truesee's Blog

Ohio cookie plant's new owner gives laid-off workers $1,500 each

Wednesday,  December 10, 2008 5:14 PM

ASHLAND TIMES-GAZETTE VIA AP

ASHLAND, Ohio -- A company reopening the former Archway cookie plant stunned displaced employees by presenting them with $1,500 Visa gift cards.

Lance, Inc., based in Charlotte, N.C., will begin operations next week at the former Archway plant with a staff of 50 to 70 workers. Nearly 300 employees lost their jobs when Archway filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in October.

Each former full-time employee received a gift card at a meeting yesterday at Ashland High School's Little Theater.

"It was absolutely astounding," Ashland Mayor Glen Stewart said today. "It was a sigh of, 'I can't believe this is happening.' Totally unexpected and totally appreciated in a genuine way."

Lance spokesman Russell Allen said it was the first time the company has made such a gesture and that it was done to show good will to workers and the Ashland community.

Cathy Hayes of Ashland, who worked at the bakery for nearly 30 years before Archway's bankruptcy filing, said the company seemed compassionate.

"I'm excited. I'm ready to go back to work," Hayes said. "It seems like they care about their employees."

Lance, which makes and distributes cookies, sandwich crackers and other snacks, expected to finish hiring workers by Thursday. It has promised to hire workers at the same rates they were making at Archway -- an average of $14.93 per hour.

"It feels like it's going to be a positive change, something we've been needing for a long time," said former Archway employee Michelle Fife of Mansfield.

The plant will resume production of cookies under the Archway brand.

Archway & Mother's Cookie Co. Inc. cited rising food and fuel costs in closing its U.S. operations. Lance announced last week that it completed the purchase of Archway Cookies LLC for about $30 million.

Lance has about 4,700 full-time employees and has manufacturing facilities in North Carolina, Iowa, Georgia, Massachusetts, Texas, Florida, Arkansas and Ontario, Canada. It also sells cookies and chips under the band names Cape Cod and Tom's.

Ashland is about 50 miles south of Cleveland.

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'Santa' Attacked After Woman Brings In Bobcat For Holiday Photo

From NBC News:

His white Santa gloves suddenly became red and Jonathan Bebbington says he's got the wounds to prove this was no ordinary kitty.

"It hurt, it had a lot of power in its jaws," said Jonathan Bebbington.

The volunteer Santa Claus was repeatedly clawed and bitten by what he believes was a 30-pound bobcat.

"It was about that large, she was walking it around on a harness," Bebbington said.

It's the pet. Yes, the pet of a woman who brought it to this Petsmart store in Mays Landing Sunday morning for photos with Old Saint Nick. Bebbington says the bobcat didn't become violent until it was on his lap.

"I never expected this while volunteering to do this," explained Bebbington.

"The person was saying how she paid 15-hundred dollars to have this animal shipped in from Wyoming," Christine Tartaro of Penny Angels Beagle Rescue said.

The photo shoot benefitted Penny Angels Beagle Rescue. The woman is believed live in Egg Harbor Township, but she and the young bobcat split before anyone got her name.
Organizers want to find to her and get their hands on the creature's veterinary records.

"Without the record of the shots, I have to go through a series of rabies shots which are very painful," added Bebbington.

It's NOT LEGAL to have a bobcat as a pet in New Jersey. Violators could face a fine of up to $5,000.

Vincent Sonetto of Cape May County Zoo says "any kind of wild animal is just not a good idea for a pet, regardless of how nice it is. Eventually, it can snap."

Jonathan says "if you're a pet owner, you have to be responsible."

Petsmart will be paying Jonathan Bebbington's medical bills. Meanwhile, authorities are working to track down the woman and her biting bobcat which left this Santa scarred for Christmas. Santa "Clawed" Attacker Comes Forward

Elusive no more. The owner of a large cat that attacked a man posing as Santa Claus last weekend in South Jersey came forward Wednesday.

Despite initial fears that the animal was a bob cat—illegal to own as pets in New Jersey-- the animal’s owner,  Christine Haughey insists "Benny" is actually an 8-month old Pixie Bob, a recognized, legal breed.

It is“a unique breed of cat with bobcat heritage,” according to the website, catsinfo.com. But the head of the Atlantic County S.P.C.A. can't be certain and Pixie Bob breeders across the country have been contacting NBC10 to say they believe it is a bobcat.

He shouldn’t worry, she said. Haughey showed NBC10 Benny’s veterinary records and rabies tag to prove the cat has received all necessary vaccinations.

Last Update: 12/10 12:26 pm

Entry #3

Pastor prays over deposit slip, gets $1.5M gift

Tue Dec 9, 9:14 pm ET

LONGVIEW, Texas – A $1 million bank deposit slip wish by a Longview minister to pay for a new church came true — and then some. The Rev. Thomas McDaniels of LifeBridge Christian Center said a businessman, who chooses to remain anonymous, wrote him a $1.5 million check.

Members of LifeBridge, which formed in 2005, had met at a Longview hotel. Their new church opens in a few weeks.

McDaniels described on Monday how in January 2007 he took a bank deposit slip and wrote $1 million, "meaning that one day someone would give us a million dollar gift."

The minister, who prayed over the deposit slip, said a business owner Dec. 2 asked how much was needed to pay for the church.

McDaniels said $1.4 million. The benefactor's check included an extra $100,000.

McDaniels says, in these economic times, that "the Lord wanted to show his power."

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Information from KLTV-TV & Longview News Journal

Entry #2

Luck of draw hurts Lottery

An extraordinary lucky streak for Maryland lottery players has meant more bad news for a state budget already hobbled by the recession.

Maryland lottery revenue has fallen $27 million below projections since July, largely because a high number of lottery players won big on the Pick 3 and Pick 4 games.

December 9, 2008

Defying the odds, a series of the same digit was drawn eight times for the game in which players choose three numbers, and once in which they choose four. In those games, players often pick a same-number series out of superstition or for other reasons, officials said.

When the winning Pick 4 series was 1-1-1-1 in August, about 1,400 players won $5,000 each, a $7 million combined payout.

When 1-0-1-2 hit last month, 1,100 players won a total of about $5.5 million.

"We expect a couple of those a year; we don't expect 10 of those in four months. That's an incredible percentage," said Maryland Lottery Director Buddy Roogow, who gave a fiscal briefing to the House Ways and Means Committee in Annapolis yesterday on lottery proceeds, which are the third-highest source of state operating revenue, after income and sales taxes. "I couldn't believe it."

Roogow said he couldn't guess the psychological reasons players choose a series of the same numbers, though he mentioned that three 6's, which came up in July, is the "number of the beast" in the Bible.

Copyright © 2008, The Baltimore Sun

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