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Community Bank System acquires professional-services practice from EBS-RMSCO
SYRACUSE — Community Bank System, Inc. (NYSE:CBU), through its subsidiary Benefit Plans Administrative Services, Inc. (BPAS), has reached an agreement to acquire the professional-services practice
Galaxy’s TK99/TK105 to broadcast Yankees’ games in 2014
SYRACUSE — The New York Yankees have chosen the Syracuse radio station TK99/TK105 as the new home for their baseball broadcasts in the local market
St. Lawrence University research: Nanoparticles may ease MS symptoms
CANTON — A team of scientists that includes St. Lawrence University biology and psychology professors, plus several recent graduates, has discovered that a specific type of
CBORD names Danowski VP of foodservice management solutions
ITHACA — The CBORD Group, Inc., a provider of cashless-card systems used to buy food on many college campuses, has appointed Damian Danowski as vice
Woodbine Group opens anglers’ paradise on Salmon River
ALTMAR — Thomas J. Fernandez is passionate about fly fishing. Fortunately, one of America’s premier venues for the sport is the Salmon River, located in
Boynton is “excited” and ready to become Crouse’s next CEO
SYRACUSE — Kimberly Boynton stands ready to become Crouse Hospital’s new CEO on New Year’s Day, and she believes her time as the hospital’s CFO
Philipson: Slow and steady wins the race
ROME — Six years after Sam Walton opened his first five-and-dime store in 1945 with the goal of being the lowest-cost provider, Herb Philipson opened
Siena: Upstate consumer sentiment recovers from October slide
After losing some confidence amid the federal-government shutdown in October, upstate New York and New York state consumers in November became a little more positive
Wage Theft Act Reform is Needed
The Business Council of New York State, Inc. is urging the New York Legislature to repeal the annual wage-notification provision of the Wage Theft Prevention Act. “The wage notification and acknowledgement requirement of the Wage Theft Prevention Act provides little, if any, additional benefit to employees,” Ken Pokalsky, vice president of government affairs for The
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The Business Council of New York State, Inc. is urging the New York Legislature to repeal the annual wage-notification provision of the Wage Theft Prevention Act.
“The wage notification and acknowledgement requirement of the Wage Theft Prevention Act provides little, if any, additional benefit to employees,” Ken Pokalsky, vice president of government affairs for The Business Council, said in testimony given Nov. 21 to an Assembly Labor Committee Hearing in Albany.
“Repealing this one specific mandate would eliminate unnecessary administrative costs this mandate imposes on private-sector employers that are in full compliance with fair wage laws.”
The wage-notification provision — adopted in 2010 — requires that, each January, private sector employers provide a written pay notice to each of their employees in New York state, and obtain a written acknowledgement of the receipt of such notice from each employee. The employer must retain the notices and written acknowledgement for six years.
Components of the annual-pay notice are virtually identical to information employers already include on weekly or bi-weekly employee pay stubs, meaning that employers bear the additional administrative costs for providing the same information that employees have already received at least 26 times during the prior year.
Current law also requires employers to furnish a written explanation of how individual employee wages are computed, if requested by an employee.
The Business Council supported S.5885/A.8106, sponsored by State Senator Diane Savino (D–Staten Island) and Assemblyman Carl E. Heastie (D–Bronx) during the 2013 legislative session. This legislation leaves the majority of the Wage Theft Prevention Act intact while reducing compliance costs for in-compliance employers and providing stricter penalties for employers that actually violate fair-pay laws.
This opinion is drawn from a news release that the Business Council issued on Nov. 21. Read the Business Council’s full testimony on this subject at http://www.bcnys.org/whatsnew/testimony/2013/wage-theft-prevention-act-112113.html
Facts about Free Markets and Pope Francis
Pope Francis tells us lately the free market is a wicked enemy. It must be restrained. He calls it a “new tyranny.” He insists the successes of free markets have “never been confirmed by the facts.” Ronald Reagan used to say that facts are stubborn things. On economic matters the president had a better grip
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Pope Francis tells us lately the free market is a wicked enemy. It must be restrained. He calls it a “new tyranny.” He insists the successes of free markets have “never been confirmed by the facts.”
Ronald Reagan used to say that facts are stubborn things. On economic matters the president had a better grip of facts than does the Pope.
I crib from an editorial in Investors Business Daily: Before Francis ventured into such territory, he should have first consulted Milton Friedman, who offered this famous gem: “In the only cases in which the masses have escaped from the kind of grinding poverty you are talking about, the only cases in recorded history are where they have had capitalism and largely free trade.”
Fact: Hundreds of millions of the poor the Pope loves starved to death in the 20th century. In India. In China. In Korea. The wretchedness of their poverty was like a bottomless cesspool.
Fact: The salvation of the poor in these countries came from free markets. When India’s bureaucrats finally loosened markets the Indians learned to feed themselves — and to even sell surpluses to other countries. When Mao and his stooges finally allowed peasants to grow and sell food on the side, China began to end starvation. Francis, please take note. Alongside previous attempts to alleviate poverty, these were miracles.
Collectives failed to do this. Central control — the opposite of free markets — failed to do this.
Fact: North Koreans starve today. South Koreans prosper. The difference is that free markets thrive in South Korea. They are virtually forbidden in the North.
Fact: The tyrannical communist rulers have one by one admitted that free markets work better than central control. Today, the Castro dictators are tossing in the towel. They are gradually allowing free markets.
In the past 30 to 40 years, billions of people have finally been granted free markets. In those years more people have been lifted from abject poverty than at any time in the history of humanity.
In the modern era, there has never, ever been such progress for so many. Or for such a big percentage of the poor. Hundreds of millions have access to medicine and clean water for the first time.
These are facts, Francis. Look ’em up. The most startling fact of all is that free markets bring prosperity to more people than any other system.
Are there still poor people? Yes. Are free markets perfect? Not at all. Are they always fair? Nope.
Are there better systems for reducing poverty? There are utopian systems that promise equal wealth for all. They end up dragging everyone down to share in a lower quality of life. And they eventually fall apart. Meanwhile, the elite within these utopian systems do all right for themselves.
Pope Francis, why do you not see such facts? I suspect you see only big international businesses and huge banks as the face of free markets. In fact, many of them try to suppress free markets. Meanwhile, the guy who used to sell you a newspaper every morning in Argentina? He was a free-marketer. Give him more freedom to operate. Give the car-repair guy the freedom to own his garage and to price his work. Give all entrepreneurs fewer taxes and more freedoms and less government. Those elements of free markets work wonders.
Francis, you have faith in what you cannot see. Heaven, Hell, etc. You do not deal with facts on these matters. You rely on faith. You also have faith in central planning, government, bureaucrats. You believe they will lift up the downtrodden. The facts do not support this faith.
The facts support free markets, ugly as they are. As Friedman reminds us: “The only cases in recorded history when the masses escaped grinding poverty is when they had capitalism and largely free trade.”
If free markets have achieved this, why call them tyranny? Why not push for reforms, but also embrace them?
From Tom…as in Morgan.
Tom Morgan writes about political, financial, and other subjects from his home near Oneonta, in addition to his radio shows and TV show. For more information about him, visit his website at www.tomasinmorgan.com
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