Thursday, 11 September 2014

Boehner: House GOP 'Ready To Work With The President'



House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) on Capitol Hill on Thursday. Boehner says Congress stands ready to work with the president on the threat from Islamic State militants.i i



House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) on Capitol Hill on Thursday. Boehner says Congress stands ready to work with the president on the threat from Islamic State militants. J. Scott Applewhite/AP hide caption



itoggle caption J. Scott Applewhite/AP

House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) on Capitol Hill on Thursday. Boehner says Congress stands ready to work with the president on the threat from Islamic State militants.



House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) on Capitol Hill on Thursday. Boehner says Congress stands ready to work with the president on the threat from Islamic State militants.


J. Scott Applewhite/AP


House Speaker John Boehner, commenting on President Obama's strategy to defeat Islamic State militants, says Congress has received a request for authorization to train Syrian rebels and "we ought to give the president what he's asking for."


In a cautious show of support for the White House strategy, Boehner, speaking with reporters, said the president's televised speech Wednesday night, "made a compelling case for action," to destroy the threat from the extremist group.


"We are doing our due diligence with all our members" on the issue, he said, adding that "we stand ready to work with the president."


The speaker said no decision had been made on the form of a legislative vehicle to approve the authorization for training the Free Syrian Army, as Obama has proposed.


Asked by a reporter whether there was concern about funneling U.S. supplied arms to the FSA, Boehner said that "based on all the information that I've looked at, the Free Syrian Army has been vetted very well by our intelligence."


But he also expressed some of the skepticism he shared with fellow House Republicans over the White House plan.


"A lot of our members think that a lot more needs to be laid out than last night," he said.


Pressed by a reporter, Boehner said: "I am not sure that we're doing all that we can to defeat this threat.


"An F-16 is not a strategy and airstrikes alone will not accomplish the mission," he said, adding that although he understood that the president doesn't want U.S. forces on the ground in Iraq or Syria, "somebody's boots have to be on the ground."



Missouri Lawmakers Override Vetoes On Abortion, Guns


Missouri's Republican-led Legislature overruled vetoes by Gov. Jay Nixon to push through measures expanding gun rights and mandating a 72-hour waiting period for women seeking abortions.


The state House voted to defeat the veto by a 177-44 margin late Wednesday. A Democratic filibuster was then prevented in the state Senate by a 23-7 vote.


The state's waiting period for abortion will be among the strictest in the U.S. — South Dakota and Utah also have 72-hour waiting periods, though South Dakota excludes weekends and state holidays.


The Associated Press quoted differing viewpoints on the waiting period from female representatives in the state House.


"You get a couple more days to think about this pregnancy, think about where it's going, you may change your mind," says Republican Kathie Conway of St. Charles.


But Democratic Rep. Judy Morgan of Kansas City said the move is "designed to demean and shame a woman in an effort to change her mind."


In a session that lasted into the early morning hours Thursday, lawmakers also overturned a veto on legislation to allow teachers to carry guns in school and residents to obtain open-carry permits.


The veto was defeated by a two-thirds majority. State law already allows school employees with "concealed carry" permits to have their weapons on campus. This new legislation will enforce training guidelines through the state's Department of Public Safety for any teacher or employee wishing to carry a concealed gun or pepper spray. After the training, the teacher or employee will be designated as an official "school protection officer."


The Washington Post reported the measure also lowers the age from 21 to 19 for those seeking a permit to carry a concealed weapon.


Both pieces of legislation, on abortion and gun rights, are due to go into effect in about a month.



Alcoa lands $1 billion-plus contract with Boeing


Alcoa Inc. said Thursday that it won a multi-year contract worth more than $1 billion to supply aluminum products to aircraft maker Boeing Co.


Alcoa said it was the largest contract ever between the companies. The companies also agreed to work together to develop new alloys for aerospace materials.


The deal makes Alcoa the only supplier for wing skins on Boeing metallic planes, and Alcoa will also supply aluminum plate used in wing ribs and other structural parts of planes.


Alcoa has been downplaying its longtime business of mining and smelting aluminum to focus more on providing aluminum products for use in aerospace, automobiles, construction and other industries. Earlier this year, the announced that it would pay $2.85 billion to acquire Firth Rixson, a maker of jet engine components. Alcoa has operations in Pittsburgh with a corporate office in New York.


In morning trading, shares of Alcoa fell 14 cents to $17.06 and Boeing shares lost 92 cents to $127.30.



Man pleads not guilty in tainted steroid case


A pharmacist who worked for a Massachusetts company blamed for a nationwide meningitis outbreak that killed 64 people pleaded not guilty to a mail fraud charge Thursday as his lawyer said he is concerned he could be made a scapegoat.


Glenn Adam Chin, 46, of Canton, entered his plea during a brief arraignment in federal court in Boston.


Prosecutors say Chin oversaw the sterile clean rooms at the New England Compounding Center in Framingham, which custom-mixed medications in bulk and where tainted steroids blamed for the 2012 outbreak were made.


Chin, a supervisory pharmacist, is accused of participating in a scheme to fraudulently cause one lot to be labeled as injectable, meaning it was sterile and fit for human use. The drug was shipped to Michigan Pain Specialists in Brighton, Michigan, and injected into patients. As a result, 217 patients contracted fungal meningitis, and 15 died.


Chin is the first person to be charged criminally in the case, but prosecutors have said the prosecution is part of a larger criminal investigation of Chin and others.


"I think he and others will be scapegoated," said Stephen Weymouth, an attorney appointed Thursday to represent Chin. "Someone has to be made to pay. I'm just not sure Mr. Chin is that person."


Prosecutors allege that Chin did not properly sterilize or test equipment and concealed unsafe practices.


About 750 people in 20 states who were injected with the tainted steroids for pain developed meningitis — an inflammation of the lining of the brain and spinal cord — or other infections. Of those, 64 died. Michigan, Tennessee and Indiana were hit the hardest.


Chin is free pending trial but is under home confinement.


The compounding center gave up its license and filed for bankruptcy protection after it was deluged with hundreds of lawsuits. Last year, attorneys for its creditors announced a preliminary settlement with a victim compensation fund worth more than $100 million.



4 Reasons shoppers will shrug off Home Depot hack


Home Depot's data breach could wind up being among the largest ever for a retailer, but that may not matter to its millions of customers.


The nation's largest home-improvement chain on Monday confirmed a theft that could have gone back as far as April and affected customers who used credit and debit cards at nearly 2,200 of its U.S. and Canadian stores. While the scope of the hack is not yet known, there's speculation that it could be the biggest yet.


Home Depot joins a growing list of retailers that have had their data stolen. Perhaps the most high-profile of those previous hacks came was at Target, which suffered profit and sales declines after shoppers fled following a breach that compromised 40 million debit and credit card accounts.


Industry watchers are betting Home Depot will fare better with its customers.


"It's simply not a big issue with consumers," said Craig Johnson, president of retail consultancy Customer Growth Partners, noting that shoppers seem to be almost immune to the breaches now. "Everybody knows that this is not people's first rodeo."


Take Johnna Horn. She stopped shopping at Target for two months after its breach was disclosed. Yet when she heard the news about Home Depot, she wasn't alarmed.


"With Target, it was more shocking," said Horn, who lives in Wentzville, Missouri. "With Home Depot, it's like here we go again."


To be sure, analysts say it's too early to estimate the impact the breach will have on Home Depot's business because there are many details that are unknown. But they say there are at least four reasons Home Depot's breach may not matter to shoppers:


TIMING


In addition to the fact that Home Depot's breach follows a thefts at other retailers, the chain may benefit from timing in another way.


Target Corp. disclosed its breach a week before Christmas, the final critical stretch of the two-month holiday season, the busiest shopping period of the year for retailers like Target.


But Home Depot's disclosure came in September, months after the spring season, which is the busiest time of year for home-improvement chains.


"September is not a peak season for Home Depot, while Christmas at Target is critical," said Greg Melich, a retail analyst at International Strategy & Investment Group LLC.


CUSTOMERs


Home Depot's customers are more likely to react differently to the breach because of who they are.


About 37 percent of Home Depot's sales come from professional and contractor services — or commercial customers, Melich estimates. Analysts say that group is loyal to Home Depot, and they often shop there several times a week.


By contrast, Target caters to the middle-income customers, who tend to shop around for the best prices. By nature, they tend to be less loyal to one store.


GROWING BUSINESS


Unlike Target, Home Depot's business was solid before the breach.


Home Depot has been benefiting from a turnaround in the housing market that has enticed shoppers to spend more on their homes. Its revenue for the six-month period that ended last week was up 4.4 percent. Meanwhile, profit rose 13.5 percent, and the company raised its annual profit forecast.


Conversely, Target has had disappointing sales and profit declines during the economic recovery as its middle-income shoppers have remained frugal. It also has struggled to restore the reputation it's lost among some shoppers that it has cheap chic fashions.


For the nine-month period that ended a little more than a month before Target disclosed the breach, the discounter's sales rose just 1 percent, while profits fell nearly 29 percent.


LACK OF CHOICES


Home Depot customers see the chain as a necessary place to shop.


When Target's breach was announced, customers had their pick of plenty of other stores that have the same merchandise that it carries at low prices, from Amazon.com to Wal-Mart.


On the other hand, Home Depot has fewer competitors. Shoppers can go to Lowe's or Ace Hardware and small hardware stores, but that's about all, analysts say.



Eastman Chemical buying Taminco for about $1.73B


Eastman Chemical Co. is buying specialty chemical company Taminco for approximately $1.73 billion.


Eastman Chemical said in a statement that the acquisition will strengthen Eastman Chemical's presence in markets such as food, feed and agriculture. It also provides opportunities to speed up growth in the personal care, coatings and oil and gas.


Eastman will pay $26 per share, a 9 percent premium to Taminco Corp.'s Wednesday closing price of $23.88.


The companies put the deal's total value at about $2.8 billion, which includes $1 billion in debt.


The deal includes a 30-day period in which Taminco can seek offers from other potential buyers.


Taminco CEO Laurent Lenoir said in a statement that the acquisition will give the company more resources to put toward its long-term strategy of expanding in key markets and will help to expand into new product lines.


Taminco also said it is cancelling its investor day, which was scheduled for Monday.


Eastman Chemical said that it will pay for the acquisition with available cash and debt financing. The company expects the addition will increase its 2015 earnings by more than 35 cents per share, excluding acquisition-related costs and charges. It is expected to add more than 60 cents per share to 2016 earnings.


Both companies' boards have approved the deal, which is expected to close in the fourth quarter. It still needs approval from a majority of Taminco's shareholders.


Shares of Taminco, based in Allentown, Pennsylvania, surged $2.74, or 11.5 percent, to $26.62 in Thursday morning trading. Shares of Eastman Chemical, based in Kingsport, Tennessee, climbed 77 cents to $83.99.



Funding shortage threatens Nahr al-Bared revival


BEIRUT: The reconstruction of the Nahr al-Bared refugee camp is threatened by the lack of funding, UNRWA’s Director in Lebanon Ann Dismorr said Thursday.


Dismorr said that Saudi Arabia, the U.S and the European Union were leading among the donations received to reconstruct the Palestinian refugee camp, stressing that ongoing projects require more aid.


In 2007, much of Nahr al-Bared and the surrounding area was flattened and pitted with mines during hostilities between the Lebanese Army and local hard-line Sunni group Fatah al-Islam. More than 35,000 people were displaced.


“With regards to funding, we have launched contacts with many Arab states,” the head of Lebanese-Palestinian Dialogue Committee Hasan Mneimneh said during a meeting in the Grand Serail.


The LPDC head said he hoped the initial positive response of Arab states would soon be translated into workable contributions to reconstruction.


Mneimneh also said that the Lebanese government was continuing its effort to provide the necessary funding for the reconstruction of the Nahr al-Bared camp.


The LPDC has recently launched an administrative mechanism that provides basic services to the camps such as electricity, water, waste treatment and sanitation.


Mneimneh expressed hope that all concerned parties would cooperate to ensure the continuity of basic service provisions.


“The world is starting to realize today, the importance of development and construction in countering terrorism,” Mneimneh said during an UNRWA-organized tour of the settlement that took place after the meeting in the Grand Serail.


“Uprooting [terrorism] is not done through military force alone, but also through ceasing to offer a hospitable environment that provide suitable conditions for it to spread."



US stocks start lower


The stock market is opening lower as shares of energy companies slip.


The Dow Jones industrial average fell 69 points, or 0.4 percent, to 16,999 as of 9:33 a.m. Eastern time Thursday.


The Standard & Poor's 500 index eased seven points, also 0.4 percent, to 1,988. The Nasdaq composite slipped 14 points, or 0.3 percent, to 4,572.


Bond prices rose. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note slipped to 2.52 percent from 2.54 late Wednesday.



Philippine central bank raises interest rates


The Philippine central bank raised key interest rates by a quarter percentage point Thursday for the second time in six weeks to stifle inflation.


The bank's Monetary Board raised the rate it charges commercial banks for overnight borrowing to 6.0 percent and the rate it pays lenders for overnight deposits to 4 percent.


Deputy Governor Diwa Guinigundo said the decision was made because forecasts put next year's inflation rate at 3.8 percent, close to the upper end of the bank's 2-4 percent target range. The bank forecasts an inflation rate of 4.5 percent this year.


Possible increases in food prices due to tight domestic supply, a pending petition for utility rate increases and potential power shortages could push inflation higher, he added.


Guinigundo also said the rate increase is a "pre-emptive move" in the context of the U.S. looking like it will tighten its currently loose monetary policy.



Kroger beats Street 2Q forecasts


Kroger Co. (KR) on Thursday reported earnings of $347 million in its fiscal second quarter.


On a per-share basis, the Cincinnati-based company said it had profit of 70 cents.


The results surpassed Wall Street expectations. The average estimate of analysts surveyed by Zacks Investment Research was for earnings of 69 cents per share.


The supermarket chain posted revenue of $25.31 billion in the period, which also topped Street forecasts. Analysts expected $24.91 billion, according to Zacks.


Kroger expects full-year earnings in the range of $3.22 to $3.28 per share.


Kroger shares have increased 31 percent since the beginning of the year, while the Standard & Poor's 500 index has climbed 8 percent. The stock has climbed 38 percent in the last 12 months.


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This story was generated by Automated Insights (http://bit.ly/1jX8LIs) using data from Zacks Investment Research. A stock research report on KR from Zacks is available at: http://bit.ly/1qn0VKc



EU agrees to introduce new sanctions on Russia


The European Union has decided to slap new economic sanctions on Russia over its actions in Ukraine, diplomats said Thursday.


The sanctions will further curb access to European capital markets for Russian firms and banks, limit exports of certain high-technology goods and target several officials with travel bans and asset freezes, diplomats told The Associated Press in Brussels.


The sanctions will take effect Friday following their publication in the EU's official journal but will be reversible if the situation in eastern Ukraine improves, four diplomats said independently. They spoke on condition of anonymity pending the official announcement.


A summit of EU leaders almost two weeks ago called for the new sanctions to be finalized, but they were then twice postponed to assess the impact of a cease-fire in eastern Ukraine. The United States previously said it was also considering new sanctions once the EU moves forward, and could now take that step as early as Thursday.


The new sanctions are expected to deepen earlier penalties targeting Russia's oil and arms sectors, including a further tightening of access to international capital markets. The current ban on credits and loans to Russian entities with a maturity of more than 90 days will be reduced to 30 days, two diplomats said. Curbing access to western capital markets could weigh down Russia's already-flagging economic growth.


More individuals, including Russian government officials and people close to Russian President Vladimir Putin, are also expected to be sanctioned.


Russia's benchmark MICEX, which was rising on Thursday morning and early afternoon, declined 0.7 percent on the news. The Russian ruble fell to an all-time low of 37.51 rubles against the U.S. dollar.


Brussels has been more reluctant than Washington to sanction Russia because of its broad economic ties. Moscow is an important gas supplier for many EU nations and it is the bloc's third-largest trading partner overall. The EU's sanctions, however, have more impact than those imposed by the U.S. since the EU is Russia's largest trading partner by far.


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Nataliya Vasilyeva in Moscow contributed reporting.



Job-based health premiums increasing slowly, deductibles faster


Average premiums for job-based family health coverage are up just 3 percent this year, while the cost of single coverage rose only 2 percent, continuing a sustained trend of moderate growth in insurance costs, according to a nationwide survey of more than 2,000 businesses.


The slowdown in premium growth is good news for the estimated 150 million Americans with employer-sponsored health coverage.


But the overall benefit to consumers is muted because the slowdown is occurring amid relatively flat wage growth and a noteworthy rise in deductibles, the out-of-pocket costs that patients pay before their coverage kicks in.


Employer-sponsored coverage for a family of four costs an average of $16,834 this year, compared with $16,351 in 2013, according to the annual Employer Health Benefits Survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Health Research & Educational Trust, the education arm of the American Hospital Association.


Individual coverage costs an average of $6,025 in 2014, compared to $5,884 last year.


Both increases pale in comparison with the double-digit premium hikes that occurred from 2000 to 2004. And they continue a nine-year run of mostly 3 to 6 percent annual increases, the survey reported.


In fact, this year’s 2 percent hike for individual coverage marks the first statistically insignificant premium increase in the survey’s 16-year history.


As they did in 2013, covered workers pay an average of 29 percent, or $4,823, toward their family insurance costs in 2014. Employers pay the other 71 percent, an average of $12,011, the survey found.


Single workers pay an average of 18 percent, or $1,081, toward their coverage, with employers picking up the remaining 82 percent, or $4,944. Those percentages are also unchanged from last year.


Most experts credit the slower premium growth to a sluggish economy that limits consumers’ use of health services, the proliferation of less comprehensive coverage and more efficient delivery of health care services.


But there’s little agreement on which of these factors is most responsible for the slowdown and how soon, or whether, insurance costs will begin to pick up, said Drew Altman, the president and CEO of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a health policy research group.


“There is no question but that we are seeing historic moderation in costs, including in premiums, now over a considerable period of time,” Altman said during a conference call Wednesday. “But if you say that to an average person, they may very well look at you like you’re out of your mind.”


That’s because workers’ earnings and inflation have grown 2 percent and 2.3 percent, respectively, this year, virtually nullifying the effect of the slow premium growth.


In addition, the average health-plan deductible of $1,217 for single coverage _ while virtually unchanged from last year _ is up 47 percent from 2009, when it was $826, as employers continue to shift more health care costs to workers.


This year, 41 percent of covered workers face deductibles of at least $1,000, nearly double the share from five years ago. Eighteen percent have deductibles of at least $2,000.


On average, deductibles for all types of family plans have increased along the same trend lines as those for individual plans, according to Kaiser.


“From the point of view of an average person, their premiums are still going up, their cost sharing is still going up, at a time when, even though wages are doing a little bit better, they’re still pretty flat,” Altman said. “So don’t expect your average reader or viewer out there to have the same sense . . . that we’re living in a world of historic moderation in health care costs. They live in a different world.”


More than seven times as many people get their health coverage through employers as through the individual insurance market, which was recently overhauled by the Affordable Care Act.


Just 55 percent of all firms offer health coverage this year, down from 57 percent last year and 61 percent in 2012. This is a trend that began in the early 2000s, and it’s driven mainly by companies with only three to nine workers dropping coverage.


Among companies that have at least 50 workers, 92 percent still offer coverage, the survey found.


Concerns about employers moving covered workers to the health insurance marketplaces weren’t reflected in the survey, said Gary Claxton, a Kaiser foundation vice president. But some small companies that are struggling to provide coverage might begin to do so in the future.


“If this is going to happen, we’ll watch it unfold over the next couple of years as they see how the exchanges work and are able to balance the opportunities,” Claxton said.


More than 90 percent of all employers offer health insurance coverage to workers, their spouses and dependents. The survey found that 49 percent of companies with 200 or more employees offer coverage to same-sex domestic partners, and 39 percent of companies that have fewer than 200 employees do so.


Only 26 percent of covered workers are in “grandfathered’ plans that don’t meet the new coverage requirements and consumer protections required by the Affordable Care Act. That’s down from 36 percent last year.



WATCH: Carney, McCain Spar On CNN Over ISIS Strategy


Hours after President Obama announced his administration's plan for battling the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and former White House press secretary Jay Carney engaged in a tense argument on CNN about the strategy.


Carney, now a CNN analyst, sparred with McCain, who called the president's speech a "weak argument." The senator stated several times throughout the segment with moderator Anderson Cooper that Carney did not know the "facts" about the military situation in Iraq and Syria.


"I'm astounded," McCain said. "That Mr. Carney should say that the Free Syrian Army is now stronger." Of the Syrian military environment, McCain blamed the president for not helping to arm the Syrian opposition. "The entire national security team, including the Secretary of State, said we want to arm and train and equip these people and he made the unilateral decision to turn them down and the fact that they didn't lead a residual force in Iraq, overruling all of his military advisers, is the reason why we're facing ISIS today."


Carney attempted to interject, suggesting that the two men were going to disagree and that there was another key element: the Iraqi army. But McCain called it "more than a disagreement." Pointing to the time he spent in Baghdad, McCain blamed the U.S. troop withdrawal.




MCAIN: The number cascaded down to 3,500. That was not sufficient to do anything but to defend themselves and you, in your role as a spokesperson, bragged about the fact that the last American combat troop had left Iraq. If we had left a residual force, the situation would not be what it is today and there would be a lot more —


CARNEY: Senator, I can pause it with great respect for you that we can disagree on this.


MCCAIN: You can't. You can't. No, you can't —


CARNEY: Sir, if I may —


MCCAIN: You don't have all the facts, Mr. Carney. That is the problem.




Carney did have a chance to fire back at the prospect of continuing U.S. presence in Iraq. He called it a "whitewash of history" to ignore the violence and fighting when tens of thousands of US troops were on the ground in Iraq, specifically in 2007 when the troop number had reached its peak number.




CARNEY: We cannot — the United States of America ask our military to be a permanent occupying force in a country like Iraq," said Carney. "We have to get to a situation where we can help build up and assist an Iraqi security force, where we can put pressure on Iraqi political leaders to form an inclusive government, which they have taken steps to do as was noted earlier and then we can provide the kind of military support that we're providing, an action that we're taking against a threat like ISIS as appropriate, but the alternative of leaving a permanent, massive U.S. force on the ground in Iraq, not for ten years, not for 20 years, but in perpetuity, is simply not sustainable financially and not consistent with what the American people think we should do.




McCain responded that he didn't expect the numbers or strategies from previous years in Iraq, but believed that a larger number of U.S. troops was necessary as support and help for the Iraqi army.


McCain also went on to say that although the U.S. borders were "porous," he did not believe there was a direct threat to the United States but had no question that it was a goal of the Islamic State.



For gamers, waiting can be the hardest part

The Associated Press



When it comes to video games, are they better late than never?


At this week's GameStop Expo, the video game retailer's annual consumer-centric event, more than 3,000 attendees had the chance to test drive highly anticipated titles like "Evolve," "Dying Light" and "Battlefield Hardline" in the halls of the Anaheim Convention Center. However, it's probably the last time this year that gamers will be able to play those particular titles.


That's because they're among the growing list of games initially set to be released in 2014 that have been delayed until 2015. The publishers behind the monster fighter "Evolve," zombie survival adventure "Dying Light" and cops-and-robbers romp "Battlefield Hardline" each postponed their release dates earlier this year so developers had more time to tweak the titles.


It's a frustrating trend that's prompting many players to bemoan the least fun game of all: The Waiting Game.


"Oh, it sucks," said Dan Adams, an expo attendee who came to preview games like "Far Cry 4" and "Call of Duty" on the show floor. "I know games are delayed to make them better, but it definitely feels like it's happening more often these days. It really messes with your expectations when you think you know when a game is coming out, and then — boom — it's next year."


Other games previously set for release this year that have been pushed to 2015 include the online apocalyptic shooter "Tom Clancy's The Division," the Dark Knight sequel "Batman: Arkham Knight," the supernatural historical adventure "The Order: 1886," the sprawling role-playing sequel "The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt" and the open-world movie adaptation "Mad Max."


"There are so many games for next year, it makes me worried sometimes," said Yves Guillemot, CEO of Ubisoft, at the Electronic Entertainment Expo in June. "We are always caught between two things: How can we make it better but take full advantage of what we started a few years ago? It's always a difficult decision because there are always other games coming."


Deciding to delay is as much a business decision as it is a creative one.


While setting a release date helps to build hype for a game, if it comes out on time but doesn't meet gamers' expectations, there's less chance a publisher will greenlight a sequel. Historically, consumers are forgiving of most overdue games. For instance, the fourth-month delay of last year's "Grand Theft Auto V" hardly seemed to impact sales.


That's likely to be true for the latest batch of tardy titles, which also aren't expected to affect the sales of the newer PlayStation 4 and Xbox One consoles. In fact, pushing games like "Evolve" to Feb. 10 and "Batman: Arkham Knight" to June 5 might actually boost the bottom line for publishers like 2K Games and Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment.


"I don't think any of the delayed games are system sellers, so I don't really think it makes a lot of difference," said Michael Pachter, an analyst at Wedbush Morgan. "The games coming out will benefit from lower competition, and the delays smooth out the release calendar, so they'll probably create an opportunity for greater success all around."


It also means newcomers like "Evolve," "The Order" and "Division" won't have to compete with the latest editions of long-running series, such as military shooter "Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare," fantasy epic "Dragon Age: Inquisition," shoot-'em-up "Far Cry 4" and French Revolution-set "Assassin's Creed: Unity." They're still on track to come out in 2014 — well, for now.


"It's still the best slate of games I've seen since I've been here, and I've been here nine years," said Tony Bartel, president of GameStop Corp. "There are plenty of genres. We think it's all going to come down to affordability. We're working on programs specifically around trades to put currency in the hands of our customers, so they can afford all of those games."


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Online:


http://bit.ly/1qmX7bX



Follow AP Entertainment Writer Derrik J. Lang on Twitter at http://bit.ly/M4KQ9i.


Albemarle purchase of Rockwood moves forward


The federally mandated antitrust review waiting period for Albemarle Corp.'s $6.2 billion acquisition of Rockwood Holdings Inc. has passed.


Albemarle President and Chief Executive Office Luke Kissam tells The Advocate (http://bit.ly/1xNkWNW ) this is another important step towards completion of the transaction with Rockwood to create a premier specialty chemicals company.


Baton Rouge-based Albemarle announced the acquisition on July 15. The company announced Wednesday that the antitrust waiting period ended on Sept. 8.


Albemarle has offered $50.65 in cash and 0.48 shares of Albemarle stock for each share of Rockwood.


Albemarle and Rockwood shareholders must still sign off on the acquisition. Albemarle has said it expects to complete the deal in the first quarter of 2015.



Lebanon minister warns TV against being podium for terrorists


BEIRUT: Lebanon's TV stations have a responsibility to avoid becoming a podium for terrorist groups, Lebanon's information minister said Thursday, stressing the need for the media to prioritize public interests in its coverage.


“We have agreed to avoid broadcasting harmful images, and speeches that incite sectarian tensions,” Information Minister Ramzi Joreige said after a meeting with representatives of Lebanon’s audiovisual media outlets. Media must “avoid giving takfiri terrorists the chance to use TV channels as a space to publicize their speeches.”


In its last session, the Cabinet called on media outlets to stand alongside the Army and government and avoid publishing any unverified information about the soldiers and policemen kidnapped by ISIS and the Nusra Front.


“I think the media is aware of its responsibility in this critical situation,” Joreige said, stressing on the need to avoid “becoming podiums that serve the interest of the takfiri kidnappers.”


Joreige highlighted the crucial role played by the media in shaping public opinion, saying it shapes views by publishing headlines and interpretations, and could either play a positive or a negative role.


“It can either be a father, mentor and a friend, or a traitor that distorts the meanings of words,” he said addressing journalists. “This is why you have a great responsibility in the current circumstances to prioritize national interest and the safety of the kidnapped soldiers.”


The channels’ tendency to race, and the desire for exclusive scoops, should be considered secondary, according to Joreige, and their side effects should be taken into consideration.


The head of the National Audiovisual Media Council Abdel Hadi Mahfoud also attended the meetings, which gathered the head of most Lebanese TV channels' news desks heads.



Lebanon to open first Syria refugee camps: minister


BEIRUT: Lebanon has decided to set up two camps for Syrian refugees for the first time along its border with war-torn Syria, Social Affairs Minister Rashid Derbas told AFP on Thursday.


The move comes despite long-standing reservations among many in Lebanon over establishing such camps, for fear they will encourage Syrians to stay in the country or threaten its security.


There are already more than 1.1 million Syrian refugees in Lebanon, which has a population of just four million people.


Many are already living in informal tented settlements on farmland or empty fields in parts of the country.


Derbas said the decision to establish the two camps had already been approved and that government representatives were meeting on Thursday to discuss implementing the plan.


"The Council of the Ministers has taken a decision to set up camps for Syrian refugees, one in the Bekaa valley in the Masnaa area and one in the Abda area in northern Lebanon," Derbas said.


"Estimates are that each camp could accommodate 10,000 people," he added.


The refugee influx has put massive pressure on the country's limited resources and contributed to rising tensions in a nation with a delicate sectarian balance and bitter memories from a 15-year civil war.


The issue of refugee camps in Lebanon is particularly fraught because of its experience with the Palestinians who flooded into the country after the creation of the state of Israel.


Those refugees and their children have remained in camps in the country, and armed Palestinian groups played a signficant and deadly role in the 1975-1990 Lebanese civil war.


The dispersal of Syrian refugees throughout the country has created its own pressures, and Derbas has several times advocated establishing camps.


He said Thursday's meeting of government representatives would set up a study on "implementation of the project of establishing camps" as well as a funding mechanism for the proposed sites.


The camps would have prefabricated homes for the refugees that "can be dismantled and taken with them when they move to Syria", he added.


In a statement, the UN refugee agency UNHCR said it was ready to cooperate with the project.


"In regard to the present proposal, we stand ready to work with the Minister of Social Affairs on reviewing possible sites and assessing their feasibility as requested," it said.


But it warned that the "overriding imperative" in selecting a site should be security.


"This includes making sure sites are in areas that are not prone to floods or erosion so as to support structures needed to accommodate refugees," the statement said.


"It also means that the locations must not be vulnerable to being compromised by armed elements which can threaten refugees and their hosts."


The conflict in Syria has regularly spilled over into Lebanon, with the border region often particularly volatile.


The fighting has also stoked existing political and sectarian tensions in Lebanon, where many Sunnis back the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad and many Shiites support his regime.



Rail union members vote down BNSF proposal to cut train crew size


A tentative agreement to reduce train crew size on one of the nation’s largest rail carriers has failed, according to the labor union whose members voted on it this week.


The pact would have eliminated on-board conductors on 60 percent of BNSF Railway, which spans the western two-thirds of the country.


The vote represents a defeat for the railroad, based in Fort Worth, Texas, and owned by billionaire investor Warren Buffett. BNSF sought union approval to operate most trains with a single engineer on lines protected by Positive Train Control, a collision-avoidance system required by Congress in 2008.


John Fleps, BNSF vice president for labor relations, said in a statement Thursday that it was up to members of the International Association of Sheet Metal, Air and Rail Transportation Workers to decide whether to adopt the changes.


“They have decided not to move forward at this time and we respect the process,” Fleps said.


Under the pact, engineers would have received a pay boost, and conductors would have been given the opportunity to become engineers.


Trains carrying hazardous materials, including trains laden with large volumes of crude oil or ethanol, would still have operated with two people on board.


Earlier this year, following a deadly derailment of a crude oil train in Quebec last year that had a sole engineer, the Federal Railroad Administration proposed a rule that would have required two-person crews on most trains.


However, the rail industry argued that there was no data to support the government’s assertion that two-person crews enhanced safety. And the National Transportation Safety Board takes no position on how many people are in the cab of a locomotive, as long as the train is protected by Positive Train Control.


The agreement would have applied to roughly 3,000 BNSF workers across several states.


A message sent to union members late Wednesday by Randall Knutson, general chairperson of SMART’s GO-001 committee, informed them that the proposal had failed, and that more detailed results would be available in coming weeks.


It also said that the committee would remain open to “informal conversation” about the matter with BNSF.


Note: This post has been updated with comment from BNSF.



HK regulator sues China conglomerate, ex-chairman


Hong Kong regulators said Thursday they are suing state-owned Chinese conglomerate Citic and its former chairman in a bid to compensate investors over a huge loss related to a bungled bet on Australia's currency.


The Securities and Futures Commission said it launched legal proceedings against Citic Ltd. and five former executive directors for allegedly providing false or misleading information about the company's financial position in 2008.


The commission said it was seeking a court order for compensation for up to 4,500 investors.


The company, formerly known as Citic Pacific, warned in 2008 it would suffer losses of $2 billion after bets on the Australian dollar and other currencies to hedge costs for an Australian iron-ore operation went sour.


Investor anxiety about the company's situation, magnified by the turmoil of the global financial crisis, sent Citic's shares plunging and wiped out two-thirds of its market value in four days.


The SFC alleges that Citic and the five directors "were aware of huge financial exposure arising from the leveraged foreign exchange contracts" six days before the company released a statement saying it wasn't aware of any "adverse material change" in its financial or trading position.


Investors bought about 1.9 billion Hong Kong dollars ($245 million) worth of stock during the period in question, the SFC said.


Chairman Larry Yung, who is one of those named in the suit, was forced to resign following the fiasco.


Yung comes from Chinese business royalty. He's is the son of Rong Yiren, who set up China International Trust and Investment Corp., or Citic, in the late 1970s and rode China's wave of economic reform to become one of the country's richest people. He also held the title of state vice president.


The Hong Kong-listed company changed its name after buying out its parent company's assets in a multibillion dollar deal this summer.



China's auto sales slow in August


China's auto sales growth decelerated further in August to 8.5 percent while sales of SUVs surged by nearly a third.


Drivers in the world's biggest auto market by vehicle sales bought 1.5 million passenger cars in August, the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers said Thursday. Total sales, including trucks and buses, rose 4 percent to 1.7 million vehicles.


Global automakers are looking to China to drive global sales but growth has slowed steadily as the world's No. 2 economy cooled from double digit rates of expansion. Auto sales growth declined from 13.9 percent in May to June's 11.5 percent and to 9.7 percent in July.


The market share of Chinese auto brands eroded further in August under intense pressure from U.S., European and Asian brands that are spending heavily to appeal to local tastes.


Sales of Chinese-brand passenger vehicles grew by 5.7 percent while those for German, Japanese and American brands increased by 21.6 percent, 15.1 percent and 13 percent respectively. Chinese brands' share of the market declined by 1 percentage point to 37.1 percent.


The standout vehicle category was sport utility vehicles. Sales rose 30 percent to 311,000 vehicles. That compared with 35.3 percent growth for the first seven months of the year.


Earlier, General Motors Co. said sales of GM brand vehicles by the company and its local partners rose 14 percent to 280,178 vehicles. The company said it was a new August record and the third-best month this year. For the first eight months of the year, sales rose 11.1 percent to 2.3 million vehicles.


— Ford Motor Co. said sales rose 9 percent to 77,506 vehicles and year-to-date sales were up 30 percent at 717,537 vehicles


— Nissan Motor Co., the biggest Japanese brand in China, said August sales were off 0.7 percent at 85,500 vehicles but year-to-date sales were up 9.4 percent at 1.4 million vehicles.


— Toyota Motor Co., a relative latecomer to China's auto market, said sales rose 108.9 percent to 78,500 and by 109.7 percent for the year so far to 619,200 vehicles.


— German luxury brand BMW AG said its sales in the first eight months of the year rose 19.9 percent to 298,752 vehicles.


— Porsche said deliveries in China to date this year rose 15 percent over a year earlier to 28,000.



Caterpillar plans new lab at U. of Illinois


Caterpillar Inc. plans to open a new data analytics laboratory at the University of Illinois, the Peoria-based company announced this week.


The heavy equipment-maker already operates a center in the university's Research Park where it uses computer-aided engineering to simulate and develop new products. It employs about 55 people in addition to the 60 students working there.


The new lab is expected to open in the Research Park later this year, Gwenne Henricks, Caterpillar's chief technology officer, told The News-Gazette (http://bit.ly/1nLYF9y ). It isn't clear yet how many people will work there.


The lab will focus on analyzing data on areas such as fleet and equipment management.


The new lab expects to rely on university faculty and students for some of its work, Henricks said.



Hancock Fabrics sales improve, losses widen


Hancock Fabrics posted slightly higher sales in its just-completed fiscal second quarter, but the fabrics and crafts retailer also recorded a bigger loss for the period.


The Baldwyn-based company reported net sales of $59.3 million for the quarter ended July 26, as comparable store sales - sales at stores open for at least a year, a key retail industry metric - increased 0.9 percent.


But its quarterly loss also widened, from $2.6 million, or 13 cents a share in the second quarter a year ago, to $3.3 million, or 16 cents per share, this year.


The Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal reports (http://bit.ly/WMNJ45 ) the company's operating loss in the second quarter also increased from $1.3 million to $1.9 million, primarily driven by health benefits-related costs and professional fees.



Huge Los Angeles raid nets $90M in cartel money


Raids in the fashion district of Los Angeles led to the seizure of $90 million — including $70 million of it in cash — in a massive crackdown on Mexican cartels' attempts to use international trade to launder money from U.S. drug sales, federal authorities said.


The raids Wednesday came after three separate federal indictments in the biggest investigation to date into trade-based drug money laundering, said Thom Mrozek, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office in Los Angeles.


About 1,000 law enforcement officers fanned out across the city's downtown to search dozens of businesses suspected of taking bulk cash funneled by drug cartels for clothing exported to Mexico.


Nine people were arrested in the raids, and authorities were searching for four others accused in the scheme, including three in Mexico, federal prosecutors said.


Since Mexican authorities tightened financial regulations in 2010, U.S. officials say drug cartels have sought new ways to launder proceeds from sales of cocaine, methamphetamine and other drugs in the U.S. and are increasingly turning to international trade.


Los Angeles is a shipping point for narcotics and also a hub for traffickers to consolidate proceeds once the drugs are sold, said Robert E. Dugdale, chief of the criminal division at the U.S. attorney's office in Los Angeles. Officials believe money laundering is prevalent in the city's 3,000-business fashion district because of the sheer volume of trade with Mexico, he said.


"They produce cheap wares that can be sold down in Mexico," Dugdale said. "The fashion district in particular seems to be where this is thriving at the moment."


During the sweep, agents searched approximately 50 businesses and seized massive amounts of cash stored in cardboard boxes and duffel bags, officials said.


Kent Smith, executive director of the LA Fashion District, said most businesses in the district are legitimate and the area generates more than $10 billion a year in economic activity, according to a 2009 study. He also said most businesses sell clothing within the United States.


"All of us are very surprised by this," he said.


The three indictments include charges related to money laundering and other financial violations — for example, breaking up large sums of money into smaller deposits in an attempt to elude authorities.


"We are stepping up our efforts to go after their money, which is the lifeblood of these criminal organizations," Dugdale said.


In one case, the Sinaloa Cartel had $140,000 in ransom payments funneled through businesses in the fashion district for a hostage who was beaten and tortured in Mexico, said Bill Lewis, assistant director in charge of the FBI's office in Los Angeles.


Fashion district wholesaler QT Fashion Inc. is accused of taking the cash and channeling it through 17 other district businesses at the direction of a Mexican company tasked with laundering the money, officials said.


Messages left for lawyers for QT Fashion's owner, Andrew Jong Hack Park, and business manager, Sang Jun Park, weren't immediately returned. Another man authorities say was affiliated with the business, Jose Isabel Gomez Arreola, was not involved and will plead not guilty, said his attorney, John Targowski.


In another case, the chief executive and financial officers of Pacific Eurotex Corp., one of their relatives and an employee were accused of receiving $370,000 in cash and splitting up the funds into smaller deposits in an effort to avoid detection by authorities, said Claude Arnold, special agent in charge of Immigration and Customs Enforcement's homeland security investigations.


Arnold said the defendants accepted the money even after two of them attended an outreach meeting with ICE and Internal Revenue Service officials to review financial reporting requirements. He said agents began investigating after noting businesses in the fashion district were dealing in large amounts of cash.


A message left for Pacific Eurotex's lawyer, Ariel Neuman, wasn't immediately returned.



Only 1 bidder for Natchez Regional Medical Center


Natchez Regional Medical Center goes up for auction Thursday, but only one company is bidding.


Community Health Systems is the only entity that met a Monday deadline to qualify to try to buy the hospital, which is in bankruptcy. That's according to Scott Slover, attorney for the Adams County Board of Supervisors.


CHS already owns Natchez Community Hospital.


The Natchez Democrat reported that (http://bit.ly/ZgMJqF ) that CHS's total bid is $18 million. Only $10 million of that is cash for the hospital's assets. The other $8 million is in pre-paid property taxes.


In addition of getting a court's blessing, the package was vetted by the Mississippi attorney general's office.


The hospital's creditors are voting on a plan for recovery of debts. The tentative plan would pay off bonds, loans and other end-stage financing before funds are distributed to unsecured creditors. It would pay no more than 50 percent recovery to the hospital's unsecured creditors.


The plan was crafted with the committee representing the unsecured creditors, and a letter urging the creditors' assent to the plan from the committee was included when it was distributed to them.


The confirmation hearing for the plan, which will include tallying the votes of the unsecured creditors in favor of accepting it, will be Sept. 29 in the federal courthouse in Natchez. If the court approves the plan after the confirmation hearing, the sale of the hospital will close Sept. 30, and Natchez Regional Medical Center will belong to CHS as of Oct. 1.



RadioShack says it may need more capital


RadioShack says it may need more capital to help complete its turnaround efforts.


CEO Joseph Magnacca said in a statement on Thursday that the consumer electronics company is actively exploring options for overhauling its balance sheet and is in advanced talks with "a number of parties."


RadioShack Corp. is also working with its lenders, bondholders, shareholders and landlords to try to find a long-term solution. Magnacca said this could include debt restructuring, consolidating stores and other measures to help lower costs.


Details of a recapitalization are not yet finalized. Magnacca said the Fort Worth, Texas company is reviewing several alternatives, some that would need consent from its lenders.


RadioShack's stock rose 5 cents, or 5.3 percent, to 98 cents in premarket trading.



Islamic State Is A Serious Threat To U.S. Interests, Rubio Says


President Obama has laid out his strategy for dealing with militant members of the Islamic State. Steve Inskeep talks to Republican Sen. Marco Rubio for his reaction.



Opinion Pages Offer Support On Plan To Combat Islamic State



President Obama delivers a prime time address from the Cross Hall of the White House on Wednesday. He pledged to lead a broad coalition against the Islamic State insurgents and vowed to target the terrorist group with airstrikes "wherever they exist."i i



President Obama delivers a prime time address from the Cross Hall of the White House on Wednesday. He pledged to lead a broad coalition against the Islamic State insurgents and vowed to target the terrorist group with airstrikes "wherever they exist." Saul Loeb/DPA/Landov hide caption



itoggle caption Saul Loeb/DPA/Landov

President Obama delivers a prime time address from the Cross Hall of the White House on Wednesday. He pledged to lead a broad coalition against the Islamic State insurgents and vowed to target the terrorist group with airstrikes "wherever they exist."



President Obama delivers a prime time address from the Cross Hall of the White House on Wednesday. He pledged to lead a broad coalition against the Islamic State insurgents and vowed to target the terrorist group with airstrikes "wherever they exist."


Saul Loeb/DPA/Landov


President Obama's prime-time speech outlining his plan to broaden a U.S.-led offensive against Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria, prompted generally cautious support from the editorial pages of major newspapers across the country this morning.


As we reported last night, Obama told the nation: "Our objective is clear: we will degrade, and ultimately destroy, ISIL through a comprehensive and sustained counter-terrorism strategy."


The United States "will hunt down terrorists who threaten our country, wherever they are," he said.


Here's a sampling of reaction in op-eds in major dailies today:


The New York Times (Peter Baker):




"It will be a significantly different kind of war — not like Iraq or Afghanistan, where many tens of thousands of American troops were still deployed when Mr. Obama took the oath nearly six years ago. And even though Mr. Obama compared it to the small-scale, sporadic strikes against isolated terrorists in places like Yemen and Somalia, it will not be exactly like those either.


"Instead, the widening battle with the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria will be the next chapter in a grueling, generational struggle that has kept the United States at war in one form or another since that day 13 years ago on Thursday when hijacked airplanes shattered America's sense of its own security."




The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:




"Obama has used military force judiciously throughout his presidency, but there are times when the threat is so clear that nothing else suffices. This is one of those times.


"There is no way at this early stage to know how exactly the American response will unfold or how the threat will mutate in the coming months. The success of the campaign depends on the reliability of U.S. partners in the region."




The Los Angeles Times: "The president is right about the shared global interests in stopping the Islamic State. After a decade of war in Iraq and Afghanistan, though, the decision to re-engage militarily in the region is a fraught and complicated one. As he moves forward, he needs to be mindful of the dangers of mission creep and assiduous in pressing other countries to help in the effort. Finally, he should seek congressional endorsement for any sustained use of military force against this enemy."


The Washington Post (E.J. Dionne): "The emergence of the Islamic State and its barbaric beheadings of James Foley and Steven Sotloff have shaken public opinion again. It is, of course, possible that the public's guardedly increased hawkishness is another short-term reaction to an enraging news event. But there is a strong case that, after all the gyrations in policy and popular attitudes, we are on the verge of a new politics of foreign policy based on a steadier, more sober and more realistic view of our country's role in the world and of what it takes to keep the nation safe."


And, The Boston Globe (Stephen Kinzer):




"President George W. Bush told Americans that the 9/11 attacks represented a threat so enormous that we had to plunge into foreign wars that cost tens of thousands of lives and trillions of dollars. That is how some Americans want Obama to depict the ISIS threat. He refused to do that.


"Instead he spoke in measured phrases, recognizing the emergence of a new danger but not exaggerating it. Rather than warn of mortal peril, he said he was 'more confident than ever about our country's future.'"





Congress Will Eventually Vote On Force Against Islamist Militants



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





Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee Mike Rogers talks to Steve Inskeep about whether Congress will authorize military action against militant members of the Islamic State.



FDA approves weight-loss drug Contrave


U.S. regulators are greenlighting a new weight-loss drug called Contrave, the third in a string of approvals for anti-obesity treatments.


The drug was developed by Orexigen Therapeutics Inc., based in La Jolla, California. The Food and Drug Administration said Thursday that it is approved for use by people who have a body mass index of 30 or higher, which is the level at which people are considered to be obese. It is also approved for use by people with a BMI of 27 or higher who also have a weight-related medical condition such as diabetes.


The agency approved the drug for use in combination with a reduced-calorie diet and exercise.


Contrave is a combination of two drugs that are already approved, naltrexone and bupropion. Naltrexone is used to treat alcohol and narcotic dependence. Bupropion is an antidepressant also used to help people quit smoking.


In experiments, non-diabetic patients lost 4.1 percent more weight than patients who took a fake pill.


The drug will have a boxed warning about the risk of suicidal thoughts associated with antidepressants like Bupropion. Additional risks include the possibility of seizures, as well as increased blood pressure and heart rates.


The heart effects created a long road to approval for Contrave. The FDA refused to approve the drug in 2011, citing cardiovascular risks. Orexigen resubmitted its application to regulators in December, saying that the drug fared well in an early analysis of a study designed to rule out excessive cardiovascular risk.


In addition to Contrave, the FDA has approved Qsymia from Vivus Inc. and Belviq from Arena Pharmaceuticals Inc. Sales of the drugs, once considered potential billion-dollar sellers, have been below expectations because of limited insurance coverage and high costs for patients.


Contrave will be distributed in the U.S. by Japanese drugmaker Takeda Pharmaceuticals, which will pay Orexigen royalties on sales. Orexigen and Takeda plan to start selling the drug this fall.



New York, Illinois find success in tackling labor violations


On an overcast July afternoon, with the clock ticking on their lunch break, men in blue jeans and hard hats filed out of the four-story Fairfield Inn & Suites under construction near Interstate 270.


Jon Gould, a Carpenters Union job site investigator, stood in the parking lot of a nearby filling station and gazed at the half-finished motel. Three months earlier, on a hunch, investigators from Gould’s union had started videotaping the people building the motel.


The surveillance was taking place to answer a big question: Was Road Runner Construction, of Little Rock, Ark., the motel framing contractor, trying to get away with a practice known as misclassification? Repeated countless times nationwide, often with impunity, the practice enables dishonest companies to underbid honest competitors by categorizing employees as independent contractors _ thereby dodging laws that require the payment of state and federal taxes.


Last year, Illinois toughened its employee classification law by increasing potential financial penalties for construction companies that wrongly classified workers as independent contractors. “This is going to be a test case for us,” Gould said. “This is the first one we submitted since the law was toughened.”


Illinois and New York are national leaders when it comes to curbing worker misclassification. Their efforts were highlighted by a recent review of payroll records on large, publicly financed projects conducted by reporters for McClatchy and ProPublica, an independent nonprofit news outlet, in both states.


While North Carolina and other Southern states have misclassification rates on publicly financed projects approaching nearly 40 percent, the reporters in Illinois and New York combed through payroll records for dozens of projects and found not one instance of a company wrongly listing its employees as independent contractors.


It’s no accident. Illinois and New York have passed hard-nosed laws and formed task forces to take an aggressive tack toward employers who misclassify their workers.


By executive order, New York state created its Joint Enforcement Task Force in 2007, partly in response to a Cornell University study that showed nearly 1 in 10 audited employers in New York were improperly listing workers as independent contractors.


“I think the state of New York and the state Labor Department deserve a lot of credit for recognizing that this was a really big issue when they did,” said Linda Donahue, senior extension associate with the Worker Institute at Cornell University ILR School and a co-author of the study. “They didn’t let any moss grow. They got right on it, and clearly it’s made a difference.”


The difference can be counted in billions. Since its inception, the task force has uncovered more than 114,000 cases of worker misclassification, adding up to almost $1.8 billion in lost wages. Last year alone, the task force found more than $333 million in unreported wages.


A task force plus stiffer penalties


The task force also conducts hundreds of random work site and “Main Street” sweeps, in which inspectors target a single retail plaza and inspect each business’s books. In testimony to the U.S. Senate in 2010, then-New York State Department of Labor Commissioner Colleen Gardner described one enforcement sweep that cost the state about $25,000 to execute but garnered more than $100,000 in additional taxes and penalties.


The Cornell researchers found misclassification especially rampant in the construction industry. Their study revealed that, before 2007, about 15 percent of the construction workforce in New York could be misclassified in any given year.


“It wasn’t just workers that were hurt by this,” said Donahue, “but also the businesses that complied, because they were being seriously underbid.”


The prevalence of the practice led New York’s Legislature to pass the Construction Industry Fair Play Act in 2010. The law strictly defines an “independent contractor” and places the burden of proof on the employer.


The law imposes penalties as high as $5,000 per misclassified worker, with the option to charge employers criminally for “willful misclassification.” This year, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed the Commercial Goods Transportation Industry Fair Play Act, a similar law that targets trucking companies.


The fair play laws require work sites to post notices about the practice next to other legally required notices describing New York’s wage and labor laws. The notices have been so successful in increasing awareness and generating tips, the state Department of Labor’s next step is to require misclassification notices at every work site in the state, according to James Rogers, deputy commissioner for worker protection at the department.


All this enforcement makes business owners very reluctant to misclassify their employees willfully, Rogers said.


“We’ve been at it so long that if you put all that together along with the public’s awareness of the problem, there are few public works projects in New York state that’s going to be against the law,” he said. “We’re gonna find you.”


Enforcement pays off


Illinois’ crackdown on misclassification got a big boost in 2012 with the creation of a task force that consists of the state attorney general, the Workers’ Compensation Commission and the state Departments of Labor, Revenue and Employment Security. All share information about suspected violators and work together to ensure guilty parties pay up.


The changes seem to be working. Illinois is second in the nation in the number of misclassified workers detected per audit, according to the state Department of Employment Security. More than 9,000 Illinois workers were identified as misclassified last year, resulting in the collection of more than $2.3 million in unreported taxes.


Illinois’ and New York’s efforts to root out misclassified workers mean they capture larger shares of much-needed tax revenue and suffer lower rates of workplace injuries and deaths than states that ignore misclassification do.


The same alliances of unions and lawmakers in those states that passed laws to crack down on misclassification also made laws to encourage workplace safety. Employers who play by the rules on worker classification also are more likely to hire experienced, well-trained workers who know how to avoid accidents and injuries.


What’s more, Illinois and New York received a big economic boost during the Great Recession of 2008-09 because associated prevailing-wage laws _ which require that contractors pay the usual hourly wages, overtime and benefits that most workers in an area receive _ stabilized their economies when construction in the private sector suffered serious declines, according to several academic studies.


It’s not just strong state laws that are responsible for the high rate of compliance in Illinois. There’s also a big buy-in from county and municipal governments on the importance of ensuring that workers are properly classified and paid the prevailing wage, according to Bob Bruno, a professor of labor and employment relations at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.


And New York’s proactive policies don’t mean fraud is nonexistent there. In August, New York City officials discovered that a contractor overseeing a Harlem housing project was underpaying his employees by almost $300,000.


In New York state last year, 1 in 4 workers – nearly 2 million – were union members. The state’s strong union presence is another tool in combating worker misclassification. Donahue recalled an instance in which members of a bricklayers union recorded every worker coming in and out of a construction site. When they later looked at the official documents at the construction firm, only three workers were listed on the payroll.


“Construction unions were really stepping up enforcement,” said Donahue. “They send people to keep an eye out on this.”


The same holds true in Illinois, where 1 in 6 workers belong to labor unions and state inspectors work closely with union representatives to monitor and investigate companies suspected of wrongly listing their employees as independent contractors.


To make the case against Road Runner Construction, Gould and his team of investigators staked out the site in Pontoon Beach where the company is building the new Fairfield Inn. During regular day and night shifts beginning in April, the union reps videotaped the construction workers when they drove up in the morning from the nearby motel where they were staying, and then videotaped them when they left the job site at night.


“Sometimes they’d sit at the Taco Bell,” Gould said of his investigators. “Sometimes they’d sit at the McDonald’s.”


The union reps took down license plate information and learned the workers were from out of the area, Gould said. They watched as all the laborers were put up at the same motel, and learned from informal conversations with the men that they were all taking direction from the company and otherwise being treated as employees, according to Gould.


The presence of out-of-state workers on a job site represents a red flag to union inspectors such as Gould. The fact that these workers are brought in from hundreds of miles away is, based on past experience, a key tip-off for Gould that a project contractor may be engaging in dishonest practices, including misclassification and paying substantially less than the local prevailing wage.


Record searches showed that Road Runner isn’t licensed to do business in either Illinois or Arkansas. For Gould, that provided a key piece of the puzzle: If Road Runner wasn’t registered to do business in either state, then it couldn’t be documenting its workers’ salaries and payroll deductions with W-2 forms. Instead, they’d be relying on 1099 tax forms, which go to workers categorized as independent contractors.


“Once we knew that, we knew they were 1099-ing or paying cash,” Gould said.


In May, Gould turned over to the Illinois Department of Labor the evidence his investigators had compiled of violations they said they’d documented at the Fairfield Inn site. The state Labor Department later conducted its own on-site investigation, with state inspectors interviewing workers.


Neither Road Runner nor the site’s developer, Sam Patel, returned calls seeking comment. The Illinois Labor Department has declined to comment on where its investigation stands.



Fitzgerald reported from Illinois for McClatchy’s Belleville News-Democrat; Jones reported from New York for ProPublica. Email: mfitzgerald@bnd.com, ryann.jones@propublica.org.


Russian gas supplies to Poland drop further


Russian natural gas deliveries to Poland dropped by 45 percent on Wednesday, the third day of decreases, heightening concerns that Moscow is piling on political pressure over the crisis in Ukraine.


Poland's state gas company, PGNiG, said Thursday it had received no notification from Russian supplier Gazprom. Gazprom has denied any fall in exports but has not provided further explanation.


Some commentators say Russia is trying to punish Poland for selling the gas on to Ukraine. Moscow is angry with the Ukrainian government for trying to quash a rebellion of pro-Russian separatists in the east, and with Poland and the EU for supporting Ukraine.


PGNiG spokeswoman Dorota Gajewska said it was the first time the company has seen such a drop in deliveries from Gazprom. She said lawyers were analyzing whether Poland should seek damages from Gazprom.


Deliveries dropped by 20 percent on Monday and 24 percent on Tuesday, PGNiG said.


Poland is making up for the shortfall by buying more gas from Germany and the Czech Republic, Gajewska said. She added that there is no need for immediate concern in Poland because the weather is warm and gas storage tanks are full.


Last year, Poland bought some 8.9 billion cubic meters of Russian gas, covering about 60 percent of its needs. Poland meets another 30 percent of its demand with gas it produces itself, and the remainder comes from other European countries, mainly Germany and the Czech Republic. Poland also has some 2.6 billion cubic meters of natural gas stored in gas tanks.



Lebanon foreign minister joins Jeddah meeting on counterterrorism


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Arab, European youths write one message of peace


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Lebanon health minister shuts down dispensary, warns hospital


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Lebanese Army defusing car bomb in Arsal


Lebanese Army defusing car bomb in Arsal


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Delcambre welcomes new boat launch, pavilion


Delcambre now has a boat launch that can handle four boats at a time and a new pavilion for the seafood and farmer's market.


Shrimp and fishing boats can dock at the 7,500-square-foot pavilion to sell their catch directly to the public.


The four shrimp boats at Saturday's market sold their entire catch in a few hours, The LSU AgCenter said Wednesday.


The $4 million project, called Bayou Carlin Cove, also includes a fishing pier. It was dedicated Saturday, during the first Seafood and Farmer's Market of the shrimp season. The AgCenter says attendance was estimated at more than 4,000.


The project started after the coastal town on the Iberia-Vermilion parish line was flooded by Hurricane Rita in 2005. Delcambre was flooded again by Hurricane Ike in 2008.


The AgCenter and Louisiana Sea Grant worked with local officials to get a $3.4 million federal community development grant and $600,000 from the Twin Parish Port District.


The Delcambre Seafood and Farmer's Market will be held again on Oct. 4, Nov. 1 and Dec. 6.


The 14-acre site has parking at the boat launch, which formerly had no parking and could handle just one boat at a time. There's also room for additional facilities, including an RV park and a boat storage warehouse, said Thomas Hymel, LSU AgCenter and Louisiana Sea Grant fisheries agent.


The LSU Landscape Architecture Department also got involved in the project, he said. The University of Louisiana at Lafayette conducted a community design workshop, and ULL business students helped draft a seafood marketing program.


"It's a real model on how things can happen when the resources of the university work with local officials," Hymel said.


Wendell Verret, Twin Parish Port District director, said a conversation between Hymel and port commissioners led to the successful grant application. Hymel also took the project to Louisiana Sea Grant, which led to a business plan and more grants.


Verret said Hymel also started the Delcambre Direct project, which lets people contact shrimpers and fishers to buy seafood from a boat once it gets to the dock.


"It was a tremendous success," Verret said.


He said the new boat launch is attracting recreational and commercial boaters from out of town.


"It's above our expectations," he said.



China fines Audi, Chrysler on monopoly charges


Chinese authorities have fined automaker Audi $40.5 million and Chrysler $5.2 million on charges of violating anti-monopoly law in a sweeping probe of the auto industry.


The government announced Thursday that Audi's China unit was found to have violated the law by enforcing minimum prices that dealers were required to charge for sales and service and Chrysler enforced minimum sales prices. Three Chrysler dealerships were fined for agreeing on minimum prices for repairs.


Regulators have launched a series of investigations of global automakers, technology suppliers and other companies under China's 6-year-old anti-monopoly law. Business groups say foreign companies appear to be unfairly targeted but authorities have denied that.


Authorities earlier announced fines for a group of Japanese auto components suppliers.



Four Hezbollah fighters killed near Lebanese border village


Nusra Front releases UN troops: Al-Jazeera


The Nusra Front has released the U.N. peacekeepers it seized two weeks ago in the Golan Heights, Al-Jazeera television...



Lebanon envoy withdraws in protest of Israel remarks


BEIRUT: U.S. Senator Ted Cruz was booed offstage during a dinner for the Middle East's Christian conference in Washington D.C., with his pro-Zionists comments causing many Lebanese figures to withdraw in anger, including the Lebanese ambassador to the U.S.


“Christians have no greater ally than Israel,” Sen. Ted Cruz said, addressing a crowd of Arab Christian figures at a fundraising dinner for the non-profit organization "In Defense of Christians" in Washington D.C.


Billed as a keynote speaker at the event, Cruz switched the topic from defending Christians in the Middle East against terrorism, to the need to form an alliance between Christians and Jews, which he identified as “people of good faith.”


“Tonight, we are all united in defense of Christians. Tonight, we are all united in defense of Jews,” he said. “Together, against those who would persecute and murder those who dare disagree with their religious teachings.”


As part of the controversial speech that led to the withdrawal of Ambassador Antoine Chedid, Cruz evoked the old argument that whoever disliked the state of Israel was anti-Semitic and did not follow the teachings of Jesus Christ.


“Those who hate Israel hate America,” he said, while crowd began to turn against him. “Those who hate Jews hate Christians. If those in this room will not recognize that, then my heart weeps.


“If you hate the Jewish people you are not reflecting the teachings of Christ,” he added, addressing an audience representing the Christian churches of the Middle East, including Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai.


The republican senator from Texas, who was a member of George W. Bush’s electoral campaign in 1999, also used the podium to equate fundamentalist groups massacring Christians in Iraq and Syria, to Palestinian and Lebanese groups fighting Israel.


“Religious bigotry is a cancer with many manifestations,” he said. “ISIS, Al-Qaeda, Hezbollah, Hamas, state sponsors like Syria and Iran, are all engaged in a vicious genocidal campaign to destroy religious minorities in the Middle East.”


Criticizing those who he said “try to parse different manifestations of [one] evil,” Cruz argued about the similarities of the mentioned groups, seemingly ignoring the varied battlefields, history, context and at times aggressive enmity between many of them.


“Sometimes we are told not to loop these groups together,” he added, “...that we have to understand their so called nuances and differences.”


“But hate is hate, and murder is murder,” he said. “Our purpose here tonight is to highlight a terrible injustice, a humanitarian crisis.”


Cruz’s comments on the region were too extreme for the audience, and provoked a round of cries that firmly asked him to leave.


“Stop it, stop it, enough,” and “Out, out, leave the stage!” were some of the shouts aimed at the senator, which prompted IDC’s president, Toufic Baaklini, to join Cruz on stage and ask the crowd to listen.


After failing in attempts to be heard, the senator announced “if you will not stand with Israel and the Jews, then I will not stand with you. Good night and God bless,” before walking off the stage, with some carrying on the shouts and others applauding his departure.


In addition to Chedid’s protest, media reports said that Future Movement MPs Jean Ogassapian, Atef Majdalani and former MP Ghattas Khoury all withdrew from the conference.


The reports said that while Patriarch Gregory III Laham had also intended to withdraw, Patriarch Rai called on the participants to avoid the tension and prioritize the conference’s success over some individual statements.