06/30/2011 (5:44 am)

OMB approves 10,000-unit plan for Downsview lands

Filed under: money, online |

Longtime residents lost their bid to curb development in Downsview Park as the Ontario Municipal Board approved a plan for up to 10,000 new residential units on Wednesday.

The development will help fund the transformation of the 572-acre former military base into an urban park.

Residents concerned about traffic congestion and loss of green space requested that planners cut the previously approved 8,300 units by 830 in two particular areas. Instead, the board approved an amended city plan for an additional 1,700.

06/28/2011 (8:44 am)

FAA pursues Boeing fine over 777’s oxygen hoses

Filed under: real estate, term |

The Federal Aviation Administration is pursuing a penalty of more than $1 million against Boeing Co. because it says the airplane manufacturer didn’t follow its own instructions for installing oxygen systems on the 777.

The instruction turned out to be unnecessary and Boeing deleted it, a Boeing spokeswoman said.

The FAA said on Monday that it found the problems when it inspected nine new planes between April and October 2010. Hoses for the passenger oxygen system were installed at a sharper angle than allowed, the FAA said.

The system feeds the masks that allow passengers to get oxygen if the cabin loses pressure in flight.

Boeing spokeswoman Alana Broadbent said the hose would have had a 2 degree bend if installed according to instructions. Because the instructions were unclear, some were bent as much as 10 degrees, she said.

However, Boeing tested the hoses and found no problem even when they were bent as much as 10 degrees and put under double the pressure they needed to withstand. So, instead of requiring a 2-degree angle, Boeing deleted the instruction because it’s not possible to install the part at more than a 10 degree angle anyway, she said.

She said other 777s in the factory were inspected. Because there was no safety problem with the hoses, 777s that had been made previously were not reinspected, she said. For the same reason, Boeing did not issue a service bulletin, which advises airplane operators to inspect or fix problems discovered after a plane has entered service.

The FAA said it can charge $25,000 for each mistake, and it counts as a new mistake every time the misinstalled part passed inspection. There were 46 such inspections, which would have totaled $1.15 million if FAA sought the maximum penalty for each one. The FAA offered to compromise with Boeing for $1.05 million.

The FAA said Boeing had failed to correct a known problem in installing the system.

“There is no excuse for waiting to take action when it comes to safety,” said Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood.

Source

06/26/2011 (6:44 pm)

McConnell: Talking about tax revenue not helpful

Filed under: legal, money |

The Senate’s top Republican says throwing more tax revenue into the mix isn’t the answer as budget talks move into a new stage.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell tells ABC’s “This Week” that proposals to seek more tax revenue won’t pass Congress.

McConnell is set to meet with President Barack Obama on Monday evening, and he says the focus should be on proposals that can pass Congress.

Democrats want to raise some revenue by closing loopholes and trimming tax breaks for big companies and wealthy people payday loan lenders.

The Democratic leader of the Senate, Harry Reid, is meeting with Obama on Monday morning.

Talks between congressional leaders of both parties ended last week when Republicans walked out amid an impasse over the question of taxes.

Source

06/25/2011 (3:48 am)

LaBarge shareholders approve sale to Ducommun

Filed under: bank, mortgage |

Shareholders of electronics manufacturer LaBarge Inc. approved the sale of the Ladue-based company to Ducommun Inc. at a special meeting held today.

Ducommun, an aerospace supplier based in Carson, Calif., announced in April that it was buying LaBarge for $340 million. The sale is expected to close on or about June 28.

LaBarge, which has 40 local employees, will become part of Ducommun’s Technologies subsidiary, which will be renamed Ducommun LaBarge Technologies. The subsidiary will be headquartered in the St. Louis area, according to a LaBarge spokeswoman.

Source

06/23/2011 (12:24 pm)

Hydro One

Filed under: bank, finance |

Steve Taylor and his father Wray have close to $250,000 worth of solar power panels sitting in a field near Strathroy, Ont., that can

06/21/2011 (9:36 pm)

Calls grow for Greek Marshall Plan

Filed under: legal, mortgage |

As budget cuts and tax increases push Greece deeper into recession, politicians, economists and business leaders are calling for a new approach _ a Marshall Plan that would jolt its economy back to life and give its citizens new hope.

Debt-ridden Greece is currently negotiating a second rescue package, on top of the euro110 billion ($158 billion) it was granted a year ago. However, those loans depend on harsh austerity measures and an overhaul of Greece’s economy, which are designed to make the country fit in the long-term, but will likely worsen citizens’ financial pain in the short-term.

At the same time, billions of euros foreseen for Greece are languishing in EU coffers, as the country struggles to come up with its part of the funding.

“You can’t tighten the thumb screws indefinitely,” warned Andreas Rees, an UniCredit economist based in Munich. Yet more austerity might drown the economy, lead to lower tax intakes and ultimately backfire and drive the debt burden yet higher.

Already, the Greek economy is expected to shrink 3.7 percent this year, following a decline of 4.5 percent in 2010 and 2 percent in 2009, while unemployment has shot above 16 percent. Citizens who have held on to their jobs have lost much of their pension, had their salaries slashed and face more job cuts in the years to come as Greece slims down its public sector.

As angry demonstrations and defecting lawmakers endanger the passage of the vital new reforms in parliament, politicians are increasingly realizing that Greece’s people will need some prospect of a better future to make the belt-tightening more bearable.

Lawmakers in the European Parliament, economists and business leaders _ including the heads of German heavyweights Deutsche Bank and Allianz _ have increased their calls recently for a stimulus package for Greece, similar to the U.S.-funded Marshall Plan that helped create Germany’s “Wirtschaftswunder” _ or “economic miracle” _ after the Second World War.

“It is very important to supplement our macroeconomic efforts with something credible,” European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said Tuesday, referring to the eurozone’s rescue loans. “If we are going to get benefits in the long-term we have to already start mobilizing our resources for more practical purposes so that Greek people become aware that there is hope and that we are not just asking them to make sacrifices.”

Just days before a summit of European Union leaders, at which Greece’s imploding financing will be top of the agenda, Barroso urged the bloc’s members to help the country get access to billions of euros in EU funds.

Of the euro20.2 billion in development funds budgeted to help Greece catch up with the richer regions in the 27-country EU between 2007 and 2013, only euro4.9 billion have actually been paid out. The rest is still sitting unused in EU coffers as Greece struggles to show it can put them to work efficiently and come up with its 50 percent of the funding for any proposed project.

Barroso said the European Commission, which manages the funds, could accelerate payments and frontload projects to give Greece quick access to about euro1 billion _ a small fraction of what is available _ to boost job creation and help make Greek businesses more competitive no fax needed payday loans.

That money would come with “tight supervision” and increased technical assistance for Greek authorities from the Commission and other EU states, Barroso stressed.

However, even international help to set up projects that qualify for EU support would not get rid of the problem Greece is facing in co-financing them at a time when government spending is being slashed.

Jean-Claude Juncker, the prime minister of Luxembourg who also chairs the meetings of the 17 eurozone finance ministers, has called for the co-financing requirement to be waved for Greece, and the idea appears to be gaining momentum.

“I don’t exclude that this is something that could be discussed” at the EU summit this week, said an official at the European Commission. The official declined to be named because Barroso’s push for easier access to EU funds for Greece is still in its early stages.

Some alterntive plans already exist. Jorgo Chazimarkakis, a member of the European Parliament for the German Free Democrats, has proposed a euro30 billion stimulus package for Greece, dubbed the “Hercules Plan.” The package would combine the EU regional funds for the coming years with one fourth of the proceeds of Greece’s highly unpopular euro50 billion privatization program.

“That would also set an even higher incentive for the Greeks to go ahead with the privatization,” said Chazimarkakis, who is half Greek, adding that any stimulus plan has to come with EU officials overseeing how the funds are spent locally.

To get around the co-financing problem, Chazimarkakis proposed low-interest loans from the European Investment Bank that could be repaid once Greece is back in shape.

However, the plan faces some significant obstacles. While the EIB regularly provides loans for specific projects, sharing half the burden of Chazimarkakis’s Herkules plan could well put too much strain on the bank, which last year only had euro72 billion to finance projects in all 27 member states.

More importantly, the EU’s poorer states, which struggle as much as Greece with the co-financing requirement, would likely balk at any attempts to soften it for one country only. Greece’s per capita income may only be 89 percent of EU average, but states like Bugaria and Estonia, which have managed their budgets much more tightly, have per-head incomes that lie 57 percent and 35 percent below average respectively.

What no one denies is that Greece is in deep trouble, as it now has to convince not only the markets that it has the wherewithal to get its finances back under control, but also its own citizens that the efforts are worth it.

“Foremost you need a strategy for the time after the imminent debt crisis,” said Ulrich Kater, chief economist of Germany’s DekaBank. “And that has to be a growth strategy.”

Source

06/19/2011 (4:52 pm)

New report shows early chaos at Japan nuke plant

Filed under: money, news |

A new report says Japan’s tsunami-ravaged nuclear plant was so unprepared for the disaster that workers had to bring protective gear and an emergency manual from distant buildings and borrow equipment from a contractor.

The report by plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. was released over the weekend and is based on interviews of workers and plant data. It portrays chaos amid the desperate and ultimately unsuccessful battle to protect the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant from meltdown Faxless payday loans.

The report shows that workers struggled with unfamiliar equipment and fear of radiation exposure.

TEPCO has been criticized for dragging its feet on venting and sea water cooling _ the two crucial steps that experts say could have mitigated the damage.

Source

06/18/2011 (7:04 pm)

Philippines’ Aquino halts some foreign-funded work

Filed under: bank, uk |

Philippine President Benigno Aquino III is canceling or reconsidering foreign-funded infrastructure projects worth $2 billion, saying that although his country badly needs improvements, the contracts are overpriced and technically deficient.

He told The Associated Press in an interview Friday that he has canceled a Belgian-funded lake dredging project, and ordered a restudy of a Chinese-financed rail line and renegotiation of a French-funded port work.

Aquino has been reviewing infrastructure contracts signed under his predecessor, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, whose administration has been accused of corruption. He did not accuse anyone involved in the three projects of corruption but said dredging in particular “is one of the most notorious practices for those who do corrupt practices … so I have a tendency to be allergic to such projects.”

Aquino canceled the 18.7 billion peso ($430 million) Belgian project to dredge Laguna Lake, the country’s largest fresh water lake, on the southern edge of Manila.

He said the project was supposed to increase the lake’s water-holding capacity to ease flooding and provide potable water to the sprawling metropolis, but that the plan was to simply move 424 million cubic feet (12 million cubic meters) of silt from one portion of the lake and dump it on another portion over three years.

“That’s where it fell through,” he said.

He said it would be better to spend that money for his government’s 21 billion peso ($483 million) conditional cash transfer program to give financial assistance to the poorest 2.3 million Filipino families.

Aquino’s year-old administration is fighting graft while wooing foreign investors to partner with his government to boost the economy and fulfill his promise of easing poverty.

“We thank the foreign governments that have been assisting us,” he said. “We think it is incumbent upon us to be responsible with their kindness in ensuring that these projects are worthwhile personal loans for people with bad credit.”

He said he wanted to ensure that such projects would also allow the country to repay its loans to foreign creditors in the long run.

He said a 12 billion peso ($276 million) French project to build 72 steel roll-on-roll-off ports around the archipelago will be studied because it was overpriced by about 200 percent, and the country could do with just 36 ports.

He said the project calls for building ports in unprotected coves mostly facing the Pacific Ocean on the country’s east, where most typhoons originate, thereby voiding the warranty stipulated in the contract.

He said he ordered renegotiation of a rail project linking Manila to a northern airport complex, financed by a loan from China, principally because of the cost, which has ballooned to over $1.3 billion. He said the existing plan is to have the line carry only passengers, no cargo, and for it to use narrow-gauge rail, which would cost more because such systems are no longer standard and would have to be custom-made.

Aquino, who won last year’s election by a landslide on a strong anti-poverty and anti-corruption platform, did not directly accuse anyone or the companies involved in the projects.

However, contracts that have been found to be overpriced and investigated are often found to be tainted with corruption. After a Senate probe, Arroyo was forced to cancel one such contract, for a proposed Chinese-financed national broadband network.

Aquino ousted the Arroyo-appointed graft prosecutor for failing to act on complaints under the previous administration. He is expected to name a replacement soon.

Source

06/16/2011 (11:34 am)

Greek PM to announce new Cabinet

Filed under: finance, mortgage |

Greece’s prime minister is to reshuffle his cabinet and seek a Parliamentary confidence vote in his new government as he struggles to push through an unpopular new austerity package.

George Papandreou’s reshuffle Thursday comes a day after talks with opposition parties over forming a coalition government collapsed and anti-austerity riots hit central Athens. A confidence vote is expected Sunday.

The five-year austerity bill must be passed by Parliament this month if Greece is to continue receiving funds from its euro110 billion ($157.21 billion) international bailout.

Papandreou has not indicated which Cabinet posts will change hands, but many expect him to replace his finance minister, George Papaconstantinou, who handled previous budget cuts under the bailout agreement.

Source

06/15/2011 (4:53 am)

Pensions: Retirement income now up in the air

Filed under: online, technology |

Are you one of the lucky third? This blessed and declining group comprises the roughly 30 per cent of Canadian employees hanging on for dear life to their defined-benefit pension plans.

Among them are striking workers at Air Canada and U.S. Steel Canada in Hamilton, who want to retain DB plans in which the employer guarantees a retirement income based on years of service and earnings.

The percentage of employees covered by DB plans has plunged from 41 per cent in 1991 to barely 30 per cent today.

At the same time, the number of troubled DB plans has been rising. In 2008, at the height of the market meltdown, Statistics Canada reported that 75 per cent of workplace pensions (most of them DB plans) had unfunded liabilities, meaning their liabilities were greater than their assets. By 2009, the figure had risen to 83 per cent.

An underfunded or unfunded DB pension plan forces a company to pay out benefits to workers from other sources or spend money it doesn

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