Burlington Parks Issue To Be Heard

Friday, November 28th, 2008

Some more light has been shed on the firing and eventual re-hiring of Burlington Parks supervisor Adam Cate. Inappropriate access to emails was the main issue.

City officials have remained silent on the circumstances surrounding Cate’s firing in October, following a six-month investigation into Cate’s conduct and actions as the person in charge of the city’s waterfront operations. Personnel matters and discipline are supposed to be confidential.

In the meantime, Channel 3 News has learned that Cate was accused of hacking into the city’s email system in an attempt to find out what top city officials were talking about. There was also an allegation involving improper handling of cash derived from Parks and waterfront fees.

At issue was a proposed reorganization of the Parks department and its possible merger into the Public Works Department. The city’s Parks commission later re-instated Cate, but also handed him discipline — two weeks of suspension without pay, and six months of probation on the job.

The matter is expected to be discussed at Monday night’s City Council meeting. Council president Kurt Wright, R-Ward 4, says he’ll introduce a resolution calling for a full accounting of the money spent on an investigation of Cate’s alleged wrongdoing and the procedures that were followed. Wright has acknowledged that certain details of Cate’s case must remain confidential.

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Bussell poised to do a Blanchett for ballet

Monday, July 28th, 2008

IT COULD be called the Cate manoeuvre. Just as the Sydney Theatre Company added theglamour factor with the appointment of Cate Blanchett asa co-artistic director, the Sydney Dance Company has brought its own star on board.

Bussell’s presence on the board will be a publicity magnet and a fresh opportunity to find new corporate sponsors. VIP guests at next Tuesday’s premiere at CarriageWorks will include Bussell and her banker husband, Angus Forbes, who live in Vaucluse with their two young daughters. After two decades as Britain’s best known ballet dancer, Bussell, 39, retired from the Royal Ballet last year and moved to Sydney in January. It is understood she is writing a children’s book.

The dance world has been waiting to see whether Bussell would join in the life of the Australian performing arts. Some will be surprised she has been snapped up by the Sydney Dance Company rather than the national company, The Australian Ballet.

In a statement yesterday Bussell said she was best known for her classical ballet roles, but “I have also had the pleasure of roles being created on me in many new works commissioned by the Royal Ballet. I understand the importance of creating new dance both for dancers and audiences. It is this that excites me about Sydney Dance Company, and it’s why I have decided to join their board.”

At the Sydney Dance Company Bussell will be involved in selecting an artistic director, after the departure last year of Graeme Murphy. His successor, Tanja Liedtke, had not yet taken up the job when she was killed in a road accident in August.

The company’s executive director, Noel Staunton, said a shortlist for the position was expected to be finalised by the end of next month. He made the initial approach to Bussell, although the formal invitation came from the company’s chairman, Julian Knights, a managing partner of Ironbridge Capital. Mr Knights and the Sydney Dance Company director Tony Bancroft, a partner in the law firm Mallesons Stephen Jaques, have helped fund 360°.

Bookings for the three-week season are at 35 per cent of box office capacity, “the standard before an opening night”, MrStaunton said. “When the reviews come out we see a lift, except with Meryl we didn’t get a lift”, he said, referring to Meryl Tankard, who choreographed the company’s first season this year. The company began the year with “zero deficit. The responsibility is on our shoulders.”

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From darkness to light in the cauldron of souls

Sunday, July 20th, 2008

Three o’clock Sunday morning, chilly and wet underfoot, with a watery moon overhead. Most of the estimated 150,000 pilgrims contentedly crammed into the newly declared Southern Cross Sanctuary are trying to sleep. But it is not easy.

Generators throb. Every now and then, emergency vehicles go wah wahing off into the night. Piercing floodlights and big screens turn a night that earlier twinkled softly with candlelight into premature day.

And everywhere, bobbing across a vast sea of sleeping bags, tents, cardboard shelters and multiple occupancy accommodations made out of commandeered crash barriers and tarpaulins, pilgrims are moving.

Or merely roaming restlessly, making friends, giving and receiving hugs, joining conversations, making confessions.

By morning, Father Joseph Kodiyan, from Kerala, in southern India, one of several priests sitting on white plastic chairs, or in the dewy dirt, outside the Missionaries of Charity marquee, has heard dozens, from east and west.

Human nature, he says, is similar the world over. “There are always issues with money and women sexy.” But like many Westerners, he suggests, most Sydneysiders are not God-fearing.

“They think creature comforts will give them joy. It is an illusion,” he says taking his interviewer’s hand. “This is why so many of them come to India, looking for the meaning their lives at home are lacking.”

Several hundred metres away, almost lost in the maze of race railings, sand breaks and crash barriers, Iraqi Catholics are patiently posing for pictures taken in front of a bloody cross, by a stream of fellow pilgrims.

Michael Butres and Lara Kiryakos, who now live in Sydney, explain that since the fall of Saddam Hussein, Catholics, who are mainly from northern Iraq, near Ninevah, have been increasingly persecuted.

He has spent his savings to come to Sydney. He has probably lost his job. He has walked with thousands of others across the Harbour Bridge from North Sydney, near the Mary MacKillop Memorial Chapel. He has seen, on several occasions, the Pope, who despite his monotonic, Teutonic drawl, and sometimes highly technical message, proves again at Saturday night’s vigil to be the only person who can reduce the masses to silence.

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Sewing up the baby business

Friday, July 18th, 2008

It wasn’t that long ago that women had to resign from their jobs when they became pregnant to stay at home and look after the children.

Returning to work after having a child is now generally the norm but some mothers are deciding to go it alone and set up their own businesses.

Emma Isaacs is president of the Sydney chapter of Entrepreneurs’ Organisation, a global group for entrepreneurs with more than 7000 members worldwide, and chief executive of Business Chicks, a national networking community for women in business.

Isaacs says: “When I joined the Entrepreneurs’ Organisation three years ago our membership was 10percent female. We’ve now almost doubled that because we’ve strategically targeted women and continue to do so.

“A lot of women resolve to go out on their own. It’s not difficult to set up a business and with the flexibility, creative control, and choices, it’s an attractive option.

”It’s also easier these days to find entrepreneurial female role models which prompts would-be moguls to explore starting their own business.”

Starting a business that makes the most of the burgeoning demand for baby wear, baby toys and baby entertainment is becoming increasingly popular. After all, kitting out and entertaining a baby is expensive, a fact mothers know very well.

Here are three examples of entrepreneurial women who are getting in on the action.

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Carriage companies compete for tourists’ business

Thursday, July 17th, 2008

As a city heralded for its cowboys and culture, one essential aspect of Fort Worth’s charm is the occasional clip-clop of hooves down Main Street.

Five carriage companies currently are licensed by the city’s Department of Transportation to serve Fort Worth and often can be seen waiting in front of the Worthington Hotel on weekends or weaving around traffic with bridal parties waving to passing cars.

Tracy Pratt is one businesswoman who capitalizes off tourists and local interest in horses, as an owner of Brazos Carriage Co. Pratt’s business is a recent addition to the companies that serve downtown. Brazos  Carriage was established in 2004 and the business has been operating primarily in Granbury.

During Pratt’s previous experiences riding through Downtown for scheduled events, such as weddings or funerals, her interest was piqued as she saw the existing companies blossom off Downtown clientele.

“We’re not in a nasty competition by any means – there’s enough business to go around,” Pratt said. “The thing with Downtown is that we all have to distinguish ourselves as being the elite service next to the other guy.”

The Ground Transportation Coordinator for Fort Worth’s Department of Transportation, Jerald Taylor, said there is no limit to the number of companies that may operate in the area between Lancaster Avenue and Weatherford Street and between Henderson Street and Interstate 35W.

When Billie Cate, owner of Classic Carriages, started operating Downtown in 1987, Fort Worth was a one-horse – or carriage company – town. She applied to the city to create a parking spot in front of the Worthington Hotel where she and her horses could wait for customers without being hassled by traffic.

Now, Cate said the city deemed this spot a parking area for all carriage companies, which, she said, causes a crowded confusion for customers who can’t tell which buggy belongs to which company now that there are several companies.

Though some customers who hop into a carriage on a whim might not have a preference for a certain carriage company, Cate emphasized the importance of knowing who a client is riding with.

“This is not like choosing ice cream,” Cate said. “This is putting your family in a vehicle in high traffic with a live animal.”

While the city requires drivers to take a defensive driving course as well as a drug test and carriages to meet with inspection standards, Cate said customers should do some homework before going for a ride.

Taylor said he hasn’t heard any reports of accidents or customer complaints since he started in the Fort Worth transportation department in 2000.

“Carriages are required to be inspected annually and horses are required to have vaccinations, plus every so often a random carriage inspection might pop up,” Taylor said.

Still, Pratt said she looks forward to joining the carriage business Downtown and working the job she loves.

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MMI Provides Advice for Coping with Financial Hardship

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

Money Management International (MMI), the nation’s largest nonprofit credit and debt counseling and education firm, announced today the results of a survey designed to measure consumer sentiment and coping mechanisms in light of the current economic instability.

While experts are hesitant to define the current economic situation as a recession, 86 percent of respondents are feeling the effects of an economic downturn. Coping mechanisms for financial hardship vary widely, from eating out less to dipping into savings accounts or relying on credit cards. Interestingly, when asked about the most extreme sacrifice they’d make if the economic downturn continues, nearly half of respondents (41 percent) indicated they would take on an additional job.

Unfortunately, a second job may not be a viable option for many consumers. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the unemployment rate shot up in May by the highest amount in over 20 years, and has remained steady at 5.5 percent, up from 4.6 percent a year ago. Even more troubling, the number of people out of work for more than six months has increased by 37 percent since June of 2007.

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Cate Blanchett’S Kids Step Behind The Camera

Monday, June 16th, 2008

Actress Cate Blanchett’s kids were thrilled when Steven Spielberg gave them the chance to step behind the camera and direct their mother in the new Indiana Jones movie.

Blanchett stars in Indiana Jones And The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull alongside Harrison Ford and often brought her children Dashiell, seven, and Roman, four, onto the set.

And director Spielberg was so happy to have to the young family there, he let the kids take on his job and direct a scene featuring their mum.

“Steve was so welcoming to my family. And that was really special.”

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Pets Jobs Cars Homes RVs Stuff MORE

Monday, June 16th, 2008

Another aggravated assault over the weekend has landed a 19-year-old Boise man behind bars.

Boise Police were called to Longmont Avenue after a man and woman say a man entered their residence, and battered them both.

The male victim was taken to a hospital with several facial injuries that looked serious, but were not life threatening.

Witnesses say the suspect threw a brick at the male victim’s vehicle as he ran from the house.

Cate has been charged with aggravated battery, burglary, malicious injury to property, stalking and battery.

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Food wars and the challenge for peace-makers

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

Everyday concerns of the population rarely reach the negotiating table, in part because the economic and social problems in conflict-ridden societies are extremely complex, involve many actors and can only be resolved in the long term.

So what happens when people are driven to kill one another for food? It’s a critical question to ask as the world faces a sudden and unexpected food price crisis that is threatening to plunge millions back into poverty.

The sharp spike in food prices this year has already generated violence. Food riots in parts of Africa and the Caribbean have created social and political instability. In rice-growing countries like India, Vietnam and Thailand, hoarding has begun with export bans already in place, creating inter-state friction.

Burma’s rice-growing capacity has been devastated by Cyclone Nargis, which will add to price pressures in the coming months.

This is largely a crisis born of inflation and other market factors rather than fundamental shortages. Prices for the benchmark Thai variety of rice, a food staple across much of Asia, have increased threefold in a year, reports the Asian Development Bank. Meat prices have risen by 60% in Bangladesh in the year ending in March, and by 45% in Cambodia and 30% in the Philippines.

With this sharp increase in the price of basic staples, people are already hoarding, stealing and fighting over scarce supplies. The World Food Programme calls it a “silent tsunami.”

The threat of conflict is real, both within societies where the numbers impoverished by higher grain prices is already high, and also between states as the trend towards commercial liberalisation and conglomeration is suddenly reversed and replaced by subsidies, price-fixing cartels and export curbs.

In Indonesia, retired general recently warned: “If students demonstrate it’s not a worry, but if hungry people take to the streets, now that’s dangerous.”

Hunger causes conflict when people feel they have nothing to lose and are willing to kill their neighbours over scarce resources. The peasant wars of the late 20th century in Central and South America and the wars that sprung from famine in Nigeria, Ethiopia and Sudan, are grim reminders of man’s most basic instinct, which is to fight to survive.

The trouble is that in terms of resolving conflict, we have come to rely less on material remedies and more on political artifice. Many of the internal conflicts that have been peacefully resolved in recent years only superficially addressed the material seeds of conflict. Peace agreements have been elite affairs where leaders of armed groups and governments reached an understanding on how to share power within a common state.

This approach is a sensible first step toward conflict resolution: by convincing the people inciting violence to lay down their arms, it becomes possible to start designing a wider range of policies addressing socio-economic issues.

However, typically, the socio-economic changes and the economic reconstruction and development the public was expecting trickled down slowly, if at all. Aceh remains one of the poorest parts of Indonesia, as does Mindanao in the southern Philippines - two areas of Southeast Asia where peace has been negotiated.

When hunger drives people into conflict, we might presume that peace-making will simply be a question of providing food. We would be mistaken. In fact, the experience of humanitarian aid agencies in the 1970s and ’80s in Africa was that food aid tends to fuel conflict, as the combatants seek to harness the supply of nutrition to the goals of war.

Experts tell us that farmers will eventually adjust the supply of food to cope with higher demand so that prices stabilise. More encouragingly, there are signs that decades of improving cooperation between states is stimulating a collective urge to resolve the crisis. The sharing of technology is key, says Kofi Annan, the former UN secretary-general. He believes that farmers in Africa could double food output in five to 10 years if rich countries partner them in a “Green Revolution” for a long-term solution to the continent’s food crisis.

But realistically, trade agreements and technological advances are slow-moving transformations.

In the meantime, officials in India warn that the food price crisis could plunge millions of people into poverty in a country that is already battling an internal Marxist insurgency that draws support from impoverished and landless peasants.

In Bangladesh, where the soaring cost price of staples has forced the marginally poor to give up meat and rice, there is a significantly increased risk of conflict in an already fractured polity.

The immediate challenge, therefore, is to prevent and resolve conflict arising from the food crisis. This places a significant burden on the international community to swiftly respond to outbreaks of violence.

But if people driven to war by hunger are less inclined to compromise, this makes the task of peace-making rather more challenging.

For one thing, conflict fuelled by hunger will be more widespread, exerting strain on international agencies involved in peace-keeping and humanitarian work. Food security is already fragile in many African countries and a protracted conflict tends to drift across borders, as we have seen in Sudan and Congo.

Peace-makers need to be more aware of, and recognise, the socio-economic roots of conflict. They should incorporate in peace agreements remedies for the population’s grievances and to enlist the international community’s support behind their implementation.

Such remedies should include pledges by leaders to address in a meaningful manner contentious issues such as land distribution, job creation, and racial and ethnic discrimination leading to socio-economic inequality.

The ethnic and religious wars of the last half of the 20th century have perhaps lulled us into a false sense of security.

We have grown accustomed to resolving conflict by forging political accommodation and compromise in situations where protagonists had much to lose materially if they kept on fighting.

But in a world where environmental and market pressures can treble the price of staple commodities in a matter of a few months, it is harder to find the grounds for compromise.

This calls for more effective negotiating skills, both domestically and internationally, bilaterally as well as multilaterally, to resolve these crises.

Markets must be kept open to assist with the flow of goods to crisis situations, and in affected countries solutions must be found that address both elite and popular grievances.

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New Web sites make it easy to spy on friends

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

Armed with new and established Web sites, people are uncovering surprising details about colleagues, lovers and strangers that often don’t turn up in a simple Internet search. Though none of these sites can reveal anything that isn’t already available publicly, they can make it much easier to find. And most of them are free.

Some people have come across dirt on their loved ones without even looking for it. Doug Orlyk, a 42-year-old librarian in Bensenville, Ill., recently turned to ZabaSearch to find his new boyfriend’s address so that he could send him a card. Instead, he found out that the boyfriend had been lying about his age - he was 43 years old, not 35 as he had claimed to be on the dating site where Orlyk had met him. “I thought, ‘You’re a liar! You’re older than I am!’ ” Orlyk recalls. His new relationship ended soon thereafter.

Others rely on the Web to gather information on the job. Art Feagles, a technology specialist at the Cate School, a private high school in Carpinteria, Calif., runs the computer system for the alumni and development office. But his colleagues, who raise funds for the school, keep tapping him for another tech skill: researching potential donors online.

Last year, for example, Feagles wanted to learn more about a potential donor by using the person’s address. So he searched for it in Google Inc.’s Google Earth aerial-mapping program and saw that the address was for a golf-course condominium. From that, he gathered that this was probably a second home, and therefore the person must be rich - and a good prospect for a donation.

The Web sites, for their part, say they’re merely trying to provide services that people will find useful and entertaining. Ray Chen, a cofounder of Spokeo, says he and his partners “don’t want to stalk people.” Instead, he says, “we’re just trying to make something that’s fun to use.” Zaba CEO Nick Matzorkis says the dissemination of public information online is “a 21st-century reality with or without ZabaSearch.”

Larry Yu, a Google spokesman, says the use of Google Earth and Maps to glean personal information about others “is not the intent of the products.” He touts their other uses, such as helping users visualize driving directions.

Many online sleuths start by signing up for an account on social-networking sites like Facebook and News Corp.’s MySpace, where they can search for individuals by name. An acquaintance’s home address can be dug up using ZabaSearch or another public-records search engine; that can then be plugged into Google Maps, where the Street View feature might show an image of the address from the street, or Zillow, which can estimate the value of the home. Those trying to make a business contact might try Jigsaw, which invites users to provide phone numbers, e-mail addresses, job titles and other information from business cards they’ve collected.

The bad news, for those who find themselves targeted by snoops: There is no foolproof way to protect yourself from embarrassing personal-data leaks. But you can avoid many mishaps by going to the root of the leak - that is, by keeping individual pieces of personal data from being made public in the first place. If you don’t want others to see your Amazon wish list or the photos you’ve stored on Flickr, visit those sites’ privacy pages and adjust your settings accordingly.

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