Sunday, 6 July 2014

Questions and answers about Washington's pot sales


Washington state's first recreational marijuana stores open for business this week, more than a year and a half after voters decided to legalize, tax and regulate pot. Some questions and answers about the industry:


Q: When can I buy legal weed?


A: The state's Liquor Control Board plans to issue the first 15 to 20 retail marijuana licenses on Monday, and stores can open at 8 a.m. Tuesday if they're ready — but they might not have any cannabis on the shelves right away. Once stores get their licenses, they can place their orders with the state's licensed growers, who have to wait 24 hours before they ship the marijuana, and there's travel time to account for, too. But two licensed growers and a hopeful retailer said Sunday that they expected the licenses to be issued electronically at 1 a.m. Monday. If all goes according to plan, that should leave time for product to be available in at least some stores by Tuesday morning.


Q: Where can I buy legal weed?


A: The board hasn't identified the stores that will get their licenses Monday, but some of the shops have told reporters they've paid their fees, passed their inspections and are ready for their golden tickets. The board said a few stores were prepared in Spokane, Tacoma, Bellingham and Vancouver, but only one is expected to open in Seattle.


Q: Will it be expensive?


A: Yes. Although some stores say they plan to sell some of their supply for as little as $12 a gram — comparable to what it sells for at the state's unregulated medical dispensaries — others expect it to go for $25 or more. The issue is mainly supply. Relatively few growers have harvested — the pot being offered for sale in the coming days was grown by only about a dozen producers statewide. According to the two labs certified to check the pot for mold and other impurities, the samples they had tested by last Thursday represent a maximum initial statewide harvest of about 440 pounds.


Some growers are asking $4,000 per pound wholesale. The marijuana is heavily taxed — 25 percent at wholesale and 25 percent at retail, at least, not to mention additional sales taxes. Officials don't expect prices to stabilize until after many more growers begin harvesting.


Q: How much can I buy?


A: State law allows the sale of up to an ounce of dried marijuana, 16 ounces of pot-infused solids, 72 ounces of pot-infused liquids or 7 grams of concentrated marijuana, like hashish, to adults over 21, whether you're a Washington resident or not. But there isn't expected to be any infused food or drink available right away: As of last week, the Liquor Control Board had not issued any licenses to processors of those products, or approved any edibles for sale. Some stores are talking about limiting customers to one 2-gram package apiece to make sure there's enough for everyone to buy some.


Q: What took so long to get the stores open?


A: Colorado already had a regulated medical marijuana system, making for a smoother transition when it allowed those dispensaries to start selling to recreational pot shops on Jan. 1. Washington's medical system is unregulated, so officials here were starting from scratch as they immersed themselves in the pot world and tried to come up with regulations that made sense for the industry and the public. The regulations include protocols for testing marijuana, what types of edibles should be allowed, requirements for child-resistant packaging, how much criminal history is too much to get a license, and what types of security systems pot shops and growers should have.


Ultimately, though, much of the delays can be attributed to overwhelming interest: The liquor board received nearly 7,000 applications from people who wanted to grow, process or sell marijuana. Each of them needs to be vetted, with criminal and financial background checks, reviews to ensure they're not too close to a school or daycare, and approval of their business and security plans. It's time consuming work, and the board's 18 licensing investigators have been swamped.


Q: Where does the tax money go, and who's paying for programs to prevent problems?


A: The measure voters passed in 2012 directs some marijuana tax revenue to the state Health Department for public health programs. But tax revenue hasn't come in yet. With sales about to start, the department scraped together $400,000 for a new radio and online advertisement campaign urging parents to talk to their kids about marijuana and visit http://bit.ly/1oikYpL .



Washington pot shops prepare for historic sales


With the clock ticking down to the start of legal weed sales in Washington state, store owners hoping to start selling on Tuesday are consumed by details as they try to make sure there's pot on the shelves.


At Cannabis City, the only recreational marijuana shop that's ready to open in Seattle, owner James Lathrop has hired an events company to provide crowd control, arranged for a food truck and free water for those who might spend hours waiting outside, and rented a portable toilet.


He can only hope his initial 10-pound supply is enough to stone the multitude, and says he may limit purchases to ensure everyone can go home with at least a 2-gram package of history.


A hundred miles to the north, John Evich is trying to figure out how to get the marijuana to his store in Bellingham quickly once it's approved for a license, which should happen Monday. He's considered everything from loading the pot onto his commercial crab boat and rushing it across Puget Sound to renting a helicopter.


One year and eight months after voters in Washington and Colorado stunned much of the world by legalizing marijuana, the sale of heavily regulated and taxed cannabis begins here this week, with the first few stores opening amid talk of high prices, shortages and rationing. Sales began in Colorado at the start of the year.


As many as 20 shops in Washington, out of a planned 300-plus, should receive their licenses on Monday, officials say. They could open at 8 a.m. the next day, but how many planned to be up and running remained unclear as nervous excitement built among industry hopefuls and their potential customers. While Seattle had just one store ready, at least two could open in some smaller cities, including Bellingham, Tacoma and Spokane.


Some shops were frantically calling growers, trying to ensure they'd have enough product. More than 2,600 people applied to grow the marijuana that will be sold, but fewer than 100 have been approved by the state Liquor Control Board's swamped licensing investigators, and many won't be ready to harvest until later this summer.


Even those who already made agreements to buy marijuana — at exorbitant prices, in many cases — weren't sure when it would arrive. State rules require a 24-hour "quarantine" before growers can ship it to customers. What time the stores receive their licenses on Monday will dictate when they can place their order with the growers, and thus how soon the growers can transport it to the stores, which might be hundreds of miles away.


Once it arrives, the stores must verify their bar-coded inventory and enter it into the state's tracking system before they can sell it. Few had confidence the software would be glitch-free.


The challenges were daunting enough that Adam Schmidt, of Clear Choice Cannabis in Tacoma, said he was leaning against opening his store this week even though he expected to be among the first to get a license.


"I don't want people to be waiting in line for four hours and then I have to come out and tell them we don't have any more," he said.


Lathrop, whose shop is south of downtown Seattle, and Evich, an investor in Bellingham's Top Shelf Cannabis, had secured agreements to buy dried marijuana buds from Nine Point Growth Industries in Bremerton, on the Kitsap Peninsula. Workers there rushed to sort its 30-pound harvest into thousands of 2-gram packages, said Gregory Stewart, Nine Point's owner. He spent some of last week struggling with the logistics of transporting the pot to his customers, which also included a shop in southwest Washington, when they all want it immediately.


Evich brainstormed ways to get the bud on his shelves as soon as possible. He thought of using a helicopter to pick it up from Nine Point, but it seemed unlikely helicopter companies would agree. His crab boat might draw the Coast Guard's attention, but driving and waiting in line for a state ferry seemed too slow. Maybe a friend's Bayliner would work.


Once it reaches his store — however it gets there — he said the various strains would fetch $12 to $25 per gram. People often pay $8 to $12 per gram at Washington's unregulated medical marijuana dispensaries.


In Seattle, among those who planned to buy some of the first pot at Cannabis City was Alison Holcomb, the lawyer who drafted Washington's law. She said it was a good opportunity to remind people of the big-picture arguments for ending nearly a century of prohibition, including keeping nonviolent, adult marijuana users out of jail; redirecting profits away from criminal groups; and ending racial disparities in who gets busted.


"No one thought legalization could happen in our lifetime," she said. "I think this is going to be a little overwhelming for me."



Pioneer Houston PC club shuts down after 32 years


The Houston Area League of PC Users, founded when Ronald Reagan was president and software was swapped on floppy disks, is clicking the shutdown icon after 32 years.


At one time, HAL-PC billed itself as the largest group of its kind in the country. A Houston Chronicle story in July 1987 said its membership was at 6,500. An appearance that month by Philippe Kahn, a pioneering software legend, drew more than 2,000 attendees.


The club — whose motto, "Each one teach one," reflected its mission to increase computer literacy — flourished through the 1990s along with the personal computing revolution that rapidly transformed modern life. Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and computer columnist John Dvorak were among those who addressed HAL-PC over the years.


But like many computer user groups around the country, HAL-PC couldn't compete with the Internet. Matthew Castillo, who joined when he was 16 in the late 1990s and even became a board member in his teens, recalls the difficulty in trying to bring younger members into the fold. Hosting computer gaming parties with local area networks, or LANs, didn't do the trick, he told the Houston Chronicle (http://bit.ly/1rNo7yo).


"We had good turnout for the LAN parties, but after that, (the younger people) didn't stick around," Castillo said. "They didn't have any reason to meet a friend somewhere to get a copy of a program on a floppy disk when they could download it from the Internet."


The final straw was the attendance listed as "one or two" beyond board members and volunteers at last month's general meeting.


"After much deliberation on June 24, the Board of Directors voted to dissolve the Houston Area League of PC Users, Inc.," the group said in an email to members. "We will continue to support our members for approximately the next month (July), after which most operations will have ceased."


Bill Jameson, a former board member who spoke by phone from HAL-PC's South Post Oak offices, reiterated the "changing society" theme in the email, saying "this society we live in now has a different set of interests and goals. Our type of organization is not included in that."


"Most of our members are older," Jameson said. "The cultural norms we grew up with are pretty much gone, and as a consequence, the organization has not sufficiently adapted to this new culture."


HAL-PC started in 1982 with just 20 members. In its heyday, the club boasted thousands.


But with the rise of the Internet, user groups became less relevant. Rather than attend a meeting, computer enthusiasts could find the information they needed online.


Several attempts were made over the years to modernize HAL-PC. Jameson didn't know how many members HAL-PC has now. But he said there are between 900 and 1,000 members of HALNet, the Internet service provider operated by HAL-PC.


Most of its members use DSL, but a handful still use the ISP's original dialup service. Jameson said the group was hoping to find an organization to keep running the service.


HAL-PC failed to keep up with the times in other ways, too. As its members grew older, their interests didn't expand to newer topics such as smartphones, tablets and social media. The @HAL-PC Twitter account has been inactive since August 2009 and its Facebook page has been dormant since August 2011.


Castillo said he doesn't fault HAL-PC's leaders. When he was with the group, they understood what was happening.


"They understood the Internet was taking away the reason HAL-PC was created," he said.


---


Information from: Houston Chronicle, http://bit.ly/NIjdEf


Editor's note: This is an AP Member Exchange shared by the Houston Chronicle.



Traverse City couple launches board game, business


An idea washed over Barbara Overdier and Jim Muratzki during a rainy day on an anniversary trip to Mackinac Island.


The couple spent their vacation avoiding the island's crowded fudge shops and T-shirt stands, and opted to hike quiet areas and visit historic landmarks. They dreamed of educating other visitors on the island's natural and historic features and entertaining them during bad weather trips, and got to work on developing that dream.


"We feel like folks probably take the natural history piece of Mackinac Island for granted," Muratzki told the Traverse City Record-Eagle ( http://bit.ly/1iuLnkN ). "We want to put it out there for folks to see."


Those developments turned into a board game, Mackinac Island Treasure Hunt. Overdier and Muratzki market it through their business, Archipelago Creative, which also sells Overdier's photos as note cards or calendars.


Mackinac Island Treasure Hunt is five games in one. Game pieces can be used for a matching game, dice-rolling game, scavenger hunt game, memory game or Clue-like treasure hunt game. Each one should feel like an educational trip to the island.


Making the board game took plenty of work. Muratzki and Overdier made prototypes, tested them on groups of volunteer gamers, refined the rules and had Mackinac Island experts check every fact.


Preparing the board game for sale took work, too. The couple found a Wisconsin manufacturer who will produce one game at a time, but they want to get enough pre-orders to make a big order from a Michigan manufacturer.


"In order to make this a viable business, what we need to do is make a lot of games, get the price-per down to a point where we can sell it at a reasonable price for wholesale and reasonable price retail," Muratzki said.


The couple's target retail price is $40. They're optimistic about selling games to the 20- to 30-year-old market and Mackinac Island visitors, and have talked to the Michigan Department of Education about putting the game in schools. They hope to put some of the profits toward stewardship initiatives.


Mackinac Island Treasure Hunt isn't just about matching cards, rolling dice or finding treasure. It's about showing players the natural, historic and cultural gems of Mackinac Island.


"Every chance we get we really want to dig into where we live," Muratzki said. "Our business is called Archipelago Creative, and that really is about looking at things up close that people might take for granted in our northern Michigan region."


This is an AP Member Exchange shared by the Traverse City Record-Eagle.



Asian stocks lower ahead of US earnings


Asian stock markets were mostly lower Monday as investors looked ahead to U.S. corporate earnings following last week's strong job numbers.


Oil declined but stayed above $104 per barrel.


China's benchmark Shanghai Composite Index was off 0.1 percent at 2,059.65 points and Hong Kong's Hang Seng was down 0.1 percent at 23,517.08. Taiwan, Sydney, Seoul and Singapore also registered small declines.


Markets gave up some of last week's gains that followed news the United States generated a stronger-than-expected 288,000 jobs in June, a sign an economic recovery might be gaining traction.


"The market saw another piece of evidence that the U.S. economy is gathering steam while at the same time central bank rhetoric remains dovish," said Credit Agricole CIB in a report.


Japan's Nikkei 225 bucked the regional trend, gaining 0.1 percent to 15,445.92.


Taiwan's Taiex shed 0.2 percent to 9,486.92 and Seoul's Kospi was off 0.4 percent at 2,001.27. Sydney's S&P ASX 200 shed just under 0.1 percent to 5,521.80.


On Thursday, the last U.S. trading day before the Independence Day long weekend, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 0.6 percent to close above 17,000 for the first time. The broader Standard & Poor's 500 and the Nasdaq composite also added 0.6 percent.


"Companies in the U.S. are widely expected to report better earnings after the winter slumber," said Desmond Chua of CMC Markets in a report.


In Europe, Britain's FTSE 100 closed unchanged Friday while France's CAC-40 fell 0.5 percent and Germany's DAX shed 0.2 percent.


Oil shed 3 cents to $104.02 in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract tumbled 42 cents in the previous session to close at $104.06.


In currency trading, the euro fell to $1.3584 from $1.3594 late Friday. The dollar rose to 102.14 yen from 102.08 yen.



TSA: Some on US-bound flights must turn on phones


Passengers at some overseas airports that offer U.S.-bound flights will be required to power on their electronic devices in order to board their flights, the Transportation Security Administration said Sunday.


The TSA said it is requiring some overseas airports to have passengers turn on devices such as cellphones before boarding. It says devices that won't power up won't be allowed on planes, and those travelers may have to undergo additional screening.


"As the traveling public knows, all electronic devices are screened by security officers," the TSA said in the release announcing the new steps.


American intelligence officials have been concerned about new al-Qaida efforts to produce a bomb that would go undetected through airport security. There is no indication that such a bomb has been created or that there's a specific threat to the U.S.


Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson recently ordered the TSA to call for extra security measures at some international airports with direct flights to the United States. TSA does not conduct screening abroad, but has the ability to set screening criteria and processes for flights flying to the U.S. from abroad, according to a Department of Homeland Security official, who was not allowed to discuss the changes publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.


During an interview aired Sunday on NBC'S "Meet The Press," Johnson declined to speculate on whether new security procedures called for overseas will be required at domestic airports in the future


"We continue to evaluate things," he said. "The screening we have right domestically from one domestic airport to another is pretty robust as the American traveling public knows. In this instance we felt that it was important to crank it up some at the last point of departure airports and we'll continually evaluate the situation."


TSA will not disclose which airports will be conducting the additional screening, although it will be at some airports with direct flights to the U.S. Industry data show that more than 250 foreign airports offer nonstop service to the U.S.


Aviation remains an attractive target to global terrorists, who are consistently looking for ways to circumvent aviation security measures, the DHS official said. Some details on specific enhancements and locations are sensitive because U.S. officials do not want to give information "to those who would do us harm," the official said.


American intelligence officials said earlier this week that they have picked up indications that bomb makers from Yemen-based al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula have traveled to Syria to link up with the al-Qaida affiliate there.


Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula long has been fixated on bringing down airplanes with hidden explosives. It was behind failed and thwarted plots involving suicide bombers with explosives designed to be hidden inside underwear and explosives secreted inside printer cartridges shipped on cargo planes.


Over the past year, Americans and others from the West have traveled to Syria to join the fight against the Syrian government. The fear is that fighters with a U.S. or other Western passport, who therefore are subject to less stringent security screening, could carry such a bomb onto an American plane.



Clippers sale hangs in balance as trial begins


With the potentially record-breaking $2 billion sale of the Los Angeles Clippers hanging in the balance, a trial beginning Monday will focus on whether Donald Sterling's estranged wife had the authority under terms of a family trust to unilaterally negotiate the deal.


Shelly Sterling struck a deal to sell the Clippers to former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer after Donald Sterling's racist remarks to a girlfriend were publicized and the NBA moved to oust him as team owner.


In order to do so, she had two doctors examine her 80-year-old husband and they declared him mentally incapacitated and unable to act as an administrator of The Sterling Family Trust, which owns the Clippers.


The terms of the trust say incapacitation can be determined by two licensed doctors without ties to the family who are specialists in their field. A trustee must cooperate with such exams.


The judge must find that Shelly Sterling acted in accordance with the trust and that the deal still applies — even though the trust has since been revoked by Donald Sterling — for the sale to proceed.


Donald Sterling's attorneys say that his wife "blindsided" him and he submitted to examinations under false pretenses. They allege there was undue influence in the doctors' findings, and that the exams and letters regarding his mental capacity were defective and incomplete.


They say that if he'd been properly informed, he would have participated at a more convenient time instead of being pulled out of legal meetings.


"He would have also eaten properly and have been well rested for the examinations and focused on taking the exam with the full and complete understanding what it was for and the serious nature of the exam," they wrote in filings.


But Shelly Sterling's attorney, Pierce O'Donnell, said that Donald Sterling voluntarily went to take scans of his brain and there was no requirement to remind Donald Sterling, who is an attorney, or his legal team of the trust's conditions.


The trial will also focus on the question of what happens to a deal that hasn't been closed once a trust is revoked. Donald Sterling revoked the trust on June 9 — weeks after Shelly Sterling negotiated the deal with Ballmer.


Shelly Sterling's attorneys also contend that finishing the deal is part of "winding down" the trust's affairs and that she has an obligation to close or Ballmer will sue.


Donald Sterling's attorneys argue that the probate court now lacks jurisdiction and that winding down affairs refers to passive actions, not a sale that markedly changes the assets in the trust and its value.


Donald Sterling's attorneys made a late move last week to shift the case to federal court so their allegations of medical privacy violations in the probate case can be heard.


Attorneys for both Shelly Sterling and Ballmer called the filing a "desperate" tactic that they would seek to block.


It was not immediately clear when a federal judge would rule on the filing or how it would affect the probate proceedings, but the trial remained on schedule to start Monday morning.


Whatever happens, timing is tight. NBA owners must approve what would be a record-breaking deal and are scheduled to meet July 15 to vote.


That's the same day Ballmer's offer is set to expire — and there is no deal without the judge's approval of the sale.


If the sale isn't completed by Sept. 15, the league said it could seize the team and put it up for auction.



Expedia agrees to buy Wotif for $658M


Expedia Inc. says it has agreed to pay 703 million Australian dollars ($658 million) for Wotif.com Holdings Ltd., an online travel company that covers the Asia-Pacific region.


Expedia said Sunday that it offered 3.30 Australian dollars ($3.09) per share in cash, a 30 percent premium over Wotif's average price last week.


Wotif sells hotel bookings and air travel through brands including Wotif.com, lastminute.com.au and travel.com.au. The company had revenue of 76 million Australian dollars ($71.1 million) during the last six months of 2013.


Expedia said the deal needs the approval of Wotif shareholders and is expected to close in the fourth quarter.


Bellevue, Washington-based Expedia runs its own brand website and others such as Hotels.com and Hotwire. The company lost $14.3 million in the first quarter.



Pulling fuselages from Montana river going 'slow'


Three airplane fuselages that slid down a steep embankment into the Clark Fork River following a train derailment in western Montana could take until Tuesday to remove, railroad officials said Sunday.


"The progress is going extremely slow," Montana Rail Link spokeswoman Lynda Frost said. "If we get one up today, it would appear it will take one day each to get them out."


She said a crew of 50 with eight heavy-equipment machines was working together to hoist up the three Boeing 737 fuselages, the large, central portions of planes that hold passengers.


Six fuselages were aboard a westbound train when 19 cars derailed Thursday about 10 miles west of Alberton. The three remaining plane sections also fell off but stayed on land. No one was injured in the derailment, which is under investigation.


Boeing said in a statement that it has experts at the scene to assess the damage. Marc Birtel, director of media relations, said Sunday that he didn't have information on what the experts have decided.


The fuselages were traveling from a Spirit AeroSystems plant in Wichita, Kansas, to a Boeing facility in Renton, Washington, to be assembled into airliners.


Ken Evans, senior manager for Spirit AeroSystems, said the company ships 42 of the 737 fuselages each month to Washington state.


"We're at a record rate right now," he said. "We've been doing this for decades, and this is exactly how they've been shipped for decades."


None of the companies involved offered an estimate of the damage.


Frost of Montana Rail Link said insurance considerations won't be decided until the investigation is complete. She said the train was traveling well under the 35 mph speed limit for that section of track.


Meanwhile, rafters on the popular Clark Fork River have a surreal view as they pass the fuselages near a river feature called Mermaid Rock.


"They really get to see the enormous size of those aircraft," said Josh Flanagan of Wiley E. Waters, a rafting company. "It's not something you expect to float past when you're on a river trip."



Bruce HR breaks slump, sends Reds over Brewers 4-2


Jay Bruce had hit the ball hard twice, only to see the worst slump of his career get deeper. He finally ended it with a hit that nobody was going to take away.


Bruce emerged from his 0-for-26 skid with a tiebreaking homer in the eighth inning on Sunday, rallying Mat Latos and the Cincinnati Reds over the Milwaukee Brewers 4-2.


Bruce flied out to the wall in center field and lined out to center earlier in the game, so he took a little confidence into his game-changing at-bat.


"I knew I wasn't going to go 0-for-my-career," Bruce said. "I'd been making hard contact. I really didn't feel like I was 0-for-so-much."


The Reds gained a game on the NL Central leaders by taking two of three in their series, moving to six back. Cincinnati has won 10 of 15 overall.


"That could have easily gone the other way," Reds manager Bryan Price said. "We really didn't want to lose ground on this team."


The Brewers have lost five of six but still have the NL's best record and a comfortable lead.


Bruce hit a two-run shot with one out off left-hander Will Smith (1-2), who took over for Yovani Gallardo. Smith hadn't allowed a homer to a left-handed batter all season, holding them to a .143 average.


The matchup with the slumping Bruce seemed to favor Milwaukee in every way.


"It's a crazy game," Bruce said. "You can't be surprised by anything that happens in the game of baseball."


Smith got ahead 1-2 in the count, then threw a fastball that was up. Bruce pulled it to right field, the part of Great American Ball Park closest to the Ohio River.


"He's given a lot of people trouble," Price said of Smith. "He made a mistake. You do that and he's going to hit the ball in that creek out there."


A replay review overturned Ramon Santiago's inside-the-park homer in the Reds second.


A fan reached his mitt onto the field and hit right fielder Logan Schafer's glove as he tried to catch the fly ball in front of the wall. The umpires initially ruled the ball in play, and Santiago circled the bases as Schafer and the ball fell to the ground.


Following a 3-minute, 46-second review, Santiago was ruled out because of the fan's interference.


Latos (2-1) allowed two runs and four hits in a season-high eight innings. Jonathan Broxton pitched the ninth for his sixth save in eight chances. Closer Aroldis Chapman wasn't available because he slightly pulled a hamstring while running in the outfield before the game.


Both teams were missing stars.


Brewers right fielder Ryan Braun was sidelined by a stiff back that forced him to leave Saturday's game. Manager Ron Roenicke said the problem doesn't appear to be series.


Reds first baseman Joey Votto got a day to rest his bothersome left leg. Votto missed 23 games with a strained muscle above his left knee and has batted .250 without a homer since his return. The muscle isn't expected to heal fully until after the season.


Latos made his fifth start since recovering from torn knee cartilage and a strained pitching forearm that sidelined him until June 14. He let a 2-0 lead slip away.


Schafer tripled and scored on Scooter Gennett's groundout in the sixth. Schafer also doubled off Latos with two outs in the eighth and came around on Rickie Weeks' pinch-hit single, making Latos smack his glove in frustration.


In his last three starts, Latos has allowed a total of four runs in 22 innings, showing he's fully recovered from the injuries.


Devin Mesoraco had three hits, including an RBI single in the first inning off Gallardo, who gave up two runs in seven innings.


Gallardo was coming off his worst start of the season: 10 hits, eight runs in five innings of a 10-4 loss to Colorado last Sunday. He settled in after a rough first inning. Bruce grounded into a forceout that drove in a run, and Mesoraco's single made it 2-0.


NOTES: The Brewers open a seven-game homestand against Philadelphia and St. Louis on Monday. Marco Estrada (7-5) faces Cole Hamels (2-5). The Reds continue their homestand with the start of a five-game series against the Cubs. Mike Leake (6-7), who has won his last three starts against Chicago, faces Edwin Jackson (5-8). ... The Reds put C Brayan Pena on the paternity list and called up C Tucker Barnhart for his third stint this season. ... RHP Raisel Iglesias is guaranteed $26.5 million under his seven-year contract with the Reds and can earn an extra $500,000 this year between his salary of $1,016,666 and a $250,000 reporting bonus if he reports to a minor league affiliate and receives U.S. work authorizations by Aug. 15. He gets a $5 million signing bonus, of which $1.5 million due when the contract is approved by the commissioner's office, $1 million on Nov. 15, $1 million on Nov. 15, 2015, and $1.5 million on Nov. 15, 2016. He gets a maximum $500,000 this year between salary and reporting bonus, and salaries of $1 million next year, $2.5 million in 2016, $3.5 million in 2017, $4.5 million in 2018 and $5 million in each of the following two seasons.



Maine's shrimp fishery may face new restrictions


Federal regulators may limit the number of fishermen allowed to catch northern shrimp in the Gulf of Maine once the depleted fishery reopens.


The Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission closed the shrimp season for 2014 for the first time in more than 30 years because shrimp populations dipped to their lowest recorded levels. The commission will decide this fall if there will be a 2015 season.


The commission's northern shrimp section is now also considering restrictions that could limit the number of licenses to fish for shrimp or the number of vessels allowed in the fishery. The restrictions are in development and will likely be the subject of public hearings this year, regulators said.


The fishery's estimated biomass plunged from more than 7,000 metric tons in 2011 to about 500 metric tons in 2013, said Marin Hawk, management plan coordinator for the commission.


"We're investigating the number of vessels and the number of licenses," Hawk said. "Indicators show the fishery is not at the levels that they would like it to see."


The number of vessels in the fishery has fluctuated since 2000, with a low of 144 in 2006 and a high of 342 in 2011. Maine issued an average of 463 licenses per year from 2001 to 2011. The shrimp section also sets a total allowable catch limit every year.


Fishermen from Maine, New Hampshire and Massachusetts fish for the shrimp. Maine dominates the fishery and caught nearly 5 million pounds of the shrimp in 2012. The catch plummeted to about 560,000 pounds in 2013, the last year the fishery was open.


Tim Simmons, president of the Maine Shrimp Trappers Association, said the move to limit participation in the fishery is unpopular with many fishermen. Many of the people who fish for shrimp are lobstermen who rely on shrimp fishing to make money during the winter months, he said. Timmons said a quota system is a better solution.


"We count on that fishery for our livelihoods," Simmons said. "We definitely should be having some sort of season in this upcoming year."


Northern shrimp are small, pinkish shrimp — tinier than the warm-water shrimp that make up much the U.S. shrimp harvest — and prized for their sweet, tender meat.


The three-state fishery exceeded $5 million in value as recently as 2012, and Maine's fishery alone exceeded nearly $10 million twice in the mid-1990s. They are normally fished and available to consumers in the winter but have been largely unavailable since the shutdown.


New restrictions on the fishery would need shrimp section approval after public hearings.



Jackson airport CEO retiring after 25 years


The head of Jackson's airport authority is retiring after 25 years.


Dirk Vanderleest has been CEO at Jackson-Medgar Wiley Evers International Airport's CEO's since 1990. Before that, he spent five years as CEO for the airport in Huntsville, Alabama.


Vanderleest tells The Clarion-Ledger (http://on.thec-l.com/1j6K5N6) that he's been on call 24/7 for 30 years, and he and his family have decided it's time to do something else.


He says he notified the board of commissioners last week that he's retiring Sept. 30.


Vanderleest says he might do something else in the aviation business.



Weekend’s tremors part of normal cycle of seismic activity


BEIRUT: Lebanon experienced a series of tremors over the weekend that prompted warnings by experts that the country remains unprepared for a future, major earthquake.


But the experts cautioned against a panicked response and rumors, saying scientists cannot predict with certainty when such an earthquake could occur, and adding that the weekend’s tremors were part of the normal cycle of seismic activity.


“It appears from the signs that we have now that this is the start of an earthquake crisis,” Mouin Hamzeh, the secretary-general of the National Council for Scientific Research, told The Daily Star.


“We don’t know if it will happen or if it will not happen,” he added, referring to the possibility of a larger earthquake. “We have to take precautions as much as possible.”


Six tremors were recorded between 12:41 a.m. Saturday and 9 a.m. Sunday. Two of the tremors, which registered at 4.1 and 3.5 on the Richter scale, were felt, whereas the rest were detected by seismological equipment and fell below 3-magnitude. Five tremors were the repercussions of the 4.1-magnitude earthquake, which hit Roum’s fault, affecting Iqlim al-Kharroub, Iqlim al-Tuffah and Beiteddine in Mount Lebanon.


At a news conference Sunday, Hamzeh explained the earthquake, which resulted from natural geological activities, was felt mostly in Sidon because it broke the ground there.


He called for the “highest precautions possible” against an identical earthquake that might hit the country soon.


Lebanon is crisscrossed by three major fault lines, along with other smaller ones. The Serghaya fault runs parallel to the border with Syria, while Yammouneh runs down the middle of the country. The third fault line runs mostly underwater and scientists fear a major tremor there can cause a tsunami.


The last major earthquake is estimated to have killed 40,000 people in 1759. Experts say the eastern Mediterranean region, spanning Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Palestine is due for one or more major earthquakes, but say it is impossible to predict when they will occur.In 551 A.D., Beirut was largely destroyed by a major earthquake, estimated as a 7.6-magnitude, which also spawned a tsunami that caused widespread devastation along the eastern Mediterranean.


While Lebanon’s rocky geology can reduce the violence of earthquake tremors, its valleys and mountains increase the risk of landslides, and the soil under main urban centers makes their infrastructure susceptible to damage.


Hamzeh said residents should avoid locations that are particularly defenseless against earthquakes, including buildings that are vulnerable to collapse.


The government should also enforce building codes and enact “indefinite” precautionary measures that can help mitigate the impact of earthquakes, particularly since the region is geologically active.


“On the long term obviously we need to be working on this,” said Ata Elias, assistant professor at the American University of Beirut’s geology department, who has extensively studied seismic activity in Lebanon. “Not today, we should have been working on it for years now.”


Elias said the tremors were part of normal seismic activity in the country, which rarely exceeds 4-magnitude and occurs with low frequency.


But he said the country should increase its preparedness and resilience against a more powerful earthquake.


“We should not be worried about the magnitude 4s, that’s ridiculous,” he said. “We should be worried about the magnitude 6 and 7 that will hit the area, maybe soon, maybe tomorrow, maybe in 10 years.”


“As a country we are not ready to face a major earthquake,” he added.


Elias said the government has begun strengthening its capacity to face such a possibility, setting up a disaster management unit based in the Grand Serail with representatives from ministries and security forces, working to raise awareness, carry out drills and helping formulate disaster management plans.


But he said the country still had a lot to do, such as training civil defense recruits, enforcing earthquake building codes, improving the quality of workers, educating people on how to behave in an earthquake, improving urban planning and strengthening university engineering courses with modules on designing buildings that are resilient against earthquakes. “The list is long.”


Many residents of the southern city of Sidon evacuated their homes Saturday night, heading to the coasts and open areas in light of the tremors.


The shake destroyed the glass facades of many buildings in east Sidon, which instigated panic among locals.


“What has exhausted us is not the surveying or monitoring what is happening, but how to face the rumors that come up,” he said.


“In the short term the population should be aware of what to do in such a crisis,” he added. “And we should pray that we aren’t hit by the major one.”



Presidential crisis imperils parliamentary elections


BEIRUT: Lebanon’s political crisis could lead to another extension of Parliament’s term, political sources said Sunday, as no positive signs emerged to end the presidential deadlock soon.


“Despite the statements in public to the contrary, most major players now realize that it’s virtually impossible for elections to be held this year,” a senior political source told The Daily Star.


“We are looking for another several-month extension of Parliament’s term, at least,” the source continued, requesting to remain anonymous.


Parliament extended its term for 17 months in May 2013 over the lack of an agreement on a new electoral law and due to deteriorating security.


Meanwhile, Speaker Nabih Berri dropped the idea of holding separate deliberations with MPs in a bid to break the presidential deadlock, considering the country to be in a “wait-and-see mode,” his visitors quoted him as saying.


“We, the Lebanese, cannot solve our problems by ourselves. I dropped the idea of holding deliberations over the presidential deadlock with heads of parliamentary blocs after discovering that the situation was in a ‘wait-and-see’ mode,” Berri said, in reference to the effect of regional developments in Lebanon.


The speaker has stressed several times that Saudi-Iranian rapprochement would help solve Lebanon’s presidential woes. Iran and Saudi Arabia back the rival March 8 and March 14 coalitions respectively.


Commenting on Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai’s call for daily Parliament sessions to elect a president, Berri said that he would schedule a session for the next day once an agreement was reached on a presidential candidate.


“Setting the date of a Parliament session to elect a president has to do with the legislature’s bylaws. But if new developments emerge and there are signs of an agreement on attending a session and electing a president, then I will schedule a session for the next day,” Berri said.


Parliament has failed to elect a new president eight consecutive times due to the lack of quorum. Most March 8 MPs have boycotted all the sessions, arguing that they would only show up when consensus is reached on a presidential candidate ahead of time. Berri has set July 23 as a date for the ninth session.“The scheduled date could be pushed back the moment consensus is reached,” he said. “But there are no new developments to make one optimistic that a new president will be elected, even if I schedule a session every day.”


Earlier, Rai called on Berri to hold Parliament sessions on a daily basis to elect a president.


“They [sessions] have become obligatory and exclusive [to electing a president] in line with the Constitution. Through daily deliberations and rounds of elections, an agreement is reached on the president that best suits Lebanon today,” Rai said in Sunday’s sermon in Diman.


Rai accused Lebanese politicians of ignoring the harsh consequences of the presidential void.


“Don’t the officials know that because of the presidential void, the country’s economic and security conditions are further deteriorating?” he asked.


“It is a shame that our presidential seat will be empty when Lebanon attends the Arab League or the United Nations meetings,” he said.


Former MP Mikhael Daher, a legal expert, said extending Parliament’s term was unconstitutional, just like the one in May 2013.


“This will be a violation of the Constitution, the law and the system,” Daher said. “People have chosen those MPs as their representatives for four years only. These representatives cannot extend their terms by themselves without referring to people again.”


Daher dismissed security concerns that could be used as a pretext to justify extension. “The security situation was a valid excuse during the Civil War which began in 1975. Back then, Beirut was divided into east and west, there were clashes and front lines. Whereas now, the state stretches its authority all across Lebanon.”



Western help, boosted cooperation behind security successes


BEIRUT: International security agencies from around the world, many of whom are adversarial in nature, are largely responsible for assisting Lebanese security forces in countering terrorist networks.


“External intel feeds and intelligence sharing from the ICs [Intelligence Communities] in countries that include the U.S., the U.K., France, Germany, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Assad’s Syria” have been some of the main collaborators with Lebanon’s intelligence community, said Aram Nerguizian, senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.


Since the outbreak of civil war in neighboring Syria, a wave of violence has disturbed the security situation in Lebanon. A series of car bombs rocked different areas of the country causing panic and striking fear into the hearts of many citizens.


In April, however, a security plan was put into effect and the attacks effectively ceased. June saw a resumption of attacks, though on a much smaller scale, as three bombs hit Lebanon in less than a week. The attacks renewed anxiety in Lebanon that the security situation would unravel into a near weekly attacks. But as quickly as the explosions returned, they went away as media reported on the dismantling of several terror networks and security raids on arms depots.


A number of former security officers and analysts interviewed said that recent improvements were due primarily to two factors: Information provided by foreign intelligence agencies and an increase in coordination between Lebanon’s various security agencies.


Lebanon’s major security agencies that have intelligence branches working to stifle terrorist networks include the Army Intelligence, the Internal Security Forces’ Information Branch, and more recently, General Security.


“It is all about Western intelligence,” said a member of the Internal Security Forces with the rank of captain, who asked his name be withheld because did not have permission to speak to media.


“With intel focusing on extremist groups since 9/11 [foreign intelligence agencies] have large databases and can infiltrate networks using Internet and telecom network surveillance,” said a security analyst, who asked his name be withheld for personal and professional reasons.


These databases provide extra pieces to the puzzle for Lebanon’s intelligence community. As a former security officer, requesting anonymity for professional reasons, put it: “Any piece of information, even if it is from 10 to 20 years ago, can be pieced together to help or stop crimes.”


Other analysts said that American and European intelligence agencies in particular were providing the most information.


Analysts said local intelligence agencies would receive information from abroad and then use it to consolidate data they possessed. They then use the corroborated intelligence, gathered through several sources, to take action against potential security threats.


But sharing information has also increased on a local level, a first for security agencies, often mired in political affiliation and competition.


“We’ve seen more cooperation between LMI [Lebanese Army Intelligence], ISF Intel Branch [Information Branch] and GSD [General Security] in the last 16 months than I can recall in the post-2005 period,” Nerguizian said.


This is a fresh development from the days when distrust emanated between security agencies. “There is no embarrassment in coordination between all security and military apparatuses to implement laws and pursue criminals and wanted individuals,” Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk said in the latest issue of General Security’s magazine.


“Cooperation wasn’t so good [in the past] and it could have been much better,” said the former security officer. “Every head of each agency wanted to look like a hero.”


He pointed to the examples of Jamil Sayyed and General Security and late Wissam al-Hasan at the ISF.


“Everyone wanted to establish their own agency in a way to say ‘look what I can do,’” he said, noting that the recent sharing of information seems to have drastically improved the performance of the security agencies.


“The government is now telling law enforcement agencies to increase cooperation,” said the ISF captain. “Every agency has competition but the government is insisting we cooperate.”



Western help, boosted cooperation behind security successes


BEIRUT: International security agencies from around the world, many of whom are adversarial in nature, are largely responsible for assisting Lebanese security forces in countering terrorist networks.


“External intel feeds and intelligence sharing from the ICs [Intelligence Communities] in countries that include the U.S., the U.K., France, Germany, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Assad’s Syria” have been some of the main collaborators with Lebanon’s intelligence community, said Aram Nerguizian, senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.


Since the outbreak of civil war in neighboring Syria, a wave of violence has disturbed the security situation in Lebanon. A series of car bombs rocked different areas of the country causing panic and striking fear into the hearts of many citizens.


In April, however, a security plan was put into effect and the attacks effectively ceased. June saw a resumption of attacks, though on a much smaller scale, as three bombs hit Lebanon in less than a week. The attacks renewed anxiety in Lebanon that the security situation would unravel into a near weekly attacks. But as quickly as the explosions returned, they went away as media reported on the dismantling of several terror networks and security raids on arms depots.


A number of former security officers and analysts interviewed said that recent improvements were due primarily to two factors: Information provided by foreign intelligence agencies and an increase in coordination between Lebanon’s various security agencies.


Lebanon’s major security agencies that have intelligence branches working to stifle terrorist networks include the Army Intelligence, the Internal Security Forces’ Information Branch, and more recently, General Security.


“It is all about Western intelligence,” said a member of the Internal Security Forces with the rank of captain, who asked his name be withheld because did not have permission to speak to media.


“With intel focusing on extremist groups since 9/11 [foreign intelligence agencies] have large databases and can infiltrate networks using Internet and telecom network surveillance,” said a security analyst, who asked his name be withheld for personal and professional reasons.


These databases provide extra pieces to the puzzle for Lebanon’s intelligence community. As a former security officer, requesting anonymity for professional reasons, put it: “Any piece of information, even if it is from 10 to 20 years ago, can be pieced together to help or stop crimes.”


Other analysts said that American and European intelligence agencies in particular were providing the most information.


Analysts said local intelligence agencies would receive information from abroad and then use it to consolidate data they possessed. They then use the corroborated intelligence, gathered through several sources, to take action against potential security threats.


But sharing information has also increased on a local level, a first for security agencies, often mired in political affiliation and competition.


“We’ve seen more cooperation between LMI [Lebanese Army Intelligence], ISF Intel Branch [Information Branch] and GSD [General Security] in the last 16 months than I can recall in the post-2005 period,” Nerguizian said.


This is a fresh development from the days when distrust emanated between security agencies. “There is no embarrassment in coordination between all security and military apparatuses to implement laws and pursue criminals and wanted individuals,” Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk said in the latest issue of General Security’s magazine.


“Cooperation wasn’t so good [in the past] and it could have been much better,” said the former security officer. “Every head of each agency wanted to look like a hero.”


He pointed to the examples of Jamil Sayyed and General Security and late Wissam al-Hasan at the ISF.


“Everyone wanted to establish their own agency in a way to say ‘look what I can do,’” he said, noting that the recent sharing of information seems to have drastically improved the performance of the security agencies.


“The government is now telling law enforcement agencies to increase cooperation,” said the ISF captain. “Every agency has competition but the government is insisting we cooperate.”



Top banker defends graft comments, denies slander


BEIRUT: Banking leader Francois Bassil defended himself Sunday against accusations of slander and defamation, insisting he was not referencing any specific figure when he attacked politicians for corruption earlier this year.


“I meant to address politicians that prioritize their private interests over those of the country,” said Bassil, president of the Association of Banks, during a supportive gathering at his home the northern town of Jbeil.


Amal Movement’s MP Hani Qobeissi has filed a lawsuit against Bassil accusing him of slander and defamation against lawmakers based on comments he made in April.


“Everyone should respect the Constitutional institutions,” Bassil added, offering salutations to Parliament Speaker and Amal Movement leader Nabih Berri.


Bassil also denied Lebanese banks were hindering the approval of the new salary scale.


“We refuse to accept the manipulation of the public opinion by distorting the reputation of the best and strongest economic sector in Lebanon,” he said.


He praised Parliament’s decision to postpone the wage hike’s discussion until further studies of potential state revenues can be conducted.


“[This decision] shows a true intention to avoid haste and pushing the country into a severe crisis,” he said.


He reiterated his support for workers’ rights, but rejected a wage hike that, he said, “overwhelms the economy and weakens its pillars.”


“We will not accept that the [banking sector]’s great efforts to strengthen its institution’s immunity be wasted because of reckless decisions taken by those ... who have ruined the state’s institutions,” he said.


“We will not accept, after we survived the most severe global economic crisis, to be defeated in battle over the ranks and salaries scale,” he added.


Bassil stated his testimony before Judge Charbel Abu Samra Wednesday, accompanied by his lawyers, Sakher Hashem and Elie Chamoun.


“I defended myself,” Bassil told reporters after the session, adding that he repeated the same remarks as those he made during an April news conference.


He said that although the banks support the demands of the Union Coordination Committee, they believe that the salary scale should coincide with radical reforms and not be financed by new taxes.


Abu Samra set a session for July 9 to respond to Bassil’s testimony.


The ABL had criticized MPs for making “random decisions” for political gain, warning that such a step would have negative effects on inflation rates in the country, the stability of the national currency and the purchasing power of Lebanese.


Berri had insisted that Bassil publicly apologize for verbally attacking lawmakers and Parliament.


Bassil has made a veiled apology to Berri.



Qabbani camp mulls going to court


BEIRUT: Members of Grand Mufti Sheikh Mohammad Rashid Qabbani’s Higher Islamic Council are considering whether to go to court if summoned over two lawsuits, arguing that the two legal complaints were politically motivated.


“We will decide [whether to attend] based on development [of the case],” said Maher Saqqal, the deputy head of the council.


Last week, the Higher Islamic Council of former minister Omar Miskawi filed two lawsuits against Qabbani’s. One was filed against the 32 members of the body, accusing them of violating Shura Council decisions, stating that their council was illegitimate.


Since the end of 2012, disputes between Qabbani and the Future Movement have divided the council. One side is chaired by the grand mufti and the other by Miskawi. Each considers the other illegitimate.


The council, set up in 1930, supervises the financial and administrative affairs of the institutions of Dar al-Fatwa, the top Sunni religious authority in Lebanon.


“The Shura Council issued nine decisions telling them [members of Qabbani’s council] that you don’t have the right to form a council. But they have been ignoring this for over a year,” said Mohammad Mrad, a member of Miskawi’s council.


Speaking to The Daily Star, Mrad said the decision to file the two lawsuits came after Qabbani decided last month to expand the electoral body that would pick his successor.


“This was the straw that broke the camel’s back. They violated all morals and values,” he said. Mrad said the judiciary could summon the accused this week.


Qabbani’s decision expanded the electoral body from more than 100 members to around 2,800. He justified the move by saying this was the original number of the body before he was elected grand mufti in 1996.


Qabbani’s term expires in September. The disputes could lead to the election of two grand muftis.


Last month, Sheikh Hisham Khalifa, who is the director general of Islamic Endowments and is close to Qabbani, called for the election of a new grand mufti on Aug. 31.


Miskawi urged Prime Minister Tammam Salam to work on electing a new grand mufti.


Media reports said Sunday that Salam and former Prime Ministers Najib Mikati, Fouad Siniora and Omar Karami have agreed to support Sheikh Abdel-Latif Derian, the head of the Higher Sunni Religious Court, as a candidate for the post.


Speaking to The Daily Star, a source close to Siniora said he could neither confirm nor deny the reports.


“Salam and the former prime ministers have agreed on implementing the law and holding the election,” he said.


Saqqal said that his council filed a lawsuit against Miskawi’s council over a year ago, accusing its members of misrepresenting the Higher Islamic Council.


“I believe this [the filing of the two lawsuits] was in response to what we did. ... These lawsuits are merely political. The prime minister and former prime ministers want to strip the grand mufti of his powers,” Saqqal said.


“[The secretary-general of the prime minister’s office] Suheil Bouji is behind all the Shura Council decisions,” he added.


Salam – the most senior Sunni politician in the country – and other former prime ministers back Miskawi’s council.


Mrad explained that the lawsuits did not target Qabbani, out of respect for Dar al-Fatwa.


“I will personally press charges against Qabbani once he leaves his post. I believe he is the first criminal,” Mrad said.


Another lawsuit was filed against Sheikh Khalifa, accusing him of inciting strife in a speech he delivered in 2012, in which he said that for the first time in Lebanon’s history, the Shura Council had issued a decision against the Grand Mufti.


“Unfortunately, those issuing the verdict were two Christians,” Khalifa was quoted as saying in reference to Judge Shukri Sader, the head of the Shura Council and his adviser Youssef Gemayel.


Miskawi’s council also filed a challenge to Khalifa’s call for the election of a new grand mufti, and to the decision to expand the electoral body.


Mrad said the charges pressed against Qabbani’s council are punishable with a prison sentence of one month to a year according to Article 372 of the Penal Code.



Women make gains in Md. board rooms


Maryland has fewer companies, and therefore board seats, than it used to, but more of those seats are filled by women.


According to Network 2000 Inc.'s 2014 Census of Women Board Directors in Maryland, women filled 86 board of director positions in the state in 2013, compared to 73 in 2012.


"That's a movement we love to see," said Katherine Bays Armstrong, president of Network 2000. "I would like to believe it's because companies are recognizing now the importance of including and increasing the women's presence."


The total number of board seats in the state actually declined by 37 in 2013 to 646, so the percentage of seats held by women increased from 10.7 percent to 13.3 percent. That's the greatest percentage increase that Network 2000 has seen in a single year since it began surveying companies in 2008.


The survey is conducted by reviewing the annual reports of Maryland companies listed on the major stock exchanges.


The organization's current goal for Maryland is to have 20 percent of board seats filled by women by the year 2020. That goal is based on the nationwide call to action from the organization 2020 Women on Boards.


But meeting that goal will require that the percentage of board members who are female grow by nearly 7 percentage points in the next seven years, when it has grown by only 4.5 since 2008.


"I am optimistic about the 2020," said Nancy Sloan, Network 2000's member engagement chairwoman, who led the group's census committee for several years. "It's not that I think that 20 percent is going to come easily. It's going to require a lot of continued focus."


Network 2000 has taken some steps to push that progress along. It has built a mentoring program for women in middle management, and it recently created a list of board-ready women for Maryland companies to reference when filling board seats.


"We would go around and we would interview the CEOs of publicly traded companies," said Sloan. "They always asked us, 'Can you tell us who these women are?'"


Next year, said Armstrong, they will be able to seek help from executive leaders themselves. Network 2000 is currently working to create a corporate advisory board of CEOs from major corporations in the Baltimore area.


If Maryland meets its goal for 2020, that will not be an end game for the organization's efforts.


"We just frankly want equality," said Armstrong.


The number of companies with no women directors or executives has decreased from 24 in 2012 to 15 in 2013, but women are still usually in the minority on the board in Maryland, even though more women in the U.S. have masters', professional or doctorate degrees than men. Only 6 Maryland companies have more than two women on their boards.


The organization cited eight Maryland companies that have 20 percent or more women on the board and in the executive suite:


— The Adams Express Co.


— Chindex International Inc.


— Federal Realty Investment Trust


— First United Corp.


— Lockheed Martin Corp.


— Medifast Inc.


— Northwest Biotherapeutics Inc.


— Petroleum & Resources Corp.


Armstrong said that studies have suggested companies with women leaders perform better.


A 2007 report by Catalyst said that the Fortune 500 companies with the highest representation of women board directors had significantly higher financial performance.


"Women bring a different viewpoint, a different perspective," said Armstrong. "It's good for business because it's good for the bottom line."



Newport casino question on ballot once again


Voters in Newport will be asked once again if they want gambling to be expanded at the struggling Newport Grand facility.


Rhode Island Gov. Lincoln Chafee signed legislation that will put a referendum on the November ballot about adding table games including blackjack and roulette.


The referendum has to pass both statewide and in the local community. Newport rejected it once before, though it passed statewide.


The bill Chafee signed sets out the financial terms of an agreement for expanded gambling if the referendum is approved. The city of Newport would get $1.5 million a year guaranteed, for the first six years, after investors seeking to buy Newport Grand complete a $40 million overhaul.


After that, the city would get $1 million minimum a year from the state's share of video slots.



New Hampshire considers 4-year tuition freeze


In-state students who graduate from one of New Hampshire's public colleges and universities in 2016 could be the first in state history to pay the same tuition for four consecutive years.


After years of significant increases, resident tuition was frozen at the 2012-13 rates for the last academic year and the one that starts in September. Now the University System of New Hampshire's board of trustees has proposed continuing the tuition freeze for two more years if the Legislature agrees to the budget request they'll finalize in September.


That would keep in-state tuition at the system's flagship campus, the University of New Hampshire in Durham, at $13,670, an amount that had increased 45 percent since the 2008-09 academic year and is among the nation's highest for a four-year public school.


While higher education experts say such tuition freezes aren't common, they're one example of how colleges and universities are experimenting with ways to stay competitive amid rising public concern about college affordability.


States rarely freeze tuition for multiple, consecutive years, and in some cases, those that have done so enacted large increases in later years, said Jennifer Ma, author of the College Board's 2013 "Trends in College Pricing" report. And she cautions that net prices can go up for some students if states reduce grants as a result.


Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley instituted a four-year tuition freeze in 2007, and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker recently proposed extending a tuition freeze there from two to four years. In Texas, Illinois and Oklahoma, incoming freshmen can lock in tuition rates for four years.


But while such fixed-rate plans might eliminate surprises they won't solve the college affordability problem, said Patrick Callan, president of the Higher Education Policy Institute.


"If colleges have to guess how much the costs will be four years from now, they will predict on the high side to balance the budget," he said.


Private colleges and universities also are making similar moves. According to the U.S. Department of Education, 53 private, nonprofit four-year schools offered four-year fixed tuition programs last year.


Paul Hassan, spokesman for the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities, said such experiments with tuition rollbacks, freezes, four-year guarantees and other measures show that schools recognize they have to do something to control costs, but it's too soon to say whether any of them will work long term.


"I don't know that we've seen anything that's truly revolutionary," he said.


In New Hampshire, the Legislature cut university system funding nearly in half in its two-year budget in 2011, but restored much of the funding last year, allowing the initial tuition freeze. While state funding accounts for less than 10 percent of the operating budgets at the four institutions that make up the university system, the cuts fueled a misconception among the public that the system was on rocky ground, said Chancellor Todd Leach. Freezing tuition helps turn that around, he said, and this fall's freshmen class will be the largest ever.


"What we learned is just how important perceptions are, both among students and their high school guidance counselors," he said. "So being able to say we're in a position to freeze tuition not only helps on that affordability threshold, but it also helps on the perception front in terms of the amount of support the university system and public higher education receives."


Justin Gaudreault, a student at the University of New Hampshire-Manchester and the main campus in Durham, said he has been satisfied with the financial aid he's received in the form of grants and loans and has appreciated that tuition has been frozen since he started as a freshman last year.


"It would be great if it would stay the same for two more years, so I'd at least know what to expect," he said.



Camden getting special status in New Jersey laws


New Jersey's state government has been giving a lot of attention to its poorest city, but some activists in Camden don't think the help is going to the right places.


In June, lawmakers passed three bills with major Camden-specific components, and officials announced the Philadelphia 76ers would move their practice facility and business offices to Camden, It's the first use of a provision of a 2013 law that makes it easier for companies to get tax breaks for moving to Camden than anywhere else in the state.


"It's like smoke and mirrors to us," said Roy Jones, a retiree and Camden activist who believes that measures aimed at helping the city often do little for residents there. After all, two measures of the city's health — poverty and murder rates — are worse now than they were in 2002, when a bill was adopted giving the state a bigger role in the city of nearly 77,000.


In 2012, nearly four in 10 residents lived in poverty. And last year, there were 57 homicides — more than twice as many as in 2001, the last full year before the takeover bill was signed by then-Gov. Jim McGreevey.


None of the newly passed measures has been signed into law by Gov. Chris Christie, who visits Camden frequently, particularly to tout school and public safety programs; he did events on both in Camden in June. Spokesman Kevin Roberts said Christie's office is still reviewing the latest bills.


One measure would pay pension incentives of up to $12,000 for qualifying Camden teachers to retire, a move that its backers hope will reduce the number of layoffs in the city's cash-strapped school district. In May, 241 employees, including more than 200 teachers, were given layoff notices.


Another would extend the state's Municipal Rehabilitation and Economic Recovery Act for five additional years.


That law was adopted in 2002. It infused $175 million of state funds into projects in the city — much of it matching money to expand colleges and hospitals already there with the hopes of sparking private investment.


In return for the funding, the state took control of some local government functions. Many of those provisions were undone when Mayor Dana Redd and Christie took office in 2010.


The third measure is an update to the state's reworking of business incentives from last year. One part of it clarifies that supermarkets in Camden would be eligible for tax credits. It could benefit a firm that is planning to bring Camden its first new large grocery store in generations.


The 2013 incentive program also included a provision to attract businesses to Camden specifically. Businesses applying for the program elsewhere in New Jersey have to show they would generate tax benefits worth 110 percent of their breaks over a 20-year period; in Camden, they have to show they'll bring in 100 percent of the benefits and get 35 years to do it.


The NBA's Philadelphia 76ers were the first business to announce a deal using the provision. The state is to give the team tax breaks over 10 years totaling the entire $82 million price of the facility the team intends to build on the waterfront.


Critics question how many jobs from the project or others will end up going to Camden residents.


"My problem is that jobs aren't going around," said Mangaliso Davis, a longtime city activist. "Give me something real, give me some jobs."


Jones said money would be better spent on funding local schools or helping Camden entrepreneurs launch small businesses.


76ers officials say they already have about 200 employees but will need 250 to receive the tax credits. Redd said she wants to ensure Camden residents are in line for positions with the team.


Redd, like previous mayors, preaches that better times are ahead for her city. And she's been praising Christie for his help and attention.


Christie strikes a consistently bipartisan note when he talks about Camden. At an event last month to call attention to lower reported crime rates in the year after a new Camden County police department took over patrols in the city, he said the tax breaks for companies moving to Camden would pay off shortly.


"I suspect that I'll be back here a number of times more over the course of the next six months with more important announcements about Camden's economic future," he said.


And some residents share his optimism.


Angelo Drummond, a 22-year-old Morehouse College senior who is home in Camden for the summer, said things are getting better. "I believe that overall they're working toward the major goal of improving the city quality of life in general," he said. "I feel more safe going outside now than I ever did before."



'Transformers' tops 'Tammy' on weak July 4 weekend


The Fourth of July went off like a dud at the box office, as the Michael Bay sequel "Transformers: Age of Extinction" and the Melisa McCarthy comedy "Tammy" led the weakest summer holiday weekend in at least a decade.


The North American box office was down a striking 44 percent over July 4 weekend last year, when "Despicable Me 2" and "The Lone Ranger" opened.


"This ranks as one of the lowest Fourth of Julys ever," said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for box-office tracker Rentrak. "We always think of Fourth of July being a big weekend. This year, we just have to lick our wounds and look forward to 'Planet of the Apes' and some other films to get us back on track."


This weekend sputtered not because of an oversized bomb like "The Lone Ranger," but because of numerous factors, including that Hollywood simply didn't aim for big fireworks this year. The holdover "Transformers" led all films with an estimated $36.4 million, while "Tammy" had a below expectations Friday-to-Sunday haul of $21.2 million.


Such movies are a far cry from the usual Independence Day fare, which has in the past included the opening weekends of "Spider-Man 2," "War of the Worlds," two earlier "Transformers" releases and, naturally, "Independence Day."


But this year's July Fourth fell on Friday, an already lucrative movie-going day, and thus did little to add incentive for blockbusters. The World Cup, too, may have scared off some big releases. Next week, Fox's "Dawn of the Planet of the Apes" is expected to be one of the summer's biggest hits.


The unusual holiday lull meant that for the first time this summer, a movie ("Transformers: Age of Extinction") held the top spot at the box office for two weeks in a row.


Paramount's "Transformers," the fourth in the series, opened the weekend prior to the year's biggest debut with $100 million. The movie, with a rebooted cast led by Mark Wahlberg, dropped considerably (63 percent) in its second week of release despite relatively little competition.


New Line's R-rated, Midwest road trip romp "Tammy" boasts one of the most bankable stars in movies — McCarthy — but is a smaller, homespun movie made for just $20 million and directed by McCarthy's husband, Ben Falcone. Despite being savaged by critics, the Warner Bros. release made $32.9 million in five days since opening Wednesday.


"Why the weekend was so weak in terms of competition is hard to tell," said Dan Fellman, head of domestic distribution for Warner Bros., who said he was very pleased with the performance of "Tammy." "It's just the way things fell."


The only other new wide release was the horror flick "Deliver Us From Evil," which had no blockbuster ambitions. The Sony Screen Gems release, starring Eric Bana, opened in third with $9.5 million.


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


1. "Transformers: Age Of Extinction," $36.4 million.


2. "Tammy," $21.2 million.


3. "Deliver Us From Evil," $9.5 million.


4. "22 Jump Street," $9.4 million.


5. "How to Train Your Dragon 2," $8.8 million.


6. "Earth to Echo," $8.3 million.


7. "Maleficent," $6.1 million.


8. "Jersey Boys," $5.1 million.


9. "Think Like a Man Too," $4.9 million.


10. "Edge of Tomorrow," $3.6 million.


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



Choctaws plan for casino renovation, expansion


Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians Phyliss J. Anderson has signed a new loan package to renovate the Silver Star Hotel and Casino and reopen the Golden Moon Hotel and Casino, among other resort-wide improvements and capital investments.


The Neshoba Democrat reports (http://bit.ly/1o54NJo ) Anderson signed the refinancing documents this week with Trustmark Bank and Fifth Third Bank.


"I want to thank the many people involved in securing this low-interest loan. This deal is something every tribal member should have pride in because it is the best rates banks have ever given our tribe.


"This deal clearly demonstrates banks and lenders have confidence in the work we are doing here at Pearl River Resort and on the Choctaw Indian Reservation," Anderson said.


Pearl River Resort is currently celebrating its 20-year anniversary. It was in 1994 that the Tribe first opened its flagship casino, Silver Star Hotel and Casino.


Since then the Resort has expanded five times as well as expanded outwardly to include resort amenities such as the Bok Homa Casino, Dancing Rabbit Golf Club, Geyser Falls Water Theme Park and Clearwater Key Beach Club to name a few.


Anderson had said the new money was needed to maintain the current level of employment and to improve profitability.


Renovations are underway.


The Choctaw Tribal Council adopted the resolution late last year to refinance an existing $70 million loan at the lowest interest rate ever offered to the Tribe. The resolution also included an action to secure a new low-interest loan up to $75 million for resort improvements.


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Online:


Pearl River Resort, http://bit.ly/1qLgsDr



Backlash stirs in US against foreign worker visas


Kelly Parker was thrilled when she landed her dream job in 2012 providing tech support for Harley-Davidson's Tomahawk, Wisconsin, plants. The divorced mother of three hoped it was the beginning of a new career with the motorcycle company.


The dream didn't last long. Parker claims she was laid off one year later after she trained her replacement, a newly arrived worker from India. Now she has joined a federal lawsuit alleging the global staffing firm that ran Harley-Davidson's tech support discriminated against American workers — in part by replacing them with temporary workers from South Asia.


The firm, India-based Infosys Ltd., denies wrongdoing and contends, as many companies do, that it has faced a shortage of talent and specialized skill sets in the U.S. Like other firms, Infosys wants Congress to allow even more of these temporary workers.


But amid calls for expanding the nation's so-called H-1B visa program, there is growing pushback from Americans who argue the program has been hijacked by staffing companies that import cheaper, lower-level workers to replace more expensive U.S. employees — or keep them from getting hired in the first place.


"It's getting pretty frustrating when you can't compete on salary for a skilled job," said Rich Hajinlian, a veteran computer programmer from the Boston area. "You hear references all the time that these big companies ... can't find skilled workers. I am a skilled worker."


Hajinlian, 56, who develops his own web applications on the side, said he applied for a job in April through a headhunter and that the potential client appeared interested, scheduling a longer interview. Then, said Hajinlian, the headhunter called back and said the client had gone with an H-1B worker whose annual salary was about $10,000 less.


"I didn't even get a chance to negotiate down," he said.


The H-1B program allows employers to temporarily hire workers in specialty occupations. The government issues up to 85,000 H-1B visas to businesses every year, and recipients can stay up to six years. Although no one tracks exactly how many H-1B holders are in the U.S., experts estimate there are at least 600,000 at any one time. Skilled guest workers can also come in on other types of visas.


An immigration bill passed in the U.S. Senate last year would have increased the number of annually available H-1B visas to 180,000 while raising fees and increasing oversight, although language was removed that would have required all companies to consider qualified U.S. workers before foreign workers are hired.


The House never acted on the measure. With immigration reform considered dead this year in Congress, President Barack Obama last week declared he will use executive actions to address some changes. It is not known whether the H-1B program will be on the agenda.


Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is among the high-profile executives pushing for more H-1Bs. The argument has long been that there aren't enough qualified American workers to fill certain jobs, especially in science, engineering and technology. Advocates also assert that some visa holders will stay and become entrepreneurs.


Critics say there is no across-the-board shortage of American tech workers, and that if there were, wages would be rising rapidly. Instead, wage gains for software developers have been modest, while wages have fallen for programmers.


The liberal Economic Policy Institute reported last year that only half of U.S. college graduates in science, engineering and technology found jobs in those fields and that at least one third of IT jobs were going to foreign guest workers.


The top users of H-1B visas aren't even tech companies like Google and Facebook. Eight of the 10 biggest H1-B users last year were outsourcing firms that hire out thousands of mostly lower- and mid-level tech workers to corporate clients, according to an analysis of federal data by Ron Hira, an associate professor of public policy at Rochester Institute of Technology. The top 10 firms accounted for about a third of the H-1Bs allotted last year.


The debate over whether foreign workers are taking jobs isn't new, but for years it centered on low-wage sectors like agriculture and construction. The high-skilled visas have thrust a new sector of American workers into the fray: the middle class.


Last month, three tech advocacy groups launched a labor boycott against Infosys, IBM and the global staffing and consulting company ManpowerGroup, citing a "pattern of excluding U.S. workers from job openings on U.S soil."


They say Manpower, for example, last year posted U.S. job openings in India but not in the United States.


"We have a shortage in the industry all right — a shortage of fair and ethical recruiting and hiring," said Donna Conroy, director of Bright Future Jobs, a group of tech professionals fighting to end what it calls "discriminatory hiring that is blocking us ... from competing for jobs we are qualified to do."


"U.S. workers should have the freedom to compete first for job openings," Conroy said.


Infosys spokesman Paul de Lara responded that the firm encourages "diversity recruitment," while spokesman Doug Shelton said IBM considers all qualified candidates "without regard to citizenship and immigration status." Manpower issued a statement saying it "adopts the highest ethical standards and complies with all applicable laws and regulations when hiring individuals."


Much of the backlash against the H-1B and other visa programs can be traced to whistleblower Jay Palmer, a former Infosys employee. In 2011, Palmer supplied federal investigators with information that helped lead to Infosys paying a record $34 million settlement last year. Prosecutors had accused the company of circumventing the law by bringing in lower-paid workers on short-term executive business visas instead of using H-1B visas.


Last year, IBM paid $44,000 to the U.S. Justice Department to settle allegations its job postings expressed a preference for foreign workers. And a September trial is set against executives at the staffing company Dibon Solutions, accused of illegally bringing in foreign workers on H-1B visas without having jobs for them — a practice known as "benching."


In court papers, Parker claims that she was given positive reviews by supervisors, including at Infosys, which she maintains oversaw her work and the decision to let her go. The only complaint: Her desk was messy and she'd once been late.


Neither Parker nor other workers involved in similar lawsuits and contacted by The Associated Press would discuss their cases.


Parker's attorney, Dan Kotchen, noted that the case centers on discrimination based on national origin but said that "hiring visa workers is part of how they obtain their discriminatory objectives."


Infosys is seeking a dismissal, in part on grounds that it never hired or fired Parker. Parker was hired by a different subcontractor and kept on, initially, after Infosys began working with Harley-Davidson.


A company spokeswoman said Infosys has about 17,000 employees in the U.S., about 25 percent U.S. hires. In filings to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the company said it has more than 22,000 employees with valid temporary work visas, some not in the U.S.


Stanford University Law School fellow Vivek Wadwha, a startup adviser, said firms are so starved for talent they are buying up other companies to obtain skilled employees. If there's a bias against Americans, he said, it's an age bias based on the fact that older workers may not have the latest skills. More than 70 percent of H-1B petitions approved in 2012 were for workers between the ages of 25 and 34.


"If workers don't constantly retrain themselves, their skills become obsolete," he said.


Norm Matloff, a computer science professor at the University of California, Davis, agreed that age plays into it — not because older workers are less skilled but because they typically require higher pay. Temporary workers also tend to be cheaper because they don't require long-term health care for dependents and aren't around long enough to get significant raises, he said.


Because they can be deported if they lose their jobs, these employees are often loath to complain about working conditions. And even half the standard systems analyst salary in the U.S. is above what an H-1B holder would earn back home.


Such circumstances concern Americans searching for work in a still recovering economy.


Jennifer Wedel of Fort Worth, Texas, publicly challenged Obama on the visa issue in 2012, making headlines when she asked him via a public online chat about the number of foreign workers being hired — given that her husband, a semiconductor engineer, couldn't find work.


Wedel said her husband eventually found a job in the health care industry, taking a $40,000 pay cut.


"It's a slap in the face to every American who worked hard to get their experience and degrees and has 10 or 15 years of experience," she said, adding that firms want that experience but don't want to pay for it.


To her, the issue isn't about a shortage of workers who have the right skills. Put simply, she said: "It's the money."


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Laura Wides-Munoz reported this story from Miami. Paul Wiseman reported from Washington, D.C.


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