plus 2, House debates tax and spending bill after deficit fears spur cutbacks - WGNtv.com |
- House debates tax and spending bill after deficit fears spur cutbacks - WGNtv.com
- Our View: Consider careers, jobs and markets - Mankato Free Press
- Courses at Ridge Career Center Translate to Jobs - The Ledger
| House debates tax and spending bill after deficit fears spur cutbacks - WGNtv.com Posted: 28 May 2010 08:25 AM PDT ![]() In this May 3, 2010 photo, job seekers are seen waiting in line at a National Career Fair in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Monday, May 3, 2010. The economic rebound last quarter turned out to be slower than first thought, one of the reasons unemployment is likely to stay stubbornly high this year.(AP Photo/J Pat Carter) (J Pat Carter, AP / May 3, 2010) WASHINGTON (AP) — House Democrats on Friday salvaged a bill to continue providing unemployment checks to people out of work more than six months and revive tax breaks popular with families and businesses. But spending cuts demanded by Democratic moderates unhappy about voting to increase the deficit will mean layoffs next year by state governments and no health insurance subsidies for people laid off after Memorial Day. The House approved the legislation in a 215-204 vote that capped a turbulent week for Democratic leaders, who were forced to kill $24 billion in aid to cash-starved states and $7 billion for health insurance subsidies for laid-off workers. The programs were created by last year's economic stimulus bill and Democratic leaders had wanted to extend them. Left standing is the unemployment insurance extension and a grab bag of unfinished business, including numerous spending measures and a renewal of more than 50 tax breaks for individuals and businesses. The legislation, which now faces an uncertain fate in the Senate, spends about $115 billion on tax breaks and spending such as assistance for doctors facing lower Medicare payments, a summer jobs program sought by minority lawmakers and settlements of long-running class-action lawsuits brought against the government by black farmers and American Indians. Offsetting tax increases such as a new levy on investment and hedge fund managers helped bring the bill's drag on the federal deficit down to $54 billion, according to the Congressional Budget Office. Despite House action, Democrats will miss a deadline of passing a jobless benefits measure before Memorial Day. The Senate left Washington Friday without acting on the legislation. The extended benefits program for the long-term jobless expires June 2, though the immediate impact will be relatively slight. Still, it's an embarrassment for Democrats and is the third time this year that the extended unemployment insurance program will have lapsed, though only a small fraction of the 11 million people receiving unemployment benefits have been left in the lurch. President Barack Obama issued a statement praising the measure, but said Congress should restore in future legislation the funding cut from the measure and also pass aid to school districts to help them avert teacher layoffs. But such moves face an uphill road after this week's events. The weeklong turmoil in the House reflected increasing anxiety among fiscally conservative "Blue Dog" Democrats unhappy about adding to the deficit as the national debt closes in on $13 trillion. A version circulated last week would have added $134 billion to the deficit and was declared dead on arrival by deficit-conscious lawmakers. Lawmakers also approved, by 245-171, a $23 billion provision to delay a scheduled 21 percent cut in Medicare reimbursements to doctors until 2012. The move to drop the aid to states was a big blow to the nation's governors, who are desperate for fiscal relief as weak tax revenues are forcing painful cutbacks, including layoffs and furloughs of state workers. Many states had already incorporated the money into their budgets for next year. Democrats say that continuing unemployment benefits would not only help the jobless but provide a boost to the economy since the money is typically spent immediately and spurs demand. "With this vote, we can help families across the country and continue the path we set out on last year to help dig the country out of a terrible recession," said Rep. Louise Slaughter, D-N.Y. Republicans countered that the $58 billion in tax increases to partially pay for the measure — including $11 billion from quadrupling to 34 cents the per-barrel tax that oil companies pay into the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund — are job killers. And they lambasted the new spending in the measure. "This is not a jobs bill," said Rep. Wally Herger, R-Calif. "It is just another extension of the 'tax too much, spend too much, borrow too much' philosophy that we have come to expect" from Democrats. About 200,000 people per week are set to begin losing jobless benefits when an extension of unemployment insurance expires next week, though lawmakers are likely to seek to restore them after the fact. The cost of the bill passed Friday would be partially offset by tax increases on investment fund managers, oil companies and some international businesses. The tax increases total about $57 billion over the next decade. Changes giving underfunded pensions more time to improve their finances would raise $2 billion. Democrats lauded a provision that they said would cancel a tax break for companies that ship U.S. jobs overseas. (This version CORRECTS the vote total on the Medicare reimbursements provision to 245-171, not 245-177.) Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Five Filters featured article: The Art of Looking Prime Ministerial - The 2010 UK General Election. 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| Our View: Consider careers, jobs and markets - Mankato Free Press Posted: 27 May 2010 09:26 PM PDT May 27, 2010 Our View: Consider careers, jobs and markets— Workers of today face a higher risk of their industry suffering a downturn than probably any time since World War II, and that prospect should be reason for business, labor and government leaders to plan for change more than ever. A recent series by Free Press partner Minnesota Public Radio has detailed the significant changes in Minnesota's job climate. Minnesota may never get back to the economy it had just two or three years ago. The state has lost more than 40,000 manufacturing jobs in the current recession, according to state records, and 150,000 jobs overall. Those manufacturing jobs typically paid 18 percent more than the average job in the state, and has driven the state's economic growth. Now, factory workers making $50,000 year have had to take trucking jobs where they sometimes lose 20 percent of their pay and their purchasing power, according to the MPR report. Of course, manufacturing is an industry that loses jobs to the cheap labor overseas in a number of areas. That has been happening for decades, but the current recession put more pressure on companies to compete, and many must find cheaper labor. That's not to say we will lose all manufacturing. Minnesota has a history of manufacturing companies that are adopting new technology all the time. 3M and places like Medtronic come to mind. Many of these firms adapt and are continually innovating. We may lose the lower skill jobs, but we have the competitive advantage in technology industries with an educated workforce. But we must nurture and grow that educated workforce. There are many Minnesotans trying to make a transition from manufacturing jobs to other jobs. The state has long been the major player in workforce training, whether that is through its array of colleges and technical schools or through retraining programs through the Department of Employment and Economic Development. The state's dislocated worker program that offers retraining ran out of money earlier this year, according to the MPR series, but has recently acquired an $8 million grant to serve the long list of workers needing retraining. Some workers find themselves in an industry that may be shrinking, yet they can't take time off to get retraining. Some state programs help workers who have had their hours cut back get retraining part-time. More of those programs are probably needed. They allow the worker to still have an income yet prepare for the future. The state of Minnesota has lots of resources for job seekers looking for training and careers that will be in demand at the website iseek.org. There are tips for choosing careers as well as finding retraining should you lose your job or plan to shift jobs. The only constant in the world of jobs is change. The better prepared we are, the sooner we'll be able to adapt to the changing world economy. Five Filters featured article: The Art of Looking Prime Ministerial - The 2010 UK General Election. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
| Courses at Ridge Career Center Translate to Jobs - The Ledger Posted: 28 May 2010 09:15 AM PDT "It's the best thing in the county," said the retired Army colonel who has been a longtime education advocate as a member of the Haines City/Northeast Polk County Chamber of Commerce. Broadaway was among the group that visited Ridge as the school played host to a Business After Hours event on May 18 to show off the new Health Sciences complex on the campus. "The thing about (Ridge) is it gives people who are below the poverty line the opportunity to become middle class as soon as they graduate," Broadaway said in extending his praise for the school that has been a part of the Polk County school district since 1978. Located on State Road 544 just west of U.S. 27, Ridge Career Center may have been constructed by the county but, as its director Lisa Harden pointed out, is self-sustaining. "We are a site-based school," she said, explaining that means its $6 million budget is met by the tuition paid by the students who take classes there. And those classes are eclectic, to say the least. As a postsecondary school aimed at providing work force skills that are immediately translatable into meaningful careers, Ridge offers classes in everything from the culinary arts to auto mechanics; medical administration to accounting; firefighting to truck driving. "It really does fill a void that was needed in our county," said Sue Ellis, who retired from Ridge as a financial aid coordinator in 1998, but still serves on the school's advisory committee. The new, 40,000-square-foot Health Sciences complex that was the main focus of the chamber gathering. It's home to a growing number of medical profession training courses including practical nursing, pharmacy technician, patient care technician and medical coding. It also provides classes for high school students looking to get a leg up on future careers as home health aides, first responders and electrocardiograph aides. Providing both day and night classes, Ridge has an enrollment of between 2,600 and 4,000 students each year, Harden said. Hosting the chamber program, she added, was just one way of letting the community know about the programs the school offers and its importance to the community. "I have a strong philosophy that the more people we can get onto our campus, the more they will know about us," Harden said. "We do very good work here." [ What do you think? Contact Mike Grogan about this article at reportermailbox@gmail.com. ] Five Filters featured article: The Art of Looking Prime Ministerial - The 2010 UK General Election. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
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