truesee's Blog

City will spend $2,000,000 on dinner for workers who stay late

City spending 2 million on dinner pay for workers who stay late

Kathleen Lucadamo
DAILY NEWS CITY HALL BUREAU

 

Sunday, February 21st 2010, 4:00 AM

 

That's a lot of pizza. The city plans to dish out $2 million on dinner for city workers who stay late. Cross Bronx Pizza, 2170 Cross Bronx Expressway, offers ginormous pies and slices.
Showalter for News

That's a lot of pizza. The city plans to dish out $2 million on dinner for city workers who stay late. Cross Bronx Pizza, 2170 Cross Bronx Expressway, offers ginormous pies and slices.

That's a lot of pizza.

The city plans to dish out $2 million on dinner for city workers who stay late during the next two years, budget documents show.

The so-called "supper money" kicks in after two hours of overtime for all unionized civilian workers, except teachers, under a little-known agreement that left many veterans scratching their head.

"I've heard of it but not in city government," said one longtime city employee.

Half of the funds are set aside for Emergency Service Unit technicians who are entitled to one meal allowance - $8.25 - a shift because they aren't allowed to stop for lunch.

"You don't want to take them out of service and say, 'We aren't going to take that heart attack run because we are going to have a hamburger,'" said city Labor Commissioner Jim Hanley.

Nearly $140,000 is expected to be spent by the Administration for Children's Services this year, and the Civilian Compliant Review Board is budgeted for $35,000. ACS child protective workers are often required to stay late, officials said.

The dining dollars are set by each agency and generally based on previous spending for meals.

Workers - who see the cash in their paycheck, not actual food - are supposed to put in for meal money only if they agree to take comp time instead of paid overtime, Hanley said.

But the rules are fuzzy, even to agency bosses.

One agency confirmed they give employees meal money in addition to paid overtime but asked to not to be named when told of the rules. Agencies must return meal money that isn't used.

The meal money dates back to 1968, when labor leaders drafted the citywide agreement, a contract creating rules for 150,000 unionized civilians, Hanley said.

The current allowance - from $8.25 for two consecutive hours of overtime to $12.75 for 15 consecutive hours of overtime - hasn't been raised since 1999, the agreement shows.

Although Bloomberg is asking agencies to do more with less and pushing unions to give up benefits to plug a $4 billion budget gap, the meal money isn't something officials are fighting to remove.

"It's not one of the front-burner issues," Hanley said.

Nonunion workers - mainly managers and political appointees - were surprised their counterparts are getting a free lunch.

"Usually if we are here late, I just wait until I get home and have a sandwich," said one worker.

Uniformed services, including police and fire departments, and teachers don't follow the rules of the citywide agreement and can't cash in on the meal perk. 

 Asked why those unions aren't entitled to food pay, Hanley said, "We bargain well for the city on behalf of our taxpayers."

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2010/02/21/2010-02-21_city_chewing_up_2m_workers_who_stay_late_get_dinner_pay_in_little_known_deal.html#ixzz0gE2t4Rsv

Entry #1,819

Fast-food breakfast sales decline as fewer head to work

Fast-food breakfast sales decline as fewer head to work

Ylan Q. Mui

Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, February 21, 2010

The nation's high unemployment rate has thrown millions of people out of work, scared shoppers away from stores and threatened the economic recovery. Now it's taking a bite out of breakfast.

Breakfast sales had grown at a ravenous pace during the boom years as busy workers scarfed down sausage biscuits on the way to the office, fueling a $57 billion business and accounting for as much as a quarter of sales at some fast-food chains. Chains opened earlier and expanded their morning menus to accommodate the traffic as lunch and dinner sales flatlined.

But as the jobless rate hit 26-year highs fewer people headed to work, and even those who did worried about their spending. So they poured bowls of cereal at home or simply slept in, putting breakfast on the back burner.

"Typically, if you're unemployed, you're not getting up at six and not going through the drive-thru," said Jeffrey Bernstein, an analyst at Barclays Capital. "There is a direct correlation between unemployment and breakfast sales."

In the five years before the recession hit, breakfast sales jumped 64 percent, according to NPD Group, a consumer behavior research firm, making it one of the fastest-growing sectors in the industry. But traffic slowed as the economy tanked and the ranks of the jobless soared. By the time unemployment hit 10 percent in the fall, breakfast traffic was down 4 percent.

This month, executives at Burger King reported that traffic rose during every meal except breakfast in the most recent quarter. They blamed unemployment for the falloff. McDonald's chief executive Jim Skinner has said that breakfast sales at its 14,000 U.S. restaurants were rocky in areas with high unemployment despite overall growth. Wendy's jumped into the breakfast bandwagon three years ago, only to end up scuttling its menu amid poor sales. It hopes to relaunch the menu next year.

"When people start feeling economic stress, they tend to trade down," said Dennis Lombardi, executive vice president at WD Partners, a food consulting firm. "When they lose their job, they trade out."

The decline is also part of the broader trend of Americans eating more meals at home because of tough economic times. Food consulting firm Technomic last month lowered its annual forecast for restaurant sales to a drop of 1.6 percent, driven in part by weaker fast-food sales.

But breakfast stands out because of its explosive growth before the recession. In addition, it is extremely profitable: Coffee is mostly water, and eggs are cheaper than beef. Bernstein estimated that breakfast sales at McDonald's accounted for about a quarter of its revenue but 35 percent of its profit.

Kathy Hasty, senior director of hot foods at 7-Eleven, said breakfast at her chain traditionally held up well during recessions even as other meals suffered -- but other downturns didn't come with double-digit unemployment. By late last year, sales of breakfast sandwiches were down 8 percent and she could fathom only one reason why.

"We have never seen it as significant as it is now," Hasty said.

Lonnell Buford, 38, of Montgomery County used to stop by the McDonald's near his Beltsville office every morning to order a steak, egg and cheese bagel, orange juice and coffee. But after his firm lost a contract in September, Buford lost his job as a forklift operator and had to move in with his mother. He cut back his McDonald's breakfast outings to twice a week and now orders from the dollar menu.

"I'm on a budget," he said on a recent morning as he finished a $2 meal of coffee and a sausage biscuit at a McDonald's on New York Avenue NW. "I need to hold on to the little bit that I have."

Cultural historian Barry Glassner said Americans have an unusually complex relationship with food, influenced by convenience and status. We want our food quick and easy, and at the same time we use it to show our rank in the pecking order. Fast-food breakfasts, he said, can fulfill both purposes.

"In America, it's considered a mark of our industriousness that we're very efficient in our meals," said Glassner, a professor at the University of Southern California. "In other times and places, you would be seen as a little crazy."

Restaurants are trying to reinvigorate breakfast sales with new menus, lower prices and even giveaways. 7-Eleven launched a sunny ad campaign to combat the morning meal moratorium with a new product: a sausage, egg and cheese burrito rolled last month at two for $2 or $1.19 each. That's a deal compared with its cheapest breakfast sandwich, which cost $2.49. Hot food sales jumped 6 percent after the launch, the company said.

McDonald's introduced a breakfast version of its popular dollar menu last month featuring five items: a sausage burrito, sausage McMuffin, sausage biscuit, hash browns and coffee. The $1 breakfast menu was designed to give the chain "a strong national voice" on the meal at a time when customers are concerned about value.

Restaurant chain Denny's gave away about 2 million free Grand Slam breakfasts recently in a nod to the tough economy, particularly for the 44 percent of its customers who make less than $45,000. The company said breakfast sales held steady while dinner and late-night dining drove down sales at established locations by 7 percent in the third quarter.

"People are so thankful for having an opportunity to have a free meal," Denny's chief executive Nelson Marchioli said.

For some newly unemployed, the bitter irony is that they have never had more time to savor their morning meal.

Christopher Kent, 39, of Capitol Hill said he was laid off from his consulting firm in August, the first time he has ever been unemployed. When he was working, Kent was up before 7 a.m. and ate a quick breakfast in front of his computer as he sent e-mails and organized his day.

But now he sleeps in an hour later. He has been known to lounge in his pajamas with his newborn baby until 2 p.m. He sips his coffee, reads the entire newspaper and cooks breakfast. After all, he has plenty of time.

"I make a pretty mean waffle," Kent said.

Entry #1,817

Gun instructor shoots student in the foot

NRA gun instructor shoots student by accident

Instructor’s gun goes off, striking student in foot

 

Eloísa Ruano González

Orlando Sentinel

12:24 a.m. EST

February 21, 2010

A gun instructor accidently shot a student in the foot Saturday during an NRA class to receive certification to carry a concealed weapon, Orlando police said.

Robert Frauman Jr., 50, was taken to Florida Hospital after instructor Michael Phillips' firearm discharged about 11:45 a.m., police said.

Phillips, 32, could not be reached for comment. The accident happened at Summit Church, located in a former movie theater near he Fashion Square mall.

The bullet went through a table before it hit Frauman, said Kristy-Lee Lawley, the church's communications director. She said Frauman, a member of the church, was "recovering well" and the bullet didn't break any bones.

Frauman was one of three students in the class, which was not a church-sponsored event, Lawley said. She said the church offered an upstairs conference room for free after some church members requested to have the class there. Lawley said the church is empty on Saturdays and this was the first class of its kind there.

"We won't be having anything like that in our church in the future," Lawley said.

The church with 2,500 members is headed by Pastor Isaac Hunter, son of the Rev. Joel Hunter, senior pastor of the Longwood-based megachurch Northland, A Church Distributed. The churches are not affiliated.

The NRA has a rule against bringing ammunition into a class, said Tom Wagner, a NRA instructor in Orlando who was not involved in Saturday's shooting. He said the association has "no problem yanking a certification if the rules are being broken."

This was not the first time something's gone wrong during a gun demonstration in Orlando. In 2004, a special agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration shot himself in the thigh with a .40-caliber Glock pistol while talking to schoolchildren about gun safety.
Entry #1,816

Don't let nation's snow blind you on climate change

Feb. 20, 2010

Detroit Free

Don't let nation's snow blind you on climate change   

 

Buried under snow, Washington, D.C., and other mid-Atlantic regions have become showpieces for the folks who want to dispute the possibility of global warming. Not so much here, though, where southeast Michigan has tromped through a winter that has been extraordinarily ... average.

At 30 inches as of Friday, measured snowfall is 2.3 inches below normal; temperatures are running a bit above normal, including this month, which is 0.6 degrees warmer than average to date. And then there's the other side of the continent, where Canadians struggle to keep enough snow on the slopes in the Vancouver area to host Olympic events.

All of which reinforces how daily weather is irrelevant to discussions of climate change. Even on a warming globe, new low temperatures may occur and snow records may be set. Inexorably, though, carbon dioxide is building up in the atmosphere in finite and measurable quantities.

Scientists can only model so much about the global climate, and their predictions may prove wrong about what happens as greenhouse gases build up in the atmosphere. Moreover, as recently disclosed e-mails and other reports have indicated, there have been several slip-ups in how well the research has been reviewed and in the characterization of some data.

So it's important for continued and rigorous review of various climate studies, as it is in any scientific field. But it's also important to acknowledge that the long-term global trends are not suddenly reversing to suit the arguments of those who would prefer not to invest anything in countering potential climate change.

The stakes for future generations remain high, despite the D.C. area snowdrifts. And the effort to move beyond a carbon-based economy -- in which humans dig up fossil fuels that formed over millennia and burn them within a few centuries -- must continue for other reasons as well.

While oil and natural gas fields continue to be discovered, they exist in places that are increasingly difficult to reach. The era of cheap oil, in particular, is basically over. Coal becomes a "clean" fuel only at increasing expense.

So let it snow. But let's also unleash far more investment in new energy sources. Washingtonians getting stuck in snowbanks shouldn't have to mean everyone else has to get stuck in the status quo

Entry #1,815

Man tells deputies cocaine is really bubble gum

Fort Pierce man’s bubble gum in sock turns out to be cocaine, deputies say

 

Will Greenlee

TCPalm

12:01 p.m. EST

February 19, 2010

 

A 38-year-old Fort Pierce man who said he was carrying bubble gum in his sock was arrested after St. Lucie County Sheriff's investigators turned up baggies of cocaine there, according to a police report.

Derrick C. Anderson faces a felony possession of cocaine charge following the Wednesday afternoon incident.

Investigators said they stopped a white Ford in the area of Avenue O and North 12th Street after the front passenger was spotted not wearing a seatbelt.

Anderson appeared to be putting something under a seat and looked "very nervous," the report states.

A deputy patted him down and noted a bulge in his sock. Asked what was in his sock, Anderson said "bubble gum," according to the report.

A sock search turned up three small baggies of cocaine, authorities said.

Entry #1,813

Former inmate sues for $5,000,000 after being beaten for stealing 3 crackers

Former Rikers Island inmate sues city for $5M after being beaten for taking 3 crackers

Brendan Brosh
DAILY NEWS WRITER

 

Saturday, February 20th 2010, 4:00 AM

Three crackers can cost you 11 stitches at Rikers Island.

Former inmate Michael Carey is suing the city for $5 million, claiming a correction officer pummeled him for taking three crackers from the mess hall, according to a lawsuit filed in Bronx Supreme Court Friday.

Carey says an officer with the last name Mack punched him in the face, head and ear until he fell to the ground bleeding, requiring 11 stitches.

Mack, whose first name is not given in the suit, is also being sued for $1 million by Carey, who was serving 90 days for petty larceny, an official said.

A spokeswoman for the city's Law Department said the office hadn't been served legal papers yet.

"He alleges that he did nothing wrong," said Andrew Plasse, Carey's lawyer

Entry #1,812

Doctors leave spatula in woman's abdomen

Czech Doctors Leave Surgical Instrument in Patient

02/17/10 12:12PM

Mail Foreign Service 

A Czech woman is planning to sue a hospital where she was treated after X-rays revealed doctors had left a foot-long surgical spatula in her abdomen.

Blunder: A foot-long spatula type medical instrument was left inside Zdenka Kopeckova's abdomen after a gynaecological operation

Zdenka Kopeckova, 66, had been complaining of severe abdominal pain for five months after a gynecological operation at a hospital in the Southeastern Czech town of Ivancice.

 A 66-year-old Czech woman is suing a hospital after a foot-long medical tool was left inside her abdoment after a gynecological operation. Zdenka Kopeckova complained repeatedly of severe pain following the surgery, but she says she received no help from hospital staff.

Kopeckova claims that staff at the hospital tried to cover up the mistake by dismissing her complaints and recommending pain killers. She told London’s Daily Mail, "'I said that nobody helps me and I cannot live like this till the end of my life. 

"I'll get pills, have a glass of alcohol and hang myself."

Clinic head Jaromir Hrubes blamed "a series of individual failures" for the forgotten spatula and said four employees had been punished. 

The spatula was removed from Kopeckova’s stomach last week. 

Entry #1,811

Woman finds 32-year-old $17,500 check

Old check for $17,500 found in Lauderhill woman’s nightstand drawer

Insurance settlement was for 1976 accident under Brooklyn Bridge

Rafael A. Olmeda

Sun Sentinel

7:58 p.m. EST

February 18, 2010

LAUDERHILL - Barbara Cosgrove doesn't specifically remember who gave her the envelope in late January 1978. And she doesn't specifically remember tucking it away, unopened, in the bottom drawer of the nightstand in her bedroom.

All she knows for sure is that, 32 years later, she found the envelope, its edges eaten away by time, a slip of paper still inside waiting for her signature. It was a check for $17,500. The date on it was Jan. 23, 1978, and it was void if not cashed within 60 days.

"I've gone to that drawer a thousand times," said Cosgrove, now 85 and living in Lauderhill. "Why didn't I find it sooner?"

The money was from an insurance settlement stemming from a bizarre accident under the Manhattan side of the Brooklyn Bridge on April 1, 1976.

As Cosgrove recalled Thursday, the bridge was being painted, and a tarp was placed above the road so paint would not fall on passing cars. But after a week of heavy rains, the tarp gave way and sent water crashing down 200 feet onto the Lincoln Mark IV she had just purchased three days earlier.

The water smashed the hood and the front windshield, and Cosgrove said her screams were so loud she damaged her own eardrums. She had the presence of mind to cut off the ignition before passing out.

After a brief hospital stay, Cosgrove and her insurance company filed a claim against the Belt Painting Co., which was doing the work on the bridge. Less than two years later, Cosgrove got a check from the company's insurance provider, but she didn't realize it and put it away in a drawer.

Since she received the check, Cosgrove moved from West End, N.J., to Miami Beach and finally to Lauderhill, where she's resided for the past 15 years. She divorced her husband in the mid-1980s and got the furniture in the settlement. When a friend asked to see a picture of her ex-husband, she went digging through the drawer and found the envelope.

Cosgrove said she gave up on the settlement as a lost cause later in the same year. She wrote a letter to her lawyer in July 1978 asking him to pursue the settlement, but she never sent it. "I never knew for sure that there was even going to be a settlement," she said.

Cosgrove isn't sure she'll ever get the money. The company that wrote the check, The Home Insurance Companies of Manchester, N.H., was declared insolvent and was liquidated in June 2004. Tom Kober, the liquidation's chief claim officer, said Thursday he will send Cosgrove a claim form, but he couldn't predict whether a 32-year-old claim would be honored ahead of other claims against the company.

It's also not clear where the money has been sitting. The accident was in New York, the insurance company was in New Hampshire, and Cosgrove lived in New Jersey at the time the check was sent to her. Each of those states has an office that deals with unclaimed funds and none had a record Thursday of $17,500 waiting for Cosgrove.

"When the money wasn't deposited, why shouldn't they have followed up and said ‘Why haven't you cashed the check?' " Cosgrove wondered.

While she doesn't have any pressing financial needs and has no children, Cosgrove said the money would provide a more comfortable financial cushion for herself.

LINK TO VIDEO:

 http://www.orlandosentinel.com/videobeta/?watchId=229b78dc-9eb5-4d21-bd7f-d231b2859fbc

Entry #1,810

'Dead' Woman Moves Arm At Funeral Home

Noelia Serna, 'Dead' Colombian Woman, Moves Arm At Funeral Home

| 02/17/10 01:42 PM | AP

 

AP
Funeral

BOGOTA, Colombia — A Colombian woman declared dead of a heart attack moved one of her arms just as an undertaker was about to embalm her, doctors said Wednesday.

Noelia Serna, 45, was rushed to a hospital in the city of Cali, where she was in critical condition in an intensive care unit Wednesday, said hospital director Luis Fernando Rendon.

"Her chances of survival are slim," Rendon said.

Serna, who has multiple sclerosis, was admitted to the same Cali University Hospital on Monday after a heart attack, Rendon said. She survived for about 10 hours on life support, but then seemingly didn't respond to resuscitation efforts following a second attack. She was declared dead early Tuesday.

About two hours later, funeral home employee Jaime Aullon was just about to inject embalming fluid into Serna's left leg when he saw her move.

"She was moving her right arm," he said. "I stopped the procedure and brought her back to the hospital to be treated."

On rare occasions, a person's heart rate and breathing can drop to undetectable levels, leading doctors to erroneously declare a patient dead, said neurosurgeon Juan Mendoza Vega, a member of the Colombian National Medical Ethics Board.

"It can happen," he said. "But it's not a matter of coming back to life because the person was never dead."

Entry #1,809

Boy with 8 limbs "I am tired of being different"

Boy with 8 limbs "I am tired of being different"

18. 02. 10. - 13:00

Octo-boy plea

Croatian Times.

To some in his remote Indian village he is a living version of India's multi-limbed God Lakshmi and worshipped every day as holy.

To others eight-year-old Kumar Paswan is a monster, is stoned on sight and forced to hide away his astonishing medical condition.

But all the tragic youngster wants is to be normal and has launched an appeal for the thousands of pounds needed for an operation to remove his parasitic twin.

The twin stopped developing in the womb before it separated fully from Kumar and has left him with seven limbs.

"When he was born the doctors said he wouldn't live long but here he is and apart from how he looks he is very healthy," said his dad Veeresh Paswan, of Bihar, eastern India.

"I am tired of being different. I just want to live normally," added the youngster.

 

 

 

Entry #1,805