Friday, November 30, 2012

NY appeals court skeptical about startup's live TV

(AP) ? A startup company trying to defend the legality of how it sends live TV programming to laptop computers, iPhones and other mobile devices encountered a skeptical appeals court panel on Friday.

Three judges of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals seemed poised to reverse a lower court judge who in July reluctantly gave a thumbs-up to the company, Aereo Inc. The decision by Judge Alison Nathan was appealed by broadcasters including Fox, ABC, CBS, NBC and others, who say Aereo without permission copies and retransmits their programs as they are first aired.

Broadcasters have said expansion of a business like Aereo could threaten the free broadcasting of events such as the Super Bowl.

At times, the appeals judges appeared to belittle the company's business model during an hour of arguments as they challenged its claims that individual dime-size antennas dedicated to each of its customers in the New York market give clients control over copies of programs and eliminate the need to pay licensing fees to content creators.

"The reason you have all of these tiny antennas is, in your view, a belt and suspenders approach (to avoiding copyright violations?" Judge John Gleeson asked.

"Is there a legitimate business reason for having all these little itty bitty antennas?" Judge Denny Chin asked.

Aereo attorney R. David Hosp responded: "The reason is to comply with the copyright act."

Hosp insisted the company went out of its way to comply with copyright laws as it provided a legal, alternate platform for free TV broadcasts. He accused broadcasters of trying to "punish us for following the law." He argued that the company lets users rent remotely located antennas to access content they could receive for free by installing the same equipment at home.

Gleeson questioned whether Aereo's business model is similar to "constructing a business to avoid taxes."

Aereo, to support its claim, urged the judges to look at a cable company case in which the 2nd Circuit in 2008 ruled that Cablevision Systems Corp. did not need a separate license with broadcasters to let customers store programs on a digital video recorder. The ruling upheld a lower-court decision by Chin before he was appointed to the 2nd Circuit.

Chin said the Aereo case was different because a cable company has an ongoing business relationship regardless of a customer's use of a DVR.

Lawyers for broadcasters said the Aereo case also was different because programs on a cable company's digital recorders are not watched as they are first aired.

"It's a retransmission service, plain and simple," broadcasters' attorney Bruce Keller said of Aereo. "Super Bowl comes in, Super Bowl goes out, all within seconds."

Another lawyer for the broadcasters, Paul Smith, told the appeals panel that Aereo was trying to take the Cablevision court case and turn it "into a complete carte blanche where people can violate copyrights."

Aereo has grown from 100 users to more than 3,500 in the last year and has expanded from Apple devices such as the iPhone and iPad to devices including Windows computers. It lets customers capture broadcasts from 29 local channels with subscriptions starting at $8 a month.

The appeals court did not immediately rule.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-11-30-TV%20on%20Internet/id-d5a0cf9ab5d94d63ae3790d97742c785

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

WTS: Sony Cybershot DSC H10 $130

Hi there,
Am selling off a used Sony Cybershot DSC H10, still in good condition.

Details are as follows:
Equipment Type: Compact
Equipment Brand: Sony CyberShot
Equipment Model: DSC- H10

Headline features:
1/2.5" CCD sensor, 8.1 million effective pixels
10x (38-380mm equiv.) Carl Zeiss branded optical zoom
3.0" LCD screen
HDTV video output (requires optional cable or dock)
Super Steady Shot image stabilization
2cm macro
ISO 100-3200
Face Detection
Dynamic Range Optimizer

Credits: dpreview.com/reviews/sonydsch10

Set comes with:
-Sony CyberShot DSC-H10
-Battery Charger
-Multi Connector Cable - USB, AV, Power Cord
-CD- ROM
-Rechargeable battery
-Shoulder strap
-Camera pouch
-Lens Hood
-Lens Cap Strap
-Lens Cap
-Lens Adaptor Ring

Original price : $599.00
Now selling: $130.00

Includes additional accessories!!
1 X Rechargeable battery
8GB Sony Memory Stick PRO Duo? Media

Pictures below:
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If you are interested, please contact me via sms/whatapps:
Yiying @ 9189-0 349

Source: http://forums.hardwarezone.com.sg/electronics-bazaar-259/wts-sony-cybershot-dsc-h10-$130-3998318.html

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Gunmen in Yemen kill Saudi army officer

(AP) ? Gunmen in Yemen opened fire on the car of a Saudi Arabian army officer working with his embassy's military section on Wednesday, killing him and his Yemeni bodyguard, officials from both countries said.

Yemeni officials said the Saudi officer, who had diplomatic status, was traveling to the embassy when he was shot by gunmen wearing army uniforms in another car. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief reporters.

Saudi Arabia maintains close ties with Yemen, the poorest country in the Arab world and home to an al-Qaida branch considered to be the terror network's most dangerous. The militant group is active on the Yemeni side of the two countries' border, and has drawn Saudi nationals into its ranks there.

Saudi Arabia's official news agency confirmed the attack and said an investigation had been launched. The Saudi officer was part of the security detail for the military attach? to Yemen, it said, adding that the gunmen who attacked him were wearing uniforms of the "central security forces".

Last year, Saudi officials played a key role in a U.S.-backed deal that saw President Ali Abdullah Saleh step down and transfer power to his vice president.

Islamic militants took advantage of Yemen's popular uprising last year to seize parts of the country's south. Last summer, backed by U.S. advisers and drones, the Yemeni military reclaimed much of the area, driving militants from a series of strongholds.

The militants have in turn struck back, targeting security officials for assassinations.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-11-28-Yemen-Saudi/id-586613ca5fbd4ab0be0c5298158d1068

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Killer Banner Ads and Landing Pages - Web 2.0 Asia Blog

After 15 years of working for someone else Mikaal Abdulla finally got smart and started his own company. He is the co-founder and CEO of 8 Securities. This is part of an occasional series on marketing tips and strategies for startups.


If you are building a consumer internet business, you have probably spent 90 percent of your time on product development, building a team, chasing funding, and defending your decision not to get a ?real job? to your mother. If you are lucky, then you spent the other 10 percent getting some sleep. The one area of execution that I typically see Asian startups least equipped to tackle is advertising.

Probably best to ignore Bad Advice Kitty.

As I have written before, there is a dangerous and false notion that products sell themselves. They don?t. Your product will not go viral and anyone that bets the success of their startup on tweets is a fool (and will eventually have to admit to their mother that she was correct). Advertising is to be taken seriously and you need to provision for both investment and time to learn how to acquire and retain customers online. There is no question that startups in Asia have an engineering bias ? and that?s a good thing. But we are far behind our counterparts in Berlin, London, New York, and Silicon Valley when it comes to the quality of our UX (user experience) and marketing execution. Today I will focus on paid banner advertising, which is also known as display advertising. (I will cover search engine marketing, retargeting, email marketing, mobile advertising, social, public relations and UX in future posts on TechInAsia).

Online eyeballs

I spent over a decade spending an average of US$20 million a year in advertising for my previous employer (now current competitor). That marketing investment was almost entirely online and distributed into 15 different geographies across Canada, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. Having benefited from that responsibility at a young age I learned a thing or two about online consumer behavior, building a brand online, and of course the ins and outs of digital advertising on a global scale. I also learned that fucking up once in a while was normal, and success in achieving marketing ROI (return on investment) is done through the systematic process of spend, track, learn, adjust, and then scaling the investment when you see returns. Even today, I accept that 70 percent of my teams individual advertising campaigns will either fail or break-even, but it is our job to ensure that the 30 percent that work get the majority of the investment and can scale up fast. It?s not dissimilar to the portfolio theory of a venture capitalist. They know most of their investments will fail but their ability to rapidly identify and ramp up investment in the winners is the name of the game. Treat your marketing tactics and campaigns the same way. Without some level of risk there will be no reward.

When I launched my startup into the very traditional bricks and mortar consumer financial services industry in Hong Kong, I had a theory that it could be built and operate entirely online. I had faith that consumers had evolved faster than the businesses serving them. I saw a disconnect between consumers demands and the stale business models that faced them. This was simply the opportunity. 8 Securities is new company going head to head with huge competitors such as HSBC and Bank of China. If we want to win in the long-term, we have to acquire new customers at scale, add value to their lives and strive every day to make them happy. In 2012 we will have spent approximately US$500,000 in advertising and 100 percent of that is online. Here are some lessons learned and recommendations that that I hope are useful for you.

Tip #1: It all starts with your value proposition

As a consumer internet startup, your paramount objective is to solve a problem for your customers. In doing so, you need to crystallize what differentiates you and precisely how that benefits your customer. Only once you have done this can you begin to think about your message to the market.

Defining your value proposition is no easy task. After nine months in the market we are still refining ours as we are constantly learning from our customers and striving to meet their needs. What we thought might be a benefit often has no resonance with customers, and only by listening do you really understand their pain point and the solution. Your value proposition and your brand have a symbiotic relationship in that one can not live without the other. Your brand is your promise to the customer. Your brand equity is what is left after you subtract your brand?s value proposition with that of your competitors. Marketing can not be effective until you are very clear on how you will position your value proposition in the market and and ultimately in the mind of your customers.

Many of the ?marketing professionals? across Asia maintain a false belief that brands can not be built exclusively online. Furthermore, many media planners are still very traditional in their thinking and will advise you that ?offline? marketing is a necessity to build brand strength and trust (they also earn more from traditional media). Leave the ?offline? advertising to your competitors that are dinosaurs and focus your marketing efforts online where your customers eat, sleep, and breath. With the exception of any public relations you are able to generate in the press or TV, I would ignore the offline channel all together. Marketing in print advertising, outdoor, and on TV is a luxury and certainly not a necessity for a company born on the internet.

Tip #2: Banner advertising and the economics of lead acquisition

The first online banner in history belonged to US telecoms company AT&T. It was hosted on a website called Hotwired and got an astounding 78 percent click-thru rate. The average click-thru rate today is 0.07 percent ? and falling fast. Online banner advertising is tough but if you crack the code it will give you a tremendous competitive advantage and a much lower acquisition cost per account than more traditional competitors.

The main advantage of banner advertising is that you can scale it at a rate not always available through paid search. There are three main variables you must optimize when running online banner advertising. First, you need to negotiate a viable CPM (cost per 1,000 impressions) if you are not running a pay per click campaign. Theoretically, an ?impression? is defined as each page load where your ad is displayed in front of a real set of human eyeballs. That said, a vast majority of your purchased impressions will not be seen as we have trained ourselves to ignore advertising as we browse content. This is among one of the biggest factors why we have seen click-thru rates plummet.

Many online properties where you will want to advertise still operate on a CPM basis and that includes Yahoo. For the sake of this example, let?s assume you negotiate a CPM of $5 on a site that generates quality traffic that you would like to target. If you invest $5,000 then you are purchasing one million impressions for your ad.

Second, the quality of your advertisement is critical. The most common mistakes are banners that try to convey too much information, don?t have a clear call to action, or don?t visually stand out from the background. We usually find that we have to change our messages and creative two or three times before we get it right. In terms of media, your creative can span simple flash all the way to expandable video ads. We have run a number of video based campaigns on Yahoo and LinkedIn (one of the first in Asia to do so) and saw a CTR (click-thru rate) of over one percent. Most of the videos we ran would drive interaction from over 50,000 unique visitors, but that of course is all a function of our investment level.

The benefit with video is that it?s a more effective medium to grab attention, to tell a story, and build your brand identity, but it comes at a greater cost both in terms of production and the media buy. For the purpose of this example, lets assume we run a standard three rotation flash banner. Let?s assume we beat the average and can achieve a CTR of 0.10 percent. If you invest $5,000, you have purchased one million impressions. If 0.10 percent click on your ad then you will have generated 1,000 unique visitors to your landing page (also known as the campaign page).

Finally, you need a great landing page on which your sole goal is to convert the visitor who clicks on your advertisement into a qualified lead or user. Don?t make the mistake of sending your leads to your home page as you need to isolate their experience to the objective at hand. The conversion rate of visitor to qualified lead really depends on your specific business and the information you are capturing. That said, you should aim for a minimum of 15 percent of your visitors to convert.

The fundamental elements of a great landing page are:

  1. Your call to action and design elements must be consistent between the landing page and the ad that was clicked. If the experience is not seamless and logical then your visitor is lost.

  2. Have a very clear headline and body copy. You must tell your visitor what it is and what you want them to do. If you are not promising to solve a problem for them then they have no reason to stay and will bounce off.

  3. Don?t over-engineer your online form to capture lead information. Make it as simple and clear as possible. If you don?t need their mobile phone and home address then don?t ask for it. Keep it to a minimum and ideally just just ask for name and email, or use social log ins. Don?t forget to clearly highlight your privacy policy if you expect their trust. A simple ?We promise we won?t share your email? will often suffice.

Plus, here are ?101 Landing Page Optimisation Tips? from one of the brightest minds in the business ? so there are already no excuses for getting it wrong.

In summary, we have invested $5,000 in our example to generate 1,000 visitors to our landing page with a minimum goal of converting 15 percent, or 150, of those visitors into qualified leads or users. This results in a cost per user of $33. Do you expect the lifetime value of your users to be greater than $33? If so, the investment makes sense. Know your ROI and constantly optimize your lead funnel as there is always room for improvement.

Tip #3: Tracking and optimizing your advertising investment

Anyone that knows me would be right to say I am crazy about analytics and data. I have invested a great deal of time testing hundreds of tools to measure the entire life cycle of our customers from the point of advertisement to engaged customer. We currently track the specific advertising source that a customer clicked on and bind it to the customer?s activity so we can assess in real-time the revenues ultimately generated by the specific ad, the channel, and the campaign.

There are no endorsements here, but I wanted to lift the hood for startups so you can see what marketing systems we run. We use MediaMind for our ad serving platform. From this platform we host and deploy our banner ads across different websites and geographies. On a daily basis we track CTR, conversion, and revenue metrics on the specific ads and campaigns we are running. We are constantly optimizing our media mix based on this data.

To track interaction on our landing page and website we use Google Analytics. This provides invaluable insight in terms of how visitors are engaging and navigating our store front. Tools such as CrazyEgg provide a deeper real-time heat map so you can optimize the layout of your page.

The most important tool I use when it comes to lead acquisition and conversion tracking is MixPanel. MixPanel provides event driven funnels based on your defined flow. In our case, we measure leads from the point they arrive on the landing page through each of the six steps of our online application. I can see specifically where customers may drop out of our online application and work to make the process simpler. Once we generate potential customers online, we use Salesforce to auto route the prospect to the appropriate sales person based on language, geography, and product experience. This of course increases the sales conversion rate as you are matching customer needs with the person best equipped to help them.

We use Salesforce as our end-to-end CRM system. As a transaction-driven business we measure our revenue and core business metrics in an OLAP (online analytical processing) tool called MicroStrategy. For pre-revenue startups you can very likely tackle this manually until you reach a point of scale where it makes sense to invest in automation. Rather than waste time logging into all of these systems I publish them to the entire office in real-time through a dashboard called Geckoboard. As they say, you manage what you measure.

Focus on these three core areas and you will be running very effective and performance-driven online banner campaigns in no time. Remember, be prepared to take risks and accept that failing fast and pivoting is a normal part of the marketing process.

The post Killer Banner Ads and Landing Pages: 3 Tips for Asian Startups appeared first on Tech in Asia.


Link to full article

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Source: http://web2asia.blognhanh.com/2012/11/killer-banner-ads-and-landing-pages-3.html

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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Sign of the times? Young Maple Ridge Realtor charged with robbery ...


According to the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBGV) there are over 11,000 real estate agents who "live and work in communities from Whistler to Maple Ridge to Tsawwassen and everywhere in between."

As the Lower Mainland enters it's first prolonged downturn over a decade (with monthly sales levels consistently hitting 15 year lows), one can only imagine how difficult it is for agents whose income is commission based.

Greater Vancouver realtors are now forced to quit and find new jobs??

Mr Shen, a newly minted realtor since 2011 had been working for a year without reaching a single sale. He had just quit RE and is training to be an electrician...?

When interviewed by SingTao, Mr Shen said he had a university degree in business administration. Upon seeing the hot RE market in early 2011, he paid $5000 for a realtor prep-course and obtained his realtor license.?

Ever since he?s working as a realtor. He?s been busy every weekend showing houses, one client even had him show 10 units.?

He had a total of 20 clients in the first half year, but no sale.?

Mr Shen said, in the current housing downturn, even seasoned realtors are having a hard time.?

Another realtor, Mr Sun of Macdonald realty, said that in 2011 he averaged 2 sales per month, this year some months even went without a single sale.?

Many realtors are leasing expensive cars, paying expensive fuel, hosting networking dinners ? averaging $2000 per month of overhead. Without sufficient sales numbers, many realtors cannot survive.

Perhaps it was this need to 'survive' that drove a real estate agent from Maple Ridge's Royal LePage Brookside to crime.

As noted yesterday in the Maple Ridge Times, one of two men arrested for armed robbery was a real estate agent in Maple Ridge, and he has since lost his licence as charges have now been laid.

Police announced Friday that two local young men, including one who was a local realtor, are facing a series of charges in connection with pharmacy robberies.

Police have recommended charges against Ryan Olson, 27, and 29-year-old Luke Ash for robberies at a Langley Pharmasave, Blueridge Pharmacy in Abbotsford, twice at Surlang Pharmacy in Surrey, and The Chemist in Maple Ridge. The heists took place from Aug. 21 to Oct. 12.

Ash was a realtor in Maple Ridge for Royal LePage Brookside, but is no longer licenced.

"Royal LePage - Brookside surrendered Ash's licence on Nov. 22," said Tyler Davies, spokesperson for the Real Estate Council of British Columbia.

"Luke always presented himself as a very likeable and pleasant young man. This is a shock to all of us in our real estate industry," said Bob Quinnell, Royal LePage - Brookside's general manager.

"When we heard of this situation we immediately notified the Real Estate Council of BC, who oversees our licensing system. The council requested that we send Luke's licence to them immediately," said Quinnell, adding that it is "important to note that police checks are taken of anyone prior to obtaining a real estate licence."

Ash was originally licensed in July 2011, according to Davies.
On another note, yesterday was an interesting day in our Inventory watch on the side bar.

As the scroll states, "Inventory has probably now peaked for 2012 and we will see more and more listings pulled off the market in hopes the market will recover in the Spring. The main watch now is to see if we will have any days in the final two months where sales surpass the number of new listings for that day."

Yesterday almost achieved that historic first time for 2012 as we came in with 114 new listings and 114 sales.

==================

Email: village_whisperer@live.ca
Click 'comments' below to contribute to this post.

Please read disclaimer at bottom of blog.

Source: http://whispersfromtheedgeoftherainforest.blogspot.com/2012/11/sign-of-times-young-maple-ridge-realtor.html

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Fiscal cliff: Why is the White House helping Republicans?

A new report by the White House's Council of Economic Advisers scares the middle class about the effects of the fiscal cliff, Reich writes.

By Robert Reich,?Guest blogger / November 26, 2012

In this November file photo, President Barack Obama acknowledges House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio while speaking to reporters in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington. A new report by the White House?s Council of Economic Advisers plays into Republican hands by scaring the middle class, Reich writes.

Carolyn Kaster/AP/File

Enlarge

Why is the White House trying to scare average people about the consequences of the ?fiscal cliff??

Skip to next paragraph Robert Reich

Robert is chancellor?s professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations, most recently as secretary of labor under President Clinton. Time Magazine?named him one of the 10 most effective cabinet secretaries of the last century. He has written 13 books, including ?The Work of Nations,? his latest best-seller ?Aftershock: The Next Economy and America?s Future," and a new?e-book, ?Beyond Outrage.??He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine and chairman of Common Cause.

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If the President?s strategy is to hold his ground and demand from Republicans tax increases on the wealthy, presumably his strongest bargaining position would be to allow the Bush tax cuts to expire on schedule come January ? causing taxes to rise automatically, especially on the wealthy.

So you?d think part of that strategy would be reassure the rest of the public that the fiscal cliff isn?t so bad or so steep, and that at the start of January Democrats will introduce in Congress a middle-class tax cut whose effect is to prevent taxes from rising for most people (thereby forcing Republicans to vote for a tax cut for the middle class or hold it hostage to a tax cut for the wealthy as well).

But today (Monday) the White House?s Council of Economic Advisers issued a?report?today warning that if Congress allows the Bush tax cuts to expire January 1and the Alternative Minimum Tax to kick in, the middle class will face sharply-rising taxes.?

Groupon CEO Andrew Mason Conference Interview - Business Insider

Groupon CEO Andrew Mason is scheduled to appear at our Ignition conference in New York tomorrow.

So, naturally, when tech journalist Kara Swisher published a story this afternoon saying that Groupon's board is "seriously discussing" replacing Mason, we expected we might soon get a call explaining that Mason had to cancel his appearance because of a "scheduling conflict" or something.

But we didn't!

On the contrary, we got a call from Mason's team saying, in effect, "Well, now you have an interesting first question."

And we certainly do!

We were already looking forward to interviewing Andrew Mason, as there is plenty to talk about. But this new report does add some extra spice to the occasion. And kudos in advance to Mason and the Groupon team for not reacting to the report by going into the fetal position (a typical corporate response).

For the record, Swisher's report is carefully hedged. "To be clear," Swisher says, a move of replacing [Mason] is not likely to happen immediately, or at all."

So the reports of Mason's death as CEO may be exaggerated.

We'll get to the bottom of all this tomorrow.

SEE ALSO: The Future Of Apple

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/groupon-ceo-andrew-mason-conference-interview-2012-11

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Fire highlights harsh lives of Bangladesh workers

Bangladeshis prepare to bury the bodies of a part of the victims of Saturday's fire in a garment factory in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Tuesday, Nov. 27, 2012. Bangladesh held a day of mourning Tuesday for the 112 people killed in a weekend fire at a garment factory, and labor groups planned more protests to demand better worker safety in an industry notorious for operating in firetraps. (AP Photo/Pavel Rahman)

Bangladeshis prepare to bury the bodies of a part of the victims of Saturday's fire in a garment factory in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Tuesday, Nov. 27, 2012. Bangladesh held a day of mourning Tuesday for the 112 people killed in a weekend fire at a garment factory, and labor groups planned more protests to demand better worker safety in an industry notorious for operating in firetraps. (AP Photo/Pavel Rahman)

Bangladeshi garments workers take out a protest through a street to mourn the death of the victims of Saturday's fire in a garment factory on the outskirts of Dhaka, Bangladesh, Tuesday, Nov. 27, 2012. Bangladesh held a day of mourning Tuesday for the 112 people killed in the weekend fire, and labor groups planned more protests to demand better worker safety in an industry notorious for operating in firetraps. (AP Photo/Khurshed Rinku)

Bangladeshis prepare to bury the bodies of some of the victims of Saturday's fire in a garment factory in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Tuesday, Nov. 27, 2012. Bangladesh held a day of mourning Tuesday for the 112 people killed in the weekend fire at the factory, and labor groups planned more protests to demand better worker safety in an industry notorious for operating in firetraps. (AP Photo/Khurshed Rinku)

Bangladeshi women watch the bodies of some of the victims of Saturday's fire in a garment factory being prepared to be buried, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Tuesday, Nov. 27, 2012. Bangladesh held a day of mourning Tuesday for the 112 people killed at the factory, and labor groups planned more protests to demand better worker safety in an industry notorious for operating in firetraps. (AP Photo/Khurshed Rinku)

Bangladeshi garments workers take out a protest through the streets to mourn the death of the victims of Saturday's fire in a garment factory on the outskirts of Dhaka, Bangladesh, Tuesday, Nov. 27, 2012. Bangladesh held a day of mourning Tuesday for the 112 people killed in a weekend fire at a garment factory, and labor groups planned more protests to demand better worker safety in an industry notorious for operating in firetraps. (AP Photo/Ashraful Alam Tito)

(AP) ? Clothing is king in Bangladesh, a country that exports more garments than any other in the world except China. It is responsible for four out of every five export dollars and has turned factory owners into members of parliament and leaders of sports clubs.

That strength has often been turned against the workers in those factories, especially those who complain about poor working conditions and pay that can be less than $40 a month. A law-enforcement agency called the Industrial Police is specifically assigned to deal with unrest in factories, and labor activists accuse government forces of killing one of their leaders. Employees are barred by law from forming trade unions, even though Bangladesh allows workers in other industries to unionize.

Workers hope that could change following the industry's latest tragedy, a fire Saturday that killed 112 people at a factory that made T-shirts and polo shirts for Wal-Mart and other retailers around the world. But they have their doubts.

"The owners must treat the workers with respect. They should care about their lives and they must keep in mind that they are human beings. They have families, parents and children," said Nazma Akhter, president of Combined Garment Workers Federation. "Is there anybody to really pay any heed to our words?"

There have been many garment-factory fires in Bangladesh ? since 2006, more than 300 people have died. But Saturday's was by far the deadliest, and has drawn international attention to labor practices as the government tries to encourage Western countries and companies to expand their relationships here.

The Tazreen Fashions Ltd. factory had no emergency exit, and workers trying to flee found the main exit locked. Fire extinguishers were left unused, either because they didn't work or workers didn't know how to use them. One survivor said that after the fire alarm went off, managers told workers to get back to work.

In an interview published Tuesday in Dhaka's Daily Star newspaper, the managing director of Tazreen Fashions expressed concern ? about possibly losing foreign buyers. "I'm concerned that my business with them will be hampered," said Delwar Hossain. But there was no mention in the article of concern for victims or their families.

Tazreen has not responded to repeated requests from AP for comment.

Bangladesh's $20 billion-a-year garment industry accounts for 80 percent of its total export earnings and contributes a major share of the country's $110 billion GDP. This from an export market created only in 1978, with a consignment for 10,000 men's shirts.

By 1982, the country had 47 readymade garment factories. In three years the number rose to 587. Now it has more than 4,000.

The factory owners are a powerful group, holding parliamentary posts in both major parties. The head of the prominent Dhaka sports club Mohamedan is in the business; so is a former president of the national cricket board.

An important reason for their success is cheap labor. Almost a third of the South Asian country of 150 million lives in extreme poverty.

The minimum wage for a garment worker is 3,000 takas ($38) a month, after being nearly doubled this year following violent protests by workers. According to the World Bank, the per capita income in Bangladesh was about $64 a month in 2011.

On Tuesday, as Bangladesh held a day of mourning for the dead, 10,000 people, including relatives and colleagues, gathered near the site of Saturday's blaze, many wearing black badges as a sign of mourning. Security forces were deployed, but no clashes were reported.

"I've lost my son and the only member to earn for the family," said Nilufar Khatoon, the mother of a worker who died. "What shall I do now?"

The country's factories were closed as a mark of respect, and prayers for the dead were held in places of worship across the Muslim-majority South Asian nation. The national flag flew at half-staff in government buildings.

Authorities buried 51 unidentified bodies in a grave outside Dhaka. Many of the dead were charred beyond recognition. Some other bodies were buried in the same grave Monday.

Also Tuesday, about 2,000 members of 14 labor organizations held a rally in central Dhaka where leaders accused the government of neglecting the rights of garment workers.

About 15,000 workers protested a day earlier near the burned factory to demand better safety.

The factory itself is gutted. Its eight floors are littered with burned clothes, yarn, machinery and furniture. Broken windows and black ashes are scattered on the floors and staircases.

Authorities have formed three committees to look into the incident. An industry group has suggested that sabotage may be to blame, though fire officials have said it was not the fire itself, but the poor safety measures that caused the high death toll.

"It was complete darkness," said Mohammad Zakir Hossain, a Tazreen worker who survived the fire. "I couldn't see anything but I started moving forward. I can hear shouts from many of my colleagues in the darkness, 'Oh Allah, save me, save me.'"

Hossain says he was making 4,500 takas ($55) a month, plus about 30 takas (37 cents) an hour in overtime.

Wal-Mart has said the Tazreen factory was making clothes for the retail giant without its knowledge. Wal-Mart, which had received an audit deeming the factory "high risk" last year, said it had decided to stop doing business with Tazreen, but that a supplier subcontracted work to the factory anyway. Wal-Mart said it stopped working with that supplier on Monday.

Wal-Mart and other companies linked to the factory's products have expressed sympathy for the victims and a commitment to improving worker safety.

The European Union's delegation to Bangladesh said while it recognizes the importance of the garment industry to the local economy and European consumers, "the EU has always been very clear about the need to improve working standards and safety in this sector."

Dan Mozena, the U.S. ambassador to Bangladesh, also expressed his concern over labor rights and warned that any chaos in the sector could drive global brands away.

The United States and even many global buyers have been pressing Bangladesh to allow garment factories to form trade unions, but the government and industry have resisted.

The industry fell under more pressure after a labor leader was killed in April, his body found in a roadside ditch. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton raised concern about the killing, and workers' rights issues overall, during a visit to Bangladesh the following month.

Aminul Islam had complained before his death about police harassment, wiretapping and even being abducted and tortured, allegedly by a domestic intelligence agency. Authorities are investigating his death but have revealed nothing about their progress. Meanwhile, the leading Bengali-language Prothom Alo newspaper recently reported, citing an anonymous source, that top officials of the National Security Intelligence had regular contact with the main suspect before and after Islam's death.

Even as it fends off criticism, Bangladesh is seeking more business from the West, including pressing the United States for quota-free and duty-free access for its garment products to the U.S. market.

Earlier this month, senior executives from more than two dozen global brands and retailers visited Bangladesh in a bid to forge long-term agreements to source garments from its factories.

In September, Karl-Johan Persson, chief executive of the Swedish retail chain H&M, visited Bangladesh and said his 2,600-store group would increase its business relationship with the country.

Mustafizur Rahman, executive director of the Center for Policy Dialogue, Bangladesh's leading independent think tank, said there is "hypocrisy" among buyers who "talk about ethical buying and ethical sourcing, but when it comes to price they refuse to offer a good rate. They often go to less compliant factories for a cheaper rate. Being compliant is not cheap."

At the same time, Rahman said Saturday's fire "highlights inner weaknesses of a giant industry very essential for the country's survival."

"This has come as a strong warning," he said. "But it was too costly."

Phil Robertson, deputy director of Human Rights Watch's Asia division, blames a "nexus of influence" between senior government officials and factory owners that "allows impunity to flourish." Until that changes, he said, government vows to improve safety should be treated with skepticism.

"Six months or eight months down the road, if history is any indication, we will have another factory fire, and more workers will be killed," he said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-11-27-Bangladesh-Factory%20Fire/id-8d7b1acb8e6145c2b8868e7bd09b0aa0

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Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Feng Shui: Lessons of Well-being | By Raffealla Quartero

Feng Shui: Lessons of Well being  | FG Magazine

Beautiful contemporary bedroom

MILAN, Italy???Have you ever noticed how certain places have the ability to make us feel at ease, while other places fail to welcome us in the right way? Why is that? What can help us to exist in harmony with the spaces in which we live? A great help is Feng Shui (FS), an ancient Chinese discipline that is currently so fashionable as well as being distorted by its true meaning by some misinformation and superficiality of self-proclaimed experts. Therefore, we have asked Paola Neglia, consultant and teacher of Chue Style Feng Shui?since 2008 to shed some light on the topic. ?She studied in Milan at the school certified by the Chue Foundation International, founded by Grand Master Chan Kun Wah.

Feng Shui: Lessons of Well being  | FG Magazine


Feng Shui in professional and public places. An example of application of Feng Shui in HUB MILAN stores

Feng Shui: Lessons of Well being  | FG Magazine


Feng Shui in professional and public places. An example of application of Feng Shui in HUB MILAN stores

How would you define the FS? ?Rediscovering your own well-being through the improvement and harmonization of your environment?, explains Paola. FS studies the flow and movement of energy in the environment and channels it, putting the person at the centre. People are influenced by their surroundings, shapes, colours, layouts, furniture, objects and even by the exterior and entrances to their homes. The interrelationship between people and their environments could help us achieve a better life.Feng Shui: Lessons of Well being  | FG Magazine

Lo Pan

What are the elements that distinguish the authentic FS from ?vulgar imitation?? ?We in the industry called fake FS ?Fast Feng Shui? or ?Pop FS?: some self-taught FS teacher or expert who has read all the books on the subject. FS works in all aspects of life, so it is essential to look for serious professionals: it takes at least two years of study to learn the basics and be authorized to provide counselling; then, it is essential to practice. Each consultation is unique and personalised. The same advice is not suitable for everyone nor can it be given from a distance?. ?In fact, the FS has no fixed rules on how a house should be, ?each person has different energetic constitution and life goals, so the manuals may be too general and not very effective. Let me give you an example: a common belief attributed to FS says the bed should be facing north, a very cold and dark area from the energetic point of view, but this area could exacerbate depression! Therefore, you need an expert?.

FS is not synonymous with home-neutral, or bio-architecture, it is not magic or superstition: having at home Chinese coins to attract abundance or gold dolphins to attract the love of your life, are part of Chinese superstitions and beliefs, but this is not FS!

We must take into account a person?s taste and the culture
?We must take into account a person?s taste and the culture in which he or she is fully immersed. Including rare elements in an environment would not help, to the contrary, I am sure if I put a Chinese red light in a living room in Milan, it would be a nuisance instead! We need to work with what surrounds us and what we like?, continues Paula. Nevertheless, the starting point of any assessment of an environment is to be aware of what you are doing, ?to change something in your home you must first understand why you need a change and what should be changed. If the environment in which we live?doesn?t?represent our personality?any more?or we?re trapped in some aspect of our life, then we need to renew the environment to sustain us in a new stage of life?.

And what does the FS says about trends and fashion? ?After an in-depth energy analysis, it may be suggested to wear the colour that recalls the most suitable energy to a person, but if his house is in disharmony, the person may not benefit from it in the long run. Unfortunately there are those who, even in this context, uses the name of FS as an advertisement to attract customers?, finalises the FS expert.

Needless to say, beware of imitations and avoid the do-it-yourself Feng Shui!

Courtesy by: Paola Neglia | Photography by: Fotolia and Paola Neglia | Edited by: Elizabeth Deheza

By Raffaella Quartero

Raffaella is Italian Editor for a company that publishes books on food and wine. Her great passion, however lies in interior design and home decor and she is partial to using unqiue fabrics, colours and wallpapers. Raffaela loves design, photography, sewing, antique markets and "creative recycling" creating decorative objects, ornaments and furniture for home and is in constant search for new sources of inspiration.

Source: http://www.thefashionglobe.com/feng-shui-lessons-of-well-being

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Justin Bieber Wins Diamond Jubilee Medal, Wears Overalls

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/11/justin-bieber-wins-diamond-jubilee-medal-wears-overalls/

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5 Tips for Getting Workers' Comp | Injury Law News

Hurt on the job? You may be in luck. Most employers are required by law to carry workers? compensation insurance. This protects both the employee in the event of a work-related injury and the employer from a lawsuit. More times than not, workers? compensation will provide employees with the opportunity to collect work-injury compensation. However, just because you are injured on the job does not mean that your guaranteed workers? comp benefits. This is actually a common misconception.

Therefore, if you?re denied workers? compensation benefits, you may have to appeal to the state?s administration agency that is responsible for overseeing workers? comp benefits. And the last thing you want to do while recovering from a work-related injury is jump through hoops in order to collect workers? compensation.

Below are five tips for getting workers? comp:

File claim promptly

Each state has a different window of time to file a claim. Once this window closes, the employee may no longer be able to file for workers? compensation. Therefore, it is extremely important that you get medical help and inform you employer about your injury immediately. Then, fill out a worker?s compensation claim form and give it to your employer. Submit this request in formal writing and keep a copy for yourself. If you do not hear from the insurer within two weeks, contact them directly?do not wait.

Seek legal assistance

The next step is crucial?seek out legal counsel to review and fully understand your rights. A lawyer can help you file your workers? compensation claim and secure your benefits. When possible, speak with a workers? compensation attorney who has experience with work-related injuries. This will be particularly beneficial if either your employer or your employer?s insurance company deny you of worker?s compensation.

Keep thorough medical records

Be sure that your doctor accurately fills out your medical records in order to avoid any unnecessary hearing delays. Your medical records should include a full diagnosis, course of treatment and any pertinent disability information. Also, make sure your medical records include evidence of how your injury is directly related to your job. You should also document any mental disability that is a direct result of your work-related injury, such as depression. And make duplicate copies of your medical records too.

Contact State Administrative Agency

This is next step is important. If you are denied workers? compensation benefits from your employer, you must immediately contact your state?s workers? compensation board. Generally speaking, you have a window of one to three years to file an application with your state agency. Any application filed thereafter will most likely be denied. Your lawyer can help you review your workers? compensation file and speak on your behalf at your administrative hearing.

File for an appeal

If your claim is denied after your administrative hearing, the court will inform you of how many days you have to appeal your case. Appealing a judicial decision from a workers? compensation hearing can be very tricky. You must meet formal requirements regarding judicial mistakes made by the previous judge in order to convince the court of reasons to overturn the previous decision. That being said, it is extremely important that you choose an attorney that understands both workers? compensation and the appeals process.

Attached Images:

Sarah Barnes is a freelance writer who specializes in workers compensation claims process. As a paralegal, Sarah spends most of her time researching and defending work-related injuries.

Source: http://www.injurylawnews.us/2012/11/26/5-tips-for-getting-workers-comp/

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Michigan: No driver?s licenses for deferred deportation Dreamers

Twenty five-year old Jos? Franco is a Michigan resident who was brought to the U.S. from Mexico by his mother when he was two years old. ?He applied for deferred deportation under the Obama administration?s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA)?program, and upon approval, is looking forward to studying political science and education.? But Franco, who co-founded the group One Michigan?to provide guidance and advocate for undocumented youth, is worried about Michigan?s Secretary of State Ruth Johnson?s decision to deny driver?s licenses to those with deferred deportation status.

?It?s very disappointing, to be allowed to work legally, but not be legally allowed to drive,? says Franco.? ?Here in Michigan, we do not have a reliable transportation system, and for the young people I know trying to get to school and work, it is a real problem,? Franco states.

Secretary of State Johnson has argued that deferred deportation does not grant legal status to an undocumented Dreamer.? ?Michigan law requires legal presence, that someone be here legally,? said Johnson?s spokesperson, Gisgie Gendrau, to the Detroit Free Press.? ?The federal government has said that DACA does not grant legal status, so we can?t issue a driver?s license or state ID to DACA participants,? says Gendrau. ?We rely on the feds to determine whether someone is here legally or not ? we?re just following their direction,? the Secretary of State?s spokesperson adds.

Immigrant rights groups were among those protesting the decision to deny Michigan Dreamers driver?s licenses. (Photo: courtesy of Jose Franco)

But Susan Reed, supervising attorney for the Michigan Immigrant Rights Center, says she thinks the federal government has given pretty clear guidance on who can legally apply for a driver?s license through the government?s Real ID law, which sets federal standards for driver?s licenses. ??Under Real ID, which was passed by Congress, the federal government has specifically said those with deferred action status can qualify for a driver?s license,? Reed says. ??I?m willing to accept the Secretary of State?s indication that they have made this decision out of uncertainty, but I think it?s over-caution that will negatively impact a very deserving group of people,? she adds.

Reed adds that in Michigan, 90 percent of people drive to work. ??I?m hearing from young immigrants that not being allowed to drive does not allow them to make use of the deferred action opportunity, and they are terrified of taking a risk and driving without a license,? Reed says. ??It takes the wind out of their sails,? she adds.

Apart from helping deferred action Dreamers work and or go to school, Franco says there is another reason Secretary of State Johnson should change her policy about driver?s licenses. ??Michigan is losing population,? says Franco. ?This policy the Secretary of State introduced will not help bring back people,? he argues.

This is already happening, according to immigration attorney Susan Reed. ??I can tell you my first approved deferred deportation client has voted with her feet and decided to move to Texas,? says Reed. ?She lived in Michigan since she was five and has a health sciences degree; so she was someone ready to contribute to her state,? adds Reed. ??But she was not willing to start her new life with this degree of uncertainty,? the attorney says.

Michigan now joins two other states ? Arizona and Nebraska ? who are not giving driver?s licenses to those eligible for deferred deportation.? ?If Secretary of State Johnson is following the law,? says Franco, ?then is she saying that 47 other states are disobeying the law??

The Michigan Immigrant Rights Center is hoping they can work to change the state?s policy. ?In the meantime, says Franco, his group is ready to be a plaintiff in a lawsuit. ??Members of my group protested and helped put pressure on the President to help Dreamers,? Franco says. ??If we have to, we will do it again.?

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Source: http://nbclatino.com/2012/11/26/michigan-no-drivers-licenses-for-deferred-deportation-dreamers/

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Monday, November 26, 2012

Marketing and Selling Your Fractional Real Estate: High Tech or No ...

Over the Thanksgiving holiday, an Obama campaign strategist spoke in detail on TV about how the president?s re-election campaign used Facebook effectively.? Could this idea, with modifications, be applied in marketing and selling fractional real estate?

The president?s re-election campaign used ?a new Facebook app? to stunning effect. ?Facebook account holders who supported the president could grant his campaign access to their Facebook account.? The campaign could then invite, on their behalf, five of their friends to send out a ?chain letter? asking recipients to:

  • Vote for Obama
  • Donate to the campaign and
  • Email a similar letter to five of their friends

Reportedly, this initiative was enormously successful both in vote getting and fund-raising.? The political strategist said that a letter arriving from one?s friends was far more persuasive than one the campaign might initiate.

Now, I?m familiar with ?harmless? apps?like those providing birthday greetings?requesting access to the birth dates of my Facebook friends.? But the ability of political operatives?of any stripe: red, blue, purple or green?to set off an out-of-control ?viral? campaign is quite another matter.? It doesn?t feel right.

This practice must be legal, or someone would have raised a major ruckus by now.? It also seems to compromise the privacy of some recipients of the letter?especially the privacy of those farther down on the chain.? Then, again, we haven?t heard about protests there either.?

Still, this tactic raises a number of unsettling questions:

  • Does this app have a name?
  • Who can use this app? ?Is it (or something comparable) available to anyone in any venture or only to big-time operations playing with millions of marketing dollars?
  • Does the app itself belong to its developers?? Or, does the app belong exclusively to the entity that hired the developers who wrote the program [i.e. the president?s re-election campaign]?
  • Is this app?or any software similar to it?for sale to anyone in politics, in business or in any other field that hopes to send out a viral message??

Bottom line fractional marketing questions:

?Apps aside, can this concept?in modified form?be applied successfully to marketing and selling fractional real estate?? Is this the marketing wave of the future? Or is it just an isolated case?

In re-reading the preceding paragraph, I suddenly recalled the image in the thumbnail at the top of this post.

It?s a recreation of the one I had seen in the first book on sales that I had ever read.? The year was 1980.? The book is still in print (revised).? It is the classic Mastering the Art of Selling Real Estate. Its author is the internationally renowned sales trainer Tom Hopkins.? The image represents the ideal sales context:?

Two people meeting Belly to Belly.

In summary, we have presented above two extreme ends of a marketing and sales continuum?from ?Highly Modern High Tech? to ?Classic No Tech? (except, perhaps, for a phone call to schedule the meeting).?

As 2012 draws to an end and fractional marketing plans for 2013 become final, where does your company stand along this continuum?? Are you implementing the newest social media bells and whistles or are you sticking to classic, ?tried and true? strategies?? Let us know.?

P.S.? And, if you have additional info on that Facebook app, please fill us in.


David M. Disick, Esq. helps fractional real estate developers secure financing.? He is author of Fractional Vacation Homes:? Marketing and Sales in Challenging Times ? and the free Special Report, Seven Crucial Ingredients for a Winning Financial Presentation.? Both may be ordered on his website.? Disick consults with clients in the US and abroad.? Contact him at: http://www.TheFractionalConsultant.com.

Source: http://www.thefractionalconsultant.com/fractional-marketing-ideas/marketing-and-selling-your-fractional-real-estate-high-tech-or-no-tech/

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Florida woman arrested for riding an endangered manatee

(Reuters) - A Florida woman photographed two months ago riding an endangered manatee in violation of state law was arrested on Saturday on misdemeanor charges, authorities said.

The Pinellas County Sheriff's office said deputies arrested Ana Gloria Garcia Gutierrez, 53, without incident at her job at a Sears store in St. Petersburg on a warrant for violating the Florida Manatee Sanctuary Act.

The state makes it illegal to "annoy, molest, harass or disturb" the endangered aquatic mammals, whose survival is imperiled by manmade threats, including boating collisions. Violations are considered a second-degree misdemeanor.

The arrest stemmed from reports on September 30 that an unidentified woman had been seen touching and riding a manatee - which can grow up to 12 feet in length and weigh up to 1,800 pounds (818 kilograms) - at Fort Desoto Park, a few miles from downtown St. Petersburg.

Following media coverage of her cavorting with the mammal, Garcia Gutierrez called the sheriff's office two days later to turn herself in.

She admitted the offense claiming "she is new to the area and did not realize it was against the law to touch or harass manatees," the office said in a news release.

It was not immediately clear what penalties Garcia Gutierrez would face if convicted.

(Reporting by Tim Gaynor; Editing by Paul Simao)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/florida-woman-arrested-riding-endangered-manatee-055926479.html

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Sunday, November 25, 2012

AP IMPACT: Will NYC act to block future surges?

This artist's rendering provided by DLANDSTUDIO and Architecture Research Office shows a proposed perimeter wetlands and an archipelago of man-made barrier islets on New York's Manhattan island, designed to absorb the brunt of a huge storm surge. The concept was worked up by DLANDSTUDIO and Architecture Research Office, two city architectural firms, for a museum project. (AP Photo/DLANDSTUDIO and Architecture Research Office)

This artist's rendering provided by DLANDSTUDIO and Architecture Research Office shows a proposed perimeter wetlands and an archipelago of man-made barrier islets on New York's Manhattan island, designed to absorb the brunt of a huge storm surge. The concept was worked up by DLANDSTUDIO and Architecture Research Office, two city architectural firms, for a museum project. (AP Photo/DLANDSTUDIO and Architecture Research Office)

FILE - In this Wednesday, Oct. 31, 2012 file photo, Joseph Leader, Metropolitan Transportation Authority vice president and chief maintenance officer, shines a flashlight on standing water inside the South Ferry 1 train station in New York in the wake of Superstorm Sandy. A map of the original topography of Manhattan is seen on the wall behind Leader. By century's end, researchers forecast up to four feet higher seas, producing storm flooding akin to Sandy's as often as several times each decade. Even at current sea levels, Sandy's floodwaters filled subways, other tunnels and streets in parts of Manhattan. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle, File)

This 1939 photo made available by the Library of Congress shows New York City Park Commissioner Robert Moses with a model of the proposed, but never built Brooklyn Battery Bridge in New York. Retired geologist Jim Mellet of New Fairfield, Conn., recalls hearing a story told to him by the late Bill A. O'Leary, a retired city engineer at the time: He and other engineers, concerned about battering floods, had approached Moses more than 70 years ago to ask him to consider constructing a gigantic barrier to hold back storm tides at the entrance to the city's Upper Bay. Moses supposedly squashed the idea like an annoying bug. "According to Bill, he stood there uninterested, with his arms folded on his chest, and when they finished the presentation, he just said, 'No, it will destroy the view.'" Or perhaps he was already mulling other plans for the same site, where he would build the Verrazano Narrows Bridge years later. (AP Photo/Library of Congress, C.M. Spieglitz)

FILE - This February 1953 file photo shows an aerial view of a windmill pump elevated above the floodwaters in the coastal village of Oude Tonge in The Netherlands. It took the collapse of dikes, drowning deaths of more than 1,800 people, and evacuation of another 100,000 in 1953 for the Dutch to say "Never again!" They have since constructed the world's sturdiest battery of dikes, dams and barriers. No disaster on that scale has happened since. (AP Photo/File)

FILE - This Wednesday, Nov. 16, 2005 file photo shows apartment buildings built just behind a small dike which separates them from the Maas River in Rotterdam, The Netherlands. It took the collapse of dikes, drowning deaths of more than 1,800 people, and evacuation of another 100,000 in 1953 for the Dutch to say "Never again!" They have since constructed the world's sturdiest battery of dikes, dams and barriers. No disaster on that scale has happened since. (AP Photo/Fred Ernst, File)

Think Sandy was just a 100-year storm that devastated New York City? Imagine one just as bad, or worse, every three years.

Prominent planners and builders say now is the time to think big to shield the city's core: a 5-mile barrier blocking the entryway to New York Harbor, an archipelago of man-made islets guarding the tip of Manhattan, or something like CDM Smith engineer Larry Murphy's 1,700-foot barrier ? complete with locks for passing boats and a walkway for pedestrians ? at the mouth of the Arthur Kill waterway between the borough of Staten Island and New Jersey.

Act now, before the next deluge, and they say it could even save money in the long run.

These strategies aren't just pipe dreams. Not only do these technologies already exist, some of the concepts have been around for decades and have been deployed successfully in other countries and U.S. cities.

So if the science and engineering are sound, the long-term cost would actually be a savings, and the frequency and severity of more killer floods is inevitable, what's the holdup?

Political will.

Like the argument in towns across America when citizens want a traffic signal installed at a dangerous intersection, Sandy's 43 deaths and estimated $26 billion in damages citywide might not be enough to galvanize the public and the politicians into action.

"Unfortunately, they probably won't do anything until something bad happens," said CDM Smith's Murphy. "And I don't know if this will be considered bad enough."

Sandy and her 14-foot surge not bad enough? By century's end, researchers forecast up to four feet higher seas, producing storm flooding akin to Sandy's as often as several times each decade. Even at current sea levels, Sandy's floodwaters filled subways, other tunnels and streets in parts of Manhattan.

Without other measures, rebuilding will simply augment the future destruction. Yet that's what political leaders are emphasizing. President Barack Obama himself has promised to stand with the city "until the rebuilding is complete."

So it might take a worse superstorm or two to really get the problem fixed.

The focus on rebuilding irks people like Robert Trentlyon, a retired weekly newspaper publisher in lower Manhattan who is campaigning for sea barriers to protect the city: "The public is at the woe-is-me stage, rather than how-do-we-prevent-this-in-the-future stage."

He belongs to a coterie of professionals and ordinary New Yorkers who want to take stronger action. Though pushing for a regional plan, they are especially intent on keeping Manhattan dry.

The 13-mile-long island serves as the country's financial and entertainment nerve center. Within a 3-mile-long horseshoe-shaped flood zone around its southernmost quadrant are almost 500,000 residents and 300,000 jobs. Major storms swamp places like Wall Street and the site of the World Trade Center.

Proven technology already exists to blunt or virtually block wind-whipped seas from overtaking lower Manhattan and much of the rest of New York City, according to a series of Associated Press interviews with engineers, architects and scientists and a review of research on flooding issues in the New York metropolitan area and around the globe.

These strategies range from hard structures like mammoth barriers equipped with ship gates and embedded at entrances to the harbor, to softer and greener shoreline restraints like man-made marshes and barrier islands.

Additional landfill, the old standby once used to extend Manhattan into the harbor, could further lift vulnerable highways and other sites beyond the reach of the seas.

Even more simply, the rock and concrete seawalls and bulkheads that already ring lower Manhattan could be built up, but now perhaps with high-tech wave-absorbing or wave-reflecting materials.

Seizing the initiative from government, business and academic circles have fleshed out several dramatic concepts to hold back water before it tops the shoreline. Two of the most elaborate proposals are:

? A rock causeway, with 80-foot-high swinging ship gates, would sweep five miles across the entryway to inner New York Harbor from Sandy Hook, N.J., to Breezy Point, N.Y. To protect Manhattan, another shorter barrier is needed to the north, where the East River meets Long Island Sound, and another small blockage would go up near Sandy Hook. This New Jersey-side barrier and a network of levees on both ends of the causeway could help protect picturesque beach communities like Atlantic Highlands, in New Jersey to the west, and the Rockaways, in New York City to the east. This so-called outer barrier option was conceived for a professional symposium by the engineering firm CH2M HILL, which last year finished building a supersized 15-mile barrier guarding St. Petersburg, Russia, from Baltic Sea storms.

? An extensive green makeover of lower Manhattan would install an elaborate drainage system beneath the streets, build up the very tip by 6 feet, pile 30-foot earthen mounds along the eastern edge, and create perimeter wetlands and a phalanx of artificial barrier islets ? all to absorb the brunt of a huge storm surge. Plantings along the streets would help soak up runoff that floods the city sewers during heavy rains. This concept was worked up by DLANDSTUDIO and Architecture Research Office, two city architectural firms, for a museum project.

What's missing is not viable ideas or proposals, but determination. Massive projects protecting other cities from the periodic ravages of stormy seas usually happened after catastrophes on a scale eclipsing even Sandy.

It took the collapse of dikes, drowning deaths of more than 1,800 people, and evacuation of another 100,000 in 1953 for the Dutch to say "Never again!" They have since constructed the world's sturdiest battery of dikes, dams and barriers. No disaster on that scale has happened since.

It took the breach of levees, a similar death toll, and flooding of 80 percent of New Orleans from Hurricane Katrina in 2005 to marshal the momentum finally to build a two-mile barricade against the Gulf of Mexico.

A handful of seaside New England cities ? Stamford, Conn.; Providence, R.I.; and New Bedford, Mass. ? have built smaller barriers after their own disasters.

However, New York City, which mostly lies just several feet above sea level, has so far escaped the horrors visited elsewhere. Its leaders have been brushing off warnings of disaster for years.

Retired geologist Jim Mellet of New Fairfield, Conn., recalls hearing a story told to him by the late Bill A. O'Leary, a retired city engineer at the time: He and other engineers, concerned about battering floods, had approached power broker Robert Moses more than 80 years ago to ask him to consider constructing a gigantic barrier to hold back storm tides at the entrance to the city's Upper Bay.

Moses supposedly squashed the idea like an annoying bug. "According to Bill, he stood there uninterested, with his arms folded on his chest, and when they finished the presentation, he just said, 'No, it will destroy the view.'" Or perhaps he was already mulling other plans for the same site, where he would build the Verrazano Narrows Bridge years later.

Many city projects, like the Westway highway plan of the 1970s and 1980s, died partly because of the impact they would have on the cherished view of water from the congested cityscape. Imagine, then, the political viability of a project that might further block access to the harbor or the view of the Statue of Liberty from the tip of Manhattan.

"I can assure that many New Yorkers would have strong opinions about high seawalls," said an email from a retired New York commander of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Bud Griffis, who was involved in the permitting process for the failed Westway.

However, global warming and its rising sea levels now make it harder simply to shrug off measures to shield the city from storms. Sandy drove 14-foot higher-than-normal seas ? breaking a nearly 200-year-old record ? into car and subway tunnels, streets of trendy neighborhoods, commuter highways and an electrical substation that shorted out nearly all of lower Manhattan.

The late October storm left 43 dead in the city, and City Council Speaker Christine Quinn estimated at least $26 billion in damages and economic losses. The regional cost has been estimated at $50 billion, making Sandy the second most destructive storm in U.S. history after Katrina.

Yet heavier storms are forecast. A 1995 study involving the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers envisioned a worst-case storm scenario for New York: High winds rip windows and masonry from skyscrapers, forcing pedestrians to flee to subway tunnels to avoid the falling debris. The tunnels soon flood.

With its dense population and distinctive coastline, New York is especially vulnerable, with Manhattan at the center.

The famous island can be pounded by storm surges from three sides: from the west via the Arthur Kill, from the south through the Upper Bay, and from the Long Island Sound through the East River. Relatively shallow depth offshore allows storm waters to pile up; the north-south shoreline of New Jersey and the east-west orientation of Long Island further channel gushing seas right at Manhattan.

Some believe that Sandy was bad enough at least to advance more serious study of stronger protections. "I think the superstorm we had really put the fear of God into people, because no one really believed it would happen," said urban planner Juliana Maantay at Lehman College-City University of New York.

But nearly all flood researchers interviewed by the AP voiced considerable skepticism about action in the foreseeable future. "In a half year's time, there will be other problems again, I can tell you," said Dutch urban planner Jeroen Aerts, who has studied storm protections around the world.

William Solecki, a Manhattan-based Hunter College planner who has been at the center of city and state task forces on climate change, guessed that little more will be done to prevent future flooding beyond "nibbling at the edges" of the threat.

In recent years, the city has been enforcing codes that require flood-zone builders to keep electrical and other critical systems above predicted high water from what was until recently thought to be a once-in-a-century storm. Sealing other key equipment against water has been encouraged. The city has tried to keep storm grates free of debris and has elevated subway entrances. The buzz word has been making things more "resilient."

But this approach does little to stop swollen waters of a gigantic storm from pouring over lower Manhattan. "Resiliency means if you get knocked down, this is how you get back up again," huffs activist Trentlyon. "They just were talking about what you do afterward." He said Sandy's flood water rose to 5 feet at street level in Chelsea, where he lives on the western side of lower Manhattan.

The city has at least toyed with the idea of barriers and even considered various locations in a 2008 study. "I have always considered that flood gates are something we should consider, but are not necessarily the immediate answer to rush toward," said Rohit Aggarwala, a Stanford University teacher who is former director of the New York mayor's Office of Long-Term Planning and Sustainability.

Unswayed by Sandy, Mayor Michael Bloomberg and his assistants have been blunter. Bloomberg said barriers might not be worthwhile "even if you spent a fortune."

Deputy Mayor Cas Holloway said no specific measures ? whether more wetlands, higher seawalls or harbor barriers ? have been ruled out because "there's no one-size-fits-all solution." But he compared sea barriers to the Maginot Line, the fortified line of defenses that Germany quickly sidestepped to conquer France at the beginning of World War II.

"The city is not going to be totally stormproof, but I think it can be very adaptable," he added. He said that new flood maps informed by Sandy are being drawn up, and he suspects they will extend the zones where new developments must install critical equipment above flood level.

Computer simulations indicate that hard barriers, which have worked elsewhere around the world, would do a good job of shielding New York neighborhoods behind them. But they'd actually make flooding worse just outside the barriers, where surging waters would pile up with nowhere to go.

The patriarch of this research is Malcolm Bowman, a native New Zealander who leads a passionate cadre of barrier researchers at Stony Brook University on the northern shore of Long Island. His warnings have mostly gone unheeded. "I feel like a biblical prophet crying in the wilderness: 'The end is near!'" Bowman said.

Unbowed, he continues to preach against incremental measures. "If you get a storm and a big oak tree falls on your house, then whether you fix your gutter doesn't matter," he said.

In recent years, his logic has finally begun to resonate a bit more. Nicholas Kim, an oceanographer with engineering firm HDR HydroQual who studied with Bowman in the 1980s, said his mentor has been thinking about barriers since then: "Everybody said, 'You're crazy!' But now it's becoming clear that we need protection."

Even massive structures don't shield everyone, though. A 2009 four-barrier study co-authored by Kim found that in a simulated storm, barriers still failed to protect large swaths of Queens and sections of other outlying boroughs with a total of more than 100,000 people.

Researchers also have predicted at least a modest additional one-foot rise of stormy seas as water piles up outside the barriers. "If you're the guy just outside the barrier, and you're paying taxes and you're not included, you're not going to be very happy," said oceanographer Larry Swanson at Stony Brook University.

How such barriers would affect water movement, silt and marine life also remains an open question requiring further study for each case.

The scale and costs of hard barrier schemes have further put off many critics. After flooding from Hurricane Irene last year, city representatives asked Aerts, the Dutch planner, to compare the cost and benefits of barriers to existing approaches. His initial analysis will not be finished until February, but his early cost estimate for barriers and associated dikes for New York City is $15 billion to $27 billion ? comparable to that of the record-setting $24 billion Big Dig that reshaped Boston's waterfront ? not to block storms, but to unblock traffic and views of the waterfront.

Barrier defenders counter by pointing to the cost of storm damages. Stony Brook meteorologist Brian Colle said: "When you think of the cost of a Sandy, which is running in the billions, these barriers are basically going to pay for themselves in one or two storms." Advocates say tolls on trains or cars riding atop a barrier could help finance the project.

While appealing for rebuilding, Council Speaker Quinn also has said that "the time for casual debate is over" and called for a bold mix of resiliency with grander protective structures. She has estimated the cost of her plan at $20 billion.

Other massive protection schemes, like the green makeover of lower Manhattan, also would probably run into the billions. And soft protections are meant only to defuse, not stop, rising waters. Sandy battered parts of Long Island behind barrier islands and wetlands.

Nor is it clear that Manhattan has enough space to fashion more extensive wetlands of the sort that help protect the Gulf Coast, however imperfectly. "New York is too far gone for wetlands," said Griffis, the retired Army Corps commander for New York.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., has announced he will spearhead efforts to request a corps study of whether barriers or other options would work better. However, it remains unclear if Congress would be willing to fund such a study, which would undoubtedly take several years and cost millions of dollars.

And even before a dime has been appropriated, the corps is lowering expectations. Says spokesman Chris Gardner: "You can't protect everywhere completely at all times."

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Associated Press National Writer Adam Geller and AP researcher Julie Reed contributed to this report.

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The AP National Investigative Team can be reached at investigate(at)ap.org

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-11-25-Superstorm-Blocking%20the%20Sea/id-7673cc1940be446892755e614988accc

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