Saturday 7 January 2012

Can Amtrak Ever Make Money?

By Nate Berg
The Freakonomics blog recently invited me and a few other people to share some thoughts on Amtrak – the money-losing, somewhat underutilized national passenger rail system. The question Freakonomics posed is simple: Can Amtrak ever be profitable? Answering it, though, is much more complex.
As the editors note, Amtrak set ridership records in 2011, but still ends up losing about $1 billion annually. Amtrak’s situation was interpreted in the five very different responses as everything from a sign of little concern to outright proof that the service needs to be dramatically changed. I’m posting some excerpts from each of the responders, but I’d recommend reading through all of it to get a flavor for the troubles facing the system and possible solutions to consider.
My own thoughts are fairly brief and mainly operate under the premise that Amtrak should be thought of as a government infrastructure service which, like other public services, shouldn’t have to be profitable. I also argue that increasing urbanization increases the need for and value of this type of infrastructure.
Think of transportation as a line connecting two dots. The economic value of this connection is captured not by the transportation method itself, but by the people and places it connects. The value is in the dots, not the line. But without the line, the two (and in reality many) dots would have trouble sharing and compounding their relative economic powers.
These dots, the mid and endpoints of these transportation corridors, though, are not just single businesses or factories. They are cities, which are increasingly the centers and enablers of economic power. And while it’s true that Amtrak lines aren’t the only ways to get from one city to the next, they can play a valuable role in allowing people and services to travel between these economic centers in as many ways as possible. 
Eric Morris, a transportation scholar at UCLA, argues that Amtrak is losing money because nobody needs it. The extensive subsidies it receives, he argues, are falsely propping up what he sees as a largely unwanted service.
It is true that there are travelers out there who enjoy taking Amtrak. On rare occasions I have been one of them myself. However, society has no interest in paying for benefits—in terms of things like comfort, convenience or time savings—that are enjoyed by travelers. In our market system, which, recent speed bumps aside, is working quite well for us, the traveler himself should pay for the benefits he receives. If government has to step in and pay to produce a product customers won’t pay for, it is a sign that the product isn’t a particularly good one and is destroying wealth and resources that could be more profitably deployed elsewhere. 
Robert Puentes, a senior fellow with the Brookings Institution Metropolitan Policy Program, counters that Amtrak is indeed a wanted and needed service. He argues that its value – and potential to pull in more revenue – lies in cities and intercity routes.
Amtrak’s growth mirrors the rise of America’s largest metropolitan areas, many of which are served quite well by rail. In fact, half of Amtrak’s ridership comes from just five large metros: New York, Washington, Philadelphia, Chicago, and Los Angeles. These places are generally well positioned geographically with good connectivity to other key metros. They are also home to the nation’s largest aviation delays and highway congestion with which travelers in these metros have to contend. Indeed, Amtrak says it has a whopping 62 percent of the air/rail market between New York and Washington, and 47 percent of the market share between Boston and New York.
Stephen Smith, who blogs about urbanism for Forbes, maintains that the key to making Amtrak work is privatization. But, he writes, that would have to be a long process, with major operational and regulatory changes made before the transition.
The first thing that must be done is not even management-related, but rather regulatory: the Federal Railroad Administration’s approach to rail safety must be radically restructured. The FRA can no longer be allowed to lag behind European and Asia regulators, foisting unrealistic and outdated safety mandates on all mainline passenger rolling stock in the US, from Amtrak trains to regional/commuter railroads. Our unique standards for bulk and other more technical aspects of rail car design should have been abandoned half a century ago.
And finally, Yonah Freemark of The Transport Politic blog writes that privatization won’t work and that Amtrak can only survive with government support. He also offers some thoughts on how Amtrak is improving and suggests some ideas to help it function more economically.
The Obama Administration’s investments in intercity rail will bring faster and more dependable Amtrak services to states like Illinois, Michigan, and North Carolina within the next five years. Similar improvements over the past decade have led to dramatic increases in the company’s ridership along such routes as California’s Capitol Corridor and Pennsylvania’s Keystone Line. In addition, the national railway company must invest in increasing its capacity, a step it is already taking with new cars for regional services and its Acela trains on the Northeast Corridor. More room on trains will mean increasing efficiencies of scale, potentially lowering ticket prices for consumers. Finally, Amtrak must make an effort to reduce capital construction and operations costs, both of which are higher than those of similar railway companies overseas.
The problem, clearly, is not solved. But the discussion raised some interesting ideas about how to think about Amtrak’s role in the country and the government’s role in Amtrak. As government spending continues to be a highly political issue, how the government and the public approach the idea of keeping or dramatically altering passenger rail in the U.S. will only become more fraught.
Source http://www.theatlanticcities.com/
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Cops: Southland is home to some ‘leisure’ counterfeiters

By CASEY TONER ctoner@southtownstar.com
Funny money is circulating in the Southland.
Bogus bills have been passed to businesses in towns from New Lenox to Chicago Heights to Orland Park, police say.
Tens, twenties, fifties and even hundreds change hands in Matteson, Park Forest and Country Club Hills, among others, as counterfeiters try to spot gullible cashiers at gas stations, fast-food restaurants, grocery stores and even upscale department stores.
Counterfeiting is nothing new, but some of the counterfeiters likely are, according to local police, thanks in part to technology.
Police chiefs from Southland towns, as well as officials from the Secret Service — the federal agency established in 1865 specifically to fight counterfeiting — aren’t chalking the crimes up to an organized counterfeiting ring. Instead, they say, individuals are acting alone, hopping on their home computers and using today’s sophisticated graphics software to print the phony bucks.
“With the technology available out here now, high school kids can make believable currency,” Country Club Hills Police Chief William Brown said. “We’re going to keep our antennas up.”
Those antennas still work despite the counterfeiters’ high-tech efforts. The Secret Service made 3,028 counterfeiting arrests nationwide in the past year and helped remove more than $261 million in fake money from circulation, according to the agency’s annual report.
About 63 percent of the counterfeit money was produced using digital printing means, compared with less than 1 percent in 1995, the report said.
Derrick Golden, the assistant to the special agent in charge of Chicago’s Secret Service office, calls the growing class of phony money makers “leisure counterfeiters.”
“You have the high school kid or college kid in the dorm room experimenting with it,” Golden said. “They may get brave enough to see if they can pass it at a store.”
But the arrests are real ...
While counterfeiting may have come a long way from the days of people taping the corners of high-denomination bills over singles or sticking one fake bill in a handful of real ones, suspected counterfeiters still are getting caught.
In November, a Chicago woman was charged after an incident in Orland Park in which police found nearly $1,500 in fake bills in the car in which she was a passenger.
Shantell Hawthorne, 25, of 50 71st St., was charged with forgery Nov. 30 after attempting to use counterfeit $20 bills to buy $500 worth of items from Macy’s at Orland Square Mall, police said. They said officers also found in the car about $800 worth of merchandise from the Express and Victoria’s Secret stores in the mall that had been bought using counterfeit money, and $1,460 in additional counterfeit bills.
Park Forest Deputy Police Chief Mike McNamara said his officers usually make a couple of arrests per year for counterfeit money.
“(Counterfeiters) usually get caught because of poor quality,” McNamara said. “I think it’s someone looking for an easy way to make money, and they think their ability to fool people is better than what it actually is.”
Golden said duplicating cash accurately is harder than ever due to the changing face of money. The latest major change in 2004 features a borderless, slightly off-center presidential portrait and a new multicolored background among other changes.
Brown said it’s important for cashiers to examine bills for watermarks and mark them with counterfeit detector pens that turn the ink a different color if a bill isn’t legitimate.
“Once you’ve handled enough bills, you get a sense if you pick one up and it doesn’t feel right,” Brown said. “The cash handlers are getting as sophisticated as those trying to move it. Who is paying the most attention is victimized least.”
Chicago Heights Police Chief Michael Camilli said counterfeiters are more likely to get caught if they get greedy.
“You’re not going to go out and use a tremendous amount of phony money on a large-dollar ticket because someone will catch it,” Camilli said. “You put it out in small amounts in different places for less suspicion.”
Seven counterfeiting incidents were reported to his department in August, September and November. Only one involved a bill larger than $50.
Brown said more fake money gets exchanged during the busy holiday shopping season. Fake $20 bills were used to buy food at McDonald’s and a T-shirt from a vendor in separate incidents in Country Club Hills in November.
“These guys who move that money are good at what they do and how they do it,” Brown said. “It’s the old game of cat and mouse we’ve played for a hundred years as police officers.”
But even with crafty thieves and available technology, counterfeit cash isn’t flooding the market. Golden said the amount of fake money in circulation is minute compared to genuine currency in the United States.
And that’s for good reason, in his opinion.
“There are more honest people in the world than there are criminals,” he said.
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How to save money in the home

By
Sarah Lonsdale offers 25 ways to save your household money this year.

This year, perhaps more than any in the past few decades, will be a year of belt-tightening and saving. But it won’t all be a grim struggle for survival. There are ways to reduce bills, be gentle on the environment and save money without having to don a hair shirt.
Many of the ideas set out below are from readers of this column, who over the past months have sent in helpful hints. Some are fond memories of what their parents, in a previous age of austerity, did. A big thank you to all those who have written and emailed, keep them coming!
Food and drink
1 Thanks to a lovely letter from a reader in Yorkshire, remembering how her mother, “a wonderful cook and housekeeper” was always trying to make ends meet and save money: “On Sunday she would make a large batch of pastry. Then, when the joint went in the oven for our roast dinner, she would start baking: apple pies, mince pies, sausage rolls, jam tarts, rock cakes, scones etc.
This lasted all week so she didn’t have to put the oven on again until next Sunday, when she would repeat the process.” Genius.
2 Make your own tonic wine/cough mixture with elderberries. One of the most prolific wild berries, elders grow both in country woodland, on field margins and also in cities, on vacant lots and building sites. The berries are juicy, tart and packed with vitamin C. Boil about 2lbs of berries together with cloves, cinnamon, a pinch of nutmeg and some finely chopped fresh ginger. Simmer for 10 minutes, strain and when cool mix in a glass of brandy for every pint of liquid. Bottle and keep in a dark cupboard. It lasts forever and is a soothing tonic for coughs and sore throats.
3 Thank you to an inspirational reader from Lancashire who sent in her mother’s recipe for mushroom essence, made with foraged field mushrooms, which adds dense flavour to meat dishes. Slice the mushrooms, layer with salt and leave overnight. Wash off the salt and simmer for an hour with red wine vinegar, finely chopped garlic and plenty of black pepper. When almost black, strain through a muslin, then bottle it.
4 Invest in a pressure cooker or slow cooker: these are the two most economical ways of cooking food and will start to save you money after very little use. You can also cook cheap cuts of meat such as neck or brisket and they’ll taste like the choicest fillets after a few hours’ slow cooking.
5 In early spring, harvest sorrel from woodland walks – it makes a delicious lemony soup. Boil potatoes in stock first then add the sorrel leaves; simmer for no more than two minutes; mix with yogurt or crème fraîche for a richer, silky texture.
Heating
1Thank you to a reader in Devon, who wanted to share his cheap solution to a draughty front door: “We had a new oak front door fitted into the uneven original north-facing Thirties frame last year. We wanted something discrete to fill the very visible gaps, and going back to my early days I remembered bent copper strip around the frames of big old school doors. It was reasonably easy to fit using the supplied brass tacks, and does an excellent job.”
2 Seal draughty gaps in floorboards with DIY plastic strips. This is a quick, fun weekend job with gratifyingly instant results.
3 A reader from Kent explains how she added secondary glazing to two north-facing bay windows, which let in vast gusts of chilly air. “So much cheaper than double glazing. The cheapest quote for wood-framed double glazing that I could live with was £8,000 for both bay windows – they are rather large. Instead, my carpenter made wooden frames for each bay section and inlaid a brush seal all the way around before fitting with laminated glass. Cost: £600 for both bays.”
4 Revert to wood heating with a wood-burning stove. A reader who relies on heating oil deliveries writes: “It feels so good to be able to heat even one room without having to rely on the oil-fired boiler. I know that if the delivery lorries can’t get through, at least we won’t freeze.”
5 Hunt down all those unexpected leaks in your home’s fabric with a thermal imaging camera. Many local authorities now hire them out, either from libraries or from their environmental departments. Alternatively contact your local community recycling/sharing group to see if someone locally has one you can borrow or swap for something else.
Cleaning and laundry
1 Gentle lotion for cleaning wood or delicate surfaces made from elderflowers: pick fresh elderflowers and bruise with a pestle and mortar. Pour over boiling water and leave to steep until the mixture is cool. Strain and add one part white wine vinegar to every two parts of elderflower water. Bottle in clean jars.
2 Thank you to a reader from Devon who swears by these little scented bags to freshen up her laundry: “I started washing clothes in cold water several years ago, for financial and environmental reasons. These sweet-scented bags, folded into washing as it dries in the airing cupboard help add freshness to the laundry.” Eight measures each of crushed coriander seed and powdered orris root; one measure each ground cinnamon, nutmeg and cloves; three measures of dried lavender and a cotton wool ball soaked in geranium or rose essential oil. Fill small cotton or muslin bags (ideally from fabric remnants) with the mixture and sew up carefully.
3 Home-made beeswax wood polish: melt together beeswax, soya wax and a little white wine vinegar; stir in briskly a handful of soap flakes and a small cup of boiling water to create an emulsion. Add a few drops of your favourite essential oil. When it cools, it should be a creamy consistency. Keeps a long time in a screw-top jar and, with plenty of elbow grease, and a duster, buffs wood up to a mellow shine.
4 “Eco-cloths” – Many cleaning product manufacturers now make these finely woven cloths; the weft is so dense that the fibres literally eat up dirt from smooth surfaces, obviating the need for expensive chemical cleaners. A drop of water and plenty of elbow grease is all you require to polish glass, mirrors and porcelain tiles. £4.99 from e-cloth.com.
5 Dry your clothes outdoors all year round with a rotary washing line cover – no need for tumble driers and no damp clothes hanging on radiators.
Lighting and electricity
1 Switch from tungsten to the new generation of LED bulbs. The first of its kind to be recommended by the Energy Saving Trust, the ledon bulb, lasts 25,000 hours and uses 10 watts of electricity to produce the same light as a 60-watt tungsten bulb.
2 Replace your ordinary shower head with the Ecocamel “Jetstorm”: it aerates water droplets to provide a powerful shower using a fraction of the normal amount of water – and electricity needed to heat it.
3 Rather than use a light in dark corners, install a “sunpipe”. Light from the sun – or moon – is illuminated and magnified as it is piped to where it is needed through mirrored ducts, creating a soft, natural and surprisingly bright light.
4 Towel-dry hair rather than use an energy-guzzling hair drier.
5 A reader from Wiltshire explains how she did away with her electric blanket, by replacing it with a hot water bottle: “After cooking vegetables such as carrots or broccoli in boiling water, I drain them and pour the used, but still piping hot water into a hot water bottle, which I put in my or my children’s beds. Don’t use the water from boiling rice or pasta – it clogs them up!” Another reader fills hot water bottles up from still-hot bath water before letting the plug out. You need to clean them out every few weeks.
Decorating and interiors
1 Organic wall paints are infinitely less damaging to the environment than vinyl ones. Any unused paint from decorating can be recycled into children’s playroom creations as they are safe to use. They also smell lovely – rather like playdough.
2 Next time you need to replace a pillow or duvet, go for a wool-filled one. British wool is making a welcome comeback and supports upland farmers. Organic wool mattresses not only help regulate body temperature but don’t contain harmful flame-retardant chemicals.
3 Enrol in an upholstery, tapestry or rug-making course this year, and learn how to mend and make furniture and furnishings; if you already know how, join your local “stitch 'n’ bitch” group to exchange patterns, ideas and gossip.
4 When cushion covers become more “shabby” than “chic” replace with fabric swatches or remnants from your local interiors shop – fashions in interiors fabrics change so quickly that those fabric swatch books rapidly become obsolete for designers – but provide perfect cushion-size squares of gorgeous fabric for you.
5 Chris Knipe rescues used wood and turns it into wonderful patchwork cupboards, tables and mirror frames, in his south Wales workshop. Help him end the scandalous dumping of millions of tons of perfectly usable wood in landfill.
Where to save: useful contacts
  • “Sunpipes” – clear dome and pie kit from around £180 from monodraught.com
  • Floorboard sealing strip £19.99 for a 40m roll from stopgaps.com
  • Copper front-door sealing strip available through livesafe.co.uk from 24.99
  • Slow cookers are available from most hardware stores; try Lakeland or buy used ones for around £20 from amazon.co.uk
What’s your favourite money-saving household tip? Write to us at Life, The Sunday Telegraph, 111 Buckingham Palace Road, London SW1W 0DT; or email life@telegraph.co.uk. Best tips will be published.
Jeff Howell returns next week
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Making Durham greener, one home at a time

By Melody Guyton Butts
mbutts@heraldsun.com; 419-6684
DURHAM – They may be difficult to spot, but there are likely resource-wasting culprits hiding all around your home.
Holes in the attic floor? Goodbye heated or cooled air. An old-school thermostat? Energy’s being wasted when you’re not even home. Super-soaker showerheads? That’s just money down the drain.
For a little more than a year, the city/county Sustainability Office, with the help of nonprofit Clean Energy Durham, has worked to help hundreds of residents identify and correct hidden resource-wasters by providing expertise and slices of federal grant money.
In late December, the Sustainability Office and Clean Energy Durham celebrated the retrofitting of 380 homes, a feat marked by the installation of hundreds of programmable thermostats, carbon monoxide detectors and faucet aerators; the sealing of countless air leaks in attic floors and duct work; and the installation of blown-in cellulose attic insulation.
But they’re not done yet, said Tobin Freid, the city/county sustainability coordinator. Plans are to retrofit a total of more than 700 homes. The Sustainability Office is still accepting applications for the Home Energy Savings Program (HESP), the second of two programs involved in the effort.
The office will continue accepting applications until the money – about $992,000, some from the 2009 economic-stimulus bill, and the rest from a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency grant – runs out, with Freid expecting to wrap up by May.
Neighbors helping neighbors
The retrofitting efforts started with the so-called Neighborhood Energy Retrofit Program (NERP), which is no longer accepting applicants. NERP takes a neighbors-helping-neighbors approach to getting residents involved and informed about sustainability. Clean Energy Durham enlisted volunteer residents to recruit their neighbors for the retrofitting program and teach them about easy, low- or no-cost ways to save energy.
To be eligible for NERP, residents had to live in specific neighborhoods in the county. Each household was responsible for $200-$300 of the retrofit cost, while the rest was covered by the federal money. At the beginning of the project, organizers estimated that homeowners could reduce their energy consumption by an average of about 20 percent by making the changes.
Out of the 44 households represented at do-it-yourself workshops during which neighbors helped one another learn how to do such energy-saving tasks as caulking around windows, 89 percent went home and did at least one project they learned about and 72 percent reported some type of behavior change afterward, such as adjusting their thermostats or turning lights off in vacant rooms. And of the 44 households represented, 23 reported passing along their newfound knowledge to 118 other households.
That’s evidence that the neighbor-to-neighbor approach is working, said Lenora Smith, community outreach director for Clean Energy Durham.
“If we all do a little, teach one person, talk to somebody about it, it can really become viral in the effect it has on the community,” she said.
Beth Cranford, a resident of the Tuscaloosa-Lakewood community, volunteered with the neighborhood effort. She enjoyed getting to know her neighbors and igniting excitement over saving money, improving their homes and helping the environment.
“Because we had the neighborhood aspect, we had people talking over our listserv about things,” she said. “In the small trainings that we did, we had people talking about their own behavior and changes that they wanted to make, and I think that really added depth to the program.”
Individual homeowners
Once NERP was up and running, Freid realized that the Sustainability Office would have a hard time meeting its goal of improving more than 700 homes with that program alone, so in July 2011, they started accepting applications for HESP, which does not have a neighborhood requirement. Clean Energy Durham is not involved in HESP.
About five months into that program, the office has completed about 25 homes. HESP requires that homeowners pay $400 of the retrofit cost, and the Sustainability Office will pick up the tab for another $1,600. The retrofit process typically takes two trips by the contractor, typically over the course of two days, although not two full days.
To qualify, homes must be less than 2,300 square feet, and a former restriction that two-story homes must be the same dimensions on both floors was recently lifted. There are no income limitations for qualification.
The one part of qualifying that’s tricky is that there can be no unvented combustion appliances in the living space. Combustion appliances are those that burn something, like furnaces, stoves and space heaters that run on natural gas, fuel oil, propane, kerosene or wood. Some combustion appliances are vented, and those are OK, but those that are unvented – that are open to the air around them and can release harmful carbon monoxide into the living space – are not.
“If you have a lot of places were air is leaking into the house – holes in the attic or whatever – it’s very bad for your energy bill but good for getting fresh air in your house,” Freid explained. “If we seal your house up and make it nice and tight and snug, it’s great for your energy bill, but if any of these gases are escaping into your home, they’ll stay in your home because they won’t have a way to get out.”
The city and county have a goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 30 percent by the year 2030, and NERP and HESP is one step toward reaching that, Freid said. The programs also are good for the folks who participate in them and see lower energy bills.
She hopes the neighborhood program has helped to bring communities closer together. Neighbors have gone in together to buy project materials in bulk and have shared resources as simple as tubes of caulking, she said. In some cases, more able-bodied neighbors perform labor-intensive work.
“It seems to have formed a sense of community,” Freid said. “If we accomplished that, I would feel terrific.”
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More homeowners creating space for open-plan living

By TIM CORNWELL
HOMEOWNERS are shunning traditional house layouts in favour of open plan living, pouring money into creating “social areas” and ditching designated dining rooms, hallways and kitchens, according to research.
Once the preserve of the urban trendsetter, open-plan living is now being replicated nationwide as householders shun 20th Century traditions of rooms with specific single functions.
More than a fifth of homeowners (21 per cent) have taken a sledgehammer to their home’s walls in the past ten years, while an equal proportion are currently planning to do the same, according to an analysis of Britain’s housing stock by Lloyds TSB Home Insurance.
The survey, of 2,000 people, also revealed that one in four of today’s homes have a utility room compared to just one in ten of the houses homeowners grew up in, while one in 50 homes has a gym.
To create social spaces more conducive to modern lifestyles, a third of people have sacrificed a separate dining room, 18 per cent have converted a garage and 12 per cent have ditched a single-purpose kitchen.
However, while certain rooms are being lost, new ones are creeping onto household particulars.
Kitchen-dining rooms – the hallmark of open plan – have grown in popularity by 50 per cent in a generation and three in ten of today’s homes now have one, with many people using it as the social hub of their house.
An analysis of planning applications in eight district councils – Edinburgh, Cardiff, Bristol, Cambridge, Leeds, Newcastle, Norwich and Southampton – found that of the 210 applications submitted, 35 per cent were to create an open-plan space.
Simon Hamilton, international director at the British Institute of Interior Design, said: “Property particulars are starting to look very different.
“Houses, especially older properties, were designed with people’s lives in mind, with set rooms for set activities. But as times change so does what we want from our homes.
“With our increasingly hectic lifestyles convenience and sociability have become key, which is why kitchen-diners and games rooms have grown in popularity. In the next ten years, the majority of houses will be designed in this style.”
Recognising that open spaces will make their property more saleable, 10 per cent of homeowners have spent more than £35,000 adapting their properties, with 5 per cent investing more than £50,000. However, the works have not always gone smoothly, with one in five (19 per cent) reporting that damage was caused during the building work, with an average cost of £8,000.
Paula Llewellyn, head of marketing services at Lloyds TSB Home Insurance, said: “Rather than moving, people are adjusting their own property to create their dream home and the living space they need and it’s clear to see that open-plan living is what modern families want.”
Edinburgh architect David Blaikie has carried out about 20 open-plan conversions in the city.
He said: “Virtually any of our work for the post-war building sector is doing exactly that.
“It’s a lifestyle thing; it’s about creating space; it’s also about generally young families, mothers cooking, children watching television, doing their homework, playing, whatever they are doing, and eating all within the same sort of space. It’s more inclusive for everyone.”
In a recent project in Blackhall, Mr Blaikie worked on a bungalow where he “scooped the insides out and almost doubled the size”, he said.
Another project involved demolishing an existing extension on a late Georgian town house, and creating a new structure with five rooms – kitchen, sitting area, family eating area, formal dining room and family television space – all linked together through the back wall of the house.
Andy Whyte, of Lucid Architecture in Glasgow, said: “A lot of people have Victorian terraced houses or tenements in Edinburgh or Glasgow with small kitchens.
“They were designed with a kitchen that wasn’t intended to be seen, it was just small and functional, or not even very functional. What you have got now is a lot of people who are opening up to make kitchen, dining, and living spaces, maybe all three functions in one spaces, and it’s a move away from formal living as well.
“We’ve got a huge existing housing stock which to some extent might not have been changed for 100 years or more.
“Separate dining rooms are so pointless, they maybe get used a few times a year if you are lucky. That’s what I see, I agree with the statistics.”
He added that British estate agents still tend to focus on the number of rooms in a property, so there can be a risk of reducing value. In most other countries, properties are valued by total floor area and quality of construction, as well as location.
He said: “We tend to count rooms. But you can add value by making a really nice kitchen space, it’s the first thing people look for.”
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Home health agency rule change worries Wyoming Co. supervisors

By Matt Surtel msurtel@batavianews.com
WARSAW — State changes to Certified Home Health Agency rules have sparked opposition among Wyoming County officials.
The amendments were adopted Dec. 8. They allow other entities to establish Certified Home Health Agencies in counties with fewer than two such organizations.
The Wyoming County Board of Supervisors has requested a waiver, saying the amendments would ultimately hurt health care within the county.
“Although public need is being met and patients are being served in Wyoming County by our CHHA, new agencies will be permitted to enter the market,” said Chairman Douglas Berwanger at Tuesday’s annual organizational meeting. “These will be agencies that seek to establish their own CHHAs — not with the basic goal of caring for residents of Wyoming County, but rather to improve their profit margins.”
Berwanger was reading a letter sent to state lawmakers and health officials. The Board of Supervisors has also approved a nearly-identical resolution.
State Department of Health Spokesman Jeffrey W. Hammond said Wednesday that no new CHHAs are being created.
The lifting of the state’s moratorium on CHHAs would help efforts to shift benificiaries from fee-for-service to Medicaid Managed Care by creating additional care options, he said.
“This a process to allow organizations to apply for new or expanded CHHAs if more are needed,” he said. ‘‘It will include a request for applications. Ultimately, the Public Health and Health Planning Council would vote on any CHHA proposal. This would include assessing community need.”
Wyoming County officials see the changes as “unnecessary and irrational.”
The county’s CHHA has provided care to about 1,000 patients annually and has been self-supporting — an unusual status statewide. The organization also received an IPRO Quality Award in 2006, recognizing its health care improvement efforts.
Officials have several concerns.
Berwanger said after Tuesday’s meeting that the CHHA’s existing staff is capable, dedicated and local. He cited a woman in Perry who received immediate care after arriving home from surgery.
Local officials are skeptical patients would get the same care.
“If something had gone wrong with that lady at 2 a.m., more than likely with the new providers, one would come from Rochester and one from Buffalo,” Berwanger said. “At 2 a.m. do you think a nurse will drive out here in a snowstorm from Buffalo or Rochester?
“Our nurses are on-call,” he continued. “We’ve got the system all in-place. That’s what makes us so effective.”
Wyoming County Public Health Commissioner Dr. Gregory Collins has similar concerns.
“The issue is private companies are coming in as for-profits,” he said. “The clients they’re looking to serve are the ones they’re going to make the most money from, which leaves the county taking those that are less-fortunate, and don’t have as good insurance and reimbursement. They’ll basically come in and take the best-paying clients and leave the rest for everybody else to serve.”
That would place a financial strain on the CHAA, while not necessarily guaranteeing the same levels of patient care.
Collins said he thinks it would be a major blow.
“We’re not in the business to make a profit,” he said. “We’re there to serve the community. The other issue is the nursing staff (outside agencies) employ would be coming from outside the county, whereas our nurses live here.
“They go the extra mile. Because they live here, they’ll work in off-hours, and stop off and see people if need be. You’re not going to see that kind of service from people that aren’t here in the county.”
The CHHA includes 12 nurses and 2.5 support staff, with a census running generally at 160 to 170 patients. The agency handled 1,005 referrals in 2010, including 8,653 skilled nursing visits, and 15,841 visits overall.
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Friday 6 January 2012

Burglars jailed for raid on elderly woman's home

By Victoria Smith
A teenage burglar who targeted an elderly woman’s home has been jailed, despite blaming his criminal activities on a previous victim who stabbed him in self-defence.
Owlsmoor teenagers Joshua Hasler and Thomas Justice, of Finchampstead Road, Wokingham, targeted 80-year-old Jill Bright at her home in Pinehill Road, Crowthorne, between March 17 and March 20 last year.
Hasler, of Oxford Road in Sandhurst, and Justice, both 19, were sentenced at Reading Crown Court on Friday, December 23, after previously admitting one count of burglary.
The court heard how the pair broke into the home to “earn some money”.
However, Hasler’s defence said the teen was still suffering from the trauma of being stabbed by a previous victim of his anti-social behaviour.
Christopher Hogg, defending Hasler, added: “Mr Hasler has had difficulty since he was the victim of a stabbing in 2009. He was stabbed five times and received a punctured lung and he hasn’t been able to deal with it.
He described himself as someone being in a low mood. He is someone who is extremely ashamed of his behaviour.”
Mr Hogg added Hasler was in debt over a drug deal for around £300 at the time of the burglary.
Jane Davies, prosecuting, said: “Mrs Bright was 80 years old and living alone. Items taken include her purse and contents, television and keys to her Honda Jazz motor vehicle which was in the garage and also taken.
“She was at home upstairs in bed. It turns out in fact she hadn’t locked the garage door, nor had she locked the side door from the garage into the house so there was no forced entry to her home.
“Mrs Bright got up at 7.30am on Saturday morning and she noticed her car had gone from the garage, her keys had been taken, along with her purse and TV from a back room.
“The vehicle was later found burnt out in Drift Way, Finchampstead.
“The TV was recovered which led to these defendants being arrested. The TV was sold on and traced and those people involved in the selling-on of the TV were cooperative with police.”
The court heard from a 17-year-old witness, who was at Hasler’s house that night, that the defendant and Justice went out wearing dark clothing and glasses and were saying they were “going to earn some money that night”.
Paul Trotman, defending Justice, said: “He was made redundant in February from TV sales. He said he was very short of money as a result of that. During this period of time he was drinking heavily and taking drugs.
“This was in fact his first offence and he assures me he is remorseful about committing this offence.”
The court heard Justice went on to commit other crimes including criminal damage, theft of a bicycle and shoplifting.
Justice was caught for stealing the bicycle, which was taken from a home in Crowthorne, when the owner tracked him down through a local shop’s CCTV.
Hasler had committed previous offences and continued to offend after the burglary.
Judge Mary-Jane Mowat said: “You both went out that night to steal in whatever way you could and make money. You were both under the influence of drink and drugs.”
The pair were each ordered to serve a 16 month prison sentence.
Hasler was just 16 when he was involved in a fracas outside the home of Alex Lee in The Conifers as Alex tried to move Hasler and his gang away from the family’s vehicle.
This prompted Alex’s stepdad Colin Philpott to intervene, stabbing the teenager repeatedly with a letter opener in July 2009.
Company director Mr Philpott was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder but no charges were brought when the Crown Prosecution Service decided he was acting in self-defence and out of desperation at seeing his family member kicked unconscious.
After the sentencing Mr Philpott said: “It was a pity he doesn’t seem to have learnt anything from his previous brushes with the law.”
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QNet: Not all pyramids make money for Egypt

By Ahmed Feteha
Ahram Online explores controversial 'direct-selling' scheme that has become increasingly popular among Egypt's would-be entrepreneurs
There is not such thing as easy money" this is one lesson some Qnet IRs learn the hard way.
"Let's face it – by the time you have financial security in your nine-to-five job, you'll be too old to enjoy the benefits."
It's with these simple words that a friend or family member might lead you to reflect on all they have achieved in their career, and then compare their success with your own more limited accomplishments.
They will, however, be quick to lift your spirits with the promise of a “business proposition” that will pull you out of your current “vicious circle.” And what is that business proposition? To join a network marketing scheme run by a company called QNet.
The idea is simple: buy a product from QNet through one of the company’s independent representatives (IRs) for around LE4000 ($666) and, upon purchasing, automatically become a company salesperson. You earn a commission if you’re able to market the company's products to other buyers, who also in turn become IRs.
There is a complex “tree” system in place that allows you to earn a commission whenever any of your recruits – or the recruits they have made – make a sale or enlist additional salespeople.
On the surface, it seems like an easy, guaranteed method of generating extra income – one that has become very popular in Egypt over the past two years.
But QNet has also been the subject of considerable controversy. Just last week, Egypt's head religious authority decreed that network marketing schemes like QNet are haram – proscribed by Islam – as they can be harmful to the economy.
Some former QNet IRs agree with this assessment.
"When you’re given the presentation by the IRs, you’re brainwashed into thinking it’s a guaranteed way to make money,” says Motaz Farrag, an ex-Qnet IR who now runs a Facebook group campaigning against network marketing. “But in practice, the chances of failure are much higher than the chances of success."
IRs receive training on how to give presentations about QNet "businesses.” The more experienced IRs coach newcomers in selling techniques, providing detailed answers to frequently asked questions.
"Those who joined the scheme earlier are the ones who make all the money because they get a commission on all subsequent recruits," Farrag explains.
To many, QNet's network-marketing system sounds a lot like a classic pyramid scheme – a charge the company vehemently denies.
"As QNet becomes increasingly popular, it becomes harder to recruit new participants," Farrag points out. “New members end up not being able to extend their network, but those at the top of the ‘tree’ make money anyway.”
He believes that the market will eventually be saturated as the number of participants outstrips population growth.
QNet has already been the target of official legal action in many countries.
In Sri Lanka, for example, the central bank enacted an Anti-Pyramid Act in 2005 that outlawed multilevel marketing schemes and employed existing bank regulations to stop pyramid scheme transactions in the nation’s banks.
“Direct selling,” the business model used by QNet, was banned in China in 1998 after becoming popular in the 1990s. "The sudden ban showed how concerned the government was about these independent distributor networks, with their door-to-door sales and motivational meetings," the Associated Press reported at the time.
In 2011, Turkey's Trade and Industry Ministry began an investigation into QNet’s Turkish branch, following reports of the company “victimising” employees. Other countries have seen QNet operations suspended due to licensing and tax issues.
The company, however, says its operations are comparable to multilevel marketing schemes that are legal in many countries. IRs often explain that the number of potential participants will never run out because older IRs can reinvest in their “trees.”
The company is also a member of the Direct Selling Association based in Malaysia.
Robert L. Fitzpatrick, a well known campaigner against pyramid schemes, explains that recruitment-based pyramid sales schemes are often camouflaged as “direct selling” companies, allowing them to multiply and gain access to more and more countries.
In general, the QNet scheme is marketed to potential recruits as an opportunity for those who want to start their own business without making a large investment or taking on overheads.
But critics say that, since the scheme always requires fresh recruits, and not only selling a product per se, QNet is – in practice – no different from a pyramid scheme.
QNet was in the media spotlight last week when Egypt's Dar Al-Ifta, the country's highest official religious authority, issued a decree or fatwa ruling the company’s activities haram.
Dar Al-Ifta justified the ruling by claiming that network marketing had a deleterious effect on the national economy. Network marketing “destabilises markets and ruins the concept of work. It also lacks proper legal and financial supervision," Dar Al-Ifta stated.
The negative economic effects of the scheme include an outflow of money from cash-strapped Egypt, a country where attracting foreign investments remains at the top of the economic agenda.
Blogger Sherwette Mansour explains that, if 60,466,176 people joined the scheme, total funds leaving the country in terms of joining fees would reach $60.5 billion (60 million recruits multiplied by an average joining fee of $1,000).
Members up to the level before last, meanwhile, will generate profits in the form of commissions. According to the scheme, IRs receive $250 for every six new salespeople they recruit, so total profits earned by IRs would amount to $2.5 billion, translating into a mere 4.2 per cent of the total amount invested.
Accordingly, QNet schemes provide little benefit for the country in question, as only a fraction of “business” returns are redirected into the local economy.
Nevertheless, QNet enjoys an established presence in several countries. It has offices in nine countries: including the United Arab Emirates, Thailand, Tajikistan, Taiwan, Singapore, Philippines, Indonesia, Azerbaijan and Hong Kong. According to its website, it has a franchise company in Turkey and has agents in Armenia, Jordan and three African countries.
Detailed information about the company, however, is not available. This includes the company's consolidated financial statements and the number of its employees and IRs.
Mansour, however, challenges the assumption that such huge numbers would enter the scheme in Egypt, since "this number of people entering the business is almost impossible because a small percentage of Egyptians can actually afford to pay the $1,000 needed to join."
The ruling by Dar Al-Ifta echoes criticisms made about QNet by many others, including former participants.
"The product in the scheme is irrelevant, so you end up buying something that is very overpriced just to join QNet,” says Ahmed Fouad, a 26-year-old engineer who participated in the scheme for just two weeks before quitting. “There’s no real value-added."
The products that must be purchased to join QNet range from watches to energy pendants, diet products, jewellery and overseas holidays. "You pay a ridiculously large sum of money for a watch that you can get much cheaper elsewhere and it's not even a well-known brand," Fouad says.
Recently, QNet began arranging "training" trips, in which groups of new recruits go on hotel retreats and are coached on selling techniques by more experienced members. But accounts by attendees of such retreats suggest the events have hardly been a resounding success.
"They took us to a gated residential compound and we had to do morning drills in which we stood in line for four hours with the trainers yelling at us," former QNet IR Ahmed Hassan says.
"They banned us from smoking, took our cell phones and woke us up at 5am. It seemed more like a military camp than a selling-skills course," the 25-year-old marketing graduate recalls bitterly. "After that I decided it was all too fishy for me."
Not all experiences have been negative, however, and some QNet participants have expressed satisfaction with their involvement in the scheme.
Recent college graduate Mohamed Saafan, for example, joined QNet more than one year ago after failing to find a steady job. "I’m fully dedicated to the business, which has gone well so far," Saafan explains. "It certainly beats just staying at home."
According to the 24-year-old aviation engineer, those who don't succeed at QNet simply haven’t put in enough effort. "People expect money to start flowing in as soon as they join – that's why many become disappointed quickly," he says.
QNet was established in 1998 with regional offices in Hong Kong and Malaysia, as well as offices in Singapore, the Philippines, Thailand and the UAE.
On its official website, the company describes itself as “a dynamic wellness and lifestyle company… to enrich the lives of its customers worldwide.”
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A home office that's smart and casual: How to make a house into a great workspace

By Huma Qureshi
It's not all documents on the dining table or conference calls over the cornflakes, as Huma Qureshi finds out
Thank goodness it's a new year because, let's face it, last year wasn't all that great. Unemployment soared to 2.62 million and, according to some reports, around 1,589 people were made redundant every day. Just as well we can start again, then.
Thankfully, there is something to be optimistic about. Those unemployment statistics are far from inspiring, but on the upside, working from home is booming. According to the Live Work Network, the number of people working from home has gone up 21 per cent since 2001, with one in 12 Brits now running their own business from home. For nearly three million people, home isn't just where the heart is, it's where the money is too. But what's it like in reality when your work space is actually your living space? And, if you're starting the new year with a career change that starts at home, what's the best way to set up a workspace which will inspire and motivate, rather than distract, you?
Judy Heminsley, author of Work From Home, has a home office in the converted mill she shares with her partner in Frome, Somerset. She says: "Often people who work from home maintain an office mentality. They set up a room to look exactly like an uninspiring corner of the office, with a boring desk, chair and grey filling cabinet. Obviously, your office furniture has to be suitable, but it doesn't have to be ugly. It makes sense that your surroundings affect how you feel; if you are surrounded by things that make you happy, then intuitively it's got to have a knock on effect on how productive you are."
Jane Cumberbatch, an interior design author who works from her London home, agrees. "People don't think about the importance of having a personalised workspace. It should be intimate and calming. That's the beauty of not being in a conventional office – you can make your work space at home entirely yours."
Before she moved house, there wasn't room for Cumberbatch to have an office; instead, she worked from a desk in the hallway. "Even though there wasn't much room, I made the most of it by having shelves above my desk that went right up to the ceiling," she says. "Storage is key. My solution was to have stackable boxes for paperwork and intersperse the open shelves with pictures and decorative objects to make it feel like a feature point. If you buy boxes in the same or contrasting colour then you can create an organised feel."
Cumberbatch now works in a big, light room with open shelves and an inspiration wall. But what if your home isn't big enough to allow you to have your very own work room? "It's not totally necessary to have an office space that you literally close the door on at the end of the day," says Heminsley. "It depends on your personality. Some find that if they are in an enclosed space, they get nothing done. It's important to get a sense of where you want to be when you work."
So how do other work-from-homers work from home?
The therapist
Heather Bestel moved from a semi in Liverpool to a six-bedroom farmhouse in south-west Scotland in 2006, where she works as a therapist and stress-management consultant.
"It got to the point where I was talking to stressed-out executives about the importance of a work-life balance, when the irony was I was so stressed-out myself. As a family, we wanted a better quality of life, so we moved to Scotland and I do all my consultations over Skype.
"Working from home is wonderful. Originally, I designated a bedroom to be my study, but it felt very closed off. I still do my consultations in there, but I prefer working in the kitchen, especially when it's cold, as that's where the Aga is. Being in the kitchen lets me be in the heart of the house, where I can get on with sending emails while my husband makes tea or my daughter tells me how school was.
"I wanted to create a sense of comfort and I like the country-cottage, shabby-chic style. I love to work on a table with a bunch of flowers in the middle, but if I was in an office, people would just think I was weird if I started bringing flowers in. As a stress-management consultant, I believe it's very important that your working environment is calm. Just because it's an office, it doesn't have to be sterile."
The small-business owner
Deany Judd lives in Whitecraigs, south Glasgow, with her three children, husband and two dogs. She teaches an online tuition course, called Star Student, from home. "I used to work from a room in the house which was always the dumping ground. Every time the phone rang, I had to ask the caller to hold and put the laundry on and off.
"I hated it. Tutoring online means I record lessons and Skype pupils, and I couldn't do that from a glorified laundry room. So I turned the dining room, which we hardly ever used, into my study.
"I wanted a really grown-up looking study. An interior designer friend helped come up with the grey colour scheme. I chose a glass desk, because it gives a really airy feel, and I got my desk chair from Ikea – it's comfortable, but wasn't too expensive. I had wanted bookshelves forever, and this room finally had the space to build them. I've also got tons of photos of the children and my husband dotted around the shelves. My husband is pretty opinionated about the other rooms in the house, but I just did it how I wanted it!
"I tend to only work in the study now, and since having it, I can close the door and separate the working day from family time."
The writer
Food writer Nick Baines lives with his wife Emma in a two-bed flat in Westbourne, Bournemouth. He writes at the kitchen table.
"I have a desk in the spare room, but it's a dumping ground for all sorts of stuff which does my head in. It is devoid of inspiration. The kitchen table is where I get most done; writing about food, it feels right being in the kitchen.
"It is frustrating sometimes, though. Right now, all my books are in the lounge and spill into the kitchen and if I had the space, I'd love to have my books in one place and work right by them. I'd kill for an open fire and a wing-back chair in the corner to read in. That would be nice.
"Mostly though, I'm pretty set with just a table, a chair and tea. Tea inspires me to work. I need space to stick my ideas up and write them down, and that's what the blackboard is for. I usually have notes stuck up on the wall too. I work on the go a lot, writing from hotel rooms and service stations and cafés. So it's always good to get home, come back to the kitchen, flick the kettle on and pull the chair out.
"The kitchen really is my little haven. It's where I work best, where plans are developed, decisions are made and where we eat. It's the starting point to everything, and I think that's why I like it. It's a place for ideas and relaxation all at once."
The photographer
Former television producer Rosie Bray, 35, works as a lifestyle photographer from the three-bedroom Victorian cottage in Weybridge where she lives with her husband.
"My office is in a small, light bedroom upstairs at the back of the house. It's got plain white walls, which are great as a blank canvas for my photography. I photograph children and families in their homes and on location but all the editing and post-processing happens here in my office, along with all the other various jobs that come with running a small business.
"I love clean, white, simple design with a touch of pretty. I have an 'inspiration board' above my desk that changes regularly, where I cut out and stick up anything that catches my eye.
"Having worked as a producer, I'm used to the hustle and bustle of an open-plan office environment, but there's nothing like having a quiet room of your own. The room overlooks the garden – perfect for day-dreaming.
"Storage is really important (God bless Ikea), and I crave good light so I like being near the window. I compromised on style for comfort when it came to my chair – I need proper back support for the hours spent editing at my computer. It's not the prettiest of chairs but comfort wins. I got it from a company called Milan Direct.
"A good home office should also be your ideal bedroom/retreat so that you love being there, and I genuinely look forward to 'going to work' every day. Work feels less of the daily grind and more of a daily pleasure. And I love that I can wear slippers to work."

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N.J. woman who fraudulently obtained home mortgage used money to make ends meet, attorney says

By
SUSSEX COUNTY — A Sussex County woman who fraudulently obtained a $105,000 second mortgage loan on her mother’s home used the money to help her and her mother make ends meets, and pay their monthly bills, her attorney said.
“There’s nothing to suggest she spent the money on anything extravagant. Unlike other cases like this, there’s nothing in the house to suggest that she spent the money on anything but household bills,” said public defender Steven Insley, who represents 47-year-old Dianne Butto-Sibilia.
Insley also said Butto-Sibilia has a history of both mental and physical health problems.
“This is a very, very sad case. It’s a very sad situation with her. In my opinion, she’s not a criminal and doesn’t belong in prison,” he said.
Butto-Sibilia, who lived with her 70-year-old mother in Hamburg, pleaded guilty last month in Newton to identity theft, perjury and theft, all third-degree crimes, before Superior Court Judge N. Peter Conforti.
Assistant Prosecutor Rachelle Jones said the crimes came to light after Butto-Sibilia told a judge during an eviction hearing last year that she didn’t know why their home was facing foreclosure.
A subsequent investigation led by Detective Douglas Porter of the prosecutor’s office found Butto-Sibilia had stolen the monthly mortgage payments given to her by her mother that were supposed to be sent to the bank. She also had forged her mother’s name and the name of an attorney on the application for the second mortgage loan, said Jones.
“The mom had no idea why the home was in foreclosure,” said Jones. “She (Butto-Sibilia) did the entire closing. She definitely had knowledge of real estate closings.”
Butto-Sibilia, former owner of Changing Times Professional Services, a Mount Arlington-based legal services firm, used about $30,000 of the $105,000 second mortgage loan to pay off the first mortgage and “basically spent the rest,” said Jones, adding the defendant didn’t spend the money on luxuries although she didn’t know specifically how the money was spent. She noted Butto-Sibilia has a history of health problems.
Butto-Sibilia is expected to be sentenced to 364 days in jail, a probationary term and be required to pay full restitution to her victims when she is sentenced Jan. 23, said Jones.
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Short sellers target mid-cap retailers

The retail sector came under pressure as information provider Data Explorers highlighted in a report that several retailers have recently seen a rise in the amount of stock on loan to short sellers. Short sellers, many of which are hedge funds and traders, typically make money by borrowing stock from a third party (usually a broker) and selling it, with the intention of buying the shares back at a later date to return to that third party at a lower price.
According to Data Explorers, Carpetright, Home Retail Group and Mothercare have all suffered a spike in the volumes of stock out on loan.
The increase in stock on loan comes amid speculation the retail sector will demonstrate next week that several companies did not trade well during the festive period.
Carpetright and Home Retail Group are the most shorted stocks, with over 14pc of their total shares out on loan, according to Data Explorers. Meanwhile, Mothercare has 12.3pc of its shares on loan while Dixons Retail has seen 11.3pc of its stock borrowed by short sellers.
Dixons Retail drifted a ½ to 9.7p and Mothercare lost 3.2 to 160p. Home Retail, which Citigroup added to its "least-preferred list" also dipped 3.2 to 90.9p but Carpetright bucked the weak sector trend, edging up 3 to 494.9p.
Overall, the FTSE 100 lost 31.46 points to 5,668.45 while the FTSE 250 fell 88.18 points to 10,273.77 following Italian bank UniCredit's hugely discounted rights issue, which provoked fears of another banking crisis.
"The €7.5bn [£4.8bn rights issue] issue was offered at a discount of 69pc, which is huge," said Joshua Raymond, chief market strategist at City Index.
He added: "The size of the discount tells two distinct tales. Firstly that the Italian bank believes appetite to pick up the issue will be extremely weak, which echoes a lack of shareholder and investor confidence in the bank. And secondly, the fact that they [UniCredit] are willing to offer such a large discount to some may smack of desperation.
"Either way, the read across from the offer itself has been one of surprise by most investors, who have moved to cash in yesterday's gains in banking stocks early as a result," concluded Mr Raymond.
In London, Lloyds Banking Group dropped 0.4 to 26½p. However, Barclays rose 2 to 188.3p as many analysts believe it is likely to perform well over the next twelve months.
Mining stocks gave up some of Tuesday's gains, with Glencore International taking the wooden spoon. The shares fell 13.15 to 405p as the price of copper declined for the first time in four days.
Next lost 85p to £26.56 following a trading update in which the company was cautious about trading in 2012. Elsewhere in the sector, Marks & Spencer dipped 8.2 to 308.8p in sympathy. BSkyB, the country's biggest pay-TV broadcaster, slipped 12 to 730p after a newspaper reported that Apple is "showing interest" in joining the bidding for the next set of English Premier League live broadcast rights, to boost its UK television offering. The newspaper also said in its sports agenda column that Google is expected to make "similar soundings."
On a more positive tack, Amec perked up 1 to 934p. Yesterday Seymour Pierce published a bullish note on the company. Kevin Lapwood, an analyst at Seymour Pierce, said: "Amec has underperformed the market by 15pc in the past year and now trades at a significant discount to its oil service peers. Given the recent strength of the oil price – which should underpin future oil exploration and production activity and the increased activity in new hydrocarbon development activity such as shale gas fracking and oil shales – we believe this is unjustifiably low."
Defensive stocks, though, dominated the leaderboard amid of jitters about further declines in the wider market. United Utilities put on 9 to 620½p and Severn Trent advanced 17p to £15.37.
In the mid-cap index, recruitment companies were in the doldrums following a bearish note from JP Morgan Cazenove. Robert Plant, an analyst at JP Morgan Cazenove, pointed out that Hays delivers its second-quarter trading statement on January 10, and Michael Page its fourth-quarter trading update on January 11.
"We think the outlook for both companies is negative due to the expected slowdown in 2012 of the main economies they are exposed to," said Mr Plant.
He added: "The main reason why Michael Page is our least preferred recruitment company share is that it is the most expensive of the sub-sector ... and we think valuation is too high given the downward pressure on estimates." Michael Page fell 8.3 to 353.4p and Hays lost 0.3 to 66.7p.
However, Domino's Pizza topped the FTSE 250 leaderboard, rising 27.7 to 441½p following a trading update that met market expectations.
Small cap Eurasia Mining leapt 0.1 – 23pc – to 0.8p. It was not clear why the shares rose so much. The company eventually said in statement to the market that: "the directors of the company note the movement in the company's share price today. The directors can confirm that they are not aware of any reason for the change."
Stockbroker Panmure Gordon presented the market with its top picks for the year. Industrials analyst Oliver Wynne-James reckons investors should buy Bodycote although this idea is not for the "faint hearted". "The valuation is deeply discounted and already prices in a full double dip. In any case ... a clean balance sheet should help it to successfully navigate through 2012. Some corporate activity in the stock is now a possibility given that the five-year compounded returns are sizeable and sit well ahead of the sector," said Mr Wynne-James. Still Bodycote dipped 3.1 to 277.9p yesterday. Meanwhile, Rachel Waring and Mark Hughes advised investors to snap up Galliford Try - their top pick of 2011. "In January 2011 we picked Galliford Try as our 'Stock of the Year'. Since then, the shares have risen by 50pc and paid the largest dividend in the sector, outperforming the FTSE All Share by 55pc. For the first time in this analyst's stock-broking career, the 2011 pick is rolled over to become the 2012 key pick. Galliford is the most undervalued stock in the sector." Galliford Try put on 11.2 to 473p.
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10 New Year?s Resolutions To Cut Costs In Your Home

People often use the coming of a New Year as a springboard for self-improvement, whether it's quitting a bad habit, or shedding a few excess pounds of weight. Why not use the same principle for a little home improvement? The New Year is a great time to start working on those home improvements, repairs and maintenance projects that you might have been putting off, before things escalate to unmanageable costs and expenditures.
Get an Energy Audit
One of the first things on your to-do-list should be an energy audit. Hiring a professional energy auditor to assess your home's energy consumption may seem like an unnecessary expenditure. However, making your home more energy efficient can lead to more money saved over time. An energy auditor can point out poor insulation and air leaks throughout the home, which are common causes of increased utility bills over the winter.
Improve Your Insulation
As stated above, poor insulation can be quite costly, especially during the winter months. What many people fail to realize is that poor insulation affects utility bills in the summer, as well. If your home is not properly insulated, you will end up spending more money on gas and electricity trying to keep it warm over the winter and cool during the summer. This makes insulation improvements an important task on your New Year's to-do-list for cutting costs in your home.
Look for Drafts
The final step in weatherizing your home for this New Year's home improvements is to check for drafts around walls, ceilings, doors and windows. After locating any air leaks, begin plugging them up with caulk, foam, tape or some other form of weather-stripping material. If you don't feel confident in doing it yourself, you can hire a contractor to do the job for you.
Start Buying Energy Efficient Appliances
According to the United States Department of Energy, home appliances and electronics make up 20% of your energy bill. From the living room television, to the refrigerator in the kitchen, replacing old appliances with new, Energy Star rated appliances can help save you money over time. Not only will you be saving money on your electric bill, but you'll also be saving the environment as well. Now that's a New Year's resolution worth making.
Get Organized and Ditch the Rental Storage Space
Many people find the need to rent a monthly storage space to store anything they can't fit in their home. In reality, most of these people would have sufficient space at home if they just took the time to do a little organizing. Consider clearing out the clutter in your garage and closets by having a yard sale. You can also donate any furniture, clothing or other household items that have been gathering dust in the attic to create more storage space.
Go Green
This New Year, embrace Green Living by making your home more eco-friendly. Instead of tossing glass, aluminum and plastic bottles or containers in the trash, keep them in separated bins. Then, head down to your local recycling center and get a couple bucks back for being environmentally conscious. Also consider going paperless to minimize waste. You can pay bills and manage your banking online, while utilizing email instead of snail mail to make your home paper-free.
Stop Buying Bottled Water and Get a Water Filter
Cut costs on your grocery bill by installing a water filter on your kitchen sink for drinking water instead of buying bottled water. While city tap water is regulated and should be safe enough to drink by itself, a water filter can provide that fresh, clean taste without having to spend as much on bottled cases of water. This is another New Year's task that can save you money while you save the environment by minimizing plastic pollution.
Refresh Your Home by Repainting a Room
Instead of going for a full remodel, you can refresh and update an old home with a simple paint job. Painting a room with a bold color, or multiple colors can bring new life to a ho-hum interior. If you feel reluctant about using loud colors that aren't typically on your home palette, do a little experimenting by painting an accent wall instead of the entire room. Worst case scenario, you can simply repaint the wall to match the original color scheme.
Improve Your Home Safety
Remember when you took the batteries out of the smoke detector for the TV remote in the living room? The New Year is a great time to make sure your smoke and carbon monoxide detectors are functioning properly. While you're at it, check and see that the fire extinguisher you've had since the 1980s still works. These tasks can prove to be invaluable on the off chance a real emergency like a gas leak or fire occurs.
Plan out Dinner Menus for the Upcoming Year
Your final task for your New Year's home improvement list is to start planning out your dinners for the upcoming year. Many people find themselves eating out more when they have no idea what to prepare for themselves at home. Even consider buying yourself new cooking tools to experiment with dishes you've never served at home before, like a deep-fryer or slow-cooker. That way, you can add more variety to your dinner menu.
The Bottom Line
Your New Year's home improvement list does not need to be limited to these 10 tasks. Take a quick tour of your home and inspect areas that you've been purposely avoiding, ignoring or hiding. For example, that stain on the carpet under the living room rug, or the draft you noticed around the rear sliding door. Use the coming of the New Year to help motivate you into doing something that benefits yourself and your family by properly maintaining your home.
Source http://www.investopedia.com
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Thursday 5 January 2012

Staff cull leaves Darlington FC unable to host home game

By  Paul Cook 
ADMINISTRATORS at Darlington Football Club have dismissed all but five members of non-playing staff.
The Quakers’ financial position is so severe that the move means there are not enough employees left to host the next home game – against Fleetwood Town on Saturday, January 21.
On Tuesday, it was believed there were only days left to save the club, but The Northern Echo understands administrators are working to a timescale of two weeks, meaning the club will no longer exist if a buyer is not found by January 17.
The club was put into administration on Tuesday for the third time in nine years, only eight months after Wembley success in the FA Trophy.
Harvey Madden, from accountancy firm Rowlands, which was appointed as administrator by chairman Raj Singh, said that without any financial support, he would have little option to cease trading in a “very short time”.
Since the players were not paid last month and only received part of their previous wages, they are entitled to hand in a 14-day period of notice.
Employees dismissed include ticket office staff and the groundsman.
Players are expected to be paid £200 for playing this Saturday away against Barrow, in Cumbria.
Earlier this week, Mr Singh repeated his warnings from November that he would not put any more money into the club, dashing the hopes of the Darlington Football Rescue Group being in a position to put a package together in the summer.
Darlington MP Jenny Chapman, who is due to meet the rescue group this week, hoped a deal could be finalised in time, but believes a new club may be the only option.
She said: “I am meeting with interested parties and trying to encourage a deal to come together as quickly as possible.
“We have to be realistic because the club does not own its land or stadium. Obviously, they would have to take the club onward and take over the responsibility it has to its employees and other contracts.
“I will be working alongside other people to try and find a solution, but I do not want to give the impression I am leading on it.”
A club spokesman said: “We are waiting to see if anybody comes forward.”
Sean Hamilton, head of business recovery at Price Waterhouse Coopers, in Newcastle, said the administrator’s statement did not sound promising. He added: “The thing about football clubs is that you have to have a connection with the club. At lower levels, you do not make any money in football. It is more of a cash drain than a way of making money.”
Former captain Kevan Smith had been preparing a bid for the club, but halted his plans after the club went into administration.
To contact the administrator, call 01642-790790.
􀁧 In yesterday’s story, it was incorrectly reported that 75 per cent of profits from nonfootball related activities go to Darlington Borough Council because of a covenant on the land surrounding the stadium.
However, if the land was sold for non-sport use, 75 per cent of the increase in value of the land would go to the council because it originally sold the land to the club at a low value, reflecting the use only for sports.
A council spokesman said that if the land was sold for higher-value uses, then it was fair to the council taxpayer that the correct value of the land was paid.
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Home, lean home


Designers, builders resolve to lose extra house flab
Have you resolved to go on a diet and shed pounds in the new year? Why not also put your home on a diet in 2012?
It makes sense, said Sharon Kreighbaum, author of the new book "Is Your House Overweight? Recipes for Low-Fat Rooms" and owner of Staged Makeovers in Hudson, Ohio. When a house is overweight, it feels uncomfortable and sluggish and weighs on occupants, said the interior designer and home stager.
"It creates stress, due to not being able to find things," Kreighbaum said. "You buy another (item) and wind up with a lot of duplicates. You feel defeated in not being able to make a decision as to where to put things. Being uncomfortable with too much becomes overwhelming."
Builders and architects seem to have gotten the message that homes need to shed fat. They're building houses that start out and stay leaner, said Jennifer Ames, a broker at Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage Gold Coast in Chicago.
For example, North Carolina architect Sarah Susanka, famed for her Not So Big House philosophy, recently unveiled a showcase home reflecting that approach at SchoolStreet Homes in Libertyville. The house forgoes unused formal rooms for spaces tailored to casual lifestyles that focus on functionality and flexibility. Characteristic features include built-ins, window seats, alcoves and nooks.
Addressing the bloat starts with sacrificing quantity but not quality. Many homes have downsized or eliminated less-used spaces like living rooms and dining rooms, Ames noted.
"I'm also seeing empty nesters getting more pragmatic about how often their children will visit," she said. "Providing bedrooms for the once-a-year visit just doesn't make sense."
A small utility room off the garage or back door can do wonders for reining in clutter when a family enters and leaves the home, said Kim Cosentino, owner of De-Clutter Box, a Westmont home-organizing company.
Organization solutions for this area include benches, floor-to-ceiling storage space, built-in shelves for sports equipment and backpacks, coat hooks and spots for recharging cellphones.
Kitchen solutions
Newer home designs recognize people congregate in the kitchen, the heart of the home. An adjoining hearth room with a fireplace and comfortable seating can eliminate the need for living rooms and family rooms, Kreighbaum said.
A built-in eating area in the kitchen gives a homeowner more usable space than a formal dining room.
For storage needs, drawers are replacing shelves in the lower cupboards, allowing everything stored within cupboards to be pulled out when needed, Cosentino said.
Some of the best ideas in creating leaner kitchens are the simplest.
"Fewer cabinets, but larger and wider cabinets, can afford you more flexibility and more storage opportunities," said Sarah Reep, product specialist with Ann Arbor, Mich.-based Masco Cabinetry.
"I'd rather have one 30-inch-wide than two 16-inch-wide cabinets. And that saves you money, because one cabinet is more affordable than two."
Similarly, a 36-inch-wide drawer will accommodate a much wider range of items than standard 12-, 15- or 18-inch-wide drawers, Reep said.
Media rooms
Dens common in older homes are being supplanted with media/computer rooms, said Cheryl Daugvila, kitchen designer and owner of Cheryl D & Co. in La Grange. The firm helps builders such as Westmont's Recon Construction build more efficient homes.
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HearthStone to contractors: Builder 'has a plan' to survive

By Steve Jordon
WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER
HearthStone Homes, one of the Omaha area's most prolific home builders, is still building and selling homes and remains focused on continuing its 40-year-old business despite the concerns of some contractors about getting paid.
That's the word from Neil Smith, vice president of HearthStone, who, like others in the new-home game, has heard all the rumors: The company has filed for bankruptcy, it's going to file, it's going out of business.
"None of those are true," Smith said. "Certainly the last four years have tested the home-building business in general. We're not immune to that. We've experienced that same sort of difficulty in Omaha. When there's that much shift within an industry, it has a big impact."
In response to slow home sales, the company has cut staff and extended the cycles of payments to contractors.
That has prompted the filing of liens in the last two weeks by four contractors to lock in more than $250,000 in payments for work on HearthStone homes in Douglas and Sarpy Counties.
HearthStone built 300 houses in the Omaha area last year, down from a peak of 962 in 2007. The company cut its workforce in the past four years from about 120 people to 28, Smith said, but expects to build and sell another 275 to 300 homes this year.
HearthStone has 10 completed homes in its unsold inventory and is building 68 others under contract with buyers who expect to close on their purchases within a few months. It takes about four months to build each house, Smith said.
"I don't think they're having any problems" making payments, said Eric Patomson at AA Heating & Air Conditioning, which is owed about $200,000. "We're going to go to a meeting this week and see what's going on, to see where they're at, what the payment schedule will be."
Douglas County Register of Deeds Diane Battiato said Shamrock Concrete filed liens on 16 projects; Arid Resources, which does waterproofing and other foundation work, filed 34; and AA Heating filed 17. Shamrock is owed about $38,000 and Arid about $25,000, Battiato said.
In Sarpy County, Shamrock, Arid and J.C. Excavation filed 28 liens, Register of Deeds Lloyd Dowding said.
Smith said the liens are the method that contractors have to make sure they are paid for their work. Once a lien is filed, it must be paid off before a home can be sold. "We owe them money," he said. "They'll get paid, and we'll sell the houses."
David Angelloz, chief operating officer for Arid Resources, said the company filed its liens to protect its rights under the lien regulations. The company is still working on HearthStone projects, he said. The other contractors couldn't be reached for comment.
Patomson, from AA Heating, also said he filed the liens to protect the company's rights under state law, which recognizes liens filed within 120 days of work being completed.
AA Heating, which worked on about 1,100 HearthStone homes over the past 3½ years, stopped working on HearthStone properties in November because the margins were too small, he said, not because he anticipated payment problems. "They've been paying us," he said
Residential housing permits nationally have dropped from 1.2 million a year to about 350,000, and Smith, the HearthStone vice president, said demand in Omaha has slumped as well.
He acknowledged some uncertainty among vendors but said company officials "have been in communication with them all along the way," he said, holding frequent meetings to discuss the progress of each house toward closing.
Smith said he understands the doubts that led to the liens and the rumors. "That's not an unwarranted thought as we go through these tough times. Thousands of builders (nationally) have gone out of business. We're trying to do the things we can on a day-to-day basis to remain one of the builders that are around. The fact that we're here four years later is a testament to that."
The company has gotten good cooperation from its lenders and from the vendors who supply the workers and material to build the houses, Smith said. Some vendors have left, he said, but others have taken their places and most have stuck with the company.
"One of the great things about it is that we haven't had to do this by ourselves," he said. "All those people have helped and supported us. We're going to need those guys to help us going forward."
Crews are working to finish the houses under contract, and the company is signing up new purchasers to continue starting new projects, Smith said. Home prices and interest rates are good, he said, and Omaha's low unemployment rate and generally healthy economy are factors in favor of a good year for 2012.
"We've put together a plan and we're trying to implement that plan right now," he said.
He said HearthStone has its own sales force as well as relationships with Realtors who receive referral fees for bringing in customers. The company's model homes remain staffed and open for drop-ins. The job cuts have come mostly in back-office staff positions, finding ways to handle office jobs, warranty work and other tasks with fewer people as sales have declined, he said.
"That's been really tough," Smith said. "We've impacted some people negatively in that process. But we feel like it's most important that HearthStone, which has been part of the economy of Omaha for 40-plus years, to continue to move forward. We still have hundreds of families that rely on us for their livelihoods."
Potential buyers are still visiting the company's model homes in 14 area neighborhoods, Smith said. "Traffic was good last week. Hopefully those will translate into sales."
Contact the writer:
402-444-1080, steve.jordon@owh.com
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