Wednesday, 4 June 2014

State governments may be expanding wealth gap

The Associated Press



Lawmakers in many states have been trying to boost their post-recession economies by cutting income taxes, curbing aid to the long-term jobless or holding down the minimum wage. Some have pursued all of these steps.


Whether such policies will spur businesses to expand as hoped isn't yet clear. But collectively, the actions could ease the financial burden for the states' most affluent residents while reducing the safety net for those at the bottom.


The shift may also contribute to a trend that is prompting growing national concern: the widening gap between the richest Americans and everyone else. The divergence has developed over four decades and accelerated in recent years.


Economic statistics show that incomes for the top 1 percent of U.S. households soared 31 percent from 2009 through 2012, after adjusting for inflation, yet inched up an average of 0.4 percent for those making less. Many economists are sounding alarms that the income gap, greater now than at any time since the Depression, is hurting the economy by limiting growth in consumer spending.


Yet those concerns aren't resonating in some states. Last year, at least 10 states passed income tax cuts targeted at businesses or those in the top individual brackets. Several more already have cut taxes this year, including Democratic-led New York and Republican-led Oklahoma. Yet over the past three years, nearly one-fifth of the states have pared back unemployment benefits, and more cutbacks are under consideration.


The theory is that business owners are more likely to hire, expand and drive economic growth when their own financial burdens are eased. But others contend that formula comes with side effects.


"What's happening at the state level is increasingly important, and, to many eyes, it appears to be moving things in one direction — towards greater inequality," said Matthew Gardner, executive director of the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, a Washington-based tax research group.


The once-obscure income gap has become an issue in the 2014 elections as Democrats and Republicans differ over the best way to ensure America fulfills its promise as a land of opportunity.


Economists point to a variety of factors contributing to the gap, from the shift toward foreign manufacturing to a growth in single-parent households. Federal policies also come into play.


But state governments also have an impact.


Since the mid-1970s, states as a whole have cut their top individual income tax rates by nearly one-fourth, while boosting state sales tax rates by almost half, according to an Associated Press analysis. That has meant lower taxes for those earning the most and a bigger proportionate tax bite for those who spend more of their income on retail sales. Vermont, for example, has cut its top personal income tax rate from 17.5 percent to less than 9 percent while doubling its sales tax rate to 6 percent.


At the same time, states have scaled back some of the aspects of the financial safety net that keep low-income people out of poverty. The inflation-adjusted value of state welfare payments has been dropping in every state except Maryland and Wyoming and — even with federal food stamps included — leaves recipients below the poverty level in all states.


A divorced mother of three, Amy Jennewein came to the Missouri Capitol earlier this year imploring lawmakers to raise the minimum wage from $7.50 an hour to $10. Instead, the Republican-led Legislature voted to gradually cut the top individual income tax rate from 6 percent to 5.5 percent and referred a three-quarters cent sales tax increase to the ballot. It also curbed unemployment benefits.


"The middle class is disappearing — that's what it feels like," said Jennewein, who works two jobs at a preschool and a grocery store to support her family at a poverty-level income. "Every single day, I feel it's getting worse instead of getting better."


As the safety net shrinks, the chance that residents will be impoverished at some point has grown. The percentage of people ages 35-45 experiencing poverty rose by one third during 1988-2008 compared with the previous two decades, according to research by Mark Rank, a social welfare professor at Washington University in St. Louis.


"Folks are getting less in terms of redistribution on the bottom end, and folks are getting more in terms of tax cuts on the top end," Rank said.


The last time the income gap was this wide was in the Roaring '20s, when government did little to redistribute income. That changed after the Great Depression, when many states began using income taxes to improve public education, prevent poverty and add services to boost the quality of life.


But business groups began protesting their growing share of the burden.


In Missouri this year, business leaders stood beside GOP lawmakers at news conferences before they enacted an income tax cut with a special break for many business owners.


Jack Lonsinger, who employs about 20 people at a carbon recycling business near Kansas City, said he would put the eventual tax savings toward the purchase of new equipment.


"We use the money we get back to invest — it's nothing we're going to stick in our pocket," he said.


Income inequality among households has grown by 13 percent over the past several decades in Missouri. But state officials who are pushing for tax cuts said they aren't seeking to exacerbate the gap and, in some cases, weren't aware of it.


"The ultimate goal is to increase our state's economy and get it flowing in a better direction," said Missouri Sen. Mike Kehoe, a Republican.


The debate over the impact of reducing taxes on economic growth is long running and unresolved. Though taxes are a factor in business expansions, the cost and availability of skilled labor and good transportation systems often are rated as more important. An analysis for the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service in 2012 found that reductions in top tax rates have had "little association" with investment or economic growth.


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Associated Press writer John Hanna contributed to this report from Topeka, Kan.



Follow David A. Lieb at: http://bit.ly/1nQPhGV


4 ways state policies can influence the wealth gap

The Associated Press



The rich are becoming richer in the U.S., and the rest are mostly not. It's a trend that emerged over the course of four decades and has become particularly pronounced in recent years.


Economists point to a variety of factors, including changing labor markets and federal policies. States also can make a difference. Here's a look at four of the factors controlled by states that can play a role in the wealth gap.


TAXES


Many states have progressive income tax rates, meaning the wealthy pay a larger percentage of their income than the poor do. Yet most states also levy the same sales tax rate for all, meaning the poor may pay a larger proportionate share of their income.


Data show that states have been shifting away from income taxes in favor of sales taxes, potentially exacerbating the wealth gap.


Since 1976, the average top individual income tax rate in states has fallen from 8.3 percent to less than 6.5 percent. The average state sales tax has risen from about 3.8 percent to more than 5.6 percent.


MINIMUM WAGE


Although the federal government sets a minimum wage — currently $7.25 an hour — many states also have adopted their own wage levels. The minimum wage aims to narrow the wealth gap by boosting the income of those earning the least.


In 1976, just three states exceeded the federal minimum wage of $2.30 an hour. Many more states have since joined that group, but none have kept pace with inflation, which would make the $2.30 minimum wage equivalent to about $9.50 in today's dollars.


In recent months, officials in some Democratic-led states have started more vigorously pursuing higher wages. Connecticut, Maryland, Hawaii and Vermont have approved raising the wage to $10.10 an hour over the coming years.


WELFARE BENEFITS


One of the most basic ways that governments can attempt to minimize the wealth gap is by redistributing tax revenues to low-income residents. That practice has been in decline. A 1996 federal welfare reform law required states to implement work requirements and other restrictions for people receiving payments.


Over the past two decades, the number of cash welfare recipients in states has dropped by two-thirds, and the amount of money people get is covering less of their daily living expenses.


UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS


Unemployment benefits have long been a safety net for people who lost their jobs, providing some income while they looked for new employment. But since the Great Recession, states have been paring back the benefits.


Since the 1960s, it had been standard for states to offer 26 weeks of jobless benefits. But since 2011, nine states have shortened that time frame, in some cases to potentially as few as 12 weeks. Other changes to state laws have made it harder to qualify.


Given less time to look for work, many people accept lower pay and fewer hours in new jobs, according to some analysts. That ultimately can increase the income gap between the wealthiest Americans and the rest.



State-by-state growth in income inequality


Income inequality is often measured by the Gini index, named for Italian statistician Corrado Gini, who developed it in 1912. It measures income distribution on a scale of zero to one, with zero meaning everyone has the same income and one indicating that a single person has all the income. The higher the number, the greater the amount of income inequality.


Here's a state-by-state look at the Gini rating measurements by household in 1979 compared with 2012, the latest year for which figures are available from the U.S. Census Bureau. The "increase" column represents the percentage increase in income inequality.


STATE 1979 2012INCREASE


Alabama 0.427 0.47310.8 percent


Alaska 0.393 0.4237.6 percent


Arizona 0.399 0.46115.5 percent


Arkansas 0.428 0.4638.2 percent


California 0.408 0.48218.1 percent


Colorado 0.392 0.45816.8 percent


Connecticut 0.390 0.49226.2 percent


Delaware 0.396 0.43610.1 percent


District of Columbia0.450 0.53418.7 percent


Florida 0.421 0.48314.7 percent


Georgia 0.421 0.48114.3 percent


Hawaii 0.390 0.4269.2 percent


Idaho 0.390 0.430 10.3 percent


Illinois 0.396 0.47219.2 percent


Indiana 0.379 0.44216.6 percent


Iowa 0.390 0.43311.0 percent


Kansas 0.399 0.450 12.8 percent


Kentucky 0.420 0.46711.2 percent


Louisiana 0.438 0.48611.0 percent


Maine 0.382 0.44516.5 percent


Maryland 0.385 0.44716.1 percent


Massachusetts 0.398 0.48120.9 percent


Michigan 0.389 0.46218.8 percent


Minnesota 0.391 0.44413.6 percent


Mississippi 0.440 0.48710.7 percent


Missouri 0.408 0.46113.0 percent


Montana 0.395 0.450 13.9 percent


Nebraska 0.396 0.4349.6 percent


Nevada 0.387 0.45216.8 percent


New Hampshire0.372 0.430 15.6 percent


New Jersey 0.393 0.47220.1 percent


New Mexico 0.415 0.47113.5 percent


New York 0.419 0.50119.6 percent


North Carolina 0.403 0.46916.4 percent


North Dakota 0.397 0.460 15.9 percent


Ohio 0.385 0.46220.0 percent


Oklahoma 0.419 0.46410.7 percent


Oregon 0.394 0.45716.0 percent


Pennsylvania 0.391 0.46418.7 percent


Rhode Island 0.397 0.46517.1 percent


South Carolina 0.406 0.46815.3 percent


South Dakota 0.409 0.4346.1 percent


Tennessee 0.418 0.47313.2 percent


Texas 0.415 0.47714.9 percent


Utah 0.371 0.42414.3 percent


Vermont 0.386 0.43913.7 percent


Virginia 0.399 0.46616.8 percent


Washington 0.388 0.450 16.0 percent


West Virginia 0.406 0.46414.3 percent


Wisconsin 0.381 0.440 15.5 percent


Wyoming 0.372 0.41712.1 percent


United States 0.415 0.47614.7 percent



Co-founder of Burt's Bees says he was ousted


Conventional wisdom suggests the Burt behind Burt's Bees left the company after he became disillusioned with the corporate world in North Carolina and wanted to return to his solitary life in Maine.


The reality, Burt Shavitz says, is that he was forced out by co-founder Roxanne Quimby after he had an affair with an employee.


So the man on the Burt's Bees logo that promises "Earth-friendly natural personal care products" ended up with 37 acres in Maine, and an undisclosed sum of money.


And he's not complaining.


"In the long run, I got the land, and land is everything. Land is positively everything. And money is nothing really worth squabbling about. This is what puts people six feet under. You know, I don't need it," he told a filmmaker on property where the company was launched in the 1980s.


The reclusive beekeeper whose simple life became complicated by his status as a corporate icon is now the subject of a documentary, "Burt's Buzz," which opens Friday in cities including New York, Los Angeles, Miami, Chicago, Phoenix and Cleveland.


Interviewed by The Associated Press on his land in Maine, Shavitz declined to discuss his relationship with Quimby.


"What I have in this situation is no regret," he said, sitting in a rocking chair. "The bottom line is she's got her world and I've got mine, and we let it go at that."


Shavitz, 79, grew up around New York, served in the Army in Germany and shot photos for Time-Life before leaving New York for the backwoods of Maine.


He was a hippie making a living by selling honey when his life was altered by a chance encounter with a hitchhiking Quimby. She was a single mother and a back-to-the-lander who impressed Shavitz with her ingenuity and self-sufficiency.


She began making products from his beeswax, and they became partners. An image of Burt's face — and his untamed beard — was featured on labels.


The partnership ended on a sour note after the business moved in 1994 to North Carolina, where it continued to expand before Shavitz was given the boot. These days, he makes occasional promotional appearances on the company's behalf.


In the documentary, Shavitz sounds both bitter and ambivalent.


"Roxanne Quimby wanted money and power, and I was just a pillar on the way to that success," he said.


Quimby, who made more than $300 million when she sold the company, disagrees with any suggestion that Shavitz was treated improperly.


"Everyone associated with the company was treated fairly, and in some cases very generously, upon the sale of the company and my departure as CEO. And that, of course, includes Burt," she said in an email to the AP.


Shavitz lives in a cluttered house that has no hot water; he used to live in a converted turkey coop on the same property. He still likes to watch nature pass by.


All manner of critters traipse across the land: deer, moose, pine martens, even a pack of cacophonous coyotes. On a recent day, six baby foxes played in the field.


"Golly dang!" he exclaimed, his blue eyes gazing.


His humble life is a long way from the one where he stays in four-star hotels during promotional trips. The movie juxtaposes his ideal day, one in which he's left alone, against a trip to Taiwan, where he was greeted like a rock star by fans wearing faux beards and bee costumes.


Director Jody Shapiro said his documentary presents contrasts: a man who wants a simple life but also likes to travel and experience new things; a vegetarian who likes to shoot guns; a man who's content to sell honey but also helped launch a big business.


He described Shavitz as "an authentic character" but still isn't sure what makes him tick.


"After hanging out with him for a year, I stopped searching," he said. "Is he more complicated, or am I trying to make him more complicated?"


Shavitz doesn't plan to change a thing. He has his three golden retrievers. And he has his land.


"I had no desire to be an upward-mobile-rising yuppie with a trophy wife, a trophy house, a trophy car. I wasn't looking for any of those things. I already had what I wanted," he said in the documentary. "No one has ever accused me of being ambitious," he joked.



Skip the website? Some small businesses still do


It's cheap. It's easy to do. And it can take less than 20 minutes to set up. Yet more than half of all small businesses still don't have a website.


"It's just ridiculous," says Jim Blasingame, a small business author and radio show host. "Every small business needs a website. Period. Nonnegotiable."


Small businesses that don't have one say they don't have the time, think it will cost too much or don't want the rush of orders that comes with being online. But entrepreneurs that have jumped to the digital side say their websites have boosted sales, cut down on time-consuming phone calls and brought more people into their stores.


But not everyone wants that.


Steve Love has never had a website for the handmade sausage and meat business he's owned since 1988. He says a website for LoveLand Farms would boost sales and he doesn't have any more farmland to raise hogs and Black Angus cattle.


"I don't want it to grow," says Love, who sells his goods at a farmers' market in Bloomington, Indiana, and a store in another town that's open once a week. "I'm already maxed out. I'm scared it would blow up on me."


But customers expect one. When they ask him at the farmers' market if he has a website, he hands them a card with his phone number and a map to his shop called the Sausage Shack in Nashville, Indiana. He has no plans to start a website anytime soon. But it could happen in the future if his kids want to take over and grow the business.


"I wouldn't say never," says Love.


Some owners simply say they have no time.


Bill Peatman, who writes blog posts, emails and other content for websites for his corporate clients, doesn't have one for his own business.


"I've just been too busy," says Peatman, who started his Napa, California, business over a year ago. "I haven't come up with a plan with what I want to do."


He knows he needs one. "People don't think you exist," he says. "I want to grow. I want to build my own reputation and brand."


He recently bought a domain name. And he plans to hire someone to build the site, but he thinks it will take him a few more months to get to it.


"At the way I move," says Peatman, "about six months."


Fifty-five percent of small businesses don't have a website, according to a 2013 survey of more than 3,800 small businesses conducted by Internet search company Google and research company Ipsos. That's a slight improvement from the year before, when 58 percent said they didn't have a website.


Small business owners who want to start a website have lots of options that make it easier than in the past. Companies such as Wix.com, Google, SquareSpace.com and Weebly.com require no coding or technical skills. Users can choose a template, drag in photos and paste in words.


And with more people searching for businesses online and on their smartphones, companies without a site may be missing out on extra business.


"You might as well be a ghost," says Blasingame, who hosts "The Small Business Advocate," an online and nationally syndicated radio show. "The customers and opportunity pass right through you."


Sales at Bad Pickle Tees have doubled since Cyndi Grasman began selling her quirky food-related T-shirts online a year ago. She started the business in 2012, selling shirts with sayings like "Oh Kale Yeah!" and "I Heart Bacon" at food festivals. She launched the site using website publishing company Weebly, paying $250 a year.


"I'm reaching a larger audience," she says.


Marilyn Caskey says her website has cut down on time-consuming phone calls with customers. The owner of The Garment Exchange launched a website for her San Antonio consignment shop two years ago using a Google program. The store, which she opened in 2008, used to get calls all the time asking which clothing designers the shop resells.


"I'll be trying to ring up a sale and someone would call," says Caskey, who would read through a list to the caller of all the designers the store does and doesn't buy. "Now we refer them to the website."


Amy Gilson hopes to be able to do that soon.


She hired a company to build a website for her Oklahoma City snack food business Healthy Cravings. She is paying $4,500 for it, but she hasn't been able to find the time to take photos and give them other information needed to finish. All customers see on EatHealthyCravings.com is a message that the site is coming soon.


"Right now, I do everything," says Gilson. "I am the accountant, the marketer, the salesman."


When she sells Healthy Cravings' zucchini brownie bites or chia cookies at farmers' markets, shoppers ask about a website. One customer, who was looking for the fat content of the snacks, took to Healthy Cravings' Facebook page to ask if it had a website with more information.


"I can't wait for my website," says Gilson, who also plans to sell treats from the site. "I can just send them there."



Free Wi-Fi launched at Atlanta airport


Travelers, after years of complaints, will have access to a free wireless Internet network at the world's busiest airport.


Officials say the network at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport cost more than $5.2 million to install.


Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed and the airport's general manager on Wednesday announced the launch of the free Wi-Fi in the 6.8 million square-foot terminal complex. Officials say workers spent less than 30 days assembling the network. It's expected to accommodate up to 15,000 simultaneous users.


Southwell says the airport's lack of a free Wi-Fi network put the facility at a competitive disadvantage, and was the No. 1 customer complaint. Customers previously had to pay $4.95 to get online.


Airport officials say the airport serves more than 94 million passengers annually.



Lebanon's Arabic press digest – June 5, 2014


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


Ad-Diyar


Berri sources: Kerry said something to Berri, but something else at news conference


Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri’s sources said U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry’s comments at the news conference were different from what he told Berri during the meeting.


The sources described Kerry’s meeting with Berri as “ordinary." Prime Minister Tammam Salam, for his part, said U.S. officials always talk about the support and stability of Lebanon and give moral support to the Lebanese state.


Lebanon, Salam added, is in urgent need for a practical translation of the support to help the country cope with the burden of the Syrian refugees.


Al-Mustaqbal


Salam sources: Kerry didn’t discuss a plan, an initiative or a presidential candidate


Sources close to Prime Minister Tammam Salam told Al-Mustaqbal that Kerry did not discuss any plan, initiative or presidential candidate during talks at the Grand Serail Wednesday.


The sources said discussions between Salam and Kerry focused on the Syrian refugee crisis and the U.S. administration’s readiness to offer Lebanon all the assistance it needs.


In addition, Kerry reiterated Washington’s commitment to help the Lebanese Army and security forces.


More to follow ...



GM recall probe to be made public; 3 key questions


Along rows of cubicles at the General Motors Technical Center in suburban Warren, engineers knew for years about faulty ignition switches in small cars. Safety officials in the same complex knew, too. So did the lawyers downtown.


That knowledge loitered inside GM for at least a decade until this February, when the company recalled 2.6 million cars to repair the switches. During that time, at least 13 people lost their lives in crashes tied to the problem. Why that delay happened — and who is responsible — should be revealed Thursday, when a report by former U.S. Attorney Anton Valukas is made public.


The report, paid for by GM with the promise of an "unvarnished" inquiry, also will address just how high in the company knowledge of the problem reached. Valukas isn't expected to place blame with CEO Mary Barra. She has denied knowing the details until Jan. 31.


Although Valukas is expected to name names, it's likely that he'll find GM's bureaucratic structure at least partly responsible.


The switches can slip out of the run position, shut off the cars' engines and knock out power-assisted steering. This can make steering difficult and cause drivers to lose control. Congress and the Justice Department are investigating the delayed recall, too. Criminal charges are possible.


Here are three questions the Valukas report will have to answer:


Q: Why did it take so long for GM to recall the cars?


A: Documents show that GM engineers knew about a problem with the switches as early as 2001. GM for a long time contended there was no safety problem because the cars could still be steered manually even if the switch slipped out of position and the engine stalled. Proposed fixes were rejected as too time-consuming or costly — Barra has said that GM had a culture that picked cost savings over safety. A copy of GM's organization chart that dates to 2011 showed safety was four rungs down from the CEO. Experts say that's too low, and the bureaucracy may have stopped the problem from getting high enough for senior executives to take action.


Q: Who knew about the problem?


A: GM already has suspended two engineers with pay for their roles in the case. One, Ray DeGiorgio, denied under oath in a lawsuit deposition having approved any revisions to the ignition switches. But a document released by Congress shows that he signed off on a change to make the switches harder to turn and told the switch maker not to change the part number. This would make the change harder to trace for investigators. Two senior engineers, Jim Federico and John Calabrese, retired from GM after the recalls were made public. Safety reported up the chain of command to Federico, and Calabrese was his boss.


Q: What did Barra know?


A: Barra has said she knew of an investigation into the Chevy Cobalt compact car in December, but didn't know details until Jan. 31, the day GM decided to start recalling the cars. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which reviewed thousands of GM documents while investigating the case, found nothing to counter that. But for three years, safety reported up the chain of command to Barra in her old job as product development chief.


Experts differ on how unvarnished these types of investigations are.


Companies often hire law firms with established relationships to do investigations, and they seldom find fault with management, says Erik Gordon, a business and law professor at the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business. After all, the firms want to keep the business, Gordon says.


GM has a long history with the law firm chaired by Valukas, Jenner & Block. The firm was lead outside counsel in GM's $23.1 billion initial public stock offering in 2010. It also was involved with GM's 2009 bankruptcy. In addition, Valukas was lead counsel in a government investigation of pension accounting that ended with no allegations of misconduct, the firm's website says.


But John Coates, a professor at Harvard Law School, says often the only way to get investigation results quickly is to hire a lawyer who is familiar with the company. Corporate investigations don't always conform to the company's strategy, he says. Investigations happen more often now, creating a lucrative business line for law firms. If a firm finds no criminal wrongdoing, but it comes out later, "it is their personal reputation at stake," Coates says.



Vote on Charleston School of Law sale delayed


A for-profit company that wants to buy the Charleston School of Law will wait before it asks the South Carolina Commission on Higher Education to approve the sale.


InfiLaw said Wednesday that it was temporarily suspending its application for a license to own and operate the law school at the request of Sen. John Courson, R-Columbia. The application was supposed to be considered by the commission Thursday but Courson said the panel isn't at full strength.


"I think that it needs to be more thoroughly vetted and the Commission on Higher Education does not have a full composition of members," Courson said. "They need to do that before they get into it. It's late into the year. I'd like to see it fully vetted."


The sale of the law school has gotten conflicting signals the recent weeks. The Commission on Higher Education's staff recommending granting the license, but then a five-person committee on the commission rejected it. Then last week, Attorney General Alan Wilson issued an opinion that the commission should only consider whether InfiLaw meets the licensing requirements, not whether granting a license is in the best interest of the state.


"Given these circumstances, we want to give the commission additional time to consider and reconcile these issues, including responses to questions we submitted just a few days ago," InfiLaw said in its statement.


InfiLaw has been trying to buy the 10-year-old private law school for about a year, but has faced opposition from students, alumni, faculty and one of three remaining co-founders. They said InfiLaw has a poor reputation, low rates of its graduates passing the bar and a mentality that profits are more important than a good education.


InfiLaw owns three American Bar Association-accredited law schools at Arizona Summit (formerly Phoenix), Charlotte and Florida Coastal.


InfiLaw said in its statement it plans to renew its application for a license to run the Charleston School of Law once the Commission on Higher Education gets its questions answered.


"We remain confident that we provide the brightest future for continuing the proud traditions and commitment to excellence of the Charleston School of Law, its faculty, staff and students and we look forward to continuing to demonstrate our commitment as we use this time to reach out to students, faculty and alumni to discuss why we are the best and only viable option to secure the future of the law school," the company said.



Will that be a 6-bedroom suite or just a couch?

The Associated Press



Private elevators, personal shopping assistants, six-bedroom suites with their own postal codes. Even helipads. This is what the super-rich have come to expect from hotels.


For others, vacation now means renting someone's apartment, a spare room, maybe just a couch — anything to save on the cost of a hotel.


As the gap between the wealthiest travelers and everyone else has widened, so has the way people are experiencing vacations. The wealthy are looking for ever-more pampering. Many others are seeking new ways to economize.


And the lodging industry is adapting — at the high and low ends — to meet the diverging needs.


Luxury hotels are catering to financial elites from Russia, China, Brazil or the Middle East who now routinely hop around the world and don't mind dropping $20,000 a night for a glamorous accommodation.


"High-end travel in the air, on the sea and on land has never been more robust," says Steve Carvell, an associate dean at Cornell University's School of Hotel Administration. "There are more people with more concentrated wealth."


Luxury hotels are arising even at iconic middle-American tourism spots such as Walt Disney World. Four Seasons will open a 444-room resort there in August with 68 suites, including a nine-bedroom royal suite sporting a 1,000 square-foot (93-square-meter) private terrace with views of the park's nightly fireworks.


During the Great Recession, many resorts dropped "resort and spa" from their name. The idea was to appeal to corporate organizers who didn't want trips to seem extravagant. Excess now appears back in style.


In November, Four Seasons added the phrase "and residences" to its mountain resorts in Vail, Colorado; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and Whistler, Canada. It's pursuing families seeking a residential experience with the pampering of a hotel staff.


The six-bedroom suite in Vail fetches $15,000 a night. You get three living rooms and a movie room. The suite includes a dedicated assistant who can arrange airport transfers, private ski lessons and after-hours shopping.


The return of extravagance reflects one characteristic of the recovery: After paring their vacations along with everyone else during the recession, the wealthy have rebounded with force. Since 2009, hotel spending by the wealthiest 20 percent of Americans has risen about 6 percent, according to inflation-adjusted data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The middle 20 percent are still spending nearly 3 percent less.


To stretch their discretionary dollars, middle-income vacationers are fueling one of the industry's growth areas: "limited service" lodgings. At Marriott's Fairfield Inn, Hyatt Place and Holiday Inn Express, you get free Wi-Fi and breakfast. But there's no bellman, concierge or restaurants.


The idea is to draw travelers who feel priced out of full-service hotels. People can still say, "I'm staying at the Marriott," even if it's the Fairfield Inn, says Bjorn Hanson, dean of New York University's hospitality school.


But many people are seeking deeper savings through increasingly popular sites such as Airbnb that arrange for people to rent rooms or apartments. The number of listed accommodations has soared since Airbnb's founding in 2008 to 550,000 — not far below Hilton's 685,000 rooms worldwide. Some studies suggest that Airbnb could be cutting into budget hotels' revenue.


Robin Lynch, 34, of New York City put 14 relatives, including her in-laws, in five Airbnb facilities in Brooklyn for her wedding last year. She estimates she paid roughly $200 a night, on average, compared with the $300 she'd expected for a hotel.


"That amounts to a lot of savings over seven days," she says.


High unemployment and flat paychecks have spurred more people not only to stay in Airbnb rooms but also to list their own homes.


Eric Worley, 30, and his girlfriend stayed at an Airbnb home in Columbus, Ohio, for $59 a night — half the lowest hotel rate they could find.


"Not only am I saving money, I'm also helping out another person ... by giving them some extra money," he says. "I'd much rather do that than have a corporation overcharge me for what is essentially the same service."


Sometimes, the cut-rate experience goes further that visitors had expected. Ann Carman, 32, of Yellow Springs, Ohio, had always wanted to stay in an Airstream trailer. When she and her boyfriend visited Austin, Texas, in December 2013, she found one in a backyard. They weren't alone. Sharing their accommodations were a pig named Fern, two dogs and a rooster.


"I was like, 'They've got a pig in their backyard, we've got to stay there,'" she says.


Airbnb hosts can charge less than hotels because they typically don't pay accommodation taxes or meet safety or disability regulations. That's sparked grumbling from hotels — and from localities that lose out on tax revenue.


The luxury sphere is also trying to expand its base. Chains such as the Ritz-Carlton and the Mandarin Oriental are pursuing not just the uber-rich but increasingly the merely affluent.


"My father would never have stayed in a luxury hotel," Hanson says. "He didn't think he belonged there, even though he might have been able to afford it."


As more modestly rich travelers have checked in, these hotels have sought to provide more for the ultra-wealthy.


With the recently opened St. Regis Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates, architects considered how much privacy to provide its most sumptuous suites, says Paul James, head of Starwood Hotels and Resorts' luxury properties.


"Part of the Abu Dhabi conversation was: 'Where does the helicopter land?'" James says.


More of the wealthiest travelers are now booking on shorter notice — sometime less than a day. The St. Regis Mardavall in Mallorca, Spain, got a call from a 30-something German asking about the local weather. The receptionist reported 85 degrees and blue skies. The traveler booked the largest available suite and said he'd arrive in an hour.


He made the call from his private jet circling above Madrid.


The elite traveler's experience was precisely what the Rosewood London had in mind when it opened its Grand Manor House Wing in December. The six-bedroom complex offers three living rooms, a library and a dining table for eight. It has its own street entrance and private elevator. For $42,000 a night, guests get some extra bragging rights: Their suite has its own postal code.


Mark Herron, general manager of the Four Seasons Vail, notes that his hotel recently arranged for a guest to feed elephants at a local zoo — even though the zoo was closed.


Then there was a celebrity who had a craving for Kentucky Fried Chicken. The nearest one was 28 miles (45 kilometers) way.


The hotel first tried to make it but couldn't match the recipe. "Plus, the celebrity wanted the bucket," Herron says.


Within an hour, the guest and his 21-person entourage had 10 buckets full of traditional and extra-crispy chicken.


Cornell's Carvell has a theory about why anyone makes such extravagant requests.


"They'll sometimes do it just to see if it can be done," he says. "They don't want to hear the word no."


---


Rugaber reported from Washington.



Scott Mayerowitz can be reached at http://bit.ly/OGqbLc and Chris Rugaber at http://bit.ly/NPkM3l .


Authorities release name of crushed worker


Authorities have released the name of a 31-year-old worker who died after being crushed at a steel plant near Saginaw.


The Saginaw News reports (http://bit.ly/UaOTpO ) Andrew Beckman of Saginaw was employed for about two years at Peerless Steel. Crews responded about 9:45 p.m. Monday to the plant in Saginaw County's Buena Vista Township after he was crushed.


Authorities say Beckman was loading 12-foot steel rods onto a trailer when the 3,100 pound load appeared to shift, pinning him against a steel shelf. Peerless Steel says it's cooperating with authorities.


The death at the plant about 80 miles northwest of Detroit is under investigation by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.



US trade deficit at two-year high in April


The U.S. trade deficit jumped to a two-year high in April, as exports declined and imports surged to a record high.


The deficit rose to $47.2 billion in April, up 6.9 percent from an upwardly revised March deficit of $44.2 billion, the Commerce Department said Wednesday.


Exports dropped for the fourth month out of the past five, falling 0.2 percent to $195.4 billion. Meanwhile, imports climbed 1.2 percent to an all-time high of $240.6 billion, reflecting record shipment levels of foreign-made cars, food, computers and other goods.


A wider trade deficit can act as a drag on growth because it means U.S. companies are earning less from their overseas markets. But it could also indicate rising U.S. demand as the country shakes off the effects of a harsh winter.


"We're obviously wary of falling back on using the weather as an excuse again, but the extreme cold winter, coupled with the drought in California, does partly explain why the U.S. is suddenly importing a lot more food and exporting less," said Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics.


In 2013, the trade deficit declined by 11.4 percent to $476.4 billion. The result was led in part by a boom in U.S. energy production that cut America's dependence on foreign oil while boosting petroleum exports to a record high.


A larger trade gap in the first three months of this year compared to the fourth quarter shaved nearly a full percentage point from growth. Gross domestic product shrank at an annual rate of 1 percent in the first quarter, also hurt by less business stocking of store shelves and a severe winter that disrupted consumer spending and factory production.


But economists expect a strong bounce back in the current April-June quarter. Some estimate that growth could hover around 3.8 percent as the trade deficit narrows and stronger hiring boosts household incomes and consumer spending. However, the bigger-than-expected trade deficit in April may cause analysts to trim those forecasts a bit.


Many analysts say growth will remain strong at a rate around 3 percent in the second half of the year.


A domestic energy boom may help narrow the trade gap further this year. U.S. petroleum exports rose to an all-time high in 2013. The stronger production also lowered America's dependence on foreign oil, cutting petroleum imports by 10.9 percent. In April, imports of petroleum fell 2.2 percent to $29.8 billion, while U.S. petroleum exports rose 3.1 percent to $11.8 billion.


The deficit with the 28-nation European Union hit a monthly record of $14 billion in April as imports from that region hit an all-time high.


America's trade gap with China jumped 33.7 percent to $27.3 billion in April, the largest gap since January. The U.S. deficit with China is the largest with any country, and this year's imbalance is running ahead of last year's record pace. That is putting pressure on the Obama administration to take a tougher stand on what critics see as unfair trade practices by China.


They say Beijing is manipulating its currency to keep it undervalued against the dollar. That makes Chinese goods cheaper in the United States and American products more expensive in China.


The administration last month announced it had won a major victory before the Geneva-based World Trade Organization in a case in which the United States had challenged China's imposition of penalty tariffs on the sale of $5 billion in U.S.-made vehicles in China.


Also in May, the Justice Department charged five Chinese military officers with hacking into U.S. companies' computer systems to steal trade secrets. The case was viewed as evidence of the increased commercial strains between the world's two biggest economies.



The Moment Bergdahl Was Released In 1 GIF


No matter which side of the aisle you fall upon regarding President Obama’s much ballyhooed trade for American prisoner of war Bowe Bergdahl, you have to appreciate the pure Hollywood vibes in this video of the moment of his release.


Set to a bizarre soundtrack that may well be Taliban reggae – though it's doubt they spend much time getting irie and hacky sacking – 28-year-old Bergdahl waits in a pickup truck surrounded by armed soldiers, appearing at one point to wipe away tears. One of the men is heard to admonish him, “Don’t come back to Afghanistan. You won’t make it out alive next time.”



A helicopter appears and he is escorted over by two men, one of whom has a makeshift white flag. He's handed off and hurried aboard in a scene that looks straight out of the next James Bond flick:



An almost happy ending for Bergdahl, who was America’s only known prisoner of war, and is now potentially facing charges as a deserter for wandering off-base unarmed and disenchanted, which led to his capture five years ago. But at least he’ll be doing at home.



Machnouk: Void concerns all, not just Christians


BEIRUT: Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk said Wednesday that the presidential vacuum concerns all Lebanese, not just Christians.


He also said that Speaker Nabih Berri had reiterated his warning against obstructing the political process in light of the presidential void.


“The presidential vacuum doses not only concern a certain sect or political party. It is a problem for all Lebanese who will collaborate to end this void, but by through obstructing the work of [political] institutions,” Machnouk said after visiting Berri at his Ain al-Tineh residence.


He acknowledged that disrupting the political process was one way to exercise political pressure, but urged officials to use other means. “Obstructing these two institutions, [the Cabinet and Parliament], will not hasten the election of the president,” he added.


Machnouk spoke on behalf of Berri, saying the latter considers the Constitution as the basis for political action.


The Cabinet is responsible for discussing and enact policies that interest the people without bias, had Berri said. He stressed on the incorrectness of “using the presidential vacuum as an excuse to obstruct any constitutional institution in the country.”


Assafir newspaper published Wednesday comments made by Berri threatening to take measures against lawmakers if they boycott the next parliamentary session on June 10.


“It is no longer possible to remain silent about what is going on, and those who have harmed the Constitution will hear something from me they’ve never heard before,” he said.


Christian MPs from March 14 and MP Michel Aoun’s blocs had announced last month that they would not discuss any issue before electing a president, unless the topic was of high importance or affects national interest.


In parallel, the Cabinet failed Tuesday for the second time in less than a week to agree on a mechanism to exercise full executive powers, including the president’s prerogatives.


This pushed Prime Minister Tammam Salam to blame what he called a “traditional” inter-Christian struggle over the presidency for the deadlock. Speaking to MTV, he said he hoped that the Cabinet’s next session would resolve the prerogatives issue.



US productivity falls at 3.2 percent rate in 1Q


U.S. productivity fell even more than previously thought in the January-March period while labor costs rose at a faster pace.


Productivity, the amount of output per hour of work, declined at an annual rate of 3.2 percent in the first quarter, the weakest showing since the beginning months of the recession in 2008, the Labor Department reported Wednesday. Unit labor costs rose at a 5.7 percent rate, the fastest pace in more than a year.


Rising labor costs and falling productivity can be a cause for concern if they are an indication that inflation is worsening. But the first quarter performance was seen as a temporary bump caused by an unusually harsh winter which caused the economy to go into reverse. A strong rebound is expected in the current quarter.


Initially, the government reported that productivity fell at a smaller 1.7 percent rate in the first quarter. The initial estimate put the rise in labor costs at a 4.2 percent rate.


The reason the numbers were revised was that the economy's overall output in the first quarter, as measured by the gross domestic product, was revised sharply lower. Instead of the GDP growing at a tiny 0.1 percent rate in the January-March period, the government reported last week that the economy actually shrank, falling at a 1 percent rate.


Analysts believe overall GDP will bounce back in the current April-June period and they also are looking for productivity to recover as well.


The Federal Reserve keeps close watch on productivity and labor costs for any signs that inflation is threatening to rise to an unacceptable rate. But economists say the Fed will see the first quarter weakness in productivity and rise in labor costs as temporary developments reflecting the harsh winter rather than an indication of the start of a worrisome trend.


Even with the first quarter spurt in labor costs, overall wage pressures remain mild, reflecting the long period it has taken the economy to regain the millions of jobs lost during the Great Recession.


Economists are looking for a rebound in economic growth in the April-June quarter to around 3.8 percent as warmer weather boosts consumer spending.


They expect further job gains will lift incomes and spur consumer spending in the second half of the year when they are forecasting the economy will be growing at a solid annual rate of around 3 percent.



Aoun, Berri discuss presidential void


BEIRUT: Free Patriotic Movement leader Michel Aoun held talks Wednesday with Speaker Nabih Berri over the presidential void that the country plunged into last month.


“We discussed urgent files that need an understanding, mainly the election of a new president and the work of both Cabinet and Parliament in light of presidential void,” Aoun said following his visit to Berri’s Ain al-Tineh residence.


Asked if Berri had told him that he would back his candidacy for the election, Aoun said “Berri is the one entitled to speak for himself and not me.”


He also said that his group was maintaining cooperation and dialogue with the Future Movement, but would not provide further details.


Lebanon has been facing a presidential void since the term of former President Michel Sleiman ended on May 25 with lawmakers failing to elect a new head of state.


Berri has set June 9 as a new date for an electoral session in Parliament, but the vote would need a consensus between political rivals to be achieved.


The presidential void has also created a new challenge for officials who have yet to agree on the mechanism of Cabinet's work in the absence of a head of state. Christian lawmakers also boycotted Parliament's session last week, arguing the assembly should not legislate while the presidency is vacant.



Secretary John Kerry arrives in Beirut


BEIRUT: United States Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in Beirut Wednesday afternoon, being received by Ambassador David Hale at the Rafik Hariri International Airport.


The secretary arrived on a private jet via Warsaw. Kerry is expected to meet with Prime Minister Tammam Salam, speaker Nabih Berri and Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai during his brief visit to Lebanon, his first as secretary of state.


Kerry is headed to the Grand Serail for talks with Salam. He is also expected to hold talks with Berri at his Ain al-Tineh residence and Rai at the Beirut Maronite Diocese.


Kerry has visited the country numerous times in the past as the head of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, but Wednesday is the first time Lebanon has seen America's top diplomat since Hillary Clinton's visit in 2009.


More to follow ...



Saudi envoy announces new Syrian refugee aid in Lebanon


BEIRUT: Saudi Arabia's Ambassador to Lebanon Ali Awad Asiri announced a new aid program for Syrian refugees in Riyadh’s embassy in Qoreitem Wednesday, as a part of The Saudi National Campaign to Support Brethren in Syria.


The event was attended by UNHCR representative in Lebanon Ninette Kelley and President of the Saudi National Campaign Walid al-Jallal.


Asiri said the new aid program would spend $1.8 million over the next six months, providing 1,000 Syrian families with shelter. In the next few weeks, Riyadh will also distribute food aid to displaced families.


Asiri said Saudi assistance would further provide refugees with 150 tons of dates and 17,000 milk containers. The kingdom will also continue treating sick and wounded Syrians in Lebanese hospitals, assuring they would receive adequate treatment.


Previously, the campaign has allocated approximately $3.7 million in relief aid for 8,000 Syrian families and set up eight reception and shelter centers in Lebanon during 2012.


Saudi Arabia also provided food and blankets to 1,000 refugee families in collaboration with the Hariri Foundation for Sustainable Human Development and the Union of Aid Organizations for Syrian Refugees in Sidon on Jan. 04, 2013.


The diplomatic mission distributed 100,000 blankets for Syrian refugees in Lebanon on July 4, 2012, as a part of the campaign, conducted in cooperation with the Coalition of Charities for the Relief of Syrian Refugees.



Insurer UnitedHealth raises dividend by 34 pct


UnitedHealth is once again hiking the quarterly dividend it gives shareholders by more than 30 percent, with the latest increase tripling the initial value of a payout the nation's largest health insurer debuted in 2010.


The insurer says it will pay a cash dividend of 37.5 cents per share on June 25 to stockholders of record as of June 16. That's up nearly 10 cents from the Minnetonka, Minnesota, company's current payout of 28 cents per share.


UnitedHealth Group Inc. became the first health insurer to offer more than a token payout to shareholders in 2010 when it started providing a quarterly payout of 12.5 cents per share.


Companies often look to spend the cash they pile up from strong performances on shareholder dividends or stock buybacks.



Greenbrier, Watco form railcar repair venture


Greenbrier and Watco are forming a joint venture that will own and run their railcar repair, refurbishment and maintenance businesses.


The 50-50 joint venture will be called GBW Railcar Services LLC and have more than 2,100 employees.


The new company will have the scale to meet the certification and maintenance requirements of the growing North American tank car fleet and expand railcar repair service offerings for general freight cars of nearly all types.


GBW's combined network will include 14 tank car repair shops. Of those, 10 will be from Watco Cos. and four from The Greenbrier Cos.


Jim Cowan will serve as CEO of the new venture. He will also continue as senior vice president of operations for Greenbrier.


The joint venture is expected to close during the third quarter.


Greenbrier is based in Lake Oswego, Oregon. It supplies transportation equipment and services to the railroad industry. Transportation company Watco is based in Pittsburg, Kansas.



Strong winds, showers expected in Lebanon


BEIRUT: Strong winds accompanied by scattered rain and occasional thunder are expected to hit Lebanon Thursday.


The Meteorology Department at the Beirut airport also said the weather would be partly cloudy to cloudy with temperatures at sea level in Beirut between 24 and 26 degrees.


The sudden change in weather is due to a warm air mass over the Mediterranean.



Lebanon only to take refugees from border area: minister


BEIRUT: Social Affairs Minister Rashid Derbas said Wednesday that Lebanon would only receive those refugees fleeing from nearby border areas in war-torn Syria.


“The criterion for receiving refugees is clear under the International Convention to which we are committed,” Derbas told the Voice of Lebanon radio station. “The term for receiving refugees is from areas near the Lebanese border, and we will not accept any refugee coming from areas far from the border."


Derbas said the Lebanese government had been dealing with the Syria conflict at a humanitarian level.


"We no longer accept to deal with the Syrian crisis as a humanitarian issue,” he said. “It's a political issue that the Lebanese government as well as the international and Arab communities failed to handle properly."



EU executive says Lithuania ready to join euro


The European Union official that oversees the euro says Lithuania is ready to join the common currency as of next year and expects a full decision next month.


If it joins, the Baltic nation would become the 19th country to use the currency that was launched in 1999.


Lithuania's move to join is another vote of confidence in the euro, which has suffered a half-decade of financial stress following debt problems in a number of countries, such as Greece and Spain.


EU Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn said Wednesday that "thanks to the efforts of the past five years, this ship is far better placed to navigate rough seas than it was at the outbreak of the crisis."


The current euro members are not expected to object to the addition.



Production start pushed back for Elio


The start date for production of a new three-wheeled vehicle at a plant in Shreveport has been pushed back.


Production at Elio Motors had been slated to start by March 2015. Now, it is expected to begin in September 2015, according to The Times of Shreveport (http://bit.ly/1o9fwpK).


Founder Paul Elio says the reason is a funding delay last year.


Stuart Lichter, an industrial developer leasing the plant, was set to invest $7.5 million in Elio Motors — in conjunction with the purchase of the facility for the same amount by Caddo's Industrial Development Board. The proposal received a green light from the Caddo Commission in August. But, it was delayed until December.


Elio said he could not start the current round until Lichter's money was in hand. He said if funding falls into place "unbelievably quickly" there could be no delay. However, if it takes the time he initially allotted, production will be delayed until the second quarter or the third quarter if that funding process takes longer.


Elio said he's raised $55 million in private funding to date, and needs roughly $200 million to get his operation started.


Elio and his team have been marketing the vehicle through a 33-city nationwide tour.


"We have a tremendous amount of momentum and it's going very well for us," Elio said.


Lichter said he's confident Elio Motors will start production next year. "The demand generated for the vehicle is extraordinary."


Most Caddo commissioners have agreed. However, commissioner Stephanie Lynch has long been the skeptic, saying vehicle production will not occur because Elio Motors is "severely under-capitalized."


Lynch cast the only dissenting vote on the deal to purchase the plant in August, and immediately sued the parish on the legality of the transaction. A portion of her suit challenging the purchase was dismissed in September.



US Coast Guard issues permit for new bridge


The U.S. Coast Guard has issued a key permit needed for construction of a new bridge connecting Detroit and Windsor, Ontario.


The Detroit Free Press and the Detroit News report that word of the permit came Tuesday.


Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder and Canada are trying to build the bridge over the Detroit River that would compete with the Ambassador Bridge. Property on both sides of the border still must be acquired, and funding for a new customs plaza on the U.S. side still must be addressed.


Last week, a federal judge disagreed with private owners of the existing bridge, who claim a permit would cause "irreparable harm." It was a defeat Friday for Manuel "Matty" Moroun, whose family controls the Ambassador Bridge and wants to build its own second span.



Property taxes to rise for 5th year in Wicomico


Property taxes are rising in Wicomico County for the fifth consecutive year.


The Daily Times (http://delmarvane.ws/1kwMVtc ) reports the County Council voted 5-2 on Tuesday night to approve its annual budget with a 5 percent property tax increase.


For a $150,000 home, that leads to an increase of about $65 on the annual tax bill. Since 2010, that tax bill has gone up $290.


This year's tax increase goes into effect July 1. County Executive Rick Pollitt says the tax hike is needed to offset a 2.5 percent drop in the county's total property value.


The county also plans to take $7 million from its $39 million reserve fund to pay for a backlog of road maintenance projects and new benefits under a restructure police labor agreement.



Reshuffle of Beirut airport managers


BEIRUT: A decree by Transportation Minister Ghazi Zeaiter Wednesday announced a reshuffle of managers at Beirut airport.


The decree appointed Mohammad Shahabeddine as acting head of Rafik Hariri International Airport, replacing Daniel al-Hibi.


Hibi maintained his position as director general of Civil Aviation.


Ibrahim Abu Olaiwi was appointed acting airport vice president and Mohammad Saad head of the technical logistics at the Directorate General of Civil Aviation.



Berri calls for Parliament session to discuss salary scale on June 10


BEIRUT: Speaker Nabih Berri called Wednesday for a Parliament session on June 10 over the controversial wage hike draft law.


The session is scheduled at 10:30 a.m. next Tuesday and would resume in the evening.


The fate of Lebanon’s official exams hinges on the scheduled session after teachers vowed to boycott the tests if the wage hike was not endorsed.


The civil servants have been involved in a faceoff with officials for the past two years to pressure lawmakers to endorse the bill, which economists warn would harm and already overburdened treasury.


Parliament has been looking into securing resources for the salary increase before adopting it to avoid damaging the country’s economy.



Va. betting parlors closed to Triple Crown wagers


In the state where famed Triple Crown winner Secretariat was born, off-track betting parlors that would ordinarily be packed with gamblers watching California Chrome try to match Secretariat's feat Saturday will likely be closed or almost empty.


A dispute between horsemen and the state's only thoroughbred race track over the future of horse racing in Virginia has closed off track betting on thoroughbred racing across the state. The only way to bet on California Chrome in Virginia is online, a process many of the industry's predominantly older fans don't feel comfortable embracing.


"I'm bummed out," said Gary Cunningham, a carpenter who bets a few times a week at an off track parlor in Chesapeake. "I'm not really a computer whiz. I'm more of a simple man."


The problem at Colonial Downs are mirrored at race tracks around the country, where the costs of running live races often exceed the amount made by the wagering that takes place on them. The racing industry has struggled to recover from the Great Recession, and has been hampered by a declining foal crop and increased competition from other forms of legalized gambling.


Nationally, total U.S. pari-mutuel handle in 2013 — a measure of overall horse betting — was essentially unchanged from the previous year at $10.88 billion, according to The Jockey Club in New York. That's compared with $15.18 billion in 2003.


Most thoroughbred race track profits come from off track betting parlors that can broadcast races year-round held at other tracks. In many other states, including some of Virginia's neighbors, race tracks also are able to subsidize the purses they offer winners with onsite casino gambling.


"One of the issues Virginia has, because of where they are, is they're also surrounded by tracks that have alternative gambling. So those tracks are offering more money and purses. So you have Maryland now, you have West Virginia, you have Pennsylvania, you have Ohio,"" said Liz Bracken, associate coordinator at the University of Arizona Race Track Industry Program.


Colonial Downs — and all the state's off track betting parlors — can't accept any wagers on thoroughbred racing until it comes to an agreement with the Virginia Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association about the number of racing days it will hold this year. The contract between the two expired at the end January, closing the off track betting parlors to thoroughbred wagers during the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes. Only wagers on harness races are allowed, and Colonial Downs has closed four of its eight Virginia off track betting parlors.


"It was a detrimental thing to people that came here to play the horses," said off track betting regular Gary Cunningham. "It was almost a slap in the face."


Colonial Downs says it needs to run fewer races so it can provide bigger purses, which it argues will attract better horses, jockeys and trainers to its isolated track off Interstate 64 and gain the interest of gamblers around the world. The horsemen say they need more opportunities to win to recoup their training costs, which can exceed $2,000 a month.


Colonial Downs says it's already lost $1.5 million in revenue because of the off track betting closures. While the track was once prepared to offer 25 days of racing this summer, Colonial Downs President Ian Stewart says that's no longer case. The track has said it only wants to run six races this year.


Colonial Downs officials have said they're prepared to go without any thoroughbred racing this year — and possibly longer — if it means changing the way things are done in Virginia to make the 18 year old track nationally relevant. However, those involved in the industry say the only thing the track cares about is cutting its expenses.


"All this stuff that they're saying about them looking for excellence is an absolute crock," said Ferris Allen, a Clarksville, Md.-based horse trainer whose stable is the winningest in the track's history.


Allen said reducing races still wouldn't increase the purses enough to make it attractive to the most competitive horses.


"Both sides have legitimate points," said Alex Waldrop, president of the National Thoroughbred Racing Association, of which Colonial Downs is not a member. "There are no good guys and bad guys in this one."



Brock Vergakis can be reached at http://bit.ly/1fezqHg .


Top court rejects bail plea of Indian tycoon


India's Supreme Court has rejected an appeal by an Indian tycoon accused of a multibillion dollar fraud to be released from jail and allowed house arrest.


Subrata Roy, head of the Sahara India conglomerate, has been jailed since the end of February on charges that his company failed to return billions of dollars to investors.


The court Wednesday allowed the Sahara group to sell properties in nine Indian cities after the company said it had not succeeded in raising $1.68 billion to obtain bail for Roy.


Sahara is well known throughout India because it sponsors the Indian cricket team. The company has interests in microfinance, media and entertainment, tourism, health care and real estate, including New York's landmark Plaza Hotel and London's Grosvenor House.



Kentucky plant emblematic of move from coal to gas


In the shadow of Paradise Fossil Plant's aging smokestacks, where white steam and carbon dioxide rises into the sky, outdated coal-fired generators are being replaced with one that runs on natural gas.


The change in Muhlenberg County, once the nation's top producer of coal, is emblematic of what's been happening across the U.S. as natural gas becomes cheaper and electric utilities try to meet stiffer carbon emissions rules the Obama administration announced this week.


When the $1 billion natural gas facility is finished in 2017, the Tennessee Valley Authority, the nation's largest public utility, will shut down two coal-burning units at Paradise that date to the 1960s.


The Environmental Protection Agency says natural gas generators produce about half the carbon dioxide of coal-fired units, and a fraction of other harmful pollutants.


"It's a fraction of what it is on a coal plant," said Billy Sabin, who is managing the transition to the natural gas plant at the Paradise facility.


Natural gas is "available, cheap and perceived to be secure for a long time into the future," said Charles Ebinger, director of the Energy Security Initiative at the Washington-based Brookings Institution.


Ebinger said utilities around the country anticipated that the new regulations would require huge capital spending, so many have opted to simply close their coal-fired plants and replace them with gas.


Coal supplies about 90 percent of the electricity in Kentucky, and about 40 percent of the nation's power generation, compared with about 27 percent for natural gas.


But the efficient gas technology isn't welcome by everyone in the county, where the first coal seams were dug in the 1800s and immortalized in John Prine's song "Paradise," with its lyrics: "Well, they dug for their coal till the land was forsaken, Then they wrote it all down as the progress of man."


Randall Parham, who earns about $19 an hour working at the Paradise No. 9 mine, said new restrictions set forth by the White House on Monday could endanger the livelihood of many in Kentucky. The state is required to cut its carbon emissions by 18 percent by 2030.


"Coal is all that's here, that's the jobs," he said. "If you're not a doctor or a lawyer, coal miner is next."


Coal mining flourished in Muhlenberg County as recently as the 1970s, but tougher air restrictions have forced layoffs and cuts in production.


"If I'm still working here two years from now, I'll be surprised," Parham said.


There's also sure to be some lost jobs at the Paradise plant when the new facility opens, since gas-fired generators need about a third of the workforce of a coal-burning unit.


During a tour of the construction site Tuesday, Sabin said Paradise would need about 130 fewer employees when the two coal-burning units shut down, bringing the plant's total employment to about 210 workers. Sabin said the utility would work to find the displaced workers jobs at other sites.


The TVA said this week that its system-wide carbon emissions are on track to be cut by 40 percent below 2005 levels by 2020. By that time, TVA's carbon emissions will be about half what they were at the 1995 peak.



US: China tensions bad for Asia business


A senior U.S. official said Wednesday that Washington wants to expand its economic ties with Asia, the world's fastest growing region, but warned that China's provocative conduct in the South China Sea raises tensions that are bad for business.


U.S. Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker told American and Filipino business groups that the United States has overinvested its diplomatic, economic and strategic resources in other parts of the world. She said it was committed to policies "to correct the imbalance and to deepen U.S. engagement" with Asia.


Pritzker's swing through Vietnam, the Philippines and Myanmar is mainly focused on the economic elements of President Barack Obama's policy of refocusing U.S. foreign policy on Asia. At the same time, Obama has been in Europe reassuring U.S. allies about its security commitments to the region after Russia's annexation of Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula raised tensions.


Asia and the Pacific are expected to be home to 54 percent of the world's middle class by 2022 and will import nearly $10 trillion worth of goods and services by then, more than double the level today, Pritzker said. Through 2020, more than $1 trillion of infrastructure investment is needed in the 10-member countries of Association of Southeast Asian Nations to meet the demands of a growing population.


She told reporters that American companies are optimistic about the region. But China's deployment last month of an oil rig accompanied by government vessels in South China Sea waters also claimed by Vietnam and its incursions into areas claimed by the Philippines "are provocative and they raise tensions."


"We're very concerned about that," she said. "Actions like these create uncertainty, which is not good for the business environment."


China, the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia, Vietnam and Taiwan have overlapping claims across the South China Sea, one the world's busiest shipping lanes. Beijing says it has sovereignty over virtually all of the resource-rich waters since ancient times.


Pritzker said the United States has a national interest in maintaining peace, unimpeded lawful commerce, freedom of navigation and overflight in the South China Sea. It supports diplomatic and legal means to resolve the dispute, including the Philippines' decision to seek arbitration from an international tribunal in The Hague.



AP Writer Oliver Teves contributed to this report.