Sunday, 13 April 2014

Lebanon's Arabic press digest - Apr. 14, 2014


The following are a selection of stories from Lebanese newspapers that may be of interest to Daily Star readers. The Daily Star cannot vouch for the accuracy of these reports.


An-Nahar


Will Parliament torpedo salary scale tomorrow?


UCC: strike and sit-in Tuesday


Confusion in Parliament over the pay hike, a disappointed UCC, and caution from the banks and economic bodies.


A legislative session Tuesday is expected to turn into a confrontation that could torpedo the salary scale and postpone it to a new round of political-unions conflict.


As-Safir


Berri optimistic ... Jumblatt voices fear ... Future bloc swaying


Pay scale [to be] signed tomorrow: politicians under siege


Everyone is geared up for the signing of the new wage scale in Parliament Tuesday.


Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri is pushing toward the approval of the salary raise accompanied by an “unusual” reform and funding package.


For his part, Progressive Socialist Party leader MP Walid Jumblatt warned of a Greece-like economic disaster.


Meanwhile, the Union Coordination Committee is preparing to strike Tuesday to pressure MPs to sign the wage hike and prevent abuses of its rights.


The economic committees, in turn, are using all their cards to reduce the losses that will inflict damage on their profit.


The Future bloc is facing a growing divide between the mood on the streets and capitalists’ interest.


Al-Akhbar


Riyadh yet to make final decision on Aoun’s nomination for president, Geagea’s chances very low in Saudi Arabia


MP Michel Aoun has not gotten a final answer from Saad Hariri or Saudi Arabia about his candidacy for the presidency.


However, Aoun has Hezbollah’s full support and encouraging statements from the U.S.


Sources following up on Future Movement politicians’ visits to Saudi Arabia said Hariri and Riyadh have yet to make up their minds on Aoun’s nomination.


The sources said Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea stands very little chance of getting Saudi support for his candidacy.


They also said Hariri is yet to make a decision on Geagea’s nomination.


Al-Joumhouria


Bkirki in a hurry, Berri taking it easy and Future Movement yet to decide its stance


While waiting for Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri to set a date for the presidential election, political stances focused on the imminent ballot, with the exception of the Future Movement, which is yet to announce its position on the presidential candidate.


Berri has said that he will call a presidential election session after Parliament had approved the pay scale.


Al-Mustaqbal


Rai calls for balancing “reform and rights”


Jumblatt for the appropriateness of "commitments and supplies”


Salary scale between installment and batches


Addressing the pay hike during a Palm Sunday Mass, Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai called for balancing “peoples’ rights, the state’s capabilities and necessary reform.”


On the eve of a meeting of the National Struggle Front chaired by MP Walid Jumblatt Monday, sources from the bloc told Al-Mustaqbal that the coalition stressed the need to secure “real funding sources” to finance the pay scale before approval.



Syrian rockets hit east Lebanon


BEIRUT: Three rockets fired from Syria landed on barren terrain outside Labweh in east Lebanon Friday, security sources said.


There were no immediate reports of casualties.


The 8:20 a.m. attack was claimed by the Sunni militant group Liwaa Ahrar al-Sunna.


Labweh, a predominantly-Shiite town, has been targeted in the past by militant Islamist groups fighting in Syria seeking to retaliate against Hezbollah for its role in the war.



GlencoreXstrata selling Peruvian mine for $5.85B


A group of Chinese state-owned companies is buying a Peruvian copper mine from Glencore Xstrata Plc for $5.85 billion, adding to a wave of Chinese resource acquisitions abroad.


Glencore, based in Switzerland, said Sunday it signed an agreement to sell its entire interest in the Las Bambas copper mine to a consortium led by MMG Ltd., a mining company controlled by state-owned China Minmetals Nonferrous Metals Co. Ltd. The other buyers are Guoxin International Investment Corp. and Citic Metal Co., also state-controlled.


The purchase adds to a multibillion-dollar string of foreign acquisitions by China's government-owned energy and mining companies, which hope to profit from future demand.


The agreement also requires the buyers to reimburse Glencore for the cost of developing the copper mine from the start of the year until the sale closes. In the first three months of the year, those costs were roughly $400 million, according to Glencore's statement.


Glencore said it expects to close the sale before the end of September. It still needs MMG's shareholders and China's Ministry of Commerce to approve the deal.


Last year, Chinese mining and energy acquisitions abroad totaled $29.8 billion, according to Dealogic, a financial information firm. They included China National Petroleum Corp.'s $4.2 billion purchase of an interest in an oilfield in Mozambique from Italy's ENI.



Asian stocks decline after US losses


Asian stock markets fell Monday following two days of U.S. declines and forecasts of lower American corporate profits.


Oil rose above $104 per barrel amid renewed tensions between Ukraine and Russia.


China's benchmark Shanghai Composite Index lost 0.4 percent to 2,122.38 and the regional heavyweight, Tokyo's Nikkei 225, shed 0.1 percent to 13,944.43. Sydney's S&P/ASX 200 dropped 0.9 percent to 5,381.90.


The declines came after investors drove U.S. markets lower for a second day Friday due to anxiety that earnings growth was faltering.


Financial analysts expect earnings for companies in the Standard & Poor's 500 to drop 1.6 percent from a year earlier, according to FactSet, a financial data provider. That was a reversal from the start of the year, when they expected a jump of 4.3 percent.


"We believe the selling is not finished," said Bank of America Merrill Lynch in a report.


Hong Kong's Hang Seng shed 0.1 percent to 22,980.27 and Taiwan's Taiex lost 0.5 percent to 8,867.20.


Seoul's Kospi was the only major market to gain, rising 0.1 percent to 1,999.08. Singapore and Jakarta also rose.


In Japan, retailers are feeling the impact of a sales tax hike that took effect April 1. Department stores such as Takashimaya, Mitsukoshi and Sogo said sales plunged by 10 to 25 percent in the first week of April.


"Consumption demand has fallen sharply since the new tax rate took effect," said DBS Group in a report.


On Friday, the Nasdaq dropped 54.37 points, or 1.3 percent, to 3,999.73. It was only the second time this year the index has closed below the 4,000 mark. February 3 was the last time it ended below that level.


The Dow Jones industrial average fell 143.47 points, or 0.9 percent, to 16,026.75. The S&P 500 fell 17.39 points, or 1 percent, to 1,815.69.


In energy markets, benchmark U.S. crude for May delivery was up 55 cents to $104.29 after Ukraine's government announced Sunday it was sending in troops to try to quash a pro-Russian insurgency in eastern Ukraine despite warnings from the Kremlin. Markets have been rattled by concern Western sanctions against Moscow might disrupt Russian exports of oil and gas. The contract rose 34 cents Friday to close at $103.74.


In currency markets, the dollar fell to 101.54 yen from 101.63 yen late Friday. The euro was almost unchanged at $1.3852.



Longtime Neb. rabbi who invested with Buffett dies


A longtime Omaha rabbi who became a philanthropist after investing with Warren Buffett in the 1960s has died.


The Omaha World-Herald reports (http://bit.ly/1sXDTZx ) Rabbi Myer Kripke died Friday at the age of 100.


Rabbi Steven Abraham says his predecessor at Omaha's Beth El Synagogue remains beloved by the congregation he led from 1947 to 1975.


Kripke stayed active in the community long after becoming rabbi emeritus at Beth El, and he often gave talks explaining his faith to non-Jewish audiences.


Kripke was able to become a philanthropist later in life because he invested with his friend Buffett, who he'd met during the 1950s.


One of the bigger gifts Kripke and his wife made was a $7 million donation to the Jewish Theological Seminary he attended in New York City.



AP source: Dumars out as Detroit's team president


The Detroit Pistons have decided not to renew Joe Dumars' contract as president of basketball operations, a person familiar with the situation said Sunday.


The person, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the team has not made any announcement on Dumars' future, says Dumars will remain with the Pistons as an adviser.


Dumars was named the 2003 executive of the year, and the Pistons won the title the following season, adding the 2004 crown to the two they won when Dumars was a player. But Detroit hasn't made the playoffs since 2009, and the retooled Pistons flopped badly this season.


Detroit has one of the game's top young big men in Andre Drummond, but he's one of the franchise's few bright spots at the moment.


The Pistons now must hire a new general manager, and in the meantime, ownership executives Phil Norment and Bob Wentworth are expected to supervise preparations for the draft and free agency.


Detroit signed Josh Smith and traded for Brandon Jennings last offseason in what seemed like a return to relevance, but the new-look roster lacked cohesion at times. Coach Maurice Cheeks was fired in February, and the Pistons are 29-52 with one game remaining.


"I think overall we have a quality team as is," forward Kyle Singler said. "I don't know necessarily the formula to win, but we just weren't able to get into a groove earlier on in the year to gain confidence and know that we're a playoff team."


Now owner Tom Gores will try to find someone else to pull the team out of its doldrums.


Dumars began running the Pistons in 2000, and he made one shrewd move after another at first, acquiring Ben Wallace in a trade for Grant Hill and sending Jerry Stackhouse to Washington for Richard Hamilton.


He brought Rasheed Wallace to Detroit in another trade and signed Chauncey Billups as a free agent. Even a draft-day blunder in 2003 — picking Darko Milicic over Carmelo Anthony with the No. 2 pick — seemed like an aberration when the Pistons beat the Los Angeles Lakers in the finals the following year.


That title, however, is well in the past. The Pistons have played in front of sparse crowds in recent years, struggling to stay relevant in Detroit while the Tigers have drawn fans in droves to their downtown ballpark.


In 2008, Dumars traded Billups in a deal that brought Allen Iverson to the Pistons. That move didn't work out, and neither did the decision to sign Ben Gordon and Charlie Villanueva to big contracts during the 2009 offseason.


Once Gores took over after the 2010-11 season, the Pistons were undeniably in a rebuilding mode. Last offseason, Dumars had another chance to show he could guide the franchise back to contention. Instead, the Pistons have been one of the league's most disappointing teams in 2013-14.



AP Sports Writer Larry Lage contributed.


Vast majority of Massachusetts taxpayers e-filing


The overwhelming majority of Massachusetts taxpayers are filing their state tax returns electronically.


The Department of Revenue reported that as of Friday it processed just under 2.5 million returns, of which nearly 2.2 million had been e-filed.


The agency reported issuing about 1.8 million refunds totaling $858 million. The average turnaround time for a refund was 3.3 days for returns filed electronically, and 5-1/2 days for paper returns.


The deadline for filing state and federal taxes is Tuesday.


The department said it was fielding about 34,000 calls a week with tax questions and the average wait time for callers was 46 seconds.



Logan coffee company owner dies after crash


The co-owner of a Logan coffee company has died from injuries suffered in an accident involving a suspected drunken driver.


Police say 68-year-old Randy Wirth died Saturday from injuries suffered in a three-vehicle collision Thursday in his hometown of Millville.


Cache County sheriff's investigators plan to pursue a negligent homicide charge against 40-year-old Alvin Henson of Millville, who's accused of driving under the influence.


Deputies say Henson's pickup truck collided with a car, and somehow Wirth also was struck while riding his motorcycle.


Investigators say no one saw the motorcycle and they still don't know how Wirth became involved in the accident.


Wirth co-owned Caffe Ibis Coffee Roasting Co. with his wife, Sally Sears.


The company operates a Logan coffee shop and sells packaged coffee in grocery stores across Utah.



Iowa hires nearly 400 without advertising the jobs


At least 386 state employees have been hired by Gov. Terry Branstad's administration without advertising the positions, but this is not a new practice in Iowa.


Critics told the Des Moines Register (http://dmreg.co/1nlFjJ9 ) the practice makes it easier for friends and campaign donors to land the jobs.


Branstad spokesman Jimmy Centers says the unadvertised hires are allowed under state law for certain jobs.


This practice is allowed for at-will jobs that come with fewer job protections that most government jobs.


Centers says another 2,300 people were hired for jobs that were advertised since Branstad took office in 2011.


Branstad's predecessor hired 604 employees into unadvertised jobs.



SW Fla's Warm Mineral Springs reopen to the public


Southwest Florida's Warm Mineral Springs have reopened to the public.


The attraction closed last summer after the concessions contractor's lease expired. Sarasota County and the city of North Port agreed to temporarily open the springs for bathing and swimming.


The Sarasota Herald-Tribune (http://bit.ly/Rg0N07 ) reports that the county hopes to develop the springs as a resort to attract more tourists, taxes and jobs. However, many city commissioners want to preserve the springs as an archaeological site and public park.


National and State Park Concessions Inc. will operate the springs as a swimming facility until September.



Chehab: First Army head turned president


Editor’s note: Ahead of the 2014 presidential election, this is the third in a series of articles examining the circumstances and conditions that shaped the elections of Lebanon’s 12 presidents since 1943.


BEIRUT: Pushed into politics, the former chief of the Lebanese Army Fouad Chehab sought an agenda of social justice for Lebanon’s disenfranchised groups when he was elected president in 1958.


His reformist internal policies drew the ire of the moneyed political class, while citizens throughout the country felt the increasing brawn of the military intelligence branch, the “Second Bureau,” under Chehab’s presidency.


Born to a once-wealthy Maronite family in Ghazir, Chehab joined the military and rose in the ranks throughout the French mandate, finally becoming the commander of the Lebanese Army in 1945 after the country achieved independence.


Under President Camille Chamoun, Chehab earned a reputation as a peacemaker during the 1958 civil conflict, in which he sought to retain order across the country rather than quash the largely Muslim rebelling factions. Chehab defied Chamoun’s orders to occupy militant strongholds in Beirut, according to author Fawwaz Traboulsi in his book “A History of Modern Lebanon.”


The bloody conflict between Chamoun’s largely pro-Western allies and supporters of the pan-Arabist Egyptian President Gamal Abdel-Nasser lasted for three months and ended when Chamoun requested U.S. troops enter Beirut to restore calm.


After this stormy, sectarian chapter in Lebanon, Chehab was elected president on July 31, 1958, with an overwhelming 48 out of 66 Parliamentary votes.


A reformist at heart, Chehab sought to integrate long-marginalized Muslim communities into the public sector. A new electoral law increased the number of parliamentary seats from 66 to 99, with 54 allotted to Christians and 45 going to Muslims.


Distrustful of the corrupt and sectarian political class, Chehab established the Civil Service Board, which administered an examination to hopeful civil servants, ensuring that the public sector was staffed by the most meritorious candidates. Aside from launching several ambitious projects to develop public services in rural areas, Chehab established the National Social Security Fund, declaring that “those who benefitted from prosperity should take care of the deprived Lebanese.”


In 1960, two years after he was elected, Chehab issued a statement of resignation before Parliament, shocking his supporters and opponents alike. Chehab claimed that he had fulfilled the goals he had defined when he assumed the presidency, including stabilizing the economy, calming sectarian tensions and improving relations with other Arab countries.


Privately, however, he told his ally and confident Progressive Socialist Party leader Kamal Jumblatt that he was frustrated by the slow pace of political reforms in the country and the resoluteness of the traditional sectarian leaders to retain power.


“I resigned after realizing that it would be difficult for me to defeat an internal enemy,” Chehab told Jumblatt, according to a book on the Druze leader by Ezzat Safi.


Immediately after his resignation, however, 91 out of 99 deputies signed a petition requesting Chehab withdraw his resignation, which he reluctantly did.


On New Year’s Eve 1961, Syrian Social Nationalist Party members joined by armed militias staged an unsuccessful coup against Chehab’s government. The New York Times described the foiled attempt as a “fiasco involving so few men that it could rather serve as proof of the essential stability of the regime.”


While the incident provoked wide public support for Chehab and the Lebanese Army, critics say that the coup attempt allowed the Second Bureau a carte blanche to crack down on dissent and impose order at a brutal cost.


Thousands of suspected coup sympathizers were arrested and, according to Traboulsi, “torture became a standard practice in detention centers and prisons.”


The Second Bureau’s power continued to expand, ultimately exerting its influence in politics and union activities.


When his term was drawing to an end in 1964, 74 out of 99 MPs signed a petition requesting a constitutional amendment that would allow Chehab to serve for a second term.


Chehab rejected the proposition, however: “I fulfilled my constitutional duty, and I have done what I could to the state and the people under the circumstances and capabilities that you know.”



Arrested Berlusconi aide was sent to help Gemayel campaign: report


BEIRUT: Silvio Berlusconi’s former aide, who was arrested in a Beirut hotel last week, was sent by the former premier at the request of Russia to help Kataeb leader Amine Gemayel win the Lebanese presidential election, according to an Italian newspaper.


“Marcello [Dell’Ultri] is in Lebanon and I sent him,” La Repubblica quoted Berlusconi as telling members of his Forza Italia! party. “I sent him to Beirut a few days ago because [Russian President] Vladimir Putin has asked me to support the campaign of Amine Gemayel.”


Gemayel could not immediately be reached for comment.


Dell’Utri, who is being tried in Italy for his alleged connection to the Sicilian Mafia, was detained Friday on an Interpol arrest warrant after Rome declared him a fugitive early last week. The final verdict in the case is due Tuesday, and Dell’Utri could face several years in prison if found guilty.


Exactly why Dell’Utri is in Lebanon has been the subject of much debate. The 72-year-old issued a statement Friday saying he was overseas to obtain medical treatment and was not escaping justice, but did not specify where.


Other reports have suggested that his arrival was the first step in an elaborate escape plan involving Guinea-Buissau in West Africa.


Berlusconi’s statement adds a bizarre twist to a case that will be examined by Lebanese authorities this week, as Italian officials press for his extradition under a bilateral agreement that has been in force since 1975, according to La Repubblica.


Exactly how Dell’Utri would be able to help Gemayel, who was president from 1982-88 and is seeking re-election this year, is unclear, and La Repubblica’s report did not elaborate on why Putin would want Berlusconi to help the Kataeb Party.



UCC calls strike ahead of salary scale debate


BEIRUT: The Union Coordination Committee called Sunday for a general strike ahead of a Parliament session to debate and endorse the public sector’s controversial wage hike bill.


The decision by the UCC, which represents civil servants and teachers in public and private schools, is aimed at exerting pressure on lawmakers to approve the salary scale draft law without slashing the 121 percent wage hike demanded by the UCC or rolling out the hike in installments.


Following an extraordinary meeting, the UCC urged Speaker Nabih Berri and sympathetic lawmakers to defend the salary scale bill during a session of Parliament’s general assembly Tuesday.


Berri has called the Parliament session to debate and vote on the public sector salary scale, which is estimated to cost the cash-strapped government over $1.6 billion annually.


The salary scale bill was approved last week by Parliament’s Joint Committees following a series of marathon sessions.


However, MPs failed to reach an agreement on when the wage hikes would come into effect, whether they would be retroactive and whether they would be paid in installments. They also remained split over the increase in value-added tax and on details of the raises for teachers.


The UCC has staunchly opposed a proposal made by Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh that the salary scale be paid in installments over a five-year period, insisting that it should be paid in full.


During its Sunday meeting, the UCC expressed misgivings about the results of the Joint Parliamentary Committees’ meetings, especially after lawmakers decided “to take the rights of teachers and civil servants to Parliament’s general assembly,” Hanna Gharib, head of the UCC, told a news conference.


“In order to ensure the approval of rights in full and in support of the positions of Speaker Nabih Berri and lawmakers who support these rights, the UCC recommends the implementation of a general and total strike in all ministries, public departments, municipalities and official and private schools Tuesday along with a central sit-in at 11 a.m. on the same day on Riad al-Solh Square,” Gharib said.


He added that the strike was designed to protect the salary scale and ward off risks surrounding it with regard to dividing or installing it, reducing its figures, or failing to approve the same 121 percent pay hike granted to judges and Lebanese University teachers.


Tuesday’s Parliament session is likely to see heated debates among MPs between supporters and opponents of the salary increase, which has been a demand of civil servants and teachers for several years.


Progressive Socialist Party leader MP Walid Jumblatt said his parliamentary bloc would vote against the salary scale draft law if the funding sources were not clear enough.


“My parliamentary bloc will object to the salary scale draft law if it lacks clear means of funding,” Jumblatt told An-Nahar newspaper.


“We will not vote for any increase, although we consider the demand for it justified, if it is not coupled with a real reform process in the public administrations and institutions,” he said. Jumblatt said that his bloc would meet Monday to discuss the issue.


Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai urged Parliament to balance three things while discussing the bill: The people’s rights, the state’s financial resources and the necessary reforms.


“Justice demands that the people be given their rights,” Rai said in a Palm Sunday Mass.


Hezbollah MP Hassan Fadlallah reiterated his party’s support for the bill and lashed out at business leaders who warned of dire consequences on the ailing economy if it was approved.


“We are adamant on our position in ... to approve the salary scale draft law, away from intimidation exercised by the owners of accumulated money who have collected their money from the pockets of the Lebanese,” Fadlallah told a memorial ceremony in the southern town of Bint Jbeil.


“Those who are making huge profits from the Lebanese people must pay a little. The taxes [in Lebanon] are much less than those imposed in Western and other countries,” he added.



Rifi says violence in Tripoli has ended, time for reconciliation


BEIRUT: Justice Minister Ashraf Rifi stressed Sunday there would be no more rounds of violence in the city of Tripoli, and that the newly implemented security plan was still ongoing and had the support of residents.


“The security plan is ongoing and the residents of Tripoli and the north support it, and their desire to live is the desire of every peaceful citizen seeking normal life,” the minister added.


Rifi met with the representatives of two rival families, Al-Aswad and Al-Liza, as well as elders and sheikhs from Bab al-Tabbaneh, to pave the way for reconciliation.


Rifi said he was working to achieve serious reconciliation and compromises between the residents.


Some 200 arrest warrants for wanted suspects in the city and other parts of the country have been issued as part of Tripoli’s security plan. The city has been plagued by Syria-linked clashes between the majority Sunni neighborhood of Bab al-Tabbaneh and the mostly Alawite Jabal Mohsen.


“Most of the wanted men are now outside of the country, and according to confirmed intelligence, Rifaat Eid is outside of the country, contrary to some reports,” the minister said.


Military Prosecutor Judge Saqr Saqr charged Eid, the Arab Democratic Party’s politburo chief, of belonging to an armed terror organization and carrying out terrorist acts in Tripoli.


According to Rifi, compensating families and individuals whose homes have been damaged by the fighting in both neighborhoods was in the works.


The Army’s assessment committees will begin to survey and quantify losses and damages midnext-week in both neighborhoods, the minister said, after which point the development plan, which aims to provide employment opportunities, will be implemented.


“The government has returned to Tripoli, with justice and equality,” Rifi said, thanking former premier Saad Hariri for his backing in the implementation of the security plan.


Also Sunday, MPs from Baalbek-Hermel held a meeting at their offices to discuss the latest Army-led crackdown to restore stability in the region.


The bloc noted “the enormous sacrifices made by the Army over the years,” in a statement read by Hezbollah MP Ali Moqdad.


It also called on all political and social officials to “support and cooperate with the Army and the security forces to provide security and stability.”


The security plan that was launched in the Bekaa Valley last week saw raids in Brital, an area once considered to be off-limits, in search for wanted individuals. The Army also set up checkpoints in several Bekaa Valley towns to look for wanted individuals.


The Internal Security Forces’ unit in Arsal confiscated nine vehicles over the weekend, six of which were stolen and three of which were without license plate numbers, according to the ISF’s General-Directorate.



With $41.4M, 'Captain America' holds off 'Rio 2'


"Captain America" continued to flex its Marvel muscle at the global box office, as "The Winter Soldier" took in $41.4 million domestically and $60.6 million overseas.


The strong second-week performance for the Walt Disney release in North America was enough to narrowly edge 20th Century Fox's "Rio 2" in a springtime battle of sequels. The animated Amazon jungle tale "Rio 2" debuted with $39 million, according to studio estimates Sunday, almost exactly the opening weekend total of the 2011 Oscar-nominated original.


But "Captain America" has grown considerably in stature since its 2011 original, "The First Avenger." With a global cumulative total of nearly $477 million, "The Winter Soldier" has (in two weeks domestically, three weeks internationally) easily surpassed the $370 million total of "The First Avenger."


For a superhero whose costume is draped with the U.S. flag, Captain America (played by Chris Evans) has proven particularly popular abroad. The international appeal of such a traditionally patriot figure was once doubted.


"The traditional rules just don't apply anymore. It's really about that Marvel brand," said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for box-office tracker Rentrak. "'Captain America' can play in Peoria just as well as Hong Kong."


Two other new releases opened in a distant third and fourth place.


The low-budget supernatural horror film "Oculus" took in $12 million for Relativity Media.


The football drama "Draft Day," starring Kevin Costner and directed by Ivan Reitman, debuted weakly with $9.8 million. Made with the cooperation of the National Football League, the Lionsgate release is the second movie this year, along with the thriller "3 Days to Kill," to attempt to restore the 59-year-old Costner to leading man status.


The overall box office for the year is up more than 7 percent over 2013's record box-office haul. The month of April has been propelled especially by the summer-style release of "The Winter Soldier" and a number of less likely successes.


With $39.5 million domestically, the Wes Anderson caper "The Grand Budapest Hotel" has performed exceptionally in a gradual release by Fox Searchlight. The independently released Christian film "God's Not Dead," from Freestyle Releasing, has made a whopping $40.7 million in four weeks.


Just holding in the top five was Lionsgate's teen sci-fi franchise-starter "Divergent," which added $7.5 million in its fourth week to bring its cumulative total to $124.9 million. Lionsgate announced Friday that the third installment in the series (a sequel for 2015 is already in the works) will be split into two releases. The final book in Veronica Roth's young-adult trilogy, "Allegiant," will be made into two installments, one to open in March 2016, the other in March 2017.


Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Rentrak. Where available, latest international numbers are also included. Final domestic figures will be released on Monday.


1."Captain America: The Winter Soldier," $41.4 million ($60.6 million international).


2."Rio 2," $39 million.


3."Oculus," $12 million.


4."Draft Day," $9.8 million.


5."Divergent," $7.5 million.


6."Noah," $7.5 million.


7."God's Not Dead," $5.5 million.


8."The Grand Budapest Hotel," $4.1 million.


9."Muppets Most Wanted," $2.2 million.


10."Mr. Peabody and Sherman," $1.8 million.



Universal and Focus are owned by NBC Universal, a unit of Comcast Corp.; Sony, Columbia, Sony Screen Gems and Sony Pictures Classics are units of Sony Corp.; Paramount is owned by Viacom Inc.; Disney, Pixar and Marvel are owned by The Walt Disney Co.; Miramax is owned by Filmyard Holdings LLC; 20th Century Fox and Fox Searchlight are owned by 21st Century Fox; Warner Bros. and New Line are units of Time Warner Inc.; MGM is owned by a group of former creditors including Highland Capital, Anchorage Advisors and Carl Icahn; Lionsgate is owned by Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.; IFC is owned by AMC Networks Inc.; Rogue is owned by Relativity Media LLC.


GlencoreXstrata selling Peruvian mine for $5.85B


Glencore Xstrata Plc has agreed to sell its copper mine project in Peru for $5.85 billion in cash.


In an announcement made Sunday, the Switzerland-based company said it signed an agreement to sell its entire interest in the Las Bambas copper mine to a Chinese consortium led by MMG Limited, a mining company whose biggest shareholder is backed by China's government. The other members of the group are Guoxin International Investment Corp. and Citic Metal Co.


The agreement also requires the buyers to reimburse Glencore for the cost of developing the copper mine from the start of the year until the sale closes. In the first three months of the year, those costs were roughly $400 million, according to Glencore's statement.


The company said it expects to close the sale before the end of September. It still needs MMG's shareholders and China's Ministry of Commerce to approve the deal.



It's Official: Manny Pacquiao Still Has It


LAS VEGAS -- So the boxer Manny Pacquiao is back in the conversation. As a fighter this time. As still one of the world’s best.


He dominated Tim Bradley on Saturday in Las Vegas. It wasn’t as easy as it had been in their first meeting two years ago when Pacquiao had thoroughly dominated but controversially lost on the scorecards. And he couldn’t knock out the Desert Storm. But he won a unanimous decision against an elite, undefeated fighter in his prime and in the process Pacquiao regained the WBO World Welterweight title. In the opening rounds, Bradley came out aggressively and put Pacquiao on his heels.


In the 4th Round he stunned Pacquiao with an overhand right. “I saw a star,” said Pacquiao about getting punched in the head. But as the fight wore on, Pacquiao, 35, became more comfortable, he looked like he had turned back the clock and become a real fighter again. The punching flurries were not in the crazy multiples that had once shot from his fists, but they were still impressive. The quick, lateral movements were not quite like they used to be, but he slipped under and away from Bradley’s haymakers.


A couple times Bradley tried to make fun of Pacquiao — one of the most popular fighters in the world -- mugging to the crowd that the Pacman’s punches weren't hurting him. That is usually a tell-tale sign that punches are doing serious damage. Because of the lack of respect, Pacquiao -- a Congressman in his native Philippines -- looked determined to knock his ass out. As the fight drifted into the middle and late rounds Pacquiao looked like the Pacquiao of old, not an old Pacquiao. And the Las Vegas crowd cheered as they witnessed it.


Experiencing time go backwards felt good, like riding in some sort of Filipino time machine. “The dude still has it,” said Bradley after the fight. It wasn’t very long ago when it was simple to cheer for the PacMan. A man who seemed to have few complications, a man who grew up in a cardboard box and gave most of his money to the poor. But that was before the infidelity, the politics, the familial redemption, the religious conversion and the KO courtesy of Juan Manuel Marquez.


After the fight Pacquiao looked relatively fresh. He had taken some hard shots, but the most serious damage seemed to be a cut, from a head butt, in the dying seconds of the fight. The cut would require 32 stitches. Pacquiao was smiling and laughing again. And that was nice to see, too.


And yet Saturday night in Vegas also felt like a preview (we hope) of coming attractions. Bradley took on some of the characteristics of Floyd Mayweather Jr.: the deceptive shoulder roll, the boxing skills without knock out power. But it wasn’t on the same level as Money Mayweather, the best fighter in the world, and it invited so many questions. You can’t mention one man without speaking about the other: they will forever be linked for not fighting each other in this boxing era.


In the end, after the scorecards had given Pacquiao the unanimous decision, Bradley claimed he had hurt his leg, but added, “I lost to one of the best fighter’s in the world.” After he had showered and met the media, the Desert Storm refused to talk about his strained right calf muscle and give any excuses. Everyone wanted to talk about Mayweather. Of course, it is the fight everyone still wants to see: the two best welterweights in the world. There are excuses and dumb reasons for the non-fight of the century. During the lead up to Saturday’s bout I heard dozens of farfetched ones. Like most businesses, it really comes down to money and control.


The blood had barely dried on the canvas before Bob Arum--Pacquiao’s promoter--was hawking Pacquiao-Marquez V and deflecting questions about the fight everyone really wants to see, the fight that really matters: Pacquiao vs. Mayweather.


But Pacquiao is back, and boxing is better because of it. “My boxing journey continues,” he said. "I can fight for another two years." (He has made this same statement for several years.) The possibilities seem endless again.



Amite County hesitates over landfill for oil waste


Amite County supervisors are hesitating over a plan to allow a landfill to bury oilfield waste and inject brine wastewater underground.


Supervisor Max Lawson wants to amend the county solid waste plan for the landfill proposed in February. It also would include an oil recycling plant.


However, the other four supervisors tell The Enterprise-Journal (http://bit.ly/1lYps5W ) that they needed more convincing.


The landfill is one consequence of increasing oil drilling in the Tuscaloosa Marine Shale formation. At least one injection well is already operating in the county. Lawson's land is among the sites where wells have been drilled.


Steve Witmer of Atlanta-based CWI Enterprises says he doesn't have specific property in mind, but says he needs 200 to 300 acres to house recycling, injection and solid waste disposal operations.



'Pay Secrecy' Policies At Work: Often Illegal, And Misunderstood



President Obama signs two executive actions aimed at closing the gender pay gap, including an order to combat "pay secrecy," on April 8.i i


hide captionPresident Obama signs two executive actions aimed at closing the gender pay gap, including an order to combat "pay secrecy," on April 8.



Susan Walsh/AP

President Obama signs two executive actions aimed at closing the gender pay gap, including an order to combat "pay secrecy," on April 8.



President Obama signs two executive actions aimed at closing the gender pay gap, including an order to combat "pay secrecy," on April 8.


Susan Walsh/AP


President Obama says his administration is fighting to close the gender wage gap, the gulf between what working men and women earn for the same job.


Last week, Obama moved to circumvent a divided Congress on the issue. He announced two executive actions promoting the idea of "equal pay for equal work," both directed at creating more transparency in the workplace.


For one, the president directed the Department of Labor to collect more information on what federal contractors pay their employees, "so pay discrimination can be spotted more easily."


Obama also signed an executive order prohibiting federal contractors from retaliating against employees who talk about their salaries or other compensation information.


"Pay secrecy fosters discrimination and we should not tolerate it," the president said, "not in federal contracting or anywhere else."


The intention is that if women find out their male co-workers are earning more, they can do something about it.


But here's the thing: Under a nearly 80-year-old federal labor law, employees already can talk about their salaries at work, and employers are generally prohibited from imposing "pay secrecy" policies, whether or not they do business with the federal government.


So why is the president signing an executive order? It's a matter of visibility for labor law and this particular right, says Cynthia Estlund, a law professor at New York University. The law, she says, "is not really well understood." And many don't even know this right exists.


To better understand this complicated topic, here is a breakdown of the basics:


What Is 'Pay Secrecy'?


Pay secrecy is a workplace policy that prohibits employees from discussing how much money they make. These policies are sometimes written down in employee handbooks. In some cases, those policies are implied, and managers simply urge employees not to talk about their salaries.



The National Labor Relations Act, also known as the "Wagner Act," became law in 1935. It's the basis for employees' rights to talk about wages with their coworkers.i i


hide captionThe National Labor Relations Act, also known as the "Wagner Act," became law in 1935. It's the basis for employees' rights to talk about wages with their coworkers.



National Archives

The National Labor Relations Act, also known as the "Wagner Act," became law in 1935. It's the basis for employees' rights to talk about wages with their coworkers.



The National Labor Relations Act, also known as the "Wagner Act," became law in 1935. It's the basis for employees' rights to talk about wages with their coworkers.


National Archives


What Makes 'Pay Secrecy' Illegal?


Under the National Labor Relations Act, enacted in 1935, private-sector employees have the right to engage in "concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection."


The language is somewhat antiquated, but according to Estlund, "it means that you and your co-workers get to talk together about things that matter to you at work."


Compensation is one of those things you can talk about. The National Labor Relations Board, says Estlund, "has long held that these pay secrecy policies that many employers have in writing violate the National Labor Relations Act."


Even if an employee signs a nondisclosure agreement with an employer, Estlund says, the employee would still be protected when talking about salary.


"You can't just declare information about people's pay to be confidential information that can't be discussed," she says.


What Happens To Employers That Violate The Law?


Employers caught violating the law have to offer certain "


"It doesn't cost very much to violate the NLRA in most cases," Estlund says, "and so employers aren't so afraid of violating it." But the National Labor Relations Board can order employers to provide back pay to wrongfully terminated employees and to offer former employees their old jobs back.


The president's executive order provides a penalty that goes beyond the labor board's punishments. Companies that do work for the federal government and retaliate against employees for talking about pay could now lose a federal contact, and a lot of money.


"Even a very remote threat that you'll lose your federal contract is a very big worry," Estlund says.



How Common Are These Policies At Workplaces?


There are a couple different estimates of how many companies have policies on pay secrecy — whether on the books or merely implied.


A 2011 survey from the Institute for Women's Policy Research found that about half of workers "report that the discussion of wage and salary information is either discouraged or prohibited and/or could lead to punishment."


A survey of private-sector employers from 2001 found that more than one-third had specific policies that banned workers from talking about their compensation with their co-workers.


Are There Limitations To The Law?


Yes.


For one, the law has a limited definition of "employee." For example, supervisors do not qualify as employees, nor do people who work as independent contractors or agricultural laborers.


And not all employers are subject to the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). Here's what the labor board's website says on the issue:




"The NLRA applies to most private sector employers, including manufacturers, retailers, private universities and health care facilities. The NLRA does not apply to federal, state, or local governments; employers who employ only agricultural workers; and employers subject to the Railway Labor Act (interstate railroads and airlines)."




There are other exceptions: People who work in Human Resources and have access to a company's payroll could be prohibited from sharing other employees' private salary information.


Estlund also says that the law doesn't protect "mere griping" about pay, which would not rise to the level of "concerted activity" as outlined by the law.


What About Non-Unionized Employees? Are They Protected?


Yes.



According to the NLRB, "employees who are not represented by a union also have rights under the [National Labor Relations Act]."


What Can I Do If My Employer Fires Me For Talking About Pay?


You can contact a regional office of the National Labor Relations Board and file a complaint. The NLRB may investigate and initiate a case against your employer.


In February 2013, for example, Lyn Teare won a case against her former employer, a civil engineering company, which had fired her two years earlier. The NLRB found that the employer had improperly fired Teare for discussing salary issues, and she received two years' worth of back pay, plus the option of getting her job back. (She did not take the job offer.)


Like so many employees, Teare says she did not know about the law on pay secrecy at the time of her dismissal.


"The funniest part," she says, was that her bosses "didn't even know about the law themselves."



Rand Paul: US 'can't invite the whole world'


Sen. Rand Paul says potential White House rival Jeb Bush was inarticulate when he described immigrants who come to the United States illegally as committing an "act of love."


In an interview that aired Sunday, Paul said that those immigrants "are not bad people" but added the United States "can't invite the whole world" inside its borders.


Paul, the Kentucky Republican eyeing a 2016 campaign, says Bush should have kept his focus on controlling the U.S. borders.


Bush, a former Florida governor, says the GOP cannot demonize immigrants and should show compassion. He described illegal immigration as an "act of love" by people trying to provide for their families.


Paul was interviewed on ABC's "This Week" during a visit to early nominating New Hampshire.



Politics test Silicon Valley's Russian ties


Entrepreneurs and investors say Silicon Valley's fast-growing financial ties with Russia's tech sector are being slowed down by current political tensions between the White House and the Kremlin.


"It's safe to say a lot of investors here are taking a step back to see how the situation will unfold," said Alexandra Johnson, who manages a $100 million venture fund called DFJ VTP Aurora, a Menlo Park, Calif., branch of Russian bank VTB.


For decades, Russia's sophisticated scientists and engineers remained at arm's length from Silicon Valley's venture capitalists and marketing mavens. That changed in recent years with a flurry of investment, largely sparked in 2010 when then-Russian President Dmitry Medvedev visited the region and met with high-tech leaders.


Russians investors, including billionaire Yuri Milner, who has large stakes in Facebook and Twitter, poured an estimated $2 billion into U.S. tech firms over the past three years, according to Johnson, who organized a technology symposium with venture capitalists and entrepreneurs last month in San Mateo, south of San Francisco.


But Silicon Valley entrepreneurs and investors fear negative economic fallout from Russia's takeover of Crimea, its troop buildup near Ukraine's border and its attempts to compel constitutional changes in that country, markedly raising political tensions with the West.


Secretary of State John Kerry has charged Russia with "creating a climate of fear and intimidation" and the Obama administration has frozen assets and revoked visas of some Russian officials and their associates.


Among the concerns in this technology center are whether visa limits will make it hard for business travel or for scientists to relocate. In addition, economic sanctions could tighten the flow of dollars between tech sectors in both countries. And for those U.S. and Russian firms with ties to Ukraine, rumors of a draft are fanning fears that young entrepreneurs and engineers will have to close up shop and fight.


Experts say an investment slowdown will be temporary and will not untrack rapidly growing, lucrative U.S.- Russia business relationships in the long run.


Axel Tillmann, who invests Russian venture capital on behalf of government-sponsored RVC-USA, said the tensions are definitely going to "slow things down for a while," describing a two- to three-month suspension of additional investment by Russian government funds in tech firms.


However, Tillmann said the flow of investments is certain to resume because Russian companies thrive on Silicon Valley's entrepreneurship.


"Russian technologists have been at the leading forefront of technology for many years, even going back to the Soviet Union, but they had the problem they called 'The lonely ideas,'" he said. "The ideas just sat there."


Tillmann said the one thing Russian companies are not very good at today is commercializing their technology — something that Silicon Valley firms are masters at doing. "When we combine, we get the best of both," he said.


In Russia, entrepreneurs and investors now tap Silicon Valley experts to try to replicate their success.


A planned technology hub outside Moscow, the Skolkovo Innovation Center, includes Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt, Cisco CEO John Chambers and retired Intel CEO Craig Barrett on its 17-member board.


Russian entrepreneurs have also launched their own firms in the Silicon Valley, and tech giants are buying stakes in Russian startups. Last year, for example, Cisco acquired a stake in Russian software developer Parallels and got a seat on its board.


The Russian Innovation Center, which opened two years ago on Silicon Valley's Sand Hill Road amid a cluster of venture capital firms, combines three firms investing in California companies committed to the Russian market.


And today more than 100 Russian high-tech firms have representative offices in the northern California region, including Russian search engine Yandex, which employs former Yahoo and Google engineers at its Palo Alto laboratory.


On April 3, San Jose-based Cisco, a valley leader in building ties to Russia, announced that it had won a contract to supply the video conferencing network for Moscow's water and sanitation supplier. Cisco has also reported that it is currently reviewing its Russian business practices for any possibility of corruption.


Spokesman John Earnhardt said they are watching events closely, but that Russia remains an important market.


Silicon Valley-based Dmitry Akhanov, president of the U.S. subsidiary of Russia's state-owned venture fund RUSNANO, said it has taken years to shape those East-West tech sector relationships.


"Political turmoil can happen, but business ties are much more sustainable because those are people-to-people, and those build trust," he said. "The diplomats need to calm down and think about the immediate consequences of their decisions. It's very easy to hurt an economy and much harder to rebuild."


Oleg Slepov, who heads the Russian Trade Representation's office in San Francisco, said he's spoken with many U.S. business leaders lately who tell him they have no plans to close or scale down their business in Russia.


Slepov said he's even optimistic that business ties may help ease the conflict.


"The interests of Russian and American companies are so intertwined today that, on itself, it becomes a factor that is contributing to easing of tensions between Russia and the U.S.," he said.



Sebelius: Health care launch 'terribly flawed'


The Obama administration's timeline for having ready the new health care law's online sign-up system "was just flat out wrong," outgoing Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said in an interview that aired Sunday.


The departing health chief also said the two months when healthcare.gov was plagued with technical problems were "a pretty dismal time" and the low point of her five-year tenure. But she defended the law's impact and said millions of Americans now have access to health care because of it.


"People have competitive choices and real information for the first time ever in this insurance market," said Sebelius, who last week announced her resignation.


But she acknowledged the rocky rollout for the online sign-up system fraught with technical problems that left Americans frustrated.


"Clearly, the estimate that it was ready to go Oct. 1 was just flat out wrong," Sebelius said.


HealthCare.gov was envisioned as the principal place for people to buy insurance under Obama's health care law. But its first few weeks were an embarrassment for the administration and its allies.


"Well, I think there's no question — and I've said this many times — that the launch of the website was terribly flawed and terribly difficult," Sebelius said.


Obama set a Dec. 1 deadline to have the website repaired, a move that left Sebelius nervous, she said.


"Having failed once at the front of October, the first of December became a critical juncture," she said. "That was a pretty scary date."


Sebelius' resignation comes just a week after sign-ups for insurance coverage ended, enrolling 7.1 million people and exceeding initial expectations. Enrollment has since increased to 7.5 million as people were given extra time to complete applications.


The departing secretary said she decided after the 2012 presidential election that she wanted to leave the administration but decided to stay through the sign-up period. Sebelius said Obama did not try to convince her to stay through the end of his term.


"I thought it was fair to either commit till January of 2017 or leave with enough time that he would get a strong, competent leader," Sebelius said.


Sebelius spoke to NBC's "Meet the Press."



Corbett plan will test federal agency on Medicaid


Billions of dollars, better health care for Pennsylvania's poor and election-year politics are riding on Republican Gov. Tom Corbett's bid to bring Medicaid expansion money to the state under the 2010 federal health care law.


It could mean health insurance for hundreds of thousands of the working poor. It could mean a pipeline of new money for hospitals, doctors and other health care professionals who routinely care for people without insurance. And it could have political implications for Corbett as he runs for re-election against a Democratic challenger who is critical of his plans.


The federal government's public comment period ended Friday, and negotiations are expected to begin this month on Corbett's 124-page plan submitted in February. The outcome is anything but certain.


Pennsylvania's application is asking the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to break new ground on Medicaid policy, people who analyze and consult on states' Medicaid plans say, and it is not clear yet whether federal officials are ready to allow that.


Instead, the agency could stick to allowing the kind of changes, called waivers, it has allowed previously in other states. That could be bad for Corbett, a conservative who is heavily critical of President Barack Obama's landmark law and of Medicaid, the state-federal program for the poor and disabled. Corbett has sought to get the new money but make his plan distinct from the law, which he opposed and his fellow conservatives despise.


If some or all of his proposed changes are rejected, Corbett will face a decision on whether to take the federal government's offer in an election year when labor unions, hospital groups, the AARP, medical professionals and advocates for the poor want the Medicaid money to come to Pennsylvania.


"It's reasonable to expect that Pennsylvania will receive the same flexibility that other states have received," said Deborah Bachrach, New York's former Medicaid director and a partner with the law and consulting firm Manatt, Phelps & Phillips. "Whether or not CMS will go further depends on how the request is framed and the protections that would have to go along with the waiver."


The Corbett plan seeks several major changes to the Medicaid expansion as it was envisioned by Obama's law that sought to extend health insurance coverage to 30 million more people.


To start, Corbett wants to use the federal money earmarked for an expansion of Medicaid to instead subsidize private insurance policies for the working poor who would be covered under the Medicaid expansion. He also wants the private insurance policies to be free of some of Medicaid's coverage rules, such as its permissive rules for when coverage kicks in.


CMS has not waived retroactive eligibility in other states, Bachrach and others said. And while CMS has allowed Arkansas and Iowa to use the Medicaid expansion money to expand private insurance coverage, approval for Pennsylvania might not be automatic.


That's because Pennsylvania's Medicaid coverage for adults is already managed by private companies and it can simply expand on that platform, said Joan Alker, the executive director of Georgetown University's Center for Children and Families, who has closely followed states' Medicaid expansion plans. Meanwhile, Corbett's proposal to expand private insurance coverage is not as clearly defined as Arkansas' and Iowa's, Alker said.


"The private coverage piece is vague, lacks clear objectives and is unwarranted," she said.


Lawyers with Community Legal Services, a Philadelphia public interest law center that advocates for the poor, say Corbett is asking CMS to waive Medicaid's appeals process, which guarantees benefits for enrollees while they fight to keep their eligibility, in favor of the commercial insurers' grievance and appeals processes. That, the lawyers said, violates enrollees' constitutional rights to due process.


"CMS can't waive the Constitution," said Community Legal Services lawyer Kristen Dama.


Other elements that push the boundaries of Medicaid — and thus would draw a hard look from CMS — include higher premiums for enrollees and taking away coverage from those who miss deadlines to pay premiums.


Accompanying Corbett's proposal is a request to pare the existing Medicaid program for adults, including limiting hospital admissions, medical supplies and radiology procedures such as MRIs, CT scans and X-rays. That, Alker said, has nothing to do with the purpose of a waiver, and it is possible CMS tells Corbett to request those changes separately.


Whatever happens, all four Democrats seeking to challenge Corbett in the Nov. 4 general election have pledged to tear out his plan and replace it with a straightforward Medicaid expansion, the step that 22 other states took.


Any decision in the Pennsylvania case will reverberate. Several other states — Utah, New Hampshire and Tennessee among them — are eyeing a waiver process.


CMS' policy is evolving as states try to tailor the program to add more personal responsibility for beneficiaries, said Matt Salo, the executive director of the Washington, D.C.-based National Association of Medicaid Directors. That has prompted CMS to bend in an effort to get more states into the Medicaid expansion program, he said.


"Can Pennsylvania expect to get everything it wants? No," Salo said. "Can it expect to get what other states have gotten? Yes. Can it expect to get a little bit more than other states? Maybe."


Still, if the White House thinks Corbett will lose in November — and his public approval rating isn't inspiring — that may stiffen CMS' stance.


"Gubernatorial politics," Salo said, "are clearly important."



Opening date pushed back for Brennan restaurant


Ralph Brennan's new and as-yet unnamed French Quarter restaurant will open around Labor Day rather than in the spring as originally planned.


Nola.comThe Times-Picayune reports (http://bit.ly/1qoLQVg ) the restaurant will open in the former location of Brennan's at 417 Royal St.


The pink building was constructed in 1795 and became Brennan's restaurant in 1956.


After foreclosure, the building was sold at a sheriff's auction in May 2103 for $6.85 million. Brennan and businessman Terry White bought the property.


Brennan and White have not yet hired a chef for the new restaurant. A name for the restaurant also has not been chosen.



St. Michaels gets a gift card


People can now shop around St. Michaels in very different way — with a town gift card.


Chris Agharabi, owner of Ava's Pizzeria and Wine Bar, along with seven other business owners, pooled money together and created a St. Michaels gift card.


Agharabi said he modeled the idea after a town similar in size to St. Michaels — Fort Collins, Colo. — that has its own gift card and last year sold about $500,000 worth of them. So, Agharabi said, he found the company that made the gift card for the Colorado town and started the process to get one for St. Michaels, but the process took about six months.


The gift card was released in mid-March, and there are now about 40 merchants in St. Michaels that have signed up to participate, including shops, restaurants, attractions and lodging, but Agharabi said his goal is to get close to 100 percent participation.


Agharabi said his business sells a lot of gift cards every year, and "mails them every year up and down the East Coast and back." Though he didn't say exactly how much in gift cards his business sells, he said, "It's not a small amount. It's not $10,000. It's way higher."


The businesses involved aren't making any money on this venture, either. Agharabi said the goal is just to "keep the money in the 21663 area code of St. Michaels." Also, if any merchants in St. Michaels want to get in on the action, it won't cost anything — just email stmichaelshp@gmail.com and work out the details.


"It's a way to keep business flowing all the time, in a sense," he said.


He said when people get a gift card, using a $30 gift card as an example, that people will usually spend more than that $30, so it should bring both the price of the gift card and a little bit extra in revenue to town businesses.


Another example Agharabi used is the holidays. Instead of going to Target to buy a gift card for someone, he said he hopes that folks in town will buy a St. Michaels gift card. He also said it would be nice to buy a gift card for someone who is going to visit town, or as a wedding favor, since St. Michaels is such a big wedding destination.


"Hopefully, if we hit $50,000 this year, I'll be happy," Agharabi said.


People can buy the gift card and see a full list of participating merchants online at http://bit.ly/1iJ1jed, or buy them in person at Ava's Pizzeria and Wine Bar, 409 S. Talbot St., Five Gables Inn and Spa, 209 N. Talbot St., or Chesapeake Bay Outfitters, 100 N. Talbot St.



Frustrated With Congress, IMF Heads Leave D.C. With Budding Idea



The U.S., the IMF's most powerful member, has refused to sign off on reforms. On Saturday, global leaders suggested the IMF would turn to other options if Congress doesn't act by year's end.i i


hide captionThe U.S., the IMF's most powerful member, has refused to sign off on reforms. On Saturday, global leaders suggested the IMF would turn to other options if Congress doesn't act by year's end.



Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

The U.S., the IMF's most powerful member, has refused to sign off on reforms. On Saturday, global leaders suggested the IMF would turn to other options if Congress doesn't act by year's end.



The U.S., the IMF's most powerful member, has refused to sign off on reforms. On Saturday, global leaders suggested the IMF would turn to other options if Congress doesn't act by year's end.


Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images


As far as looks go, Washington turned in a dazzling performance as host city for this past week's meetings at the International Monetary Fund and World Bank.


Cherry blossoms peaked, tulips popped, and the air carried the sweet fragrance of hyacinths.


But politics-wise, Washington let down its global guests. They came begging Congress to approve a package of IMF reforms, but are leaving Sunday with nothing.


"We are all very disappointed by the ongoing failure to bring these reforms to conclusion," Australia's Treasurer Joe Hockey told reporters.


The week-long meetings of finance ministers and central bank governors from around the world conclude on Sunday. The global leaders have taken every opportunity to express their frustrations with the U.S. failure to ratify the 2010 agreement to reform the IMF.


On Saturday, they suggested the IMF would turn to other options if Congress doesn't act by year's end. Without going into specifics, Sinapore's finance minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said that figuring out a way to enact IMF reforms without Congress' approval would be possible, though less desirable.


Such a move, coming early in 2015, would reduce American influence in the global economy, he said. That outcome would cause a "a disruption in the multilateral system" and leave the world less safe, he added. Given that outlook, he said he still believes Congress will act before year's end.


More than 130 of the 188 member countries already have approved the proposed changes. But the United States is the IMF's most powerful member, and its sign-off is needed to move forward. The reforms would give a bigger voice to emerging markets, such as China and Brazil.


President Obama vigorously supports the adjustments. At the IMF gathering, Treasury Secretary Jack Lew called the IMF "indispensable" and said the administration "will continue to work with Congress to get legislation passed this year."


But Republicans have blocked implementation because they are worried the changes would reduce U.S. influence at the IMF, and object to helping pay for the changes. The Congressional Budget Office estimates the cost of implementation at roughly $315 million.


"Many Americans question the wisdom of supporting the IMF and other multilateral financial institutions that take their hard-earned dollars and use them to bail out other countries," House Financial Services Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling said in December during a hearing.


In their official communiqué, global finance ministers said they were "deeply disappointed" by congressional inaction.


The IMF's purpose is to lend money and provide guidance to promote global economic growth. In fact, it has set the ambitious goal of increasing the global economy by $2 trillion over the next five years.


At Saturday's press briefing, IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde expressed optimism about growth, noting that even in very depressed countries such as Greece, economists are seeing signs of life. "My hope is that confidence is coming back," she said.


Since the 2008 financial crisis, the IMF has loaned billions to troubled countries, such as Greece, Portugal and Ireland, to help stabilize those government and markets.


Now the IMF is playing a crucial role again as it puts the finishing touches on a bailout package worth up to $18 billion to help Ukraine. Lagarde said the deal should be completed by the end of April.


Work on the package was being done even as tensions were rising between Ukraine and Russia. On Sunday, a Ukraine's interim government reported one security officer killed in a clash in the eastern city of Slovyansk.


Russia has alienated itself from Western countries by annexing Ukraine's Crimean peninsula. In addition, it is raising natural gas prices for Ukrainians and saying it wants Kiev to make good on billions in unpaid gas bills.



DC Water adopts system to make power, fertilizer


This is a topic that one must approach delicately so as not to offend the reader's sensibilities, but since it is a matter of importance for which you may receive a bill for some portion of $470 million, we start out with an analogy.


You need energy, so you eat. Through the miracle of digestion, your body sorts what you have eaten, say, a pastrami on rye with a glob of coleslaw and a dill pickle, and plucks out the nutrients — proteins, carbohydrates and sugars it needs to generate power. Then it jettisons the rest.


What your body jettisons disappears forever, carried along in a huge network of sewers to a plant in the southeastern corner of Washington.


Just like you, that plant needs energy. Through a miracle called thermal hydrolysis, it soon will be able to sort through what you have jettisoned and use it to generate electricity.


Yes, from poop will come power — 13 megawatts of it. Enough electricity to light about 10,500 homes.


Ben Franklin never dreamed of this one.


While Ben may have denounced the scheme as impossible sorcery, he also noted that a penny saved is a penny earned, so he might have been at least intrigued by this notion.


More than a few pennies may be saved for the citizens of the District of Columbia and for some Virginians and Marylanders. Those people — 2.2 million of them — get a monthly bill for the privilege of sending their thoroughly digested nutritional intake to the plant in Southeast Washington operated by D.C. Water.


A chunk of that monthly bill is passed on to another local utility — Pepco. D.C. Water is the electricity company's No. 1 customer. By converting poop to power, the water company will cut its Pepco bill by about one third and reduce by half the cost of trucking treated waste elsewhere.


But enough about poop, a subject that makes many a reader a bit squeamish. Because we'd rather not drive you away from the description of a wholly remarkable plan that is very likely to affect your pocketbook, henceforth we will refer to the matter that flows through the sewage plant as "the product."


In fact, you soon will learn, it is going to be turned into a genuine product. One with a price tag. One that you may buy back.


Think about it.


The product has shed the label "wastewater" to morph into something called "enriched water," a term laden with many more intriguing possibilities.


"It could be a game changer for energy," said George Hawkins, an environmentalist who became general manager of D.C. Water. "If we could turn every enriched-water facility in the United States into a power plant, it would become one of the largest sectors of clean energy that, at the moment, is relatively untapped."


What's nearing completion outside Hawkins's office window, however, is something never built on this scale anywhere in the world. A decade of study came first, and to see whether the system would work here, D.C. Water paid smaller European utilities that use the same process to modify their product so it more closely matched that which Washington produces.


"We're confident that this model will work," Hawkins said.


Something called the Cambi, for the Norwegian company that builds it, sits at the heart of it.


When the product flows into the more than 150-acre plant known as Blue Plains, it goes through a couple of mesh filters to shed the debris swept up in the sewer system. Then it goes through a treatment process that turns it into what the Environmental Protection Agency categorizes as class B waste, enough to fill 60 big dump trucks with 1,600 tons of product every day.


And out the gate it goes, at a cost of $16 million a year.


That will change in May and June, as D.C. Water begins a phase-in intended to get the new system into full service by January.


Here's how it works:


A centrifuge drains off the liquid, and then the screened product will flow into four pulpers, tall stainless steel vats that look like Gulliver's soda cans. Steam recycled from farther down the process is used to preheat it, and then it flows into one of the two dozen Cambis. They sit like a row of gleaming, blunt-nosed rockets, but they serve as pressure cookers.


The product is heated to more than 320 degrees under as much as 138 pounds of pressure for 22 minutes. Then it moves to a flash tank, where the temperature and pressure drop dramatically and a critical change takes place.


"Because of that pressure difference, the cells burst," said Chris Peot, director of resource recovery at D.C. Water.


When the cells burst, the methanogens can have their way with them.


That happens in the digesters. They are four huge concrete vats, 80 feet tall and 100 feet in diameter. Right now, their interiors are like vast cathedrals, with domed ceilings and a shaft of light glancing through a hole in the top.


When the whole operation gets rolling, inside them is not a place you would want to be. The product will flow in from the four flash tanks, mixing with the methanogen microorganisms. Methanogens create marsh gases. In the digestive tracts of animals and humans, they also create gas, to the particular delight and fascination of middle-school boys.


That's what this is all about — creating methane to generate electric power.


The temperature inside the digesters is kept at about that of the human body: 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit. Each digester chamber has five vertical blue tubes, as big around as manhole covers, that suck the product from the bottom and recycle it to near the top. After the product stews there for about two weeks, the methane produced by the process will vent out a 12-inch diameter pipe in the crown.


After a bit more purification, the methane will be used to fire three jet turbine engines that create electricity. A byproduct of that process: steam, which is funneled back to the pulper.


The power portion of the plant will be operated under contract by Pepco. The deal doesn't allow D.C. Water to sell the power it generates, a moot point since the process of creating it eats up 3 megawatts and the remaining 10 megawatts will be sucked up by operations at Blue Plains.


Once the digester's work is done, the remaining product will be drained out into dump trucks, but their total load will be cut in half to about 600 tons a day.


Remember that we told you earlier that what you jettison disappears forever? Let's reconsider that, because there's actually a chance you'll see it again. In a strikingly different form. Right back where you saw it first: on your dinner table.


The product that has been trucked from Blue Plains is rated class B. But the product that comes out of the digester will be rated class A.


The difference?


Class B still has some bad stuff in it. Most of it is shipped to farmers, some in Maryland but most of them in Virginia. They get it free, but unless they let it sit for at least a month, and sometimes up to 18 months, the only things they can use it to fertilize are trees and sod used by landscapers.


Class A product can be used right away on anything, including fields that grow the fruits and vegetables you buy at the grocery store and serve for dinner.


That's because, Peot says, in the Cambi, "All the pathogens are completely obliterated."


"Our product has these super-elevated levels of these naturally occurring, extremely important plant hormones," Peot said.


It is a more environmentally sound choice than the chemical fertilizer alternatives. In the raw, the class A product is so potent it needs to be cut with other materials before it is used to fertilize crops.


"We can blend this with sawdust and sand and make a topsoil substitute for use in green infrastructure projects," Peot said. "We're still going to go to farms while we try to build the market for this product."


Hawkins, D.C. Water's general manager, chimed in: "It's clean, organic fertilizer. Conceivably, we could sell this product at Home Depot. "


Unlike most innovations in waste treatment locally and nationwide, this project was not mandated by a federal court order. D.C. Water's board decided it was a worthwhile investment of ratepayers' money.


"This was one of the easier $500 million decisions that we'll ever ask the board to make," Hawkins said, ticking off the value: a savings in electrical costs of about $10 million a year; lowering the cost of hauling away treated waste; the potential to generate a profit by selling the product; a reduction by one third in the plant's carbon footprint; and one more critical virtue.


For about three days in March, residents of part of Northwest Washington were told to boil their drinking water for fear it might be contaminated. That scare was caused by a power problem that shut down a pumping station.


"It wasn't Pepco's problem. It was internal to us," Hawkins said. "We have great fears here about what would happen if there was a catastrophic power failure and Blue Plains stopped."


Generating power internally will provide enough juice to keep the basics running, were that to happen, he said.


"This is the rare combination of both environmentally and economically positive," Peot said.