Suit says HUD chief tied funds to favor

Saturday, March 1st, 2008

PHILADELPHIA A seemingly ho-hum rules dispute between Philadelphia’s public housing agency and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development has led to accusations of favoritism and corruption against a member of President Bush’s Cabinet.According to the city housing authority director, HUD Secretary Alphonso Jackson has threatened the agency’s funding since it refused to award a vacant lot worth $2 million to Kenny Gamble, a soul-music producer-turned-community developer.Jackson, forgoing protocol, toured the site with Gamble in September 2006 without inviting local officials to join them, and later personally called Philadelphia’s mayor at the time for help, according to an amended federal lawsuit filed against HUD last month by the Philadelphia Housing Authority.”This is extraordinary. He’s the president’s representative, and he’s personally coming out, on his own, to take a firsthand look into a contract dispute?” housing authority Director Carl Greene said Thursday.Over the past 18 months, HUD has cited the Philadelphia agency for a series of alleged shortcomings and is threatening to pull the agency from a pilot program that gives it far greater autonomy over its $350 million budget and various programs. The rebuke would cost the authority millions of dollars a year and would lead to staff layoffs and rent increases for some of its 84,000 low-income clients, Greene said.”It’s this kind of planned, deliberate harassment that adds up to retaliation,” Greene said.HUD spokesman Jerry Brown declined to comment on the accusations this past week, saying the judge presiding in the lawsuit has asked the parties not to speak to the news media. Trial is set for May 20.In earlier news reports, Brown and several HUD officials have denied any link between the Gamble matter and the allegation of rule violations, which include handicap accessibility.Gamble’s office referred The Associated Press to Abdur-Rahim Islam, the president of the developer’s enterprise, Universal Companies. Islam did not return phone messages left over the past week.Gamble and partner Leon Huff wrote and produced “Love Train,” “Me and Mrs. Jones” and other 1970s-era soul hits that embodied the “Philly Sound.” In recent decades, he has devoted his time to community activism and redevelopment in South Philadelphia, where he grew up.According to the Web site of Universal Companies, Gamble has spent more than $7 million of his own money renovating run-down homes in the area.His Universal Community Homes, started in 1983, has twice partnered with the Philadelphia Housing Authority on redevelopment projects - but the authority said it had to take over each time.In one project, Universal Homes and another firm built just 82 of the 236 planned units before the housing authority stepped in to finish the job, an authority spokesman said.Under the contract, Universal was to receive a remaining lot free of charge so it could build 19 market-rate homes. But Greene and his lawyers concluded that Universal had defaulted on the deal.Jackson, after visiting the site with Gamble, called then-Mayor John F. Street, the housing authority’s chairman, the lawsuit charges.In March 2007, three officials called Greene to seek an early response to HUD’s inquiry about the lot. That prompted Greene, on March 19, to ask HUD’s inspector general to investigate the HUD secretary’s conduct. Greene said he presumes that investigation is ongoing.Universal Companies also has government contracts to operate four charter and public schools and provides support services for welfare and public-housing recipients.City Councilwoman Jannie Blackwell, who sits on the housing authority board, said she feels that anyone who wants to develop that vacant parcel should pay for it. And she fears that the conflict will jeopardize the housing authority’s work.”I’m really frightened about it,” Blackwell said. “I’m really hopeful that people that have well-meaning objectives can come together and work it out.”

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Video games triumph as Hollywood falters

Sunday, February 24th, 2008

The allure of Hollywood’s biggest stars is losing out to entertainment based on microscopic circuitry and fancy software.Do you doubt it? While movie attendance has essentially been flat for six years, games for computers and video consoles have been booming.If the trend continues, many people in the entertainment industry will lose their jobs, but new types of jobs are already opening up, particularly in parts of California, which form a digital entertainment hub.”I feel a massive shift,” said Dana Settle, a venture capitalist at Greycroft Partners in Los Angeles who invests in online companies. “Movie studios are corporate behemoths. They’re going to crumble.”Movie stars Tobey Maguire as Spider-Man, Mike Myers as the voice of Shrek and Johnny Depp as Jack Sparrow came out with hit sequels last year, which helped raise box office receipts in North America to $9.7 billion. But that total, which excludes shrinking DVD sales and downloads, was up a mere 2.4 percent from 2004, according to data tracker Media by Numbers.Apples-to-apples comparisons aren’t possible, but the contrasts are clear. Game industry sales, including consoles and software, totaled about $18 billion in the United States last year, up 43 percent over 2006, according to market researcher NPD Group.The first-person shooting game “Halo 3,” the hard-to-find Wii game console and the role-playing “World of Warcraft” were among the hits that contributed to those sales. Last month, Warcraft publisher Blizzard Entertainment of Irvine announced the game had 10 million subscribers.The No. 1 game even outpaced the No. 1 movie last year. “Halo 3″ brought in $170 million on its first day; “Spider-Man 3″ grossed $151 million on its first weekend.Game experts recently discussed the effects of changing entertainment choices. The impact extends from the living room to the workplace.”Studios are on the down slope, and they know it,” said Jamie Somes, senior managing director of Alexander Dunham Capital investment bank in Los Angeles. “They’re not well-positioned as organizations for the new digital environment.” He cited predictions that within five years studios will be only half to one-tenth their current size.”In studios, you can smell the fear,” Settle said. “They’re missing the creative spark. At game companies, people are psyched.”Unlike movies, modern computer-based games let viewers interact with the game’s story or with other players, said Bob Drobish, president of startup True Games Interactive, who spoke to a meeting of video game engineers at the Digital Media Center incubator in Santa Ana.Modern games often do not appeal to consumers over 30 because they tend to think of computers as one-person productivity tools - which is what they used to be, Drobish said. People under 30 take to those games more readily, he said, because they view computers as social devices for exchanging e-mails, instant messages and pictures with friends.”Computers are inherently social,” especially in the age of high-speed broadband networks, he said. New types of games tap into that quality, especially multiplayer online role-playing games such as “World of Warcraft,” he said.The development of multiplayer social games is possible because of fundamental technological improvements in computers and computer networks, said Tim Walsh, the Los Angeles-based executive vice president of in-game advertising company IGA Worldwide.”Improved software, file compression, better code, Flash animation - they’re coming together to extend the digital lifestyle,” he said.With the new appeal of games come new business opportunities - and more games in the future.- Red 5 Studios. Three game makers and executives from Blizzard - “World of Warcraft” team leader Mark Kern, art director William Petras, and Taewon Yun, who launched the game in Korea - founded Red 5 Studios in 2005 and since then have been working on their first game. With development studios in Aliso Viejo and Shanghai, China, the company’s goal is “bringing together millions of gamers across the world by creating immersive worlds, intriguing stories and compelling characters.”- Carbine Studios. Ten other former “World of Warcraft” game makers, including lead animator Kevin Beardslee, lead composer Jason Hayes and senior artist Matt Mocarski, founded Carbine Studios in Aliso Viejo. The company has 17 former Blizzard employees who are developing a multiplayer online game.- True Games Interactive. Last year, Drobish and Jeff Lujan, chief publishing officer at True Games, left executive positions at K2 to pursue their startup. They hope to launch a domestic version of a Korean game this summer.- Sleepy Giant. Last year former K2 executives Matthew Hannus and David Lee started Newport Beach-based Sleepy Giant, which runs other companies’ games rather than developing its own. The gaming opportunities aren’t limited to entrepreneurs.”A lot of good Hollywood TV and movie talent is being drawn to games” because game production can be more stable than the boom-and-bust movie business, and can even offer better fringe benefits, said Mark Friedler, founder of the GameDaily Web site. People who are moving from movies to games include digital artists and special effects experts, who tell Friedler one reason for the decision is, “I like having health insurance,” he said. Because the virtual landscapes of online worlds have grown to accommodate so many players, Walsh said, “Game companies need a tremendous amount of digital artists, physicists and designers.” Friedler cited two problems new game companies face - rising costs and growing competition for consumers‘ time. “To create a next-generation console game costs $40 million to $50 million,” he said. “That’s the same cost as a lot of movies.” With “World of Warcraft,” Blizzard changed the market, raising players’ expectations for how realistic a game will be. To accomplish that, the company spent an estimated $90 million, Drobish said. At first the budget seemed excessive, but now it looks brilliant, he said. Intense competition for consumers’ time has already affected traditional forms of entertainment. “Movies and TV are seeing a shift away from them because there are only so many hours in the day,” Walsh said. He foresees a bright future for games, but some industry observers think the same competition for people’s attention could hurt games, too. “People worry about crowding out,” Friedler said. “If someone is always on Facebook and MySpace and texting, how much time is left for games?”

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Video games triumph as Hollywood falters

Friday, February 22nd, 2008

The allure of Hollywood’s biggest stars is losing out to entertainment based on microscopic circuitry and fancy software.Do you doubt it? While movie attendance has essentially been flat for six years, games for computers and video consoles have been booming.If the trend continues, many people in the entertainment industry will lose their jobs, but new types of jobs are already opening up, particularly in parts of California, which form a digital entertainment hub.”I feel a massive shift,” said Dana Settle, a venture capitalist at Greycroft Partners in Los Angeles who invests in online companies. “Movie studios are corporate behemoths. They’re going to crumble.”Movie stars Tobey Maguire as Spider-Man, Mike Myers as the voice of Shrek and Johnny Depp as Jack Sparrow came out with hit sequels last year, which helped raise box office receipts in North America to $9.7 billion. But that total, which excludes shrinking DVD sales and downloads, was up a mere 2.4 percent from 2004, according to data tracker Media by Numbers.Apples-to-apples comparisons aren’t possible, but the contrasts are clear. Game industry sales, including consoles and software, totaled about $18 billion in the United States last year, up 43 percent over 2006, according to market researcher NPD Group.The first-person shooting game “Halo 3,” the hard-to-find Wii game console and the role-playing “World of Warcraft” were among the hits that contributed to those sales. Last month, Warcraft publisher Blizzard Entertainment of Irvine announced the game had 10 million subscribers.The No. 1 game even outpaced the No. 1 movie last year. “Halo 3″ brought in $170 million on its first day; “Spider-Man 3″ grossed $151 million on its first weekend.Game experts recently discussed the effects of changing entertainment choices. The impact extends from the living room to the workplace.”Studios are on the down slope, and they know it,” said Jamie Somes, senior managing director of Alexander Dunham Capital investment bank in Los Angeles. “They’re not well-positioned as organizations for the new digital environment.” He cited predictions that within five years studios will be only half to one-tenth their current size.”In studios, you can smell the fear,” Settle said. “They’re missing the creative spark. At game companies, people are psyched.”Unlike movies, modern computer-based games let viewers interact with the game’s story or with other players, said Bob Drobish, president of startup True Games Interactive, who spoke to a meeting of video game engineers at the Digital Media Center incubator in Santa Ana.Modern games often do not appeal to consumers over 30 because they tend to think of computers as one-person productivity tools - which is what they used to be, Drobish said. People under 30 take to those games more readily, he said, because they view computers as social devices for exchanging e-mails, instant messages and pictures with friends.”Computers are inherently social,” especially in the age of high-speed broadband networks, he said. New types of games tap into that quality, especially multiplayer online role-playing games such as “World of Warcraft,” he said.The development of multiplayer social games is possible because of fundamental technological improvements in computers and computer networks, said Tim Walsh, the Los Angeles-based executive vice president of in-game advertising company IGA Worldwide.”Improved software, file compression, better code, Flash animation - they’re coming together to extend the digital lifestyle,” he said.With the new appeal of games come new business opportunities - and more games in the future.- Red 5 Studios. Three game makers and executives from Blizzard - “World of Warcraft” team leader Mark Kern, art director William Petras, and Taewon Yun, who launched the game in Korea - founded Red 5 Studios in 2005 and since then have been working on their first game. With development studios in Aliso Viejo and Shanghai, China, the company’s goal is “bringing together millions of gamers across the world by creating immersive worlds, intriguing stories and compelling characters.”- Carbine Studios. Ten other former “World of Warcraft” game makers, including lead animator Kevin Beardslee, lead composer Jason Hayes and senior artist Matt Mocarski, founded Carbine Studios in Aliso Viejo. The company has 17 former Blizzard employees who are developing a multiplayer online game.- True Games Interactive. Last year, Drobish and Jeff Lujan, chief publishing officer at True Games, left executive positions at K2 to pursue their startup. They hope to launch a domestic version of a Korean game this summer.- Sleepy Giant. Last year former K2 executives Matthew Hannus and David Lee started Newport Beach-based Sleepy Giant, which runs other companies’ games rather than developing its own. The gaming opportunities aren’t limited to entrepreneurs.”A lot of good Hollywood TV and movie talent is being drawn to games” because game production can be more stable than the boom-and-bust movie business, and can even offer better fringe benefits, said Mark Friedler, founder of the GameDaily Web site. People who are moving from movies to games include digital artists and special effects experts, who tell Friedler one reason for the decision is, “I like having health insurance,” he said. Because the virtual landscapes of online worlds have grown to accommodate so many players, Walsh said, “Game companies need a tremendous amount of digital artists, physicists and designers.” Friedler cited two problems new game companies face - rising costs and growing competition for consumers‘ time. “To create a next-generation console game costs $40 million to $50 million,” he said. “That’s the same cost as a lot of movies.” With “World of Warcraft,” Blizzard changed the market, raising players’ expectations for how realistic a game will be. To accomplish that, the company spent an estimated $90 million, Drobish said. At first the budget seemed excessive, but now it looks brilliant, he said. Intense competition for consumers’ time has already affected traditional forms of entertainment. “Movies and TV are seeing a shift away from them because there are only so many hours in the day,” Walsh said. He foresees a bright future for games, but some industry observers think the same competition for people’s attention could hurt games, too. “People worry about crowding out,” Friedler said. “If someone is always on Facebook and MySpace and texting, how much time is left for games?”

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Letters to the Editor

Friday, February 22nd, 2008

NATIONAL POLITICS Chavez wants to improve United States image
Having failed his bold but scary attempt to make himself president-for-life in Venezuela, President Chavez now seeks to guarantee his legacy and his voice in world affairs by offering, via CITGO, 132 million gallons of free heating oil to our poor and American Indian tribes. Nothing is free; everything comes with a price.Chavez has already demonstrated his strategic vision of redistributing power; the lengths at which he will go to ensure that vision is long-lived.The sad thing is that he will probably succeed where he failed before, especially with endorsements from people in high U.S. places (U.S. Secretary of Energy Bodman wishing “more companies did it” and people with famous names (Joseph P. Kennedy asking us to be fair and reasonable). Chavez is one of two clearly anti-U.S. members of the 13-member OPEC. The other is Iran.Do we think for a minute that endorsing a greater “Chavez voice” will not have an impact among oil ministers? Free heating oil to Americans allows him a stronger voice among OPEC leaders to determine the price of billion of gallons worldwide. Mr. Kennedy, I have thought about it, and I just say no!M.L. “BUTCH” WILSON, JR., MeridianBush continues to make decisions about our future
President Bush continues to affect our futures.1. The Pentagon stated several years ago that the global warming threat was as great as that of any terrorists. Despite its warning, the Bush administration and Congress over the last five years spend $3.5 trillion for “defense,” and only $37 billion for climate-related programs. That’s $100 for war for each dollar spent on global warming. Not included in the totals for the Iraq and Afghanistan wars are the regular “supplementary” appropriations, any rebuilding, and extended costs for veterans’ care; some say these could easily reach $2 trillion. See “Wars Dwarf Warming in U.S. Budget.”2. After signing the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 into law, President Bush issued signing statements claiming the right to violate four sections, thereby removing some important reservations of Congress. The requirements he refused would leave the United States in Iraq permanently for control of its oil, stop intelligence agencies from releasing information requested by Congress, obstruct investigations of fraud and abuse by contractors, and, withhold protection for whistle-blowers who disclose wrongdoing in companies with government contracts. See “Bush’s Latest Signing Statement is Grounds for Impeachment.”LEWIS B. SMITH, BoisePRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONPoverty, global disease should be major issue
Referencing the two Associated Press Jan. 24 articles regarding the World Economic Forum where world leaders focused on world poverty, disease illiteracy and terrorism.As a voter and member of the poverty-fighting group ONE, I believe the fight against extreme poverty and global disease should be a major issue in the 2008 presidential election.Although global poverty is usually not part of election politics, ONE members are asking the candidates at campaign stops about their plans to fight poverty and save lives. Candidates are responding, some with policy speeches, others by incorporating global poverty into their national security platforms.We have gotten the major candidates to go on the record with their concrete plans to fight global poverty and disease if elected. Please view those plans and compare the candidates at www.onevote08.org/ontherecord.Hopelessness and permanent, devastating poverty breed radicalism. For the sake of the lives being lost and the security of Americans here at home, preventing global poverty and disease must be part of this year’s campaign and action by the next administration.MIKE REINECK, BoiseTAXESOwners pay high prices on overvalued homes
Don Hiatt’s Feb. 3 letter “Property owners: Keep pressure on.” Why aren’t we asking for a refund and reduction? Overvalued/assessed property brought in billions, now property isn’t worth as much but we’re still paying the taxes. Makes the banking scams of the 1980s and Enron look like a church picnic.Our self-proclaimed war president, all about an ownership society and our illustrious representatives may have pulled off the greatest caper of all time. Where did/do they have their money invested while promoting free trade, illegal immigration, war in Iraq, and now that America is spiraling out of economic control? Foreign interest buying up the subprime fiasco? Larry Craig using $210,000 from campaign contributions for personal legal fees?Bush made money on oil but was that just a bonus, like stock options? Will the stimulus buy us out of a recession or buy Bush time to get out of the White House like the buy-in? Texas hold ‘em up politics? $150 billion on top of $9 trillion? Can anyone seriously believe, in seven years Bush turned a surplus into recession with millions of working-class Americans losing their jobs and homes?SCOTT TISTHAMMER, BoiseExtend tax incentives to renewable energy industry
Extending the investment and production tax incentives for the renewable energy industry that will otherwise expire this year - and cause the industry to crash - is essential. They should be included in the current stimulus package.Regarding wind energy, the Idaho Department of Water Resources states, “The amount of available wind power far exceeds all of the developed hydro generation in the state. California has over 2,000 MW of installed capacity representing around $2 billion of total capital investments and serious power generation capacity. Idaho as of the summer of 2005 had just over 10 MW total developments.” Wind and geothermal are getting some minimal attention in the Idaho IRP.Regarding solar during peak needs:- June, July, August are the most productive solar months.- Daily afternoon and evening peak hours are the most productive solar hours.- Doesn’t need cooling water to operate in heat like nuclear and other thermal power generation.- Solar photovoltaic panels provide automatic shade for cooling (parking lots, rooftops, etc.).- Solar PV is almost completely environmentally benign (re: greenhouse gases, wasted heat, wastes, and non-mechanical to boot)(panels last 35-50 years). Idaho desperately needs tax incentives for all renewables.MARK HANAWALT, BoiseArticle on free tax filing was not totally accurate
The tax time article by Eileen Putman was good reading. I do think the idea of free filing through the IRS site was not totally accurate. My daughter, using my computer, went to the Turbo Tax site on the IRS web search results. A single mother ended up being charged near $90 for her filing. I later went to that same site and a few others and the key is “Federal Return and e-file” free. Do a state filing, they charge you, e-file a state and they charge you more. I think the deceptive wording at some of these sites is a very poor representation of corporate help offered to a few people trying to file and do the right thing. TurboTax will make a nice profit from unsuspecting filers because I could have bought the same service for $40/$50 on a disc. You would do a good service if you made this information clearer for the public.HARRY STEVENS, Meridian

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Letters to the Editor

Sunday, February 17th, 2008

NATIONAL POLITICS Chavez wants to improve United States image
Having failed his bold but scary attempt to make himself president-for-life in Venezuela, President Chavez now seeks to guarantee his legacy and his voice in world affairs by offering, via CITGO, 132 million gallons of free heating oil to our poor and American Indian tribes. Nothing is free; everything comes with a price.Chavez has already demonstrated his strategic vision of redistributing power; the lengths at which he will go to ensure that vision is long-lived.The sad thing is that he will probably succeed where he failed before, especially with endorsements from people in high U.S. places (U.S. Secretary of Energy Bodman wishing “more companies did it” and people with famous names (Joseph P. Kennedy asking us to be fair and reasonable). Chavez is one of two clearly anti-U.S. members of the 13-member OPEC. The other is Iran.Do we think for a minute that endorsing a greater “Chavez voice” will not have an impact among oil ministers? Free heating oil to Americans allows him a stronger voice among OPEC leaders to determine the price of billion of gallons worldwide. Mr. Kennedy, I have thought about it, and I just say no!M.L. “BUTCH” WILSON, JR., MeridianBush continues to make decisions about our future
President Bush continues to affect our futures.1. The Pentagon stated several years ago that the global warming threat was as great as that of any terrorists. Despite its warning, the Bush administration and Congress over the last five years spend $3.5 trillion for “defense,” and only $37 billion for climate-related programs. That’s $100 for war for each dollar spent on global warming. Not included in the totals for the Iraq and Afghanistan wars are the regular “supplementary” appropriations, any rebuilding, and extended costs for veterans’ care; some say these could easily reach $2 trillion. See “Wars Dwarf Warming in U.S. Budget.”2. After signing the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 into law, President Bush issued signing statements claiming the right to violate four sections, thereby removing some important reservations of Congress. The requirements he refused would leave the United States in Iraq permanently for control of its oil, stop intelligence agencies from releasing information requested by Congress, obstruct investigations of fraud and abuse by contractors, and, withhold protection for whistle-blowers who disclose wrongdoing in companies with government contracts. See “Bush’s Latest Signing Statement is Grounds for Impeachment.”LEWIS B. SMITH, BoisePRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONPoverty, global disease should be major issue
Referencing the two Associated Press Jan. 24 articles regarding the World Economic Forum where world leaders focused on world poverty, disease illiteracy and terrorism.As a voter and member of the poverty-fighting group ONE, I believe the fight against extreme poverty and global disease should be a major issue in the 2008 presidential election.Although global poverty is usually not part of election politics, ONE members are asking the candidates at campaign stops about their plans to fight poverty and save lives. Candidates are responding, some with policy speeches, others by incorporating global poverty into their national security platforms.We have gotten the major candidates to go on the record with their concrete plans to fight global poverty and disease if elected. Please view those plans and compare the candidates at www.onevote08.org/ontherecord.Hopelessness and permanent, devastating poverty breed radicalism. For the sake of the lives being lost and the security of Americans here at home, preventing global poverty and disease must be part of this year’s campaign and action by the next administration.MIKE REINECK, BoiseTAXESOwners pay high prices on overvalued homes
Don Hiatt’s Feb. 3 letter “Property owners: Keep pressure on.” Why aren’t we asking for a refund and reduction? Overvalued/assessed property brought in billions, now property isn’t worth as much but we’re still paying the taxes. Makes the banking scams of the 1980s and Enron look like a church picnic.Our self-proclaimed war president, all about an ownership society and our illustrious representatives may have pulled off the greatest caper of all time. Where did/do they have their money invested while promoting free trade, illegal immigration, war in Iraq, and now that America is spiraling out of economic control? Foreign interest buying up the subprime fiasco? Larry Craig using $210,000 from campaign contributions for personal legal fees?Bush made money on oil but was that just a bonus, like stock options? Will the stimulus buy us out of a recession or buy Bush time to get out of the White House like the buy-in? Texas hold ‘em up politics? $150 billion on top of $9 trillion? Can anyone seriously believe, in seven years Bush turned a surplus into recession with millions of working-class Americans losing their jobs and homes?SCOTT TISTHAMMER, BoiseExtend tax incentives to renewable energy industry
Extending the investment and production tax incentives for the renewable energy industry that will otherwise expire this year - and cause the industry to crash - is essential. They should be included in the current stimulus package.Regarding wind energy, the Idaho Department of Water Resources states, “The amount of available wind power far exceeds all of the developed hydro generation in the state. California has over 2,000 MW of installed capacity representing around $2 billion of total capital investments and serious power generation capacity. Idaho as of the summer of 2005 had just over 10 MW total developments.” Wind and geothermal are getting some minimal attention in the Idaho IRP.Regarding solar during peak needs:- June, July, August are the most productive solar months.- Daily afternoon and evening peak hours are the most productive solar hours.- Doesn’t need cooling water to operate in heat like nuclear and other thermal power generation.- Solar photovoltaic panels provide automatic shade for cooling (parking lots, rooftops, etc.).- Solar PV is almost completely environmentally benign (re: greenhouse gases, wasted heat, wastes, and non-mechanical to boot)(panels last 35-50 years). Idaho desperately needs tax incentives for all renewables.MARK HANAWALT, BoiseArticle on free tax filing was not totally accurate
The tax time article by Eileen Putman was good reading. I do think the idea of free filing through the IRS site was not totally accurate. My daughter, using my computer, went to the Turbo Tax site on the IRS web search results. A single mother ended up being charged near $90 for her filing. I later went to that same site and a few others and the key is “Federal Return and e-file” free. Do a state filing, they charge you, e-file a state and they charge you more. I think the deceptive wording at some of these sites is a very poor representation of corporate help offered to a few people trying to file and do the right thing. TurboTax will make a nice profit from unsuspecting filers because I could have bought the same service for $40/$50 on a disc. You would do a good service if you made this information clearer for the public.HARRY STEVENS, Meridian

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Colo. university selection upsets campus

Sunday, February 17th, 2008

BOULDER, Colo. The man nominated to lead the state’s flagship university is an oilman, not an academic. In a sea of Ph.Ds, he has only a bachelor’s degree. But he does offer this: A reputation as a formidable fundraiser.Bruce Benson’s nomination may be bitterly dividing this 52,000-student, three-campus institution, but it is a sign that dollars, not degrees, are playing a bigger role in choosing college presidents. Though Benson would be one of only a fraction of college presidents without an advanced degree, he says he’s not worried about doing the job.”People say, ‘What are the most important issues?’ I say, funding, funding, funding,” Benson said. “I don’t think you need to have a Ph.D. in anything to talk to legislators and raise money. We have highly educated chancellors. I will work closely with them.”Campus observers have fiercely protested the selection, which has yet to be approved by regents. A “Boycott Benson” Web site questions the selection process and criticizes his background as a conservative Republican activist. The student government has voiced complaints, and a campus portrait of Benson was defaced with graffiti that said, “I’ve given CU enough $ for an individual right-wing nut like me to be CU’s president.”State House Majority Leader Alice Madden, a Democrat and CU law school graduate, declared that Benson would be “the least educated president ever considered in modern history.”Benson is the sole finalist for the job overseeing three campuses in Boulder, Denver and Colorado Springs. In recent years, CU’s president has been more of a chief executive officer, with chancellors leading individual campuses.He would join a small club of college leaders without advanced credentials. A 2005 Chronicle of Higher Education survey of 764 presidents and chancellors found fewer than 1 percent held only a bachelor’s degree. More than 83 percent held a doctorate, while most others held master’s or professional degrees.”Generally speaking, for major research universities and colleges and liberal arts colleges, it would be indeed rare to appoint somebody to such a high position with no more than a bachelor’s degree,” said Jonathan Knight, associate secretary of the Washington-based American Association of University Professors.Benson, 69, insists his professional experience gives him an edge. He has chaired a $1 billion fundraising campaign for the school, successfully lobbied for a state law to give universities more money, and served on several education boards.After earning his B.A. from CU in geology, he abandoned a master’s degree to pursue a lucrative career in oil and gas. He went on to become owner and president of Benson Mineral Group, Inc., a Denver-based oil and gas exploration firm, and was CEO and President of United States Exploration Inc., a Montana-based oil and gas producer. He has served on numerous corporate boards.He recently was national co-chair of Mitt Romney’s recently suspended presidential campaign. That qualification, combined with his background in oil, has rankled many students and faculty at Boulder, whose climate researchers shared a Nobel Prize with Al Gore last year. Benson, however, says he quit politics after being named a finalist for president.That Benson is familiar with the university and Colorado tipped the scales in his favor over out-of-state candidates, said CU Regent Steve Bosley, who led the presidential search committee. Regents, in seeking a president, said an advanced degree would be advantageous but that they wanted a president to be a visionary, leader and fundraiser.Fundraising will have to be a priority for the university’s next president because a voter-approved measure in which taxpayers gave up billions of dollars in potential refunds to pay for higher education is expiring in a little more than two years. CU has a $2 billion annual budget, but Benson notes state funding only covers $180 million, and some of that is at risk in 2010.”We do have a financial crisis in this state in funding higher education, so we’re looking for somebody who could immediately have an understanding of the finances and a demonstrated ability to work with legislators across party lines,” Bosley said.As state budgets have squeezed public university funding, more and more campuses have chosen candidates with political or business connections. But they usually have advanced degrees. Last year, West Virginia University hired Mike Garrison, a former lobbyist and chief of staff to the governor who has a law degree. Former investment banker and White House chief of staff Erskine Bowles heads the University of North Carolina system. Bowles has an MBA.In December, the University of Missouri chose former Sprint Nextel Corp. Chief Executive Officer Gary Forsee, who has an undergraduate engineering degree, as its president. Lee T. Todd Jr., who has a doctorate in engineering, took over at the University of Kentucky in 2001 after leaving IBM’s Lotus Development Corp.Still, many faculty and students haven’t warmed to Benson, something that was evident in a meeting between Benson and students at Boulder Tuesday. A regents vote to approve his nomination has yet to be scheduled, and he is currently participating in rounds of question-and-answer sessions with staff and students.”It’s good the search committee is looking for somebody who is going to be able to fix our funding crisis … but how can you fundraise for a business you know nothing about?” said Hadley Brown, a student government member.Jerry Hauser, former chair of the Boulder Faculty Assembly, said he hasn’t made up his mind about Benson, but predicted he would have a tough time. “He has an awful lot of learning to do,” he said. “He’s going to have to scramble for the first six months or so. … Beginning with such an incredible absence of enthusiasm from faculty, it’s going to be very difficult for him.”

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UK sees worst IT skills shortage for a decade

Saturday, February 16th, 2008

Perceived shortages in the industry jumped from 4.2 percent last year to 6.8 percent this year, a national survey of IT salaries and employment trends has found.

Just under 40 percent of respondents indicated recruitment and retention issues, a significant increase on the 29 percent reported last year.

The report warns employers to budget for increased training, with 73 percent of those who said there was a need for new skills planning to get hold of them by retraining existing staff.

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Microsoft OOXML finds favour in Malaysia

Saturday, February 16th, 2008

The Malaysian government may appear to favour the use of the ODF (OpenDocument Format), with plans to adopt the standard in its ICT deployment, but Microsoft has been able to convince a growing number of Malaysian IT companies and independent software vendors (ISVs) to incorporate OOXML (Office Open XML) into their offerings.

Developed by Microsoft, OOXML is a close rival to the ODF, which is championed by open-source vendors and major IT houses such as IBM and Sun.

ODF has a first-mover advantage, having gained certification from the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) while OOXML is still seeking approval from the global standards organisation.

Microsoft’s document format, however, had received a much-needed boost when European standards body Ecma International ratified it in December 2006.

Microsoft’s latest success story in Malaysia comes from Tradenex.com, the IT arm of the Federal of Malaysian Manufacturers which represents over 2,000 manufacturing and industrial service companies.

Familiarity breeds adoptionTradenex.com last month launched nexCONNECT, an electronic business collaboration platform that links suppliers, distributors, logistics and financial institutions via the web. The Microsoft .Net-based system will incorporate OOXML as one of its standards.

The platform is targeted at small to medium-sized enterprises with limited budget and IT capabilities to invest in leading-edge technology to support their business.

“This will allow users to interact with nexCONNECT in the familiar Microsoft office environment [encompassing products such as] Microsoft Windows and Microsoft Office 2007, that they are so used to, with the aim to simplify its usage and adoption,” said Soon Koi Voon, chief executive of Tradenex.com, at the recent launch of nexCONNECT.

Asked why OOXML was preferred over the ODF, Soon said the decision was based on commercial realities. He estimated that over 90 percent of companies ran their operations using Microsoft Office and the Windows platform.

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US scraps futuristic coal plant

Monday, February 4th, 2008

WASHINGTON The Energy Department on Wednesday canceled a futuristic, virtually emissions-free coal plant scheduled to be built in Illinois, saying it preferred to spend the money on a handful of projects around the country that would demonstrate the capture and burial of carbon dioxide from commercial power plants.”This restructuring … is an all-around better deal for Americans,” said Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman in making the announcement to scuttle the FutureGen program.Bodman said the Energy Department would solicit industry applications for participation in the new carbon capture projects. The idea is for the government to pay for building the carbon capture and storage facilities and industry to build the modern coal-burning power plant. Each project would be designed to capture 1 million metric tons of CO2, the leading greenhouse gas linked to global warming, officials said.The shift has stunned officials in Illinois, where an industry group announced in December it would build the $1.8 billion FutureGen plant, three-fourths of which was being paid for by the federal government - funds now no longer available.The FutureGen program was envisioned as a unique research project that would trigger development of a virtually pollution-free coal plant where carbon dioxide emissions would be captured and buried deep beneath the earth. It would produce both electricity and hydrogen.First proposed nearly a decade ago with an estimated cost of just under $1 billion, its cost has soared to nearly double that. The project for years had trouble getting adequate funds and some critics long ago dubbed it “Never Gen.” But in 2003, President Bush hailed it as a potential breakthrough in clean coal technology and a key to eventually achieve wider use of hydrogen as a fuel.The FutureGen Alliance issued a statement saying it “remains committed to keeping FutureGen on track” but it was unclear how that would be possible without the federal funding.Michael Mudd, the alliance’s chief executive officer, called the project “America’s best hope for near-zero emission coal technology” as quickly as possible. “It will take four to five years for DOE to evaluate new proposals, place contracts, and conduct environmental reviews for new projects,” said Mudd in a statement on the Alliance’s Web site.The Energy Department on Wednesday cited its concern about the FutureGen cost escalation. Officials said it was preferable to pursue separate clean coal technologies instead of what one official called “a living laboratory” concept. It will begin a process leading to a solicitation of industry bids for projects by the end of the year.”There was a consensus view that the price of this project will only increase,” said Deputy Energy Secretary Clay Sell of the FutureGen program.Sell said FutureGen was viewed has having little prospect of commercial viability. If industry pulled out of the program at some point in the future “it would put taxpayers at risk,” said Sell.The announcement to cancel the program came 43 days after the FutureGen Alliance, the private coalition developing the program, announced it would build the plant in Mattoon, Ill., winning a competition with two other sites in Texas.Illinois’ congressional delegation waged a last ditch, and unsuccessful, appeal to the White House to keep the project intact.Illinois Reps. John Shimkus and Timothy Johnson, both Republicans, contacted President Bush aboard Air Force I.”President Bush did take the time to listen to our concerns,” said Shimkus.Some Illinois officials, noting Bush’s connections to Texas, said they believe the plant was scuttled because the industry group had selected Mattoon, Ill., over a proposed side in Odessa, Tex.Sell called such a charge “outrageous” and said the department had tried to keep the FutureGen Alliance from making a site selection on Dec. 18, so as not to give false hope to the people of Mattoon, where the project would have brought thousands of construction jobs.Sell said he and Bodman learned only last March that FutureGen’s cost had escalated from an original $950 million to $1.8 billion. “I knew (then) that we were in to something that would not end well,” Sell told reporters in a conference call Wednesday.The department will propose as part of its fiscal 2009 budget to be unveiled next Monday $241 million for demonstration programs involving carbon capture and storage from coal-burning power plants, including $156 million related to the FutureGen “restructuring.”

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Indonesia’s ex-dictator Suharto buried

Monday, February 4th, 2008

SOLO, Indonesia Former Indonesian dictator Suharto, a U.S. Cold War ally whose military regime killed hundreds of thousands of left-wing opponents, was buried Monday at a state funeral with full military honors as tens of thousands mourned.Throngs of Indonesians lined the streets to watch a motorcade carry his body to the family mausoleum. Many sobbed and called out the name of the man whose three-decade rule, though harsh, brought stability and economic growth to Indonesia.President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono led a ceremony televised live across the nation from the mausoleum near Suharto’s hometown of Solo, some 250 miles east of the capital. After a reading of Suharto’s military accomplishments, a shot was fired in his honor and Yudhoyono offered a salute.”We offer his body and his deeds to the motherland,” Yudhoyono said. “His service is an example to us.”Islamic prayers were said and as his body was lowered, mourners tossed flower petals into his grave. A military band played a dirge.Suharto died Sunday of multiple organ failure after more than three weeks on life support at a Jakarta hospital. He was 86.Yudhoyono had already declared a week of national mourning and called on Indonesians “to pay their last respects to one of Indonesia’s best sons.”"He was a great man,” said Sumartini, 65, who came from a nearby village with her four children to watch the funeral procession. “His death touched us deeply.”Suharto loyalists, who run the courts, called for forgiveness and a clearing of his name. But survivors want those responsible for atrocities to be held accountable.”I cannot understand why I have to forgive Suharto because he never admitted his mistakes,” said Putu Oka Sukanta, who spent a decade in prison because of his left-wing sympathies.Suharto was finally toppled by mass street protests in 1998 at the peak of the 1997-1998 Asian financial crisis.His departure from office opened the way for democracy in this predominantly Muslim nation of 235 million people, and he withdrew from public life, rarely venturing from his comfortable Jakarta villa.Suharto ruled with a totalitarian dominance that saw soldiers stationed in every village, instilling a deep fear of authority across this Southeast Asian archipelago that stretches across more than 3,000 miles.Since being forced from power, Suharto had been in and out of hospitals after strokes caused brain damage and impaired his speech. Poor health - and continuing corruption, critics charge - kept him from court after he was chased from office.The bulk of killings occurred in 1965-1966 when alleged communists were rounded up and slain during his rise to power. Estimates for the death toll range from a government figure of 78,000 to 1 million cited by U.S. historians Barbara Harff and Ted Robert Gurr, who have published books on Indonesia’s history.During Indonesia’s 1975-1999 occupation of East Timor, up to 183,000 people died due to killings, disappearances, hunger and illness, according to an East Timorese commission sanctioned by the U.N. Similar abuses left more than 100,000 dead in West Papua, according a local human rights group. Another 15,000 died during a 29-year separatist rebellion in Aceh province.Suharto’s five successors as head of state all vowed to end the graft that took root under his regime, yet it remains endemic at all levels of Indonesian society.With the court system paralyzed by corruption, the country has not confronted its bloody past. Rather than put on trial those accused of mass murder and multibillion-dollar theft, some members of the political elite consistently called for charges against Suharto to be dropped on humanitarian grounds.Some noted Suharto also oversaw decades of economic expansion that made Indonesia the envy of the developing world. Today, nearly a quarter of Indonesians live in poverty, and many long for the Suharto era’s stability, when fuel and rice were affordable.But critics say Suharto squandered Indonesia’s vast natural resources of oil, timber and gold, siphoning the nation’s wealth to benefit his cronies, foreign corporations and family like a mafia don.Jeffrey Winters, associate professor of political economy at Northwestern University, said the graft effectively robbed “Indonesia of some of the most golden decades, and its best opportunity to move from a poor to a middle class country.”"When Indonesia does finally go back and redo history, (its people) will realize that Suharto is responsible for some of the worst crimes against humanity in the 20th century,” Winters said.Those who profited from Suharto’s rule made sure he was never portrayed in a harsh light at home, Winters said, so even though he was an “iron-fisted, brutal, cold-blooded dictator,” he was able to stay in his native country.Like many Indonesians, Suharto used only one name. He was born on June 8, 1921, to a family of rice farmers in the village of Godean in the dominant Indonesian province of Central Java.When Indonesia gained independence from the Dutch in 1949, Suharto quickly rose through the ranks of the military to become a staff officer.His career nearly foundered in the late 1950s, when the army’s then-commander, Gen. Abdul Haris Nasution, accused him of corruption in awarding army contracts.Absolute power came in September 1965 when the army’s six top generals were murdered under mysterious circumstances, and their bodies dumped in an abandoned well in an apparent coup attempt against Sukarno, Indonesia’s founding father who helped win independence from the Dutch. Suharto, next in line for command, quickly asserted authority over the armed forces.What followed was a nationwide purge of suspected leftists, a campaign that stood as the region’s bloodiest event since World War II until the Khmer Rouge established its gruesome regime in Cambodia a decade later.Over the next year, Suharto eased out Sukarno, who died under house arrest in 1970. The legislature rubber-stamped Suharto’s presidency and he was re-elected unopposed six times.During the Cold War, Suharto was considered a reliable friend of Washington, which did not oppose his violent occupation of Papua in 1969 and the bloody 1974 invasion of East Timor. The latter, a former Portuguese colony, became Asia’s youngest country with a U.N.-sponsored plebiscite in 1999.President Bush sent his regrets over Suharto’s death. “President Bush expresses his condolences to the people of Indonesia on the loss of their former president,” said Gordon Johndroe, spokesman for the White House’s National Security Council.Even Suharto’s critics agree his hard-line policies kept a lid on Indonesia’s extremists and held together the ethnically diverse and geographically vast nation. He jailed without trial hundreds of suspected Islamic militants, some of whom later carried out deadly suicide bombings with the al-Qaida-linked terror network Jemaah Islamiyah after the attacks on the U.S. of Sept. 11, 2001.Meanwhile, the ruling clique that formed around Suharto - nicknamed the “Berkeley mafia” after the U.S. school they attended, the University of California, Berkeley - transformed Indonesia’s economy and attracted billions of dollars in foreign investment.By the late 1980s, Suharto was describing himself as Indonesia’s “father of development,” taking credit for slowly reducing the number of abjectly poor and modernizing parts of the nation.But the government also became notorious for unfettered nepotism, and Indonesia was regularly ranked as one of the world’s most corrupt nations as Suharto’s inner circle amassed fabulous wealth. The World Bank estimates 20 percent to 30 percent of Indonesia’s development budget was embezzled during his rule.Even today, Suharto’s children and aging associates have considerable sway over the country’s business, politics and courts. Efforts to recover the money have been fruitless.Suharto’s youngest son, Hutomo “Tommy” Mandala Putra, was released from prison in 2006 after serving a third of a 15-year sentence for ordering the assassination of a Supreme Court judge. Another son, Bambang Trihatmodjo, joined the Forbes list of wealthiest Indonesians in 2007, with $200 million from his stake in the conglomerate Mediacom.State prosecutors accused Suharto of embezzling about $600 million via a complex web of foundations under his control, but he never saw the inside of a courtroom. In September 2000, judges ruled he was too ill to stand trial, though many people believed the decision stemmed from the lingering influence of the former dictator and his family.In 2007, Suharto won a $106 million defamation lawsuit against Time magazine for accusing the family of acquiring $15 billion in stolen state funds.The former dictator told the news magazine Gatra in a rare interview in November 2007 that he would donate the bulk of any legal windfall to the needy, while he dismissed corruption accusations as “empty talk.”Suharto’s wife of 49 years, Indonesian royal Siti Hartinah, died in 1996. The couple had three sons and three daughters.

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