University. "There is enough wiggle room currently."



Billionaire philanthropist Jim Stowers dead at 90


Jim Stowers Jr., the billionaire founder of one of the nation's leading investment management firms who gave away most of his fortune to fight disease, has died. He was 90.


The Kansas City, Mo., philanthropist, whose tenacity in business was just as fierce as in his fight for stem-cell research, died Monday after a period of declining health, according to a news release issued by his namesake research firm and the investment firm he founded, American Century Investments.


Stowers was a struggling mutual fund salesman in 1958 when he founded Twentieth Century Investors Inc. with only two mutual funds and $107,000 in assets. That company grew into American Century Investments, one of the nation's leading investment management firms that currently manages about $141 billion in assets.


In 2000, Stowers and his wife, Virginia, who both successfully fought cancer, promised more than $1 billion of their fortune to create the Stowers Institute for Medical Research in Kansas City. The endowment eventually grew to $2 billion.


"I've always said that if I make other people successful, they'll make me successful," he told The Associated Press in 2009. "We wanted to give something that was more valuable than money to the millions of people who made our success possible."


The gleaming institute has attracted world-renowned researchers to Kansas City and prompted civic leaders in the region to enhance collaboration between area research groups, health care organizations, universities and business interests.


"For Jim, creating new knowledge was the most powerful contribution he could offer mankind," said Richard W. Brown, chairman of the board of American Century Investments and the Stowers Institute for Medical Research. "Throughout his whole life, whether as businessman or philanthropist, he thought about making things better for other people."


Stowers and his wife said they wanted the institute to focus on basic research into how genes work, to determine ways to alter genes to fight such ailments as cancer, heart disease and Alzheimer's disease. But they faced skepticism from well-known U.S. research institutions about whether the Kansas City area could be a major player in biomedical research and life sciences.


By 2013, the institute had about 370 scientists, research associates, technicians and support staff.


"We were told that what we wanted to do couldn't be done here," Stowers told the AP in the 2009 interview. "We had a whole bunch of labs tell us that they could do a better job than us.


"You know, I had the same statements made to me when I started American Century. I just said, 'I can prove it, I can do this.'"


Stowers was born in Kansas City. He earned bachelor's degrees in art and medicine from the University of Missouri, and was an Air Force fighter pilot during World War II.


He and wife, Virginia, with whom he had four children, said they were motivated to help find cures by their bouts with cancer. Stowers was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 1987, and his wife had surgery for breast cancer in 1993.


Stowers' efforts pushing stem-cell research sparked controversy in 2006, when state voters narrowly approved a constitutional amendment guaranteeing that any federally allowed stem-cell research and treatment could occur in Missouri.


The Stowerses donated most of the $30 million spent by The Coalition for Lifesaving Cures, an organization formed to support the amendment, saying stem-cell research was important to the institute's efforts to fight disease.


The amendment was only narrowly approved, after a bitter political fight in which opponents claimed the use of embryonic stem cells for research required the destruction of a human embryo. Supporters contend the research does not end a life and had the potential to cure many debilitating diseases.



Despite opposition, many landowners await pipeline


If the proposed Keystone XL oil pipeline ever gains approval, Ronald Weber will watch from his farmhouse as workers lay the line beneath a half-mile of his cropland in northeast Nebraska.


The 69-year-old retired farmer wishes the pipeline had missed his property, simply to avoid the difficulty of growing corn and soybeans around the construction work. But what leaves Weber exasperated are the repeated project delays.


"It's ridiculous that we haven't yet built this thing," he said. "It would have been nice if they had gone a mile over and missed me, but these kinds of things happen. It has to go through somewhere."


Weber has plenty of company in Nebraska, a state that has been an impediment to the 1,100-mile-long line almost since it was proposed 10 years ago, but where patience with the struggle seems to be running thin now that the pipeline company has reached financial settlements with three-quarters of the landowners on the route. Secretary of State John Kerry is expected to decide in the coming months whether to recommend White House approval of the project.


A group of environmental activists and farmers has cast the $5.4 billion pipeline as a threat to the nation's efforts to curtail global warming, to the state's groundwater and to residents' property rights. The line's path through Nebraska also remains in legal limbo because of an ongoing court challenge.


But many property owners are now waiting for the pipeline trucks with a sense apathy and resignation, eroding the grassroots resistance that had long bolstered the opposition. The settlement deals offered by TransCanada, the Canadian company behind the project, can run well into six figures and are providing residents here with their first share of the oil-boom money that had enriched those in the prime drilling areas in other states.


Earlier this month, pipeline supporters sought to isolate opponents even more when they gathered signatures from 34 Nebraska lawmakers — a bipartisan, two-thirds majority — for a letter urging federal approval. Three Democrats signed a letter opposing the project.


Jane Kleeb, director of the anti-pipeline group Bold Nebraska, said local opposition remains alive. She pointed to 115 of the 515 landowners along the proposed route that she said joined the effort to stop it, despite what she described as high-pressure sales tactics by TransCanada.


"For the last three months, it's been very stressful on the landowners," she said.


But other landowners say they're ready for the dispute to end.


"Up here where the pipeline's going through, the people I've talked to don't have concerns with it," said Frankie Maughan Jr., who farms near the route in northeast Nebraska. "They just want the money."


Other states long ago signed off on the line, which would carry 830,000 barrels of oil per day from Alberta, Canada, to Texas Gulf Coast refineries, but nothing has come easy in Nebraska.


First it was complaints that the initial route would have burrowed through the fragile Sandhills region, which sits atop the massive Ogallala reservoir. After the company made changes, the state approved a new route, but in February a judge sided with pipeline opponents in finding that the wrong state officials approved the plan. The state has appealed the ruling.


Surveys commissioned by the University of Nebraska and independent polling firms have shown that most Nebraska residents support the project. The latest federal environmental impact report also was favorable.


"Once we changed the route, the mood in the state completely changed," said TransCanada spokesman Shawn Howard.


The newest offers to property owners promise a 50 percent up-front payment for access plus a signing bonus.


Weber, who owns land near Tilden, about 100 miles northwest of Omaha, said the company's offer to him equaled what he could have gotten in court. He said he'll still be able to grow crops on top of the strip where the pipe will be buried five feet underground.


Just a few miles away, 85-year-old Joseph Grosserode said TransCanada agreed to pay him about $100,000 for an easement, and promised he could keep the money even if the project was never built.


"That was a big concern of mine," Grosserode said.


Tom Rutjens, a construction-company owner who also lives in Tilden, said he knew of two landowners who were dead-set against the pipeline, but more who were willing accept the risks.


"Just about everyone else I've talked to has been tickled" with the offers, Rutjens said.


Local opposition declined as TransCanada's offers went up. Some landowners have received offers as high as $250,000, with signing bonuses of $60,000 to $80,000, Kleeb said.


Kleeb said activists have taken heart from their recent successes, including the court ruling against the route's approval, and the refusal of some landowners to settle.


Jim Carlson, 59, who farms near the eastern Nebraska town of Osceola, said he's turned down two TransCanada offers, including one for $244,000, and is more concerned than ever about chemical additives that could run through the pipe.


"I think a lot of people who have signed so far, especially in the beginning, didn't know a lot about the pipeline," Carlson said. "Initially, I thought it would be good for the country, that it would reduce our dependence on foreign oil. But now? They could offer me $344,000 today, and I wouldn't sign it."



Rauner Leads Dillard In Illinois Governor Primary


Venture capitalist Bruce Rauner won the GOP primary Tuesday in his bid for Illinois governor, as voters embraced a first campaign by the multimillionaire who flooded the airwaves with vows to run the Democratic stronghold like a business and curb the influence of government unions.


With Republicans eyeing what they view as their best shot in years to win the top job in President Barack Obama's home state, Rauner defeated three longtime state lawmakers — including the current state treasurer. He advances to a November matchup with Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn, who easily won his nomination for a second full term.


Between Quinn and predecessor Rod Blagojevich, now imprisoned for corruption, Democrats have held the governorship since 2003. But Rauner could present a serious threat, partly due to a massive campaign bank account that already includes more than $6 million of his own money.



For voters across Illinois, the governor's race represented a potentially transformative battle over union influence, with some voters saying they wanted to break an alliance between organized labor and Democrats, who have long controlled most statewide offices and the Legislature.


Organized labor battled back out of concern that Rauner could seek to weaken unions in the same way GOP governors have in other states across the Midwest.


Rauner says he would model his governorship after those of Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and former Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels. Both significantly rolled back union power in what they said were necessary steps to attract business and reduce costs. Rauner defeated state Sens. Bill Brady and Kirk Dillard and state Treasurer Dan Rutherford in the primary.


"Rauner is going to be a bull in a china shop; we need a bull," said Tom Sommer, a 57-year-old real estate broker from the Chicago suburb Hinsdale. "It's not going to be more of the same."


Issues such as a public pension overhaul and high taxes "are coming to the fore and the old guard is not going to handle that," Sommer said, adding that he voted for Rauner because of his tough talk against the unions that represent public sector workers. That sentiment persists despite Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn's push to fix Illinois' finances by overhauling the heavily underwater public pension systems, which earned him the unions' ire.


Rauner has also won supporters with his call for term limits.


Union leaders, meanwhile, sought Rauner's defeat by encouraging members to pull Republican ballots and vote for Dillard, who picked up several union endorsements.


The typically left-leaning unions spent more than $6 million on the GOP primary, both in anti-Rauner and pro-Dillard ads. Rauner raised more than $14 million, including $6 million of his own money — more than any candidate seeking a gubernatorial nomination in state history.


Rauner warned supporters about the unions' efforts, saying Quinn's "allies" were trying to hijack the election. He said legislative term limits could break the labor-Democratic alliance.


Quinn's first re-election ad of the season — focusing on Rauner's evolving stance on raising the minimum wage — hit the airwaves Tuesday evening. Quinn has called for increasing the state's rate from $8.25 to at least $10 an hour. Rauner had initially called for a cut and later said he'd raise it under certain circumstances.


In the southern Illinois, voters had another reason to want to upend the state's political order, saying they felt marginalized and neglected by a political balance weighted toward Democrats and the Chicago region.


"In the last 10 years, things have gotten really bad (in the state)," said Marty Johns, 48, of Godfrey. "Throw out all the Democrats in Chicago. All of our money goes up there while southern Illinois gets the crumbs."


Johns said he voted for Dillard to "remove Quinn."


But others said they liked Quinn, whose administration has avoided major scandals — unlike his two predecessors who went to prison.


"I think he's honest and he does the best he can do with what he's got to work with," said Ed Kline, a 61-year-old LeRoy farmer who voted for Quinn.


Quinn, who was Blagojevich's lieutenant governor and assumed the office after he was booted amid a corruption scandal, easily defeated a lesser-known primary challenger Tio Hardiman in his bid for a second full term.


Brady won the 2010 GOP nomination, but lost the general election to Quinn. Brady, of Bloomington, argued he built the support during that bid to defeat Quinn this time around.


Rutherford, of Chenoa, did little campaigning recently. He all but conceded defeat after a former employee filed a federal lawsuit accusing Rutherford of sexual harassment and political coercion. Rutherford denied the allegations.


Republican primary voters also chose state Sen. Jim Oberweis, a dairy magnate, to run in November against U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, the Senate's second-ranking Democrat. Oberweis, who defeated businessman and West Point graduate Doug Truax in the primary, has lost five of his six bids for public office.


Also on the ballot were primary races for the U.S. House, Illinois Legislature and statewide constitutional officers.


___


Follow Sara Burnett at http://bit.ly/OAiLs9 and Sophia Tareen at http://bit.ly/1cXHWQC


___


Associated Press writers Don Babwin in Hinsdale, Ill., Jim Suhr in Godfrey, Ill., David Mercer in LeRoy, Ill., John O'Connor in Springfield, Ill., Michael Tarm in Winnetka, Ill., contributed.



GM creates new post to spearhead safety issues


General Motors has named a 40-year engineer as its new safety chief, placing a single person in charge of recalls and other safety issues as it deals with a huge compact car recall that has damaged the company's reputation.


The move, announced Tuesday by CEO Mary Barra, comes after revelations that GM knew about a deadly ignition switch problem in 1.6 million compact cars at least 11 years ago, but failed to recall them until last month. The problem has been linked to more than a dozen deaths in the Chevrolet Cobalt and five other models.


Barra on Tuesday named engineer Jeff Boyer to the new global post. She says it gives GM a single safety leader with access to senior managers and the board. Boyer is responsible for development of safety systems, vehicle testing, and safety of cars after they are sold, including recalls.


"If there are any obstacles in his way, Jeff has the authority to clear them," Barra said in a statement. "If he needs any additional resources, he will get them."


Two congressional committees and the Justice Department are investigating GM's behavior in the ignition switch case. The company has admitted knowing as early as 2003 that the switches can unexpectedly shut down car engines and cause drivers to lose control. Despite multiple company investigations, the cars were not recalled until last month. In one of the investigations that didn't lead to a recall, GM failed to consider four fatal accidents in one of the models.


"Something went wrong with our process in this instance, and terrible things happened," Barra said Monday in a video posted on GM's media website.


On Feb. 13, GM announced the recall of more than 780,000 Cobalts and Pontiac G5s (model years 2005-2007). Two weeks later it added 842,000 Ion compacts (2003-2007), and Chevrolet HHR SUVs and Pontiac Solstice and Saturn Sky sports cars (2006-2007). All of the recalled cars have the same ignition switches.


The company said the ignition switches can wear from heavy, dangling keys. If the key chains are bumped or people drive on rough surfaces, the switches can suddenly change from the "run" position to "accessory" or "off." That cuts off power-assisted steering and brakes and could cause drivers to lose control. Also, the air bags may not inflate in a crash and protect the driver and passengers.


The company is urging people not to put anything on their key rings until the switches are replaced.


The recall crisis quickly ended Barra's honeymoon as CEO. She took over the top job on Jan. 15, becoming the first woman to lead a major global automaker.


Since 2011, Boyer had been executive director of engineering operations and systems development. Before that, he headed global interior engineering and safety performance. In that post, he was responsible for certifying GM vehicle safety and crashworthiness, the company said.


Boyer started with GM in 1974 as a college student at Kettering University in Flint. He has an electrical engineering degree from Kettering and a master of business administration degree from Michigan State University.


On Monday, GM issued new recalls of 1.5 million vehicles, part of an effort to assure buyers that it's moving faster to fix safety defects in its cars and trucks.



Syria shows off car-bomb assembly site


BEIRUT: The Syrian army discovered Tuesday two sites in the Syrian town of Yabroud allegedly used by radical groups to rig car-bombs bound for Lebanon as well as to manufacture rockets, local media reported.


The site, as described by a Syrian officer, was set up in the town of Yabroud, which Hezbollah-backed regime forces have recently captured from rebel groups, primarily the Nusra Front.


Speaking to Al-Manar television, the Syrian officer said the military uncovered “the central hub” where rebels used to prepare explosive-rigged vehicles for attacks in Lebanon.


Lebanon has witnessed over a dozen car bombs and rocket attacks in the past few months, most of which were claimed by Islamist radical groups seeking to strike Hezbollah over the group's involvement in Syria.


The deadly attacks targeted predominantly Shiite areas commonly associated with Hezbollah.


Al-Manar also reported that the Syrian army dismantled a vehicle rigged with 200 kilograms of TRX explosives in Yabroud. The vehicle had a Lebanese license plate.


Television footage showed the vehicle packed with explosives with the detonator placed near the driver’s seat.


It added that the Syrian military also uncovered a site where Nusra Front allegedly manufactured rockets.



Remembering The Late Politician Reubin Askew



Audio for this story from Tell Me More will be available at approximately 3:00 p.m. ET.





The Florida Governor pushed for racial equality in the 1970s, when it was not popular to do so. Ken Rudin, political analyst and host of his own podcast, Ken Rudin's Political Junkie, remembers Askew.



In-state tuition bill survives close Senate vote


An effort to allow qualified Florida students to pay in-state college tuition rates even if they are in the country illegally is deeply dividing the Republican-controlled Legislature.


A Senate committee on Tuesday barely approved the legislation (SB 1400) after four GOP state senators voted against the measure. The final vote was 5-4 and only survived the vote because three Democrats supported the bill.


"I have serious concerns about rewarding subsidized education to adults who are not legal residents of this state," said Sen. Jeff Brandes, R-St. Petersburg, and one of the no votes.


The tug-of-war over in-state tuition has become one of the main areas during this year's session where Republicans are at odds with one another. House Speaker Will Weatherford has come out strongly for the legislation, which would allow Florida high school graduates who spent three years in a state school to qualify for the lower tuition rate.


Weatherford has said it is wrong to "punish" children who were brought to this country illegally by their parents. The Florida House is expected to take up the bill later this week.


But some Republicans - including ones caught in a GOP primary - say they can't go along with a bill that would give a benefit to someone who is not a legal resident. They pointed out that legislators just this year agreed to grant in-state tuition rates to veterans who live in Florida.


Sen. Lizbeth Benacquisto, R-Fort Myers, contended the bill would create "incentives for illegal immigration." Benacquisto, who is running in a heated GOP primary for the seat once held by disgraced Congressman Trey Radel, was one of the no votes in the Senate Education Committee.


The committee vote came after several students who said they were brought to the U.S. by their parents spoke about how they were having trouble advancing in college because of the tuition costs. Currently, those students pay out-of-state fees that can run as much as $17,000 more per year more than those charged Florida residents.


Sen. Jack Latvala, R-Clearwater, and the sponsor of the Senate bill, said that even with the in-state tuition break the students "are still going to be punished" because they do not qualify for federal financial aid or the state's scholarship programs.


Latvala said he wants to secure the borders so that people do not enter the country illegally. But he said it was "the right thing to do" to help students and families who have been living in the state for years.


"It's about giving the people who are residents of our state the value and benefit of the taxes they pay and their parents pay," Latvala said.


Gov. Rick Scott backs the Senate bill because it would place limits on how much universities could raise tuition rates. The bill would cap tuition rates at whatever rate the Legislature sets annually instead of giving universities the ability to raise the rates further.


Latvala said he remains optimistic that his bill will make it to the full state Senate for an up or down vote.


Follow Gary Fineout on Twitter: http://bit.ly/1eODejv



More layoffs at Viking plant


Viking Range Corp. has announcement more layoffs in Greenwood.


The Greenwood Commonwealth reports (http://bit.ly/1gCfLWV ) that Viking's corporate parent, The Middleby Corp., won't say how many positions were eliminated.


In a statement Monday, Middleby says the cuts were in technical services and call centers as well as in marketing and training.


The company says the positions would be "redeployed" from the headquarters in Greenwood to distribution centers throughout the United States and in Canada.


Monday's layoffs are the third round of cutbacks at Viking since it was purchased by Elgin, Ill.-based Middleby at the end of 2012.


In two rounds of layoffs — in January and November of last year — the company eliminated more than 25 percent of its workforce, with most of the cuts coming to its Mississippi operations.



Top T official rejects losing bidder's complaints


A top MBTA official has rejected claims by the losing bidder for the contract to run the state's commuter rail system that it was treated unfairly and the bidding process was flawed.


Silvio Petraglia, chief procurement officer for the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority, on Monday upheld the decision to award the $2.68 billion contract to Keolis Commuter Services.


Petraglia, in a 17-page report addressing Massachusetts Bay Commuter Railroad Co.'s concerns, says awarding the company the contract "would have been inexplicable."


Petraglia was not involved in the selection process.


An MBCR spokesman told The Boston Globe (http://b.globe.com/1hvUoV6 ) the decision was disappointing, but stood by its claims.


MBCR, which has run the system since 2003, has asked a judge to block Keolis from taking over this summer and reopen the bidding process.



US home construction fell for a 3rd month in Feb.


U.S. home construction fell for a third month in February, but in a hopeful sign, applications for building permits rose to their highest level in four months.


Builders started work on 907,000 homes at a seasonally adjusted annual rate in February, the Commerce Department said Tuesday. That was down a slight 0.2 percent from January, when construction had fallen 11.2 percent. The declines have been blamed in large part on severe winter weather in much of the country.


Applications for permits to build homes, considered a gauge of future activity, rose a solid 7.7 percent in February to 1.02 million units. Many analysts expect housing sales and construction to show further gains this year, helped by a stronger economy.


The weakness in construction came in the apartment sector. Construction of single-family homes rose 0.3 percent in February to an annual rate of 583,000. But this was offset by a 1.2 percent drop in apartment construction, which fell to a rate of 324,000.


By region of the country, construction activity fell a sharp 37.5 percent in the Northeast, a region hit by frigid weather in February. Construction was also down in the West, dropping 5.5 percent.


But activity in the Midwest, which had fallen sharply in January because of bad weather, rebounded 34.5 percent in February. Activity was up 7.3 percent in the South, the region which accounts for more than half of home construction.


The big rise in permit applications pushed activity to the highest level since October's 1.04 million rate, which had been the fastest pace since June 2008.


Housing, while still a long way from the boom of several years ago, has been recovering over the past two years. Residential construction has grown at double-digit rates over the past two years and contributed about one-third of a percentage point to overall economic growth last year.


Many economists predict that sales of both new and existing homes will rise in 2014, lifted by an improving economy and steady job growth. In 2013, housing construction had its best showing since 2007.


Though new homes represent only a fraction of the housing market, they have an outsize impact on the economy. Each home built creates an average of three jobs for a year and generates about $90,000 in tax revenue, according to data from the homebuilders association.


U.S. homebuilders' confidence in the housing market edged slightly higher in March, reflecting in part improved demand for homes as the spring home-selling season began to ramp up.


But builders said they were continuing to struggle with a shortage of skilled workers, rising building materials costs and a shortage of available land to build new homes.


The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo builder sentiment index released Monday rose to 47. That's up from February's reading of 46. Readings below 50 indicate that more builders view sales conditions as poor rather than good.


The overall index had been above 50 from June through January, reflecting a strengthening housing market.



Tax chief warns tax bill delay has consequences


Minnesota Revenue Commissioner Myron Frans says his agency is fast approaching an internal deadline for alerting tax preparers and software vendors of new tax breaks that filers might qualify for this year.


He delivered a warning Tuesday because lawmakers haven't passed a tax relief measure with extra deductions and exemptions that can be claimed on 2013 taxes. An estimated 1.1 million filers will submit returns between April 1 and April 15.


Frans told The Associated Press that if a bill isn't enacted by this week it will be difficult to assure hundreds of thousands of people of their qualifying credits. Some people would have to file amended returns if they want the money.


The House has approved a tax measure but is waiting on a matching Senate bill.



Baton Rouge planning commission sets interviews


Four finalists for the city-parish planning director's job will be invited back to Baton Rouge for another round of interviews after the Planning Commission's top pick removed his name from consideration last week.


The Advocate reports (http://bit.ly/1kEWm8g ) those still in the running include planners from Atlanta, Central, Norfolk, Va., and Columbus, Ga., with decades of experience in the field.


Commissioners say they are hopeful that another round of interviews, following initial interviews earlier this month, will give more insight into the candidates so a final decision can be made. The timeline isn't yet finalized, and it could be several days before interview dates are set.


"I want the commission to feel confident in the process that we have utilized," Planning Commission Chairwoman Tara Wicker said. "I think it was a good process. There are always things that may occur that you don't have control over."


The commission appeared to reach a final decision after spending more than four months vetting more than 90 applications for the parish's top planning job.


Cincinnati Planning Director Charles Graves declined the job offer Wednesday, a decision Wicker attributed to media attention.


The candidates invited back to Baton Rouge for second interviews are:


— Woodrow Muhammad, the planning director for Central, who has degrees from LSU and Southern University.


— Former planning director for Norfolk, Va., Frank Duke, who holds degrees from the University of Alabama in Birmingham, Auburn University and Florida State University, and served as an intern for Baton Rouge's retired planning director, Troy Bunch.


— Don Broussard, who owns a planning and design firm in Atlanta, has previously served in public planning roles in that area and has degrees from Georgia Tech and LSU.


— Former East Alabama Regional Planning and Development Commission planning director Carolyn Rutledge, of Columbus, Ga., who has a degree from Ole Miss.



Appeals court in Va. to hear torture case


Four former Iraqi detainees who claim they were tortured at the Abu Ghraib prison are asking a federal appeals court to reinstate their lawsuit against a military contractor.


A three-judge panel of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals will hear arguments in the case Tuesday morning. A district court judge dismissed the lawsuit in June.


The plaintiffs claim that employees of military contractor CACI Premier Technology directed solders to torture them to soften them up for interrogation. They claim they were subjected to electrical shocks, sexual violence and forced nudity. They allegedly suffered broken bones and were deprived of oxygen, food and water.


Photos of detainee abuse at Abu Ghraib that became public in 2004 shocked the national conscience.



Toy company settles suit against Beastie Boys


A California toy company has settled its lawsuit against the Beastie Boys over its parody of their song "Girls" in a promotional video that went viral.


The Oakland Tribune says (http://bit.ly/1mfjPQr ) an agreement to dismiss the claim was filed Monday in U.S. District Court. No details of the settlement were released.


Oakland-based Goldieblox filed suit in November, seeking to pre-empt any possible claims of copyright infringement over the repurposed song.


The video, which shows young girls singing about science and engineering, was viewed millions of times before it was removed from YouTube.


The Beastie Boys countersued Goldieblox in December. The newspaper says it was not immediately clear if Monday's settlement would have any effect on that claim.


The hip-hop group has a blanket ban on using their songs in advertisements.



Boulder considers negotiated bonds for open space


Boulder officials are asking the city council to use a negotiated bond sale rather than a competitive bond sale the next time the city sells open space bonds.


According to the Boulder Daily Camera (http://tinyurl.com/pvu44ak), a negotiated bond sale would allow the city to line up environmentally conscious investors in advance of the sale.


Boulder voters approved a charter amendment in November that allows for such sales. That charter amendment passed with 75 percent of the vote.


Previously, the city charter required competitive bond sales that did not allow such restrictions.



UC Berkeley hires first Wikipedian-in-residence


A 24-year-old geography major is the first Wikipedian-in-residence at the University of California, Berkeley.


The Contra Costa Times reports (http://bit.ly/1mfnaz2 ) the school has hired Kevin Gorman to advise students and professors on the complex task of editing articles for Wikipedia, the user-generated online encyclopedia that gets 500 million monthly visitors.


The newspaper says more than 150 universities nationwide — including the University of San Francisco and California Maritime Academy — have classes producing content for Wikipedia.


Cal is the first American university to create a position devoted to improving the site and getting its own scholarship out to the public.


Editing Wikipedia articles is already part of the curricula in environmental justice and cultural studies courses. The students will tackle existing articles on air pollution, urban agriculture and hydraulic fracturing.



France raises doubts about Russia's G-8 role


France's foreign minister cast doubt Tuesday on Russia's participation in the Group of Eight world powers because of its incursion into Crimea, saying the other members of the elite economic club are ready to meet without Moscow.


Other G-8 countries said that no decision has yet been made on Russia's future in the group. It's an especially sensitive question now, because Russia has the G-8's rotating leadership and is scheduled to host U.S. President Barack Obama and other leaders for a summit in Sochi in June.


Amid tensions between Russia and the West over Ukraine, the other members of the group — the U.S. Britain, Germany, Japan, France, Italy and Canada — had already suspended preparations for that summit.


French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius went further Tuesday, saying on Europe-1 radio that "concerning the G-8 ... we decided to suspend Russia's participation, and it is envisaged that all the other countries, the seven leading countries, will unite without Russia."


Fabius did not give further details.


Allies suggested he spoke too soon, amid a frenzy of diplomacy around Ukraine and Russia in recent weeks.


Britain's Foreign Office said Tuesday that Russia is still part of the G-8 — but did not rule out a suspension.


"The G-7 collectively made clear last week that we would take further action should the Russian Federation seek to annex Crimea," the Foreign Office said in a statement. "We are keeping this under review and talking to G-7 partners."


In Tokyo, Japanese Foreign Ministry spokesman Masaru Sato said Japan is not aware of any decision to suspend Russia and hold a G-7 summit elsewhere. Germany's Foreign Ministry said it had no information about a change.


Russia joined the seven established market economies to form the G-8 in the 1990s, but has been a bit of an odd man out at their annual meetings. The G-8 has been eclipsed in recent years by the G-20, which includes China and emerging markets and was created to better represent the drivers of the 21st-century global economy.



Cassandra Vinograd in London, Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo and Geir Moulson in Berlin contributed to this report.


India to appeal over scrapped helicopter deal


India says it will appeal a decision by an Italian court to reject New Delhi's request to recover $387 million in bank guarantees in a scrapped helicopter deal.


India canceled the contract with Italian-owned Finmeccanica's helicopter arm AgustaWestland in January amid allegations that the company paid bribes to win the $750 million deal for 12 luxury helicopters to ferry VIPs.


"The government of India will be filing an appeal against the order of the Italian court in Milan," defense ministry spokesman Sitanshu Kar said in a statement Tuesday.


India received three of the helicopters and stopped the delivery of the remaining nine.


The defense ministry says the agreement was terminated because an integrity pact was breached by AgustaWestland.



Primark to pay $9 million to Bangladesh victims


British clothing firm Primark says it will pay a further $9 million in long-term compensation to victims of the collapse of the Rana Plaza factory in Bangladesh.


The compensation announced Tuesday is being paid to the 580 employees of Primark supplier, New Wave Bottoms, which occupied the second floor of the eight-story structure.


A further $1 million is being made to workers in the supply chain of competitors and will be paid to a trust fund run by the International Labour Organization.


The payments, which Primark hopes will be complete in 12 months, take the total the company is paying to $12 million.


Last year's collapse killed more than 1,100 people and highlighted the grim conditions in Bangladesh's garment industry, a major supplier to global fashion brands.



Greece reaches long-delayed deal on bailout loans


Greece concluded its tortuous negotiations with its international debt inspectors Tuesday, reaching a deal that will allow the release of a long-delayed rescue loan installment.


The deal does not contain any new austerity measures, Prime Minister Antonis Samaras insisted. In fact, some 500 million euros ($695 million) will be distributed to help more than 1 million needy Greeks.


"Today a long period of tribulations has ended, and a new beginning is being made," Samaras said. Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras said the text of the agreement was being written up.


Greece has depended on its bailout from other European countries and the International Monetary Fund since mid-2010. Payment of the rescue loans depend on the country meeting criteria in spending cuts, tax increases and reforms, and Greece's progress in meeting the targets is reviewed regularly by the debt inspectors, collectively known as the 'troika'.


Greece began this latest round of negotiations in September with officials from the IMF, European Central Bank and European Commission. Talks had snagged on several issues, including public sector firings and market reforms.


"These were seven very, very difficult months," Stournaras said.


Apart from the 500 million euros that would be distributed to Greece's poorest, Samaras said an additional 1 billion euros ($1.39 billion) would go toward paying off the state's internal debts — for goods and services received from the Greek private sector. That will raise to 2.8 billion euros the amount it will pay off in internal debts in 2014.



Sleiman to convene National Dialogue late March


BEIRUT: President Michel Sleiman is expected to resume National Dialogue sessions at the end of month to continue discussions on the remaining items of the agenda, particularly the national defense strategy, Information Minister Ramzi Joreige said Tuesday.


“The president will call for a National Dialogue session before he travels to Kuwait and will convene the session following his arrival at the end of the month,” Joreige told The Daily Star.


The last Dialogue session was held on Nov. 12 in 2012 when Sleiman proposed a national defense strategy that would allow Hezbollah to keep its arms but place them under the command of the Lebanese Army which would have exclusive authority to use force.


The arms of the resistance would be used by the state until the Army can take over all defense responsibilities.


In 2012, the government approved a five-year plan worth $4.4 billion to provide the Army with weapons.



Adams County approves new crude oil pipeline


Commissioners in Adams County have voted to approve construction of a new pipeline to carry crude oil from Colorado to Oklahoma.


The White Cliffs Twin Pipeline will run parallel to an existing pipeline. It is intended to double the capacity. Together, the pipelines will be able to move about 150,000 barrels of oil per day.


The Denver Post reports (http://tinyurl.com/me85wet) the board voted Monday to include a requirement that requires the operators to comply with new state air quality regulations.


The pipeline will cross Adams County through about 23 miles of the northeast corner of the county. In total, the pipelines both span about 527 miles, originating in Platteville, Colo., and traveling to Cushing, Okla.



DeSoto leaders approve plan to attract industry


DeSoto County will ask the Legislature to approve a bill to let the board of supervisors get money or "in-kind" services to a local economic development agency.


The Commercial Appeal reports (http://bit.ly/1iZyCKs ) supervisors took action Monday after being told that two industrial prospects were looking at the county. The prospects were not identified.


Supervisors gave authority to the DeSoto Economic Development Council to negotiate with prospects, "package" deals on "certificated" sites and bring them to the board for action.


While the county would not have control of appointees to the council, the supervisors would decide whether to provide funding for infrastructure, site reviews and other needs.


Board attorney Tony Nowak said the local and private bill would "authorize the county to give funds directly to the council for projects, but doesn't authorize the council to expend funds."


"The western part of DeSoto County has been identified by the Mississippi Development Authority as one of the chief opportunity areas of the state," said Supervisor Bill Russell of Walls. "We have roads, rails, the Mississippi River, electric power, sewer, gas, workforce access. We have everything — except a certification process, which this will help accomplish. And if a site isn't certificated when a prospect shows up, they won't wait — they'll just go somewhere else."


Certification, said Russell, tells a prospect that a site "is shovel-ready. It means it's been checked out on pre-construction issues; no one wants to spend millions developing a site and only then find out it's on an Indian burial ground."


Russell's motion included a $25 million cap in the proposed bill on what the county can spend to draw prospects through the end of 2015.


Russell said he'd like to see more manufacturing: "We're proud of the industries on each side of the county, but manufacturing would mean a lot for stability."



Federal grand jury looks into Duke Energy spill


A federal grand jury is convening as part of a widening criminal investigation triggered by the massive Duke Energy coal ash spill that coated 70 miles of the Dan River with toxic sludge.


The grand jury will meet Tuesday at the federal courthouse in Raleigh. Prosecutors have issued at least 23 subpoenas to Duke executives and state officials.


U.S. Attorney Thomas Walker declined to comment, citing the secrecy of grand jury proceedings.


The subpoenas seek records from Duke, the North Carolina Utilities Commission and the state environmental agency. They include reams of documents, including emails, memos and reports related to the Feb. 2 spill into the Dan River and the state's oversight of the company's nearly three dozen other coal ash dumps spread out at 14 power plants.



Ascension administration to hire auditor


Ascension Parish Assessor M.J. Smiley Jr. says he plans to proceed with hiring a firm to audit the parish's salt dome caverns, although the Parish Council will not reconsider participating in paying for the effort.


The Advocate reports (http://bit.ly/1kEZXDz ) Smiley and his staff have found that caverns in Ascension Parish's two salt domes have not been on tax rolls in at least 10 years and want to hire a Texas company other parish assessors are using to assess other unreported caverns in Louisiana.


Parish Attorney O'Neil Parenton Jr. has advised the council that paying for an expert to determine the caverns' assessed values would create the appearance of a conflict. The Parish Council sits as the Board of Review to hear appeals of property tax rolls compiled by the assessor.



Vote on rezoning request in Gonzales delayed


A rezoning request to increase the commercial density for a 22-acre site on La. Highway 44 has been put off for six months by the Gonzales City Council.


Nancy LeBlanc Bondy, representing the PriceCo company, made the request that the council take another look at a request for a zoning change from C-1 commercial to C-2 commercial for the site.


A developer's earlier request for the rezoning, to clear the way for the construction of Crawford Electric supply company on the property, failed.


The Advocate reports (http://bit.ly/1p7aS8Y ) the Crawford company has since made plans to build in Ascension Parish, outside the city limits.


On Monday night, a motion was made to reconsider the rezoning request.


Before a vote was taken, substitute motion passed to delay any action for six months.



Company owned by L'Wren Scott in debt


The company owned by fashion designer L'Wren Scott, who died yesterday of an apparent suicide, was heavily in debt at the time it filed its most recent accounts.


Accounts filed by LS Fashion Ltd. in London show the company run by the girlfriend of Mick Jagger had liabilities that exceeded assets by 4.24 million euros ($5.9 million) as of Dec. 31, 2012.


The company's long and short-term debts totaled 6.75 million euros against assets, capital and reserves of 2.51 million euros, according to the accounts, which were filed in October.


Meanwhile, concert organizers said the Rolling Stones had canceled a gig scheduled for Wednesday in Perth, Australia. There was no immediate word on future dates on their tour.



Hertz spinning off its equipment rental business


Hertz plans to spin off its equipment rental business into a separate publicly traded company.


The car rental company says it will receive about $2.5 billion in proceeds, which will be used to pay down debt and to support a new $1 billion stock buyback.


The new business will be called Hertz Equipment Rental Corp. The spinoff will leave Hertz with the Dollar, Thrifty, Hertz and Firefly rental car businesses and Donlen, which provides fleet leasing and management services.


Its board has approved the separation plans. Mark Frissora will remain Chairman and CEO of Hertz.


The equipment rental company will determine its management and board as separation plans are finalized.


Hertz Global Holdings Inc. anticipates the spinoff closing by early next year.


Its shares rose more than 2 percent in premarket trading.



Bottled water company to promote 'Pure Michigan'


A bottled water company is partnering with Michigan's tourism campaign to showcase some of the state's natural beauty.


Plymouth-based Absopure announced the plans with the Michigan Economic Development Corp.


Starting this month, 24 and 35 packs of Absopure Natural Spring Water sold in the Midwest will carry packaging co-branded with "Pure Michigan." In the coming months, other Absopure products nationally will be packaged with "Pure Michigan" imagery.


Absopure and the tourism campaign also will release co-sponsored billboards as well as radio and TV ads.


The Travel Michigan state tourism agency, which is part of the Michigan Economic Development Corp., this week launched the 2014 "Pure Michigan" national television advertising campaign. The effort includes ads on national cable channels as well as network television.


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Online:


http://bit.ly/1ieGNDp


http://bit.ly/1gBER8n



Great Lakes to stop service to 2 ND airports


Great Lakes Airlines will suspend service to two more North Dakota locations by the end of the month.


The Wyoming-based company says it is suspending service to the Dickinson and Williston airports. Last month it pulled out of Devils Lake and Jamestown.


Great Lakes has said it is pulling out of several regional airports because of problems retaining pilots. The company has cited new federal rules that require co-pilots to log 1,500 flight hours before they can work for commercial airlines. They previously required 250 hours.


The new regulations have also affected Great Lakes flights in Pierre, S.D. The shortage of pilots caused about 17 percent of flights to be cancelled in February in Pierre.



Lebanese Army, gunmen exchange gunfire in Tripoli


BEIRUT/TRIPOLI: Lebanese soldiers exchanged gunfire with gunmen in the northern city of Tripoli Tuesday after Army units came under repeated attacks at night, security sources said.


There were no reports of casualties from the fresh flare-up that broke out at 10 a.m.


During the skirmish with assault rifles, gunmen fired three rocket-propelled grenades toward an Army post in Talaat al-Omari, but missed the target, the sources added.


They said gunmen lobbed several stun grenades at Lebanese Army posts in the Tripoli neighborhoods of Ghorabaa, Beddawi and Mankoubeen between 8 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. Monday.


An Army position on Syria Street also came under a similar attack. No casualties were reported.


Syria Street separates the warring Tripoli neighborhoods of Jabal Mohsen, a predominantly Alawite area that owes allegiance to Syrian President Bashar Assad, and mainly Sunni Bab al-Tabbaneh, which supports the Syrian uprising.


Soldiers deployed in the warring neighborhoods in December in an effort to end more than a dozen rounds of fighting between pro- and anti-Assad gunmen linked to the crisis in next-door Syria.


The two sides have been in on-again, off-again conflict since the 1980s but the three-year-old war in Syria between Assad, an Alawite, and the majority Sunni rebels has opened old wounds in Tripoli with recurrent bouts of gun battles.


Scores of fighters, Sunnis among them, have been arrested by the Army as it pursues a six-month-long mandate to end bloodshed in battering Tripoli.


Sunnis, however, accuse the military of targeting them while turning a blind eye to Alawites.


The nighttime hostilities kept thousands of students at home for a sixth day as schools and universities remained closed.


Monday’s clashes brought the death toll to 15 and the number of wounded to around 90 since the latest round of violence erupted Thursday.


Prime Minister Tammam Salam is scheduled to hold a meeting at the Grand Serail Tuesday with Tripoli’s lawmakers, including former Prime Minister Najib Mikati, to discuss ways to restore stability in Tripoli.



Detroit-area man accused of supporting Hezbollah


DETROIT, United States: U.S. agents say they arrested a Detroit-area man before he could fly to the Middle East to fight Syrian rebels.


Twenty-two-year-old Mohammad Hamdan is charged with breaking a law that prohibits support for terrorist organizations. The government says Hassan planned to fight with Hezbollah, a Lebanese group the U.S. classifies as a terrorist organization.


Hezbollah fighters have been aiding Syrian President Bashar Assad.


Hamdan was arrested Sunday at Detroit Metropolitan Airport. He told the FBI he was traveling for dental work, not war in Syria.


The Dearborn resident appeared in federal court Monday. He was returned to jail to await a March 24 court hearing. Defense attorney Art Weiss says Hamdan is "adamant that he didn't do anything wrong."


The FBI says an informant recorded conversations with Hamdan.



Army bolsters security in northeast Lebanon


HERMEL, Lebanon: The Lebanese Army stepped up security measures along the northern border with Syria Monday, detonating a rigged car and arresting suspects, in efforts to reduce spillover from the crisis in neighboring Syria.


The Army said in a statement that explosive experts blew up a vehicle in the village of Ras Baalbek in northeast Lebanon, loaded with around 170 kilograms of explosives.


The statement said that Army Intelligence spotted the car in an unpopulated area near a school after it received information that it could be rigged with explosives.


Due to the danger of dismantling or even moving the vehicle, the Army made the decision to detonate it in place, the statement said.


Security sources told The Daily Star that the silver Grand Cherokee, whose driver had fled, was believed to have been accompanying the rigged car that exploded in the village of Nabi Othman Sunday.


They added that both came from Syria and had taken the same route.


Fears mounted about the security situation in northeast Lebanon after the Syrian army, backed by Hezbollah, regained control of the previously rebel-held bastion of Yabroud Sunday.


Many gunmen from the Syrian opposition fled Yabroud to the mountainous outskirts of Arsal. Residents of the Bekaa Valley village support the Syrian rebels and host thousands of Syrian refugees.


Speaking to The Daily Star, an Army source said that Lebanese soldiers from the airborne regiment had deployed on the northern border in a bid to prevent the infiltration of gunmen and entry of rigged cars.


Army units conducted sweeps on the outskirts of several border towns in the Bekaa Valley, particularly Arsal, Ras Baalbek and Fakiha.


The military worked to seal all illegal border crossings along the northeastern border.


The Army said that one of its units detained 19 Syrian gunmen and two Lebanese trying to cross into Lebanon through the northern Akkar region of Wadi Khaled near the border with Syria.


The Army said that an AK-47, two pistols, ammunition, 30 cell phones, a laptop and money in different currencies were confiscated during the arrests.


Also Monday, one rocket landed in the village of Labweh and three others hit the outskirts of the town and Nabi Othman in northeast Lebanon. Both villages are associated with Hezbollah.


The Army said the rockets were fired from Syrian territory at 1:30 p.m. and left one wounded along with causing material damage.


But security sources said that the rockets were launched by gunmen positioned in the mountainous outskirts of Arsal inside Lebanon.


The sources added that the family of Labweh resident Mohammad Ammar narrowly escaped death when a rocket hit their house.


Angry residents of Labweh blocked the road linking the village to Arsal in retaliation.


Explosions were also heard in Arsal. The sources said this was from retaliatory rocket attacks targeting launchers in Arsal from which the rockets were fired.


Residents of the two villages exchanged sniper fire around the area of Wadi al-Shuob, which separates Arsal from Labweh. This prompted some residents of the area to leave their homes.


Ramez Amhaz, Labweh’s mayor, told The Daily Star that efforts were being made by prominent figures in northern Bekaa to defuse tension between the two villages.


He said that residents of Labweh blocked the road to Arsal in order to protect it from any retaliatory attack on the road.


For his part, Baker Hujeiry, a Future Movement official in Arsal, said that the group had asked the Lebanese Army to take control of the border.


Amhaz and Hujeiry both said they were optimistic that the situation in the area would improve in the coming days.


“What we are witnessing is a result of tensions from the fall of Yabroud. I think tensions will ease in the coming days,” Hujeiry said.


Speaking to other media outlets, Amhaz urged residents of Arsal to cooperate with the state to clear Arsal of Syrian rebels.


He accused Mustafa Hujeiry, from Arsal, of establishing makeshift hospitals in the town to treat members of the Nusra Front and the Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria (ISIS) fleeing Syria.


The discovery of the rigged car in Ras Baalbek came hours after a suicide bomber killed at least three people, including two Hezbollah members, and wounded 11 others in the east Lebanon village of Nabi Othman Sunday evening.


The Nusra Front in Lebanon claimed responsibility for the attack, saying it was a “quick response” to Hezbollah’s “bragging” about the “usurping” of Yabroud.Forensic experts collected evidence from the explosion site Monday, where extensive damage was evident.


The Lebanese Army said in a statement that the green Grand Cherokee that exploded had been rigged with around 100 kg of explosives.


Sources familiar with investigation said the vehicle had taken a sandy smuggling route through the mountainous outskirts of Arsal and was heading toward the area of Wadi Rafiq facing the village of Ras Baalbek. The Grand Cherokee then headed to the village of Fakiha and took the international road.


The sources said the car’s planned destination was believed to have been Labweh or another village in the northern Bekaa Valley. The identity of the suicide bomber has yet to be identified.


President Michel Sleiman praised intense efforts made by security services to prevent terrorists from carrying out their plans.


He called on security bodies to remain alert and coordinate with each other in order to preserve civil peace.


For his part, Prime Minister Tammam Salam urged the Army to take measures in order to control the situation in border regions in the Bekaa Valley.


He made his remarks to military chief Gen. Jean Kahwagi who visited him at the Grand Serail.


The spokesperson of the French Foreign Ministry condemned the Nabi Othman explosion, cross-border attacks and violence in the city of Tripoli.


For its part, the U.S. Embassy slammed the “act of terror,” calling on all parties in Lebanon to respect the disassociation policy and abstain from acts that endangered Lebanon’s stability and security.