28 January 2010

Hats for Haiti

Krochet Kids, in partnership with One Day's Wages, have come up with a fantastic fundraiser for Haiti relief benefiting Partners in Health and World Concern. PIH and WC are amazing organizations with two-plus decades commitment (each) to service in that country.  Its called Hats for Haiti - check out the YouTube video, and have fun getting involved with these excellent organizations. Its win-win, you will definitely change the lives of many people forever - and you just might change your own forever too. 
 

27 January 2010

Louis Auchincloss dies at age 92


By HILLEL ITALIE
  AP National Writer



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NEW YORK (AP) -- Louis Auchincloss, a prolific author of fiction and nonfiction whose dozens of books imparted sober, firsthand knowledge of America's patrician class, has died. He was 92,
The author's grandson, James Auchincloss, said that Auchincloss died Tuesday, a week after suffering a stroke.
Louis Auchincloss, a longtime resident Park Avenue, wrote more than 50 books, averaging about one a year after the end of World War II. He was a four-time fiction finalist for the National Book Award, his nominated novels including "The Embezzler" and "The House of Five Talents."

P. Scott says: Quite a lot of what I know about life on Park Avenue (and all that entails, and that's a lot), and what I have learned about getting along with people from Park Avenue (don't get me started), I have learned from three people: my wife, my Uncle Asbjørn, and the writings of Louis Auchincloss. Okay, and some others, but you'll have to wait for my book! A fantastic novelist and essayist, it amazes me that the Associated Press, in their rush to get out this notice of his death, overlooks mention that Auchincloss was both cousin and close confidante of Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis. Their kinship (and his encouragement of her) alone is fascinating, and is important back story in understanding the Kennedy era.


Photo: public domain (Wikipedia) Louis Auchincloss receives the National Medal of the Arts in 2005.

16 January 2010

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Dominican Republic airports key to Haiti relief


                                             Photo: Google Earth
Right now, the only international airport in Haiti is compounding the crisis. Here is a picture of the airport terminal ramp at Toussaint L'Ouverture International Airport. It is a very small ramp. Now get this: the runway does not have a taxi apron! This means that every plane (arriving and departing) has to go (one at a time) along the connecting ramp in the left of the photo - out onto the main runway, and taxi all the way to the end before turning around for takeoff. That is a disaster compounding a disaster. Aircraft are being turned away from Haiti. Crucial supplies and highly trained medical and search & rescue professionals can't get into the country. It is a horrible situation.

                                              Photo: Beli Tours  
Here is the main airport terminal at the Aeropuerto Internacional de las Américas in the Dominican Republic - it has large terminal ramps (with several access points) and a full taxiway so the airplanes can line up to take off at one end, and line up after they land at the other. The Dominican Republic also has another airport, called Punta Cana, which is actually larger than this. These airports are on the same little island of Hispaniola. The Dominican Republic is a tourist haven. Haiti is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere. The two countries, unfortunately, have very little to do with each other. One speaks Creole French, the other Spanish.
                                             Map: Hispaniola.com 
So the Dominican Republic could really ride to the rescue here, and make both of their airports available for relief flights. UPS, which is taking a leading logistical role, is working on use of the Dominican Republic airports (see the article in the Financial Times linked below). But here's the problem. Get on Google Earth and look at the roads between Haiti and the Dominican Republic. They are dirt. I told you they didn't have much going on together. Now get ready, here is the roadway at the main border crossing between the two countries:
         Photo: PADF
The road is in horrible condition. It is going to chew trucks up. It has to be done, of course. But it is not going to be easy, and the trucks will need to roll 24/7. This is going to be a bigger problem than anyone realizes. Please read more in the Financial Times article today:

FT.com / UK - Agencies struggle to secure transport link

15 January 2010

Groups raise doubts about Wyclef Jean's charity



By RYAN NAKASHIMA AP Business Writer  


LOS ANGELES—Groups that vet charities are raising doubts about the organization backed by Haitian-born rapper Wyclef Jean, questioning its accounting practices and ability to function in earthquake-hit Haiti. Even as more than $2 million poured into The Wyclef Jean Foundation Inc. via text message after just two days, experts questioned how much of the money would help those in need.

"It's questionable. There's no way to get around that," said Art Taylor, president and chief executive of the Better Business Bureau's Wise Giving Alliance, based in Arlington, Va.

Taylor reviewed Internal Revenue Service tax returns for the organization also known as Yele Haiti Foundation from 2005 through 2007. He said the first red flag of poor accounting practices was that three years of returns were filed on the same day—Aug. 10 of last year.

In 2007, the foundation's spending exceeded its revenues by $411,000. It brought in just $79,000 that year.

"Here's the bottom line: for an earthquake of catastrophic proportions, do people really believe that this organization is in a position to do anything right now?" he said.

Jean, a 37-year-old Grammy-winning artist, has been imploring followers to text "Yele" to 501501 to donate $5 to his foundation in support of Haitian earthquake victims.

The foundation, founded in January 2005, intends to airlift supplies using a FedEx plane into Haiti early next week carrying medical supplies, water and Clif Bars, according to foundation president Hugh Locke. An Associated Press review of tax returns and independent audits provided by Jean's foundation showed that it was closely intertwined with Jean's businesses.

Three of the five foundation board members—Jean, Jerry Duplessis and Seth Kanegis—are involved in his personal music and business endeavors.  According to an IRS tax return from 2006 reviewed earlier by the Web site The Smoking Gun, the foundation paid $250,000 to buy airtime from Telemax S.A., a for-profit TV station in Haiti that is majority owned by Jean and Duplessis.  Part of that money went to pay for a concert in Haiti put on by Jean himself, Locke said.

Another $160,000 that year was spent on a concert in Monte Carlo that Jean participated in, of which $75,000 paid for backup singers and $25,000 went to Jean through a company he owns with Duplessis, Platinum Sound Recording Studios Inc., Locke said.

"I'm not saying he didn't benefit from it," said Locke, who says his own salary is $8,100 a month after taxes. "We were paying that to Platinum Sound because that covered the cost of him participating in the event."

Locke argued that the foundation took in "several hundred thousand" dollars in exchange for Jean's work through the proceeds of an auction.

The foundation also rents office space from Platinum Sound, paying about $2,600 a month in New York. Locke said the foundation also plans to partner with Jean's Sak Pase Records to build a music studio to provide vocational training to Haitian children.

Sandra Miniutti, vice president of marketing for Charity Navigator, an organization that evaluates charities, said the foundation was too small to have been examined recently, although the current flood of goodwill may change that. Its revenue in 2008 was $1.9 million.

"My concern is it goes against our first tip, and that is to give only to groups with experience with disaster relief," Miniutti said. "I think it's very hard for a new organization even with the best intentions to handle something on this magnitude."

Locke said the foundation has been directly involved in delivering food and providing clean-up services in many disasters, including the hurricanes that devastated Haiti in late 2008. Jean's standing among Haitians can help the foundation gain access to gang-controlled or other troubled regions, he said.
"We have a niche which no one else occupies," Locke said.

He said the foundation is now seeking bridge financing to allow it to use money that has been pledged in unprecedented volumes by text message.

It could take at least a month for donors' money to flow in because it is not released until they pay their phone bills.

That delay presents a challenge and an opportunity, the Better Business Bureau's Taylor said.

"The challenge is they can't do anything until they get the money," Taylor said. "The opportunity is that some people may change their minds and decide that $10 or whatever they text to him might be better used somewhere else."
———
On the Net:
Better Business Bureau Wise Giving Alliance: http://bit.ly/8WJ1i3
Charity Navigator: http://bit.ly/8fCLch
The Smoking Gun: http://bit.ly/8h3mEj  


P. Scott says: I've been involved with non-profit work for a long time - organizing, planning, launching, filing with the IRS, on and on. As CNN incessantly pitched texting of small donations to this foundation over the last couple of days, and as I watched Mr. Jean talk about this charity in interview after interview - my hackles were raised. Look, I'm not saying he is a total bad guy - and at least he has gotten into Haiti today and got involved in the relief work in a hand-on way. What I am saying is that cold, hard looks by professional journalists and non profit oversight organizations are raising legitimate concerns - and it looks pretty clear that this charitable foundation is much more about promoting his career than helping the people of Haiti. I would not donate to this charity. Mr. Jean should channel the funds he has raised through millions of dollars in free publicity on (especially) CNN and CBS, by (and without raking off the top) transferring that money donated in good faith by caring people around the world to established organizations that are doing relief work right now (not next week, or for a concert, or whatever nebulous plans this foundations has).  But I'm not holding my breath on that demand. Unfortunately, while Mr. Jean could have chosen to work with established aid and relief organizations - and significantly bolstered his credibility as a humanitarian while getting some real work done to help others - he has instead (apparently) chosen to use this foundation as secondary/back channel financial padding for promotion of his career. There are words to describe people who would do that while those they purport to benefit are suffering...

13 January 2010

Weekly Standard Reporter Roughed Up By Democratic AG Staffer? (VIDEO) - HispanicBusiness.com

YouTube link here

Weekly Standard Reporter Roughed Up By Democratic AG Staffer? (VIDEO) - HispanicBusiness.com

Rob Kuznia -- HispanicBusiness.com

A reporter with the neo-conservative Weekly Standard says he was roughed up during a D.C. fund-raiser Tuesday night by an affiliate of Democratic Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley.

John McCormack, the magazine's deputy online editor, writes that Coakley had dodged a question he'd asked about Afghanistan during a brief Q and A session with reporters inside a Capitol Hill restaurant named Sonoma.

"Attorney General Coakley, you said last night that there are no terrorists in Afghanistan -- that they're all in Yemen and Pakistan. Do you stand by that remark?" he said, according to a post he wrote in the Weekly Standard. Her response, according to McCormack: "I'm sorry, did someone else have a question?"

Afterward, he followed her outside to ask another question: why are healthcare lobbyists supporting her at the fund-raiser? McCormack says she again ignored him. Shortly after, he said he was accosted by a man who appeared to be one of her staff members, Michael Meehan, who allegedly shoved McCormack into an iron gate.

"I ended up on the sidewalk," McCormack wrote." I was fine. He helped me up from the ground, but kept pushing up against me, blocking my path toward Coakley down the street."

McCormack said when he asked Meehan who he worked for, he replied: "I work for me."

The incident was caught on video and posted on YouTube. The video shows McCormack struggling to simultaneously show his press credentials and sidestep a man who is blocking his way.

A blogger for First Things, an ecumenical publication funded by Catholic theologian Richard John Neuhaus, reports that Meehan is also a vice president at Virilion, a "democratic advertising company" that represents the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America.

12 January 2010

Many Firms Reluctant to Hire Because of New Taxes, Regulation - CNBC


                                            photo: swampolitics.com
                                                                                                                                        
Many Firms Reluctant to Hire Because of New Taxes, Regulation
Couldn't help but take notice of the headline, and this quote, from a story today on the CNBC website:
As Washington and Wall Street grow increasingly restless about the unusually slow pace of job creation and the risk of a so-called jobless recovery, key business groups have begun to bang the drum more loudly.
Not that we haven't seen anything like that happening around the country already, right?

“To create jobs we must ease the uncertainty over tax increases as well as health, environmental, labor, legal  and fiscal policies,” (American Chamber of Commerce) president and CEO Thomas J. Donohue said in a speech Tuesday. Chamber members are predominantly small companies with ten or less employees.
Small business. And those businesses make up the largest part of our economy - and as a block, overwhelmingly our largest employer group. In other words (and economically speaking), they provide support (you know, backbone) for everything else we want to accomplish in this nation of ours. You have to ask yourself: do you like that? Or do you want it to change? Change into what, I'm asking. Because if you voted for change, this is what you're getting.

Just one year in, as President Obama's public opinion rating sinks further, faster than any president in modern times, to well down in the forties on both the approval and disapproval sides - officially into "presidential malaise" territory. My only advice is, please don't start the Rose Garden strategy yet. But you can count on this: voters are already poised for change (again). 

Sending your coalition to the palace walls on health care politics this early in your term, watching a surprising number jump off in "retirement" - really ought to give you pause for thought. And that is the "Chicago Way" isn't it? Oh, I see. We need change.