Tag Archives: labor

Cynthia Nixon doesn’t want school cuts

http://www.youtube.com/v/R-2zFHQWYa8

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The Alliance for Quality Education, the labor & parent group arguing against Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s proposed $1.5 billion cut to school aid, released the below video as part of the organization’s contest to hear real stories about the cut’s impact. It features Cynthia Nixon, who like most of you, I keep in my rolodex under Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Capitol confidential Discovery Date : 24/02/2011 17:09 Number of articles : 2

Cynthia Nixon doesn’t want school cuts

We Taking Over: White Folks Are Becoming Less Of A Majority

Rush Limbaugh’s greatest fear is a lot closer to coming true than even he probably ever imagined. Via the New York Times Whites continued to decline as a share of the American population in 2009, and they now represent less than half of all 3-year-olds, according to a Brookings Institution analysis of census data released Monday. The country’s young population is more diverse than ever, with whites now in the minority in nursery schools, preschools and kindergartens in eight states — Arizona, California, Florida, Hawaii, Mississippi, Nevada, New Mexico and Texas — and the District of Columbia, according to William H. Frey, a demographer at Brookings. That was up from six states in 2000. “We are on our way to having a majority of minority students in U.S. schools,” Mr. Frey said. Nationally, whites accounted for 58.8 percent of all school enrollment in 2009, Mr. Frey said, citing the new data, which measured enrollment from preschool to graduate school as of October 2009. That was down from 64.6 percent in 2000, a decline that came with falling birthrates as the white population aged. Population growth has come instead from Hispanics, blacks and Asians, whose children represent ever larger shares of the school population. Twenty-three percent of children in kindergarten were Hispanic in 2009, up from 18 percent in 2000 and 10 percent in 1989. Hispanics now account for nearly a fifth of all enrollment from nursery school through college, Mr. Frey said. The United States has been experiencing the biggest surge of immigrants since the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when European immigrants considerably expanded the population. And while immigrants have long taken to cities, more recently they have spread throughout the nation, creating diverse student populations in places that had been overwhelmingly white. The states whose white children dipped to below 50 percent of nursery school and kindergarten enrollment most recently were Arizona, Florida and Nevada, Mr. Frey said. Next in line are Georgia, Louisiana and Maryland, he said. The increase in minority students in schools doesn’t mean our children are getting a better education yet. And the people who worry about these things are in no rush to change that. The gap between the country’s diverse young population and its older white one is raising difficult issues for policy makers, who are trying to balance the growing costs associated with the aging white population with the need for financing to educate an increasingly diverse youth. Education experts who have studied the issue say the United States is lagging behind in educating minority students. The past big wave of immigrants took more than a generation to integrate into the economy through education, they say, a delay the country can still afford in today’s age of global competitiveness. “These students will be an important source of our labor-force growth as baby boomers begin retiring,” Mr. Frey said. Is this good news to you?

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We Taking Over: White Folks Are Becoming Less Of A Majority

Saigon Finally Tells The Greatest Story Never Told

‘This album is my offering to hip-hop,’ he tells Mixtape Daily of long-awaited debut. By Jayson Rodriguez, with reporting by Rahman Dukes Saigon Photo: MTV News Mixtape Daily Main Pick Street King : Saigon Holding It Down For : Mooseknuckle to Brownsville Independent LP : The Greatest Story Never Told Real Spit : “This ain’t about a mixtape, this is about my story,” Saigon, a Mixtape Daily favorite, told us when we asked him about his upcoming project. “I know you know me from the mixtapes, but this is the album, the debut.” Pardon the intensity, but our Brooklyn brother has been hard at work on this project for more than a few years, and his labor of love is just weeks away from finally seeing the light of day. “This album is my offering to hip-hop,” Sai said. “There’s no jumping from story to story. It’s put together like a story, from start to beginning. And I think it’s a great piece of work that people are gonna appreciate.” The New York rhyme spitter has a tale that’s as in-depth as his poetics on wax. He was one of the Big Apple’s finest upstarts in years and inked a deal with Atlantic Records. He later raged against the machine, however, with his blistering “Trans-Atlantic Slave Deal” when he felt he was being pushed to deliver pop hits and later parted ways with the label. On February 15, the rapper will finally release a collective of material that showcases his full range of skills, from his booming voice, passionate delivery and lively topical offerings. After delivering a couple of warning shots, Saigon is in storytelling mode now. Joints to Check For

‘Spider-Man: Turn Off The Dark’ To Resume Performances After Injury

Following fourth injury, the Broadway musical is canceling only its Wednesday matinee. By Terri Schwartz “Spiderman: Turn Off the Dark” Photo: Marvel After a fourth person was injured during the Broadway preview run of “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark,” the Wednesday matinee show has been postponed, but all subsequent shows will proceed as scheduled, a spokesperson for the production told MTV News. Stunt double and aerialist Christopher Tierney, 31, was hurt on Monday during the final moments of a preview performance. The cable he was attached to snapped, and he fell approximately 8 to 10 feet. He was taken to New York’s Bellevue Hospital with multiple broken ribs and substantial bleeding, BroadwayWorld.com reported. He is being held in serious but stable condition. Rick Miramontez, the spokesperson for the $65 million musical, told MTV News that representatives from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, Actors Equity and New York State Department of Labor met with the “Spider-man” company on Tuesday (December 21) to discuss additional safety protocols to prevent more injuries. “It was agreed that these measures would be enacted immediately,” he said. That agreement prevented the show from being delayed anymore than it already has been. Producers for “Turn Off the Dark” recently announced the opening of the musical would be delayed from January 11 to February 7. Previous injuries on the set included actress Natalie Mendoze being hit on the head with a rope and suffering a concussion. The musical, a creative brainchild of “Across the Universe” director Julie Taymor and U2 band members Bono and The Edge, involves telling the story of Spider-man in a musical fashion and incorporates acrobatics and cable work so the actors can fly across the stage like Spidey with his web. The Edge explained to MTV News last month that “it’s elements of rock and roll, it’s elements of circus, it’s elements of opera, of musical theater. It is so many different things, and when we started the process, we promised we’d do something that hasn’t been done before. And really, we, I think, have managed to do that.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark.

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‘Spider-Man: Turn Off The Dark’ To Resume Performances After Injury

Spider-Man Injury Update: Safety Inspectors Plan to Visit Production

If Broadway had an NFL -like injury report, Julie Taymor’s production of Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark would be listed as “questionable.” In the wake of Monday night’s latest injury — when a stunt performer fell nearly ten feet into a pit beneath the stage — safety inspectors with the New York State Department of Labor will pay a visit to the production. “We’ll be talking to the production team, checking the harnesses, cables, and other equipment, and trying to determine what happened, and we’ll have more information after that,” said a department spokesman to the Times . Developing… [ NYT /ArtsBeat ]

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Spider-Man Injury Update: Safety Inspectors Plan to Visit Production

Big 3 Nets’ Evening News Audience Fails to Break 20 Million in Mid-September

They’re out of excuses. Summer’s over. It’s after Labor Day. The kids are back in school. People are back into their routines. The trouble for the Big 3 broadcast networks is that those routines don’t include watching their early-evening newscasts. Beyond that, last week was a pivotal week in Campaign 2010, with key primaries in New York, Delaware, New Hampshire, and several other states. As far as I know, Brian Williams, Diane Sawyer, and Katie Couric were firmly ensconced in their anchor chairs all week long. With all that, the Big 3 Nets’ audience for the weeks was less than 20 million, almost 5% lower than the same week a year ago, when there were no key election races. The Big 3 are not recovering from what was an awful summer. Here are the numbers (source: Media Bistro — Week of Sept. 13, 2010 ; week of Sept. 14, 2010 ): NBC and ABC both took huge hits in the 25-54 demographic groups, while CBS picked up a bit. If they expected their all-O’Donnell-bashing all-the-time strategy to translate into additional evening news viewers, early returns would seem to indicate that it’s not working out too well. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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Big 3 Nets’ Evening News Audience Fails to Break 20 Million in Mid-September

Wanna Fix The economy? Republicans Say Middle Class Should Take A Pay Cut!

Leave it to somebody from the American Enterprise Institute to figure out what's really wrong with the economy. Kevin Hassett, AEI's director of economic-policy studies, was an adviser to John McCain in his bid for the presidency. He writes, Your Fat Paycheck Keeps Your Neighbor Unemployed: ( http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-09-07/your-fat-paycheck-keeps-your-neighbor-u… ) > So here comes the leap into ice-cold water: The biggest problem with the labor > market right now is that wages are too high. As Washington again turns to > government spending as a cure for unemployment, some against-the-grain thinking > is in order. > Economics teaches that full employment would be reached if wages adjust > downward, to a level that better reflects current circumstances. At lower wages, > employers would desire more workers. Labor markets generate persistent > unemployment only if wages are sticky, failing to fall as demand declines. So why aren't American workers eagerly joining this race to the bottom, according to Hassett? Because of the minimum wage. Because of the damned unions. Because of extended unemployment benefits. Because of an unwillingness to pull up stakes and move. And, besides not understanding Economics 101, all those silly people have psychological issues: > …the natural reluctance of workers to accept lower pay is amplified by how their > wage helps define their identity. A $60,000-a-year office worker might have an > extra-hard time coming to terms with becoming a $40,000-a-year worker. Hassett fails to point out how many workers have already taken pay-cuts, often in the guise of furloughs. Nor is he volunteering to take a one-third cut in his pay. Nor, you'll notice, does he have anything to say about big-time CEOs or others among the top 10 percent taking a hit on their paychecks at a time when income inequality has given the United States a rich-poor ratio of a banana republic. No surprise. As a colonel in the class war, providing philosophical protection for the top tier is in his job description. No matter how disastrous actually carrying out his prescription would be. As Tom Petruno at the Los Angeles Times points out( http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/money_co/2010/09/pay-cuts-kevin-hassett-american… ), the plan would lead to deflation with consumers buying less than before at the very time that small businesses note that their biggest problem is weak sales. Which is why they're not hiring. Does Hassett actually want to worsen the vicious circle? Who knows. At least he's not proposing another tax cut for the rich as a solution to the deficit. Gotta save that for next week's column. added by: toyotabedzrock

After Ohio Gov. Strickland’s Unhinged Rant, Columbus Dispatch’s Hallett Begs, Fails to Get Help Watering It Down

Though its true nature was largely ignored by the local media at the event (noted on Tuesday at NewsBusters ; at BizzyBlog ), Ted Strickland’s unhinged Labor Day speech at the AFL-CIO’s annual picnic at Cincinnat’s Coney Island has, with the help of the Republican Governors Association (RGA), garnered quite a bit of statewide attention. During his rant , Strickland denounced the Republican Party as “overtaken by the zealots, by the extremists, by the radicals”; claimed that “they don’t seem to like Ohio very much, and quite frankly, they act as if they don’t like America very much,” in essence questioning their patriotism; and asked the audience to help him fight “the Tea Party radicals.” The fallout has apparently been so severe that ever-helpful veteran Columbus Dispatch reporter, senior editor, and columnist Joe Hallett felt compelled on Thursday to try to help the Governor walk it all back. In an exchange that can only be seen as Hallett begging for Strickland to give him something, anything to work with, Strickland wasn’t very helpful, bogusly played the “out of context” card, and in a very real sense doubled down on his disrespect for those who oppose him. He even went into a riff on how opponents (in context, “Republicans,” not just “some Republicans”) want to repeal the 14th amendment (huh?). The full 11:36 video of Strickland’s discussion with reporters  is here (originally posted at the Ohio Capital Blog ); the RGA’s 2:04 excerpt featuring Hallett  is here (HT RightOhio ). What follows is a transcript of the excerpt: Hallett: The Republicans are making much of the speech you gave in Cincinnati, basically saying you had a heartbeat moment, when in your speech you said that “Republicans don’t like Ohio very much, and they don’t like America very much.” Do you mean that? Strickland: Uh, yes, but you need to, you need to get the full context of what I said, Joe. I wasn’t talking about their patriotism. I went on to talk about why I was saying that. Um, um, they want to ch-, they want to change the country. They want to change Ohio. It has nothing to do with their love for the country or their love of Ohio. It has a lot to do with whether or not they like Ohio the way it is, or they like America the way it is. For someone to repeal the 14th Amendment, that’s a pretty basic thing, that’s a part of our country’s history, tradition, and, and, Constitution, um, processes. Uh, uh, Mary Taylor, uh, says that she has urged people to leave Ohio and move to Florida, uh uh, or Nevada, or to some other state. (Taylor is the GOP’s Lieutenant Governor candidate — Ed.) So, uh if, if you understand what I said within the context of, of what I was saying and how I was saying it, uh, it’s not what they’re trying to make it. So — Hallett: Well, you’ve got, you’ve got a lot of Republicans _____ in ____, they’re going to present this as, “Governor Strickland says, ‘You Republicans don’t like this country.'” Strickland: Here a-, here again Joe, I talked about the fact that moderate Republicans are being pushed out of their party, that the, that the leadership of the Republican Party now was comprised of people that I think are on the extreme right wing of that party. I was not talking about all Republicans. Th-They know that, and I-I hope you can, can just watch the, the total, uh, speech that I made rather than, uh, the particular snippet of it. Other items found in the longer video: Strickland considers GOP candidate John Kasich’s idea to gradually eliminate the state’s income tax to be “radical.” Well, how have Florida and Texas (both much larger states), as well as Tennessee, New Hampshire, and several other states without income taxes survived all these years? A Hallett softball — “You’ve seen the polls. They’re not looking good for you. Are you fearful of becoming a victim of a climate over which you have no control?” Oh, the humanity! Hallet apparently already has his Election Night column theme drafted. Try to imagine Hallett asking a similar question of a Republican trailing in the polls. I know; you can’t. Besides being justifiably outraged at the characterization of Tea Partiers, sensible conservatives in the Buckeye State are surely chuckling at Strickland’s description of Ohio’s Republican Party, which during May’s primary campaign spent large sums of money and put a great deal of effort into ensuring the defeat of Tea Party-backed statewide and Central Committee candidates in favor of its preferred go-along, get-along candidates and Central Committee incumbents. As to liking and loving Ohio and America — to specifically describe just one problem, “Ohio the way it is” has 10.3% unemployment . “America the way it is” is at 9.6% . Unless I’m missing something, nobody “likes” that (Ted, if you do, which could fairly be inferred from what you said — and would be if a Republican or conservative had said it — please let us know). One can love their state and their country and still not like high unemployment, out of control debt, a bloated public sector, high taxes, and a lousy business climate. Strickland campaigned in 2006 as the guy who would ” Turnaround Ohio .” Obviously, he has done no such thing. The clear majority of loyal, loving Buckeye Staters don’t like that, and at this point appear to want something different. The pathetically pleading Joe Hallett, who infamously wrote in May that Ted Strickland couldn’t possibly bear any responsibility for Ohio’s lost jobs (just as, Hallett noted, GOP gubernatorial candidate John Kasich can’t be blamed for the collapse of the economy, which happens to be true), had to come away from his rescue attempt disappointed. Sorry, Joe. This is who Ted Strickland is. You and the rest of Ohio’s establishment press mostly provided cover for him in 2006. Now that he has a record trying to actually run something bigger than his former congressional staff (which, by the way, he didn’t do vey well either), your job has become a lot tougher. Too bad, so sad. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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After Ohio Gov. Strickland’s Unhinged Rant, Columbus Dispatch’s Hallett Begs, Fails to Get Help Watering It Down

Vince Neil Accused Of Attacking Woman In Las Vegas

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Obama Aims $50 Billion Stimulus at Nation’s Transit

Image via California High-Speed Rail Authority In his Labor Day speech two days ago, the president announced plans for a $50 billion stimulus package that would take aim at updating the country’s lagging transportation infrastructure. He called for Congress to approve an infusion of funds for highway, air traffic control, and, yes, high speed rail projects, that would lead to the “immediate” creation of jobs and give a boost to the economy. Obama said that the bill would be paid for by eli… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Obama Aims $50 Billion Stimulus at Nation’s Transit