Monday, 9 June 2014

Pipeline proposal stirs criticism in Massachusetts

The Associated Press



A proposal to build a new pipeline carrying natural gas is stirring criticism in Massachusetts, where more than a dozen towns near the potential path of the 250-mile line have passed resolutions against the project.


The plan, which calls for expanding a pipeline system that already stretches from the Gulf of Mexico to the Northeast, stems in part from a push by the six New England governors to boost the region's supply of natural gas.


A section of the Tennessee Gas Pipeline already enters the state at the New York line and runs along the edge of southern Massachusetts. The proposal by pipeline operator Kinder Morgan Energy Services of Texas calls for a new section to be built along the northern part of the state, ending in Dracut, north of Boston, where it would connect with a network of transmission lines owned by other companies.


Opponents have raised concerns about potential risks to the environment, including state forests and wildlife management areas, as well as the effects of the hydraulic-fracturing, or fracking, used elsewhere to extract gas by injecting high-pressure mixtures of water, sand or gravel and chemicals.


On May 19, the Berkshire Hills town of Windsor became the 14th municipality in the state to vote against pipeline-related projects after surveyors requested access to residents' properties as part of the siting process.


Most of the votes were nonbinding resolutions approved by residents, although the City Council in Northampton approved an anti-pipeline measure on May 15. Deerfield officials passed a resolution on April 28 denying access to town-owned land for project surveyors.


"We've got to be the squeaky wheel," said Janet Bradley, a retired high school environmental science teacher in Windsor, who said she is concerned about the possibility of accidental releases of gas or chemicals used in the fracking process. She said the municipal votes likely won't do much to stop the project — jurisdiction lies with the federal government — but she hopes they send a message to officials and utility executives.


A spokesman for Kinder Morgan, Richard Wheatley, said planners attempt to be as environmentally friendly as possible when routing the pipeline. About 37 percent of Massachusetts property owners contacted for land surveys have given their permission, according to Kinder Morgan.


The opponents include comedian Bill Cosby and his wife, Camille, who own hundreds of acres protected by the Franklin Land Trust in Shelburne Falls. The couple, who began buying land in the area in the 1970s, denied a request to survey for the pipeline on their land. Their agent, David Brokaw, said they are concerned about toxic waste and potential damage to wetlands.


The multibillion-dollar project would require public hearings and approval by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The proposal came about after the six New England governors asked last year for grid operator ISO-New England to consider strategies to deliver more electricity, especially during peak usage periods.


Massachusetts relies heavily on natural gas. A report issued by the New England Gas-Electric Focus Group in March, in which ISO participated, said more than 50 percent of New England's electricity needs are now generated with natural gas, compared with 15 percent in 2000. In Massachusetts, only about 9.3 percent of net electricity generation comes from renewable sources, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.


Pipeline opponents say the state should instead focus on efficiency programs and developing renewable energy sources.



Salam slams ministers for disrupting Cabinet work


BEIRUT: Prime Minister Tammam Salam Monday criticized some ministers for disrupting the work of the Cabinet under the pretext of speeding up the presidential election.


According to his office, Salam “warned against the dangers that might arise as a result of disrupting the legislative and the executive powers under the pretext of pressuring lawmakers to elect a new president.”


His remarks came during a meeting with a delegation from the alumni club of the Lebanese University's Faculty of Media.


Salam was referring to Christian lawmakers and ministers who refused to attend Parliament and Cabinet sessions amid a presidential vacuum, arguing that the assembly and the government should merely address urgent issues.


But Salam’s Cabinet began last week discussing a mechanism to govern the work of his government in the presence of a vacuum.


The Constitution vests full executive power to the Cabinet including those of the presidency in light of a presidential vacuum.


“I hope that a new president is elected as soon as possible but this purpose cannot be achieved by disrupting the Cabinet's work amid a presidential vacuum,” Salam said.


He said he called for a Cabinet session Thursday to “look into the agenda and resume discussion on establishing a mechanism to govern amid the vacuum.”


"If anyone believes that they can achieve something by disrupting the government, they're wrong,” he said.


The ecnomy is paralyzed and continued disruptions would exacerbate the ailing situation, according to the premiere.


Salam warned that he would divulge to the Lebanese details about negligence and obstruction "because the country and the people are the ones paying the price."



Chouest buys Washington yacht builder


Gary Chouest, who founded the Galliano shipyard Edison Chouest, has led a group that purchased Westport Shipyard Inc., a Washington company that is one of largest yacht builders in North America.


The Advocate reports (http://bit.ly/1jf6fqF ) Westport LLC, a group that included Chouest and members of his family, acquired the shipyard. Terms of the sale were not disclosed.


Along with Edison Chouest, the Chouest family also owns American Custom Yachts, of Stuart, Florida.


Westport has three shipyards in Washington state and a marina and sales office in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The company, which has more than 400 employees, has built more than 120 yachts since 2000. The company's yachts cost several million dollars.



Merck to pay $3.85B for hepatitis C drug developer


Merck will spend nearly $4 billion for Idenix Pharmaceuticals with a per-share bid that more than triples the hepatitis C drug developer's last closing price.


Pharmaceutical companies are racing to test new and potentially lucrative treatments for hepatitis C, a blood-borne disease that causes liver damage and is expected to become more common as the U.S. population ages.


Merck will spend $24.50 in cash for each Idenix share. The company's stock closed at $7.23 on Friday and had already climbed 21 percent so far this year. Shares of Idenix Pharmaceuticals Inc. soared more than 230 percent at the opening bell Monday.


The boards of both companies have approved the deal, which they expect to close in the third quarter.


Merck said Cambridge, Massachusetts company has built a promising portfolio of hepatitis C treatments, including three that have reached clinical testing, or testing in humans. Its most advanced candidate, samatasvir, is in mid-stage testing.


Merck also has a portfolio of hepatitis C treatments that includes Victrelis and several drugs in development.


Doctors have long sought more effective, palatable treatments for hepatitis C. Until late last year, the standard treatments required patients to ingest 12 pills a day, alongside antiviral drug injections that can cause flu-like symptoms. That approach cured only about 75 percent of patients.


Physicians quickly embraced Gilead Sciences Inc.'s once-a-day pill Sovaldi, which was approved by U.S. regulators in December and cures between 80 percent and 90 percent of its patients. Sovaldi racked up more than $2 billion in sales for Gilead in its first full quarter on the market. But the drugmaker has taken criticism for the new pill's high price. One 12-week course of treatment costs $84,000.


Idenix shares climbed $16.67 to $24.10 at the opening bell. Shares of Merck, which is based in Whitehouse Station, New Jersey, slipped 42 cents to $57.43.


Shares of another hepatitis C drug developer, Achillion Pharmaceuticals Inc., now seen as a potential takeover target, climbed 40 percent to $4.05.



Greek PM replaces finance minister in reshuffle


Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras replaced his finance minister with a finance and economics professor during a broad Cabinet reshuffle Monday following the conservative-led coalition government's weak showing in European parliamentary elections last month.


Outgoing Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras has been widely rumored to be taking over the governorship of the Bank of Greece. The current governor's term expires later this month.


Stournaras, who was appointed in mid-2012, handled Greece's bailout negotiations with the International Monetary Fund and European Union and oversaw the country's tentative return to financial markets earlier this year.


He is being replaced by Gikas Hardouvelis, chief economist at Eurobank who also served as economic adviser to two previous governments, those of socialist prime minister Costas Simitis in 2000-2004 and of Lucas Papademos in late 2011-mid-2012.


The finance minister is a key position in the country whose near default is broadly blamed for sparking a financial crisis in the eurozone.


Greece has been largely dependent on international rescue loans from the IMF and other eurozone countries since mid-2010 after a mountainous debt and gaping budget deficit left it unable to borrow on the international market. In return, successive governments have imposed deeply unpopular spending cuts and reforms.


Seeking to strike a balance with his coalition partner, the socialist PASOK party that suffered a dramatic collapse in popularity during the financial crisis, Samaras distributed new positions among members of both parties.


Other reshuffle changes include the ministers of the interior, public order, education, culture, health and agriculture.


The main opposition Syriza party dismissed the move as irrelevant.


The new Cabinet is to be sworn in Tuesday.



Automakers to help save Detroit's art treasures


General Motors, Ford and Chrysler are driving into Detroit's bankruptcy reorganization by pledging $26 million to help support retiree pensions while keeping the city's art treasures off the auction block, officials announced Monday.


The money will go to the Detroit Institute of Arts as part of its $100 million commitment to what what's being called a "grand bargain" to resolve the largest public bankruptcy in U.S. history. It's helping keep city-owned pieces in the museum off the auction block as some creditors demand they be sold to pay off some of Detroit's billions of dollars in debt.


Of the $26 million, $10 million will come from Ford Motor Co., $6 million from Chrysler Group LLC, $5 million from General Motors Co. and $5 million from the General Motors Foundation.


"The city needs more and specifically the city needs cash," Reid Bigland, head of U.S. sales for Chrysler, said during the announcement at the museum.


Since leaving bankruptcy protection itself in 2009, GM has posted about $20 billion in earnings and currently has a cash stockpile of $27 billion. Chrysler has earned nearly $4 billion since exiting bankruptcy and had $12.5 billion in cash on hand at the end of the first quarter.


Last week, the Michigan Legislature approved sending $195 million for Detroit's two retirement systems, and Gov. Rick Snyder has said he will sign the bill. A dozen foundations also have committed about $360 million toward state-appointed emergency manager Kevyn Orr's plan of adjustment, which is Detroit's roadmap through and beyond bankruptcy.


As part of the deal, the city's art museum and its assets would be transferred to a private nonprofit.


Snyder called the corporate and foundation support the "fundamental core" of Detroit's comeback, which he described as going on for a while.


"It's a fragile comeback," he said. "Our work is not done. We need to follow through."


About 2,800 city-owned artworks have been valued at between $454 million and $867 million.


Orr has said the city's debt is $18 billion or more with $5.7 billion in unfunded retiree health care and $3.5 billion in unfunded pension liabilities.


The city already has reached a deal — brokered by mediators — that would protect the art forever and limit pension cuts for approximately 30,000 retirees and city workers to no more than 4.5 percent instead of as much as 34 percent. If the retirees and employees do not support it, the money from the state, foundations and DIA pledge would be made moot and deeper pension cuts could become inevitable.


Retirees have until July 11 to vote on the city's plan. The trial on the city's case will be held this summer.



The Hartford announces top executive changes


The Hartford Financial Services Group says that its chief executive is stepping down and will be replaced by its chief financial officer.


The Hartford, Connecticut, property and casualty insurer and financial services company said Monday that Liam E. McGee is also stepping down as president but will stay on as executive chairman until the annual meeting in May 2015.


CFO Christopher J. Swift was appointed CEO. Swift joined The Hartford in March 2010 after holding leadership and finance jobs at American International Group. Douglas G. Elliot, president of commercial markets, will succeed McGee as president.


Beth Bombara, who headed efforts to reduce The Hartford's annuities operations, succeeds Swift as CFO.


The appointments take effect July 1.


McGee, who led the company for five years, said The Hartford's "strategic transformation" is largely complete.


Shares of The Hartford rose 6 cents to $36.29 in midday trading Monday.



Interior minister meets Qatari officials in Doha


BEIRUT: Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk arrived Monday for a two-day visit in Doha, where he is set to meet Qatari officials.


Machnouk was accompanied by a delegation of security officials comprised of Maj. Gen. Abbas Ibrahim, the head of Lebanese General Security; Brig. Gen. Ibrahim Basbous, the acting chief of the Internal Security Forces; Imad Othman, the head of the ISF's Information Branch; and Beirut Governor Ziyad Shbib.


The minister was received by the head of Qatar’s general security alongside the director of international cooperation.


Monday evening, Machnouk is set to attend a dinner in his honor organized by members of the Lebanese community in Doha.



5 Things to Know in Florida for June 9


Your daily look at news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today.


BRUSH FIRE CLOSES U.S. 27 IN SOUTH FLORIDA


A brush fire in western Broward County has forced the Florida Highway Patrol to close a portion of U.S. 27, from Alligator Alley to Southern Boulevard in Palm Beach County. Officials believe the brush fire may have been started by a lightning strike.


END NEAR IN EX-OFFICER'S ATV BEACH CRASH TRIAL


Trial is wrapping up for a former Miami Beach police officer on charges stemming from a 2011 crash in which he struck and seriously injured two people while joy-riding with a woman on a police all-terrain vehicle. The defense for Derick Kuilan is expected to rest Monday. After prosecutors put on a short rebuttal case, both sides will begin closing arguments.


TERRORISM TRIAL IN TAMPA DRAWS TO A CLOSE


Closing arguments are set in the trial of a Kosovo-born American citizen in federal court for plotting a terrorist attack in Tampa.


The trial of Sami Osmakac, continues Monday. He's the 27-year-old Pinellas County man arrested during a sting operation in 2012 in which he bought weapons, including a car bomb and an AK-47, from a man he thought was an arms dealer.


ENDANGERD BUTTERFLIES TO BE RELEASED IN PARK


Some rare butterflies are set to be released on an island in Biscayne National Park. Researchers are scheduled to release some Schaus' swallowtail butterflies Monday on Elliot Key.


FLA. GOV. TO CAMPAIGN ON COLLEGE COSTS AND TUITION


Florida Gov. Rick Scott is hitting the campaign trail this week to discuss college costs and tuition hikes. Scott plans to make five campaign stops. He will be starting Monday at Florida Gulf Coast University in Fort Myers.



Time Warner completes spinoff of Time Inc.


Time Warner Inc. said Monday that it completed the spinoff of magazine publisher Time Inc. into a separate, publicly traded company, as it focuses on its other media properties.


As part of the spinoff, Time Warner shareholders were given one share of Time for every eight Time Warner shares they owned as of May 23. Time Inc. publishes People, Time and Sports Illustrated magazines, among other titles, and had been a cornerstone of Time Warner.


New York-based Time Warner owns cable TV channel HBO and Warner Bros. studios. Shedding the publishing arm should help the company focus on being a video content company, Time Warner CEO and Chairman Jeff Bewkes said in a statement.


Shares of Time Warner rose 68 cents to $68.82 in morning trading Monday.


Shares of Time Inc., which had been trading on a when-issued basis under the symbol "TIME" on the New York Stock Exchange, dropped $1.01, or 4.3 percent, to $22.47 in morning trading Monday.



18 Clark County pot dispensary licenses approved


Clark County commissioners have approved licenses for all 18 medical marijuana dispensaries available in its jurisdiction.


The 18 businesses approved Friday were whittled down from a field of 79 applicants during three days of public hearings.


The lucrative potential of the medical marijuana industry prompted a flood of applications from prominent members of Las Vegas' political, medical, legal and real estate fields.


The Las Vegas Sun reports license winners include businesses associated with former state lawmakers Richard Perkins, David Goldwater, Mark James and Chad Christensen.


The 18 businesses will be located in unincorporated areas of the state's most populous county, which is centered around Las Vegas.


Nevada legalized medical marijuana in 2000, but the only way for patients to obtain the drug was to grow it.


Last year, state lawmakers approved and Gov. Brian Sandoval signed a law that cleared the way for dispensaries.



Families of missing press Salam on publishing files


BEIRUT: Judicial authorities requested Friday that the Shura Council reconsider its decision to publish the results of a state investigation into missing people, drawing protests from civil activists.


Several NGOs condemned the judicial authority’s decision, in an open letter to Prime Minister Tammam Salam, saying that the “mere request of retrial is insulting to the missing persons and their families, who have suffered terribly for decades due to the failure of successive governments to underline the crucial importance of their rights to know.”


It also said that delay in publishing the files due to the request for a retrial was based on the judicial authorities’ view that the “implementation of the decision threatens civil peace.”


The NGOs called on Salam to order the Case Committee at the Justice Ministry to withdraw its request, urging the prime minister “to immediately implement the [original publication] decision along with adopting all the necessary measures to ensure the right of the families of the missing to know.”


On March 4, 2014, the Shura Council issued a landmark decision ordering the government to release the full results of the Official Commission of Inquiry’s investigation into the "Fate of the Kidnapped and Missing Persons in Lebanon."


According to the letter, the original suit to release the files began after several groups petitioned the prime minister on April 29, 2009. Attorney Nizar Saghieh filed the suit on behalf of Wadad Halawani, representing the Committee of the Families of the Kidnapped and Disappeared in Lebanon in the case, and Ghazi Aad, representing the Support of Lebanese in Detention and Exile group.


The letter hailed the Mar. 2014 decision as the “the first official acknowledgment of the right to know, allowing Lebanon to be in conformity with the international legal systems as well as international universal principles with respect to this matter.”



Chesapeake Energy board approves spinoff


Chesapeake Energy Corp. said its board has approved a previously announced plan to spin off its oilfield services business into a separate, publicly traded company.


The Oklahoma City-based oil and natural gas producer said Monday that the new company will be called Seventy Seven Energy Inc.


To separate the companies, Chesapeake shareholders will receive one share of Seventy Seven Energy for every 14 shares of Chesapeake stock they own as of June 19. No fractional shares of Seventy Seven Energy will be issued. Instead shareholders entitled to one will receive cash instead. The distribution is expected to happen June 30, after the market closes.


Seventy Seven Energy has applied to list its stock on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol "SSE." Trading is expected to begin on July 1.


Seventy Seven Energy, based in Oklahoma City, provides drilling, hydraulic fracturing, oilfield rentals and other services to oil and gas producers.


Chesapeake first announced in February that it was planning to spin off the business to streamline its operations. In May, the company said the move would cut about $1.1 billion of debt from its balance sheets.


Shares of Chesapeake closed at $29.87 Friday. Its shares are up nearly 10 percent since the beginning of the year.



Vietnam tycoon sentenced to 30 years for fraud


A Vietnamese court sentenced one of the country's richest men to 30 years in prison on Monday after finding him guilty of financial crimes involving millions of dollars.


Nguyen Duc Kien, a flamboyant businessman who also headed the Hanoi ACB football club, was arrested in 2012. The move was seen as part of the fallout of a power struggle among factions in the ruling Communist Party and allied business tycoons.


State media reported that Kien was found guilty of fraud, tax evasion, illegal trade and "deliberate wrongdoing" in scams at investment companies run by him.


The Laborer newspaper quoted judges as saying "a severe punishment was needed since Kien, the main culprit, did not show sincerity."


He was also ordered to pay a fine of 75 billion dong ($3.6 million), it said.


Kien was the founder of Asia Commercial Bank, one of Vietnam's largest. He was a board member of the bank but stepped down before his arrest, which triggered a run on the bank's deposits and a massive drop in the stock market. Seven other bank executives were also sentenced in connection with the case.


Vietnam's banking sector is plagued by high levels of bad debt, which have dragged down economic growth in recent years and caused public anger at the one-party government. Much of the debt is owed by state-owned and politically connected conglomerates.


The government has pledged to make the debtors pay and clean up the banking system, but most observers say the reforms have not been far-reaching enough.



76ers seek $82M in tax breaks for Camden facility


The Philadelphia 76ers are seeking $82 million in tax credits over 10 years for building a practice facility in Camden.


The New Jersey Economic Development Authority is scheduled to consider the application at its meeting Tuesday.


The amount requested is listed on the authority's agenda.


Team CEO Scott O'Neil declined to comment on Monday.


The team has not said how much it expects the facility to cost.


To qualify for tax credits under the Grow New Jersey incentive program, businesses must commit to bringing jobs to distressed areas.


Camden is among the nation's most impoverished cities.



Obama aims to expand student loan relief


President Barack Obama is signing an executive order that lets borrowers pay no more than 10 percent of their monthly income in student loan payments.


The measure expands on a 2010 law that covered those who started borrowing after October 2007 and kept borrowing after October 2011. The executive order allows those who borrowed earlier to participate, potentially extending the benefit to millions more borrowers.


Obama will sign the order Monday during an event in the White House Rose Garden. The president will also use the appearance to call for Congress to pass more sweeping legislation that would let college graduates with heavy debts refinance their loans.


The Senate is expected to debate the legislation next week, but it faces significant obstacles.



Analog Devices to buy Hittite Microwave for $2.4B


Semiconductor maker Analog Devices says it agreed to buy Hittite Microwave Corp. for $78 per share in cash in a deal worth about $2.4 billion.


Analog says Hittite's circuit making technology complements Analog Devices and help it expand into industrial, communications infrastructure, and automotive markets.


The price is a 29 percent premium to Hittite's closing price Friday of $60.56.


Analog Devices, based in Norwood, Massachusetts, expects the deal to close in the third quarter and benefit its earnings. The company also reaffirmed guidance for the third quarter of 60 to 64 cents per share. Analysts expect 63 cents per share, according to FactSet.


As of March 31, Chelmsford, Massachusetts-based Hittite had 31.4 million shares outstanding, implying a value of $2.4 billion for the total deal.



Report: Federal oversight of bus system lags


Even though buses represent the fastest-growing segment of interstate travel, regulation of the industry has lagged, potentially putting passenger safety at risk.


A Boston Globe (http://bit.ly/1mw7gvC ) analysis of federal data has found that one in four of the more than 3,700 commercial motorcoach and passenger van companies regulated by the federal government has never received the full safety evaluation.


Of those that have been inspected, problems uncovered range from unqualified and over-tired drivers to unsafe vehicles.


More than 200 companies with at least one safety alert for serious violations uncovered by local authorities have not undergone a complete federal safety review in at least two years.


Anne Ferro, head of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, says her agency has neither the money nor the manpower to adequately monitor the bus system.



Del. GOP proposes education savings accounts


Republican legislators in Delaware want to create "education savings accounts" that would allow families to spend some of the tax money that goes to public schools to send their children to private schools.


The lawmakers tell The News Journal of Wilmington (http://bit.ly/1mwGJ1g ) that they don't expect the bill creating the accounts to pass this session. But they say it calls attention to the need for parents to have more control in their children's education.


The bill would allow parents to put a percentage of the per-student funding that goes to public schools into accounts with the state treasurer's office. Parents could then spend the money for whatever educational purposes they choose — as long as they don't send their kids to public school.


Democratic Gov. Jack Markell doesn't support the proposal.



Information from: The News Journal of Wilmington, Del., http://delonline.us/1hCrmqU


US stock futures drift lower on Wall Street


U.S. stock futures are drifting lower Monday, after major indexes ended last week at record highs. Family Dollar's stock jumped following news that investor Carl Icahn has taken a stake in the company.


KEEPING SCORE: A half hour before the market opened, Dow Jones industrial average futures slipped 13 points, or 0.1 percent, to 16,919.


Standard & Poor's 500 index futures fell two points, or 0.1 percent, to 1,947 while Nasdaq 100 futures sank three points, or 0.1 percent, to 3,796.


On Friday, the S&P 500 index notched another record high, its eighth in 10 trading days. The index notched its third straight week of solid gains.


TYSON WINS: Tyson Foods emerged as the winner in a bidding war for Hillshire Brands, beating an offer by Pilgrim's Pride for the meat-processing company. Tyson raised its offer to $63 a share, beating Pilgrim's Pride's offer of $55 a share. Hillshire said Monday that its board has yet to sign off on the deal. In premarket trading, Hillshire Brands jumped $4.90 to $61.81, while Tyson Foods slipped 5 cents to $40.10.


ICAHN: In a regulatory filing on Friday, Carl Icahn said he and his affiliates have picked up a 9 percent stake in Family Dollar, a discount store, and plan to look for changes to boost the company's value. Family Dollar's stock jumped $7, or 12 percent, to $67.52.


MERGER MONDAY: Merck announced a deal to buy Idenix Pharmaceuticals for $3.85 billion. Merck & Co. said Indenix has built a promising array of treatments for hepatitis C. Indenix soared $16.97, or 234 percent, to $24.20, while Merck sank 78 cents to $57.40.


BONDS AND COMMODS: In the market for U.S. government bonds, the yield on the 10-year Treasury inched up to 2.60 percent from 2.59 percent late Friday. Yields rise when bond prices fall. The price of oil rose 87 cents to $103.53 a barrel.



Ottumwa wants to make airport a regional cargo hub


Ottumwa officials are making plans that could help turn the city airport into a regional cargo hub.


The Ottumwa Courier says (http://bit.ly/1qgHdfz ) plans are in place to lengthen the 5,900-foot main runway to between 7,200 and 7,300 feet.


City Administrator Joe Helfenberger says the city also wants the airport to have a satellite customs office and a duty-free designation.


A customs office in Ottumwa would let companies fly items directly to Ottumwa from outside the country, saving them a stop on the way. The duty-free designation could grant exemptions from state and federal taxes for items that move through the airport. That, too, could lure attract companies that ship items internationally.



Acadiana Regional Airport may get Houston flight


Iberia Parish officials are fine-tuning a plan to add commercial round-trip air service from Acadiana Regional Airport to Houston for oil and gas workers and others by next summer.


Some $1 million has been allocated for taxiway improvements and another $750,000 will pay for building a passenger terminal at the airport, located just west of New Iberia.


F. Jason Devillier, airport director, tells The Advocate (http://bit.ly/SpnC0S) he and other Iberia Parish officials hope to have commercial air service to Houston by summer 2015.


Bill Miller, president of the six-member Iberia Parish Airport Authority, says the plan is a response to demand by oil and gas service businesses located near the U.S. 90 stretch from Lafayette Parish to New Iberia, including companies at the Port of Iberia.



Khalil calls for rescue plan for Customs


BEIRUT: Finance Minister Ali Hasan Khalil called Monday for a rescue plan to restore confidence in Lebanon’s Customs Department after the appointment of a new head for its council.


Khalil’s appeal came as he held a meeting with Nizar Khalil, recently appointed as the head of the Higher Council for Customs, and Director General Chafik Merhi and other officials from the Customs Department.


“We clearly demanded to have a short-term plan to restore confidence in the Customs Department and reorganize its structure and role after its work was obstructed in the previous phase,” Khalil said.


Khalil said the Customs Department was in a state of paralysis and confusion and he assured the officials that “the stage after forming the new administration cannot be like before.”


The minister said the new administration of the Customs should be able “to work seriously and end smuggling and the waste of funds.”


He promised that no one would have political cover “to commit any violations in the Customs administration.”


Corruption is reportedly rampant at Lebanon’s Customs Department, which monitors and collects duties on imports and exports.



Subway strikers, police clash in Sao Paulo, Brazil


Brazilian police and striking subway workers clashed early Monday in a central commuter station, with union officials threatening to maintain the work stoppage through the World Cup opening match here this week.


Authorities are deeply worried about the strike because the subway is the main means of transportation for World Cup fans scheduled to attend Thursday's opening match when Brazil takes on Croatia. The stadium is about 20 kilometers (12 miles) east of central Sao Paulo, where most tourists stay.


Riot police firing tear gas pushed about 100 striking workers out of the station as the strike threw Sao Paulo's normally congested traffic into chaos for a fifth day. About half of the city's subway stations were operating, but with greatly diminished service.


"This is the way they negotiate, with tear gas and repression," said Alexandre Roland, a union leader, as he and others regrouped outside the station after confronting riot police.


The striking workers marched toward the city center, where they planned to join a wide-ranging rally by various activist groups, including homeless workers demanding low-cost housing and a group calling for free public transportation.


Roland said the strike will continue through the tournament opener unless the government meets workers' demands for a pay increase of just over 12 percent. A Sao Paulo labor court over the weekend fined the union $175,000 for the first four days of the strike and said it would add $220,000 for each additional day the work stoppage continued.


So far, the government-controlled company that runs the subways is offering an 8-percent increase, and says it cannot go higher because fares haven't been raised for two years.


Last year, a fare increase was reversed after violent protests broke out.


The standoff with the Sao Paulo transport workers is the latest unrest to hit Brazil in the run-up to the World Cup. Teachers remain on strike in Rio de Janeiro and routinely rally and block streets. Police in several cities have gone on strike, but are back at work now.


The work stoppages are in addition to a steady drumbeat of anti-government protests that began a year ago during massive rallies in scores of Brazilian cities. Those protests blasted government spending for the World Cup and demanded big improvements in woeful public services like hospitals, schools, security and transportation.


The protests have greatly diminished in size but not in frequency. Demonstrations have repeatedly erupted in Brazil's metro areas in recent months, with even a small number of protesters blocking main roadways and severely disrupting traffic.



Tough Week For The Common Core



The Core gets a few bites taken out of it.



hide captionThe Core gets a few bites taken out of it.



Henrik Brameus/Flickr

A few months ago, when I told friends and media colleagues that I was interested in the Common Core State Standards, the most common response was "What's that?"


Now, it seems, everyone has an opinion about the Core.


And right now, opinions about the K-12 learning goals for math and English that have spread nearly nationwide are trending toward the heated.


While the school year is winding down, education policy sure isn't. This past week brought a bunch of front-page news on the Common Core.


On May 30, South Carolina governor Nikki Haley signed a law requiring the state to stop using the Common Core after the upcoming school year. And last week, Oklahoma dropped the standards effective immediately, bringing the total number of states embracing Common Core State Standards down to 42, from a high of 45 (Indiana is the third state to have pulled back.)


Those states that adopted, and then dropped, the Core now face spending tens of millions of dollars to create new standards, adopt new materials to go with them and to retrain teachers.


Speaking of millions of dollars, the money behind the Common Core was the topic of a long story in The Washington Post yesterday that focused on Microsoft founder Bill Gates' role in the creation of the standards and in encouraging their implementation.


The story detailed how the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has spent some $200 million on the development of the standards, political lobbying, and grants to organizations that now support the Core. (The Gates Foundation is also a longtime supporter of NPR, including coverage of education.)


Education standards are not a new idea. They've been advocated in the United States at least since the 1950s. But our unique system of highly localized control of public schools with limited federal involvement in education have prevented them from getting much traction on a sustained, national level. Until now.


As the piece, by Lyndsey Layton, details, Gates' money helped unite disparate interests behind a single policy in an incredibly short amount of time.




"The Gates Foundation spread money across the political spectrum, to entities including the big teachers unions, the American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association, and business organizations such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce — groups that have clashed in the past but became vocal backers of the standards.


Money flowed to policy groups on the right and left, funding research by scholars of varying political persuasions who promoted the idea of common standards. Liberals at the Center for American Progress and conservatives affiliated with the American Legislative Exchange Council who routinely disagree on nearly every issue accepted Gates money and found common ground on the Common Core."




What has seemed most troubling for critics of the Core, and of the influence of large philanthropies in U.S. policy generally, is the close association between the Gates Foundation and the U.S. Department of Education under the Obama administration. The Common Core are not, strictly speaking, national standards. They were developed independently of the federal government and states are not under a mandate to adopt them. But the standards received a big boost in the form of funding incentives from the Obama Administration.


Behind the alignment of interests, the Post article noted several close ties: Education Secretary Arne Duncan's chief of staff Margot Rogers, and James Shelton, now a deputy secretary, both came directly from the foundation. The administration waived ethics rules to allow the two of them to consult closely with former colleagues. And Chicago received $20 million in Gates funding to reorganize schools while Duncan was that district's CEO before leaving for his cabinet position.


We reached out to the foundation yesterday for comment on the article and on the developments in Oklahoma and South Carolina, but didn't hear back.


Some of the frustrations with the adoption of the Common Core reflect broader concerns with education policymaking in general.


In an ideal world, policies would be made like this: Practitioners in the field develop solutions to problems. Disinterested experts would study and test them. Philanthropists would support that research and development phase without picking winners.


And then politicians, through the democratic process, would make the case to the public to support the spread and implementation of the best identified solutions, while giving practitioners the leeway they need to continue to refine and propose new ones.


Many in the ed-policy world agree: The Common Core State Standards skipped a few key steps here.


Critics have long noted that the influence of classroom teachers in writing the standards was limited. They weren't pilot-tested, although, in fairness, it's pretty hard to pilot universal standards—either they're universal or they're not.


They were adopted with little public debate. And their implementation, as we've reported, has been plagued with criticisms: notably that they are top-down, rushed, and underfunded so far.


And yet in some states, the Common Core built on earlier foundations of setting high standards for students. Many teachers and communities have embraced them.


The bigger picture problem may be one that Gates himself outlined to the Post.




"The guys who search for oil, they spend a lot of money researching new tools," Gates said. "Medicine — they spend a lot of money finding new tools. Software is a very R and D-oriented industry. The funding, in general, of what works in education . . . is tiny. It's the lowest in this field than any field of human endeavor. Yet you could argue it should be the highest."




And so, the billionaire said, when he was approached with what sounded like a very good idea, he threw his support behind it. But when it comes to conceiving and implementing new education policies, Bill Gates himself says, he is crying out for some competition.



Ambassador to Argentina demands apology for insulting Lebanon


BEIRUT: Lebanon's ambassador to Argentina demanded that a prominent Argentine journalist apologize for insulting Lebanon during his show, the online-based Jabalna Magazine reported.


On June 1, Jorge Lanata ridiculed the poor living conditions in his country, comparing them to Lebanon, on his weekly "Lanata Sin Filtro" (Lanata uncensored) radio show.


"In this revolting atmosphere we see, we have to understand that we are not Swiss, Swedish, Norwegian, democrats, republicans ... we're not. Instead, we are shit like Lebanon. That is what Lebanon is. We see in Lebanon what we are in today," he said, according to the website.


Lanata's trash talk prompted Lebanese Ambassador Antionio Andary write a letter to the host demanding an apology for Lebanon and the Lebanese community in the South American country.


In his letter, Andary condemned Lanata’s remarks, saying he discriminated against and tarnished Lebanon's image, “which only indicated a profound ignorance of reality.”


"In fact, Lebanon is one of the oldest democracies in the Middle East and our political system is of openness and diversity and represents the country's various groups,” Andary said in his letter. "We, the Lebanese, can safely say that we preserved our democracy even in the years of Civil War, which was a product of foreign elements that turned Lebanon into a war arena."


The envoy also said the Lebanese prided themselves on their freedom of religion and speech and that the country had always exerted efforts to maintain peace in a region of continuous conflict.


Quoting the late Pope John Paul II as saying that Lebanon “is a message of peace, freedom and coexistence,” Andary said that speaking about the country in such a manner as Lanata did was unjust.


"You not only insulted our country, but you insulted one of the largest communities in the Argentine Republic ... that has contributed to the various fields of life,” he said. “I hope you offer an apology to the Lebanese state and its people and the hundreds of Argentinians who are originally Lebanese.”



Head of Journalists Union challenges STL charges


BEIRUT: The head of Lebanon’s Journalists Union, Elias Aoun, Monday challenged the Special Tribunal for Lebanon's accusations of contempt against Al-Jadeed television and Al-Akhbar newspaper.


“I am addressing you as a media official asking you to deal with the cases of our two colleagues Khayyat and Amin with honesty and impartially,” said Aoun in a letter addressed to the STL judges.


“I also hope the Publications Court in the Lebanese Justice Palace would be the only reference in any dispute between the international tribunal and Lebanese media,” he added.


“I also hope you do not use double standards [in dealing with the Lebanese and international media] especially that I, like the majority of the Lebanese, doubt the truth of the accusation by your court against the two colleagues."


Al-Akhbar newspaper’s Editor-in-Chief Ibrahim al-Amin and Karma al-Khayyat, the deputy head of news at Al-Jadeed TV, were charged with contempt and with obstructing the work of the STL.


Khayyat last month pleaded not guilty during the STL’s first hearing, while Amin accused the tribunal of "oppression" during a second session he attended via video-link.


The STL is tasked with prosecuting those responsible for the Feb. 14, 2005, bombing that killed Hariri and 21 others and plunged Lebanon into political turmoil.


The STL accusations came after Al-Akhbar, a pro-Hezbollah newspaper, published two news reports in January 2013 that included personal details of individuals it said were going to testify in the Hariri case and after reports by Al-Jadeed TV that also revealed alleged witnesses.


Aoun said that the union “received several letter from Lebanese expats voicing surprise at the accusations to the Lebanese press of obstructing the work of the international tribunal.”


He said that the Lebanese judiciary should hold the Lebanese press accountable when mistaken and called on the STL to leave such “trivial” issues and focus on revealing the truth about Hariri’s assassination.



A Computer Just Fooled a Panel of Judges Into Thinking It Was Human


A supercomputer called Eugene has become the first machine to pass the famous Turing test after fooling a panel of judges into thinking it was a teenage boy.


The computer reached the artificial intelligence milestone by convincing 33% of judges that it was human during a five-minute keyboard conversation.


Alan TuringAlan Turing: Rex Features


Devised by legendary code-breaker Alan Turingin the 1950s, the test dictates that a computer is "thinking" if it can be mistaken for a human more than 30% of the time.


Five computers were subjected to the test at the Royal Society in London under the supervision of researchers from the University of Reading, with Eugene alone passing.


"In the field of artificial intelligence there is no more iconic and controversial milestone than the Turing Test," said the university's Professor Kevin Warwick.


Red Dwarf X: Episode 1: KrytenRed Dwarf's Robert Llewellyn was on the judging panel


"It is fitting that such an important landmark has been reached at the Royal Society in London, the home of British science and the scene of many great advances in human understanding over the centuries. This milestone will go down in history as one of the most exciting."


Eugene's developers Vladimir Veselov and Eugene Demchenko attributed the machine's success to its "plausible personality" and ability to handle more than just direct questions in conversation.


Red Dwarf actor Robert Llewellyn, who plays the robot Kryten in the science fiction comedy, was a member of the judging panel tasked with separating the human participants from the machines.


The feat was achieved on the 60th anniversary of Turing's death.


Originally published by Digital Spy



Outdoor dining squeezes Portland's sidewalks


A battle is brewing in Portland between restaurants putting tables on the sidewalks to satisfy customer demand for alfresco dining and those who say the sidewalks are being impeded.


Sight-impaired pedestrians, wheelchair users, stroller-pushing parents and other walkers have lodged official complaints about restaurants overextending into the sidewalk space in violation of their permits and city ordinances.


Bud Buzzell, a 72-year-old sight-impaired resident, tells the Portland Press Herald (http://bit.ly/1uJT9JB ) the narrowed sidewalks near his home are becoming an increasingly frustrating and dangerous maze.


Restaurant owners say outdoor dining is popular and helps drive up business. Officials with a downtown business group say they are attempting to strike a proper balance.


City Manager Mark Rees said during a recent city council meeting that the city takes the matter very seriously.



Judge issues arrest warrant for Omar Bakri


BEIRUT: Military Investigative Judge Riad Abu Ghayda Monday issued an arrest warrant against detained militant Sheikh Omar Bakri Fustoq on charges of terrorism and preparing to establish an "Islamic emirate" in north Lebanon.


Abu Ghayda interrogated Fustoq for three and a half hours in the presence of his lawyer, Mohammad Hafezah, before issuing the warrant.


The judge charged the Syria-born preacher with belonging to an armed group, giving lessons encouraging terror acts, preparing to create an Islamic emirate in north Lebanon, and inciting against the Lebanese Army, the state and its civilian and military institutions.


If convicted, Fustoq could face the death penalty.


Abu Ghayda also interrogated the landlord who rented Fustoq the apartment in Aley where the militant sheikh was hiding at the time of his arrest on May 25.


The judge issued an arrest warrant against the landlord for helping Fustoq evade justice.


The Tripoli-based preacher, who in 2005 was barred from returning to Britain, where he had lived for more than a decade, had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria, urging the radical Syrian rebel group to “reactivate its cells” in Lebanon.



Assad announces 'general amnesty': state TV


DAMASCUS: Syrian President Bashar Assad announced a "general amnesty" Monday for all crimes committed to date, state television said, without giving further details.


The channel cited Justice Minister Najem al-Ahmad as saying the decree was issued in the context of "social forgiveness, national cohesion calls for coexistence, as the army secures several military victories."


It was not immediately clear who would be included in the amnesty, which is not the first such announcement since the Syrian civil war broke out more than three years ago.


Rights groups say the Syrian government is holding tens of thousands of prisoners in jails where torture and other abuses are systematic.


Since the outbreak of an anti-Assad revolt in March 2011, the regime has branded all dissidents - non-violent and later armed - as "terrorists", jailing thousands arbitrarily, according to human rights organizations.



China Mobile to take stake in Thailand's True


China Mobile Ltd. is planning to buy an 18 percent stake in Thai telecommunications and cable TV company True Corp.


The investment is part of a 65 billion Thai baht ($2 billion) share issue by True that will be mainly used to reduce its debt.


True said Monday it will issue more than 10 billion new shares to existing shareholders and China Mobile.


China Mobile will buy about 4.4 billion shares for $880 million.


China Mobile is the world's largest mobile phone company by subscribers. True Corp. has mobile phone, Internet and cable TV businesses.



US committed to partnership with Lebanon: Hale


BEIRUT: United States Ambassador to Lebanon David Hale met Monday with a delegation from the March 14 General Secretariat and reiterated his country’s commitment to partnership with Lebanon.


“US will remain a strong and engaged partner with the Lebanese people and institutions of the state,” Hale said, according to a tweet from the embassy.


Hale also reaffirmed support for the Special Tribunal for Lebanon probing the 2005 assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.


He confirmed U.S. support for the full implementation of the Taif Accord and UN Security Council Resolutions 1701 and 1559, as well as the Baabda Declaration, an agreement to distance Lebanon from regional crises, especially the war in Syria.



France clarifies stance after Nasrallah claim


BEIRUT: French Ambassador Patrice Paoli Monday clarified his government’s position after Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah said Paris had proposed a tripartite power sharing formula to replace the Taif Accord.


“We discussed various issues and I renewed the French government’s support for the Lebanese Constitution and Lebanese institutions,” Paoli told reporters after meeting Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil.


In a speech Friday, Nasrallah said France had first proposed the idea to Iran, arguing that the Taif Accord was no longer valid as a ruling system in Lebanon.


Nasrallah said the Iranians rejected the proposal, which called for replacing the current Muslim-Christian power-sharing system with a tripartite formula of Christian, Shiite and Sunni power.


“There are some questions about France’s stance and I have clarified matters to Minister Bassil,” Paoli said.


“I renewed France’s known stance,” he said when asked about Nasrallah’s tripartite power allegations.


Paoli stressed that Paris was the first to support the Lebanese Constitution and the Taif Accord.


“This is the message I had carried to Speaker Nabih Berri, and today I’m carrying the same message to [Bassil],” he said.


Paoli urged lawmakers to elect a new president based on the state’s Constitution after MPs botched a sixth voting attempt Monday



President should be elected by the people: Arslan


BEIRUT: Lebanese Democratic Party leader Talal Arslan called Monday for changing the Lebanese presidential election system to allow the Lebanese people to vote for the head of state, just like in Syria.


“The presidential crisis is a major insult to the Lebanese nation,” Arslan, a prominent pro-Assad figure, said during a press conference. “The only way to save the nation and restore respect to the presidency is by holding the election directly by the people."


Arslan said that the Syrian presidential election should be a role model for Lebanon.


“The Lebanese should draw a lesson from the participation of Syrian brothers on Lebanese territories in the election of the Syrian president while the Lebanese in Lebanon do not take part in electing their president,” Arslan said.


Crowds of Syrian expats in Lebanon voted in the Syrian presidential election at their country’s embassy in Yarze last month, provoking criticism from anti-Assad Lebanese sides.


Arslan hailed the re-election of Syrian President Bashar Assad and said “the Syrian community achieved a historic uprising by expressing its free and sovereign opinion through the massive turnout for the election ignoring terrorist threats.”



ISIS dedicates song to Lebanon’s Roumieh inmates


BEIRUT: The Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria called for the release of Islamists detainees being held in Lebanon's Roumieh prison, in a YouTube video released over the weekend.


Gathering in an unidentified, mountainous green location, the video shows a group of masked gunmen with ISIS black-and-white flags in the background chanting for the release of the Roumieh inmates. The video showed rocket-propelled grenades and other weapons surrounding them.


A man in the center was reciting the lyrics, sometimes reading them from a sheet of paper he held, while others repeated the chant after him like a chorus.


The video, signed by the “Lions” of ISIS is dedicated to “our brothers and prisoners in Roumieh – Lebanon.” It was released Sunday on an ISIS-affiliated YouTube channel.


“Oh, if anyone can tell the news to Sheikh Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in Baghdad, I am saddened by the circumstances of prisoners in Roumieh prison, oh brothers,” the hymn goes.


“I am sick of watching militants and policemen ahead of me while the doors between us are locked,” the lyrics said.


In another part of the song, the militants hoped for bringing down the Roumieh prison and said “indefinite brothers inmates [in the facility] want to crack the gates.”


The song also compared Roumieh to the notorious Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, where U.S. soldiers were accused of abusing Iraqi detainees through physical and sexual torture before the facility was closed.


They said Roumieh, Lebanon’s largest prison facility, would soon meet the same closure.


Roumieh holds several Islamist detainees awaiting trial, with the majority linked to the 2007 Fatah al-Islam battles against the Lebanese Army in the Nahr al-Bared refugee camp in North Lebanon.



Berri postpones presidential election to June 18


Speaker Nabih Berri postpones Lebanon's presidential election to June 18. Monday's session, the sixth attempt to elect a successor to Michel Sleman, whose term as president ended May 25, failed to convene due to the lack of the two-thirds quorum required in Parliament.


This was a breaking news items, to see full coverage, click here.



Strike six in Lebanon's presidential election


BEIRUT: Parliament’s session to elect a president failed, with observers saying lawmakers seem more focused on the fate of Tuesday’s legislative session over the salary scale.


Speaker Nabih Berri postponed the session to elect the new president to June 18, after it failed to convene due to a lack of quorum.


Political sources told The Daily Star that the atmosphere of the electoral session was not serious at all. Berri was meeting with Education Minister Elias Bou Saab and Finance Minister Ali Hasan Khalil to discuss the wage hike issue as the scheduled noon start for the electoral session approached.


The majority of lawmakers from the March 14 coalition arrived in Parliament while the Free Patriotic Movement and Hezbollah maintained their boycott. However, only 64 lawmakers were present Monday, compared with 70 in previous sessions.


Progressive Socialist Party leader MP Walid Jumblatt was absent from the session, the first one he has missed since Parliament started meeting to vote for a president.


Lawmakers have now botched six attempts since April 23 to elect a successor to former President Michel Sleiman, whose six-year term ended on May 25, with the last five failing due to lack of the two-thirds quorum of the legislature’s 128 members.


Lebanese Forces MP Antoine Zahra said that Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea maintained his candidacy for the election.


He argued that lawmakers do not have the right to boycott Parliament’s session to elect a new head of state in light of presidential void.


“Do those who are obstructing the session and violating the constitution know that their right to absent from the sessions drops in light of presidential void?” he asked.


Former President Michel Sleiman renewed his call for the election of the new president away from the foreign intervention.


“It is not right to accuse the foreign community of obstructing the presidential election while we are setting preconditions and counter-conditions for the features of the new president,” Sleiman said in a tweet.


“Let us keep the foreign community away from the presidential election and take part in the parliamentary session to vote for a new president,” he said.


“It is not suitable for Lebanon, known for its democracy, to have enough with dancing in the celebrations of neighboring and brotherly elections,” he said in reference to the Syrian election of President Bashar Assad.



Miss. shrimp season awaits right size for opening


Officials with the Department of Marine Resources hope to announce this week when shrimp season will start. It all depends on the shrimp themselves.


DMR Public Information Office Melissa Scallan tells The Sun Herald (http://bit.ly/1puesfL ) shrimp season can open typically anywhere from the end of May to the end of June. Scallan says the shrimp have to be a certain size before it can open. According to state statute, they have to be 68 per pound before the season can open.


She says DMR has been sampling shrimp weekly to determine their size.



Grand Jury In Texas Probes Whether Gov. Perry Abused His Powers



Audio for this story from Morning Edition will be available at approximately 9:00 a.m. ET.





Governor Rick Perry is accused of threatening to veto funding for a local prosecutor if she didn't resign following a drunk driving arrest.



Oxford considers stronger taxi law


Oxford aldermen will hear from the public June 17 on proposed changes to the city's taxi ordinance that would limit what cabs can charge riders and require all cab drivers to have video cameras.


Alderman Jay Hughes told the Oxford Eagle (http://bit.ly/1iA4toK) he and other board members have received complaints about some taxi companies gouging customers during home football game and other big events; or students after a night on the Square.


Currently, cab drivers can charge $10 per passenger within the city limits or to the University of Mississippi campus and $2.50 for each additional stop.


If four people were going to the same place the cab driver could charge them $40 to drive a mile or two down the road.


The proposed change would allow the first passenger to be charged $10 with each additional passenger paying $5 if they are going to the same place. If more than one stop is required, inside the city limits, the driver can add on an additional $2.50 charge.


It also would not allow taxi drivers to charge passengers more on special weekends, such as home game days.


"They are charging more on those weekends when they aren't accruing any additional charges and driving the same 2 miles," Hughes said. "We are giving cab owners the greatest latitude and they can still make $25 for running four people from the Square to campus."


The proposed required video cameras would help protect everyone in the cab, including the driver, Hughes said. The recordings would only be necessary to download and review if a complaint was filed or in the case of robbery.


Angel Taxi owner Sue Stoner said her cabs have videos already.


"There was a cab driver who got robbed and beaten a few years back and that's when I put them in my cabs," Stoner said. "They aren't that expensive. They're about $250 a camera and it's a smart thing to do. Since I installed them, I have no taxi drama."


All cabs will be required to be inspected by the Oxford Police Department before hitting the road.


A company's insignia or logo with a phone number will be displayed on the vehicle.


Drivers will also be required to issue all passengers a written receipt detailing where the trip started and ended, how much was charged, how many passengers, and the time and date of the trip.


Each cab must display a 5-inch-by-8-inch sign inside that shows the rates inside the city and it must state the driver is required to provide a receipt.



UCC urges contract teachers to defy minister


BEIRUT: Union Coordination Committee head Hanna Gharib Monday called on contract teachers to defy the education minister and refuse to monitor official school exams.


“We call on everybody to take part in a [meeting] this afternoon to vote to boycott the official exams until our rights are met,” Gharib told a rally outside the Education Ministry in Beirut. “We tell contract [teachers]: be united with the UCC."


The UCC has rejected Education Minister Elias Bou Saab’s call to hold official exams Thursday even if a legislative session set for Tuesday fails to approve the wage hike bill. The UCC vowed not to allow the exams to be conducted unless the public sector’s salary increases were endorsed first.


Bou Saab has warned that he will hire contract teachers and members of the Parents Committees to monitor and correct the tests if the UCC boycotts.


The Committee of Contract Teachers said they agreed to the minister’s proposal and that Bou Saab had promised to refer their demands of full-time employment to the concerned parties and pay them transportation fees for exam days.


Gharib slammed Bou Saab for changing his position: “You were the first to support the teachers’ demands. At the beginning you said you were with us, and later you said: ‘We will show you.’”


Gharib, nevertheless, pleaded with Bou Saab to “take the right path.”


Parliament is set to meet Tuesday in a new attempt to endorse the wage hike.


Change and Reform bloc MP Alain Aoun told Al-Jadeed television that his bloc’s lawmakers would take part in Tuesday’s session, arguing that “it is a good opportunity to pass the salary scale draft law.”


“We are not against legislation when it comes to the wage hike despite void in the presidential post,” Aoun said. “The salary scale is an urgent issue due to its repercussions on civil servants and it has been discussed several times previously in Parliament and in the parliamentary joint committees and the subcommittee."


Meanwhile, a meeting is underway between Speaker Nabih Berri and Bou Saab to discuss the salary scale. Finance Minister Ali Hasan Khalil joined the meeting at Berri's office in Parliament shortly after it started.


Lawmakers are divided over measures to fund the new salary scale, which is estimated to cost the treasury around $1.6 billion.