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Shares mixed in thin New Year's Eve trading

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 31 Desember 2013 | 20.26

TOKYO — Shares were mixed Tuesday in thin pre-holiday trading, with early gains in some markets succumbing to selling pressure as roller-coaster 2013 wound to a close.

The French and British markets, which will trade for a half day on Tuesday, started on a positive note. The CAC-40 rose 0.2 percent to 4,284.83 and the FTSE 100 inched up 0.1 percent to 6,738.10.

Germany's DAX was closed for the holiday.

Futures suggested potentially modest New Year's Eve gains on Wall Street. Dow Jones futures rose 0.04 percent while S&P 500 futures gained 0.03 percent.

In Asia, Hong Kong's Hang Seng index gained 0.3 percent to close at 23,306.39 in a half-day session, buoyed by buying of mainland China-based banks and energy companies. Shares in Shanghai and Shenzhen also rebounded from early losses.

Elsewhere in Asia, share prices rose in Malaysia, Singapore and India but fell in Australia, New Zealand and Taiwan.

Markets were closed in Japan and other Asian markets for the New Year holiday.

The Tokyo benchmark Nikkei 225 stock index rose 0.7 percent Monday to end 2013 at its highest level in more than six years, having gained 56.7 percent in 2013 — the biggest annual gain in 41 years.

In foreign exchange markets, the dollar was virtually unchanged at 104.95 Japanese yen, while the euro slipped 0.08 percent to $1.379.

The price of crude oil dipped back below $100, with the benchmark U.S. contract for February delivery down 10 cents at $99.19 in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.


20.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

The Ticker

Technical glitches dog 
Mass. jobless website

Technological glitches are plaguing yet another state-operated website ­— the Massachusetts unemployment system.

Users are reporting problems accessing both the phone line and website to file weekly unemployment claims with the Massachusetts Division of Unemployment Assistance. One user told the Herald he receives error messages on the site and is disconnected when trying to call via phone.

The state acknowledged the technological issues on its website yesterday and told the Herald it will extend the hours of its call center tonight.

Bain Capital buys big stake in Bob's

Boston's Bain Capital has an agreement to buy a majority stake in Manchester, Conn.-based Bob's Discount Furniture for undisclosed terms from fellow private equity firms Karp Reilly and Apax Partners. Bob's has 47 stores in the Northeast and mid-Atlantic, including 10 in Massachusetts. Its management team will continue to own a "significant" stake in the 22-year-old company, and CEO Ted English will continue in his role. The deal is expected to close in the first quarter of 2014.

Wholesale Liquidators driving event

National Wholesale Liquidators, which operates several stores, including one in Dorchester, is emphasizing safe driving tonight in a special event aimed at reminding motorists how to protect themselves while enjoying the holiday.

The "Designate a Driver" campaign will provide safety tips in a handout to customers and a special YouTube video. "Promoting safe driving can save lives," said Scott Rosen, president and CEO of NWL. "I hope the emphasis we put on safety this year can prevent a tragedy. Safety is our goal."

Today

 Standard & Poor's releases S&P/Case-Shiller index of home prices for October.

 The Conference Board releases the Consumer Confidence Index for December

TOMORROW

 Stock and bond markets are closed for New Year's Day.

THE SHUFFLE

Kirkland Albrecht & Fredrickson, a CPA firm based in Braintree, has announced that Joshua Sircar, left, has joined the company as a staff accountant. In this role, he will prepare compilations and reviews, in addition to the preparation of taxes for corporations, partnerships and high-net-worth individuals.

 TD Bank has named Amber J. Howe as a senior vice president based in Braintree. She will provide strategic human resources support to the chief information officer and manage the team of HR personnel who support technology services.


20.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Mass. home sales slide in Nov.

There was a slight chill in the Massachusetts housing market last month.

November saw the first year-over-year decline in single-family home sales — and the fewest number of monthly sales — since April, driven by a tight supply of available properties and rising interest rates.

Sales fell 2 percent compared to November of 2012, according to data released yesterday by the Warren Group, the Boston publisher of Banker & Tradesman.

The median sales price for single-family homes, meanwhile, climbed 4 percent to $307,000, for the 14th straight month of year-over-year increases.

"The low inventory of homes for sale is affecting the number of sales, because people who are eager to buy are not finding much to their liking," Warren Group CEO Timothy M. Warren Jr. said. And while historically low, interest rates have been rising since May.

Single-family homes for sale as of Nov. 30 numbered 18,428, down 20.6 percent compared to the same month last year — marking the 21st consecutive month of inventory decreases.

And, unlike some buyers during the mid-2000s inventory shortage who purchased homes beyond their financial means, buyers today aren't willing to make that leap, according to MAR president Kimberly Allard-Moccia, broker-owner of Century 21 Professionals in Braintree.

"They're not interested in repeating past mistakes, and the lending requirements are far more strict now," she said. "Even if a buyer wanted to overpay for a property, or get involved in a multiple bid situation, their lender may not approve the loan."


20.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Drone research funds to fly into Bay State

The announcement of six states that will host testing areas for commercial drones is a significant step toward approving unmanned aircraft in U.S. skies, experts said, and will pay dividends for Massachusetts — even though the Bay State isn't on the list.

The FAA announced yesterday that Alaska, Nevada, North Dakota, Texas, Virginia and New York will host research sites for drones, but the New York site, at Griffiss International Airport, will be run by an alliance of organizations from New York and Massachusetts, including Joint Base Cape Cod.

"It's a great economic opportunity because it will mean jobs," said Missy Cummings, a professor at MIT and a drone expert.

"This selection recognizes the importance of Massachusetts' military installations and our special role as an innovation hub," Sen. Edward J. Markey said in a statement.

Markey has filed a bill that would require the FAA to enact privacy guidelines before allowing drones to take to the skies.

"These test sites will give us valuable information about how best to ensure the safe introduction of this advanced technology into our nation's skies," transportation secretary Anthony Foxx said in a statement.

The FAA is scheduled to put the regulations in place by 2015, but that is not likely to happen, Cummings said.

"The FAA is not known to move fast," she said.

The regulations, whenever they are finalized, will allow commercial drones like those that Amazon proposed to be used for package delivery, as shown in an attention-grabbing CBS "60 Minutes" segment, and would also have larger possibilities, like search and rescue and agricultural uses, Cummings said.


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Application deadline for Mass. casino hopefuls

BOSTON — At the finish of a year of ups and downs for would-be casino developers in Massachusetts, the deadline has arrived for final resort casino applications to be submitted to the state gaming commission with no more surprises expected.

MGM Resorts International said it filed its lengthy Phase 2 application for its proposed Springfield casino on Monday, one day ahead of Tuesday's deadline. MGM is the only applicant for the sole western Massachusetts resort casino license.

Mohegan Sun and Wynn Resorts planned to file final applications as they vie for the only eastern Massachusetts license.

Mohegan Sun has proposed a $1 billion casino on land owned by Suffolk Downs in Revere, subject to a vote of approval by city residents in February.

Wynn Resorts wants to build a $1.2 billion resort in Everett.


20.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Mass. couple promote new craft beer business model

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 29 Desember 2013 | 20.25

BELMONT, Mass. — Kate Baker and Suzanne Schalow founded Craft Beer Cellar in Belmont in 2010, and today, at any given time, its 1,500 square feet of retail space are filled with more than 1,000 beers from 350 breweries. Beers are organized by region, from Worcester to the West Coast, with an emphasis on local brews. Employees have jobs like Head Beer Geek, Ambassador of Fine Ales and Lagers, and Hoptologist and wear hooded sweat shirts emblazoned with the words "Beer Geek."

"People take two steps in the door and they don't know how to proceed," says Brian Shaw, who opened a Craft Beer Cellar in Newton Centre recently, joining franchises in Winchester, Westford, and Braintree. "People say, 'Oh my God, I didn't know there was this much beer.'?"

Is there ever. And now Baker and Schalow are betting their model can work elsewhere as they expand to New Hampshire and Vermont, as well as Florida, St. Louis, and maybe Seattle. Their goal is to make people think about whether to buy a Pretty Things Jack D'Or or a Sierra Nevada Pale Ale as carefully as they would wrestle between a cabernet or a merlot.

It is a risky quest. Despite craft beer's popularity boom, creating a national franchise of specialty beer stores has not been done. One reason could be that craft beers accounted for only 10 percent of the dollars in total beer sales in the United States in 2012.

Craft Beer Cellar stores carry flavorful ales and lagers that are brewed to traditional standards and can be hard to find.

Baker and Schalow prefer to focus on other numbers, like the 2,403 brewers that operated in the United States in 2012, the most since the 1880s, according to the Brewers Association. Schalow and Baker hope to capitalize on this explosion by packing each small, service-oriented store with carefully curated beer while leaving out nips, cigarettes, and jugs of wine.

"Beer store is still not a 'category' in the world," says Schalow. "No one has done this. No one has put everything on the line and said, 'I can teach people about great beer.'?"

Schalow and Baker, partners in life as well as business, met in 2002 when Schalow, then a manager at Cambridge Common restaurant, hired Baker. The first beer Baker consumed in front of Schalow was a Budweiser.

"I almost fell over," Schalow says.

Around that time, Schalow wanted to take Blue Moon, a MillerCoors product, off the bar's tap list. When ownership said no, she challenged her staff to "sell the heck" out of something else, and Magic Hat's Circus Boy, a craft beer, eventually replaced Blue Moon.

Baker and Schalow married in 2010, and the couple decided that year to leave the restaurant and open the beer store.

"When I told her craft beer store, she was a lot supportive and a little skeptical," says Schalow. "I told her, 'If we make it amazing, they will come, it doesn't matter where it is.'?"

The pair have scoured the region looking for craft beer from hard-to-find brewers. Stores carry multiple styles from brewers like Northampton's Brewmaster Jack, Everett's Night Shift Brewing, and Plymouth's Mayflower Brewing, as well as beers from Belgium, Italy, and France.

"It's all about building and cultivating the relationships," says Baker. "And it could be with a distributor, or a bartender, or a homebrewer who has visions of creating their brewery."

"They're really in tune with the culture of craft beer," says Mark Vasconcelos, craft brand manager for Burke Distributing, a Massachusetts company that delivers 37 craft brands to stores around the state, in addition to larger brands like Coors Light. "They're proactive in letting us know if there's something that's going to be in demand by the consumers."

Carrying 350 beer brands is not without challenges. "Beer is the least marked up drinkable thing," Baker says. "There's a reason why no one has done this before."

A big reason is that light beer, in particular, remains hugely popular.

"We celebrate the beer renaissance currently taking place, and we are proud to offer beer drinkers a portfolio of great beers for every drinking occasion," Karina Diehl, a spokeswoman for MillerCoors, said in a statement. "Light beer is the largest segment in the American beer industry for a reason."

John Libonati and Chris Schutte own Social Wines in South Boston, which carries only premium beer, but also wine and spirits. They acknowledge the higher markups on wine make it easier to not carry the big-name beers.

"The growth of the craft beer market right now isn't being fueled by people who only want beer," says Jeff Wharton, co-founder of DrinkCraftbeer.com. "I think the world is ready for more liquor stores with a craft beer ethos."

Craft beer, by definition, means small, independently owned, and brewed to traditional standards; it accounted for 6.5 percent of the volume of all beer sold in 2012, according to the Brewers Association. Schalow knows craft beer is not yet on everyone's radar.

"We're the crazy hippies with the headbands, screaming and shouting and carrying the torches," she says.

To better reach the masses, the store has tried to engage potential customers through social media. Lee Movic, who runs Craft Beer Cellar's social media accounts, positions himself as an advocate for craft beer, not just the store. Movic attends events, even for competing stores, pushing craft. He tweets about those events, new beer arrivals, and generally positive messages like, "Good morning, beer geeks. We hope you have a great day today."

He is luring new customers the only way he knows how. "Everyone loves great customer service," he says, "so we start with that."

Franchising was not always the plan, says Baker. The pair spent "close to 50 hours" scouting store locations in St. Louis before hiring a real estate developer to help. They admittedly don't know the Brandon, Fla., market as they know Belmont. Selecting new franchise sites and owners has taken them away from their base.

"The first couple months were humbly painful," says Schalow. She says the store's regular customers weren't used to seeing them less.

Movic says the store's brand is intrinsically linked to Baker and Schalow. "But it is already becoming much more than that," he adds.

Despite early challenges, the owners — with a staff of about 30 people and growing — remain devoted to spreading their motto of "Don't drink crap beer." Schalow talks in great detail about educating her staff and the public ("If you can't buy good beer from me, just buy good beer," she says), and several staffers eagerly share their "a-ha" moments of talking dazed and confused customers "down from that scary place" and converting them into regulars.

Shaw, the Newton Centre store owner, says business has been brisk since the opening on Oct. 30. Kay Lorenz, one of the owners of the Braintree Craft Beer Cellar, says she has "been welcomed with open arms" by neighboring retailers. On a day in late November, a new 20-something employee introduced himself to Schalow on his first day.

"This is so much fun," he says, his voice rising in pitch with excitement. "I just love working here!"

Schalow smiles. "You'll fit right in."


20.25 | 0 komentar | Read More

Gaming foes await SJC decision

Attorney General Martha Coakley is pushing for swift action by the state Supreme Judicial Court on the legality of a ballot initiative to repeal the Bay State's two-year-old expanded gaming law, a question that looms large over the awarding of casino licenses.

Coakley rejected the initiative in September, arguing it would damage the contractual rights of those bidding for casino licenses. Those pushing the ballot question appealed Coakley's ruling to the Supreme Judicial Court, which is expected to hear arguments and make a decision in the spring, the same time the state Gaming Commission plans to award casino licenses.

"We expect to request that the SJC take up this matter promptly in order to reach a final determination," Coakley spokesman Brad Puffer said. "While our office determined that the question does not meet constitutional requirements, the most important thing is to get the right result."

If approved to go before voters on the November 2014 ballot, the question would pose huge problems for anyone looking to develop a casino in Massachusetts.

"It's an open question," said Matthew Cameron, an attorney for the repeal group. "I think, honestly, that the smartest thing would be an injunction (on casino development) if it clears the SJC. I think the industry's going to be pretty scared if they see that's going on the ballot."

The Gaming Commission has yet to take a stance on what would happen to casinos awarded licenses in the spring if it appears the law could be overturned in the fall.

"The commission has not taken up this topic yet," commission spokeswoman Elaine Driscoll said.

For now, casino companies are keeping a poker face about the potentially game changing ballot question.

"We knew that was out there when we went after this, we knew that was looming, but we feel that this is a project that is worth pursuing," said Mitchell Etess, CEO of Mohegan Sun, which is going for a license to open a casino on the Revere side of Suffolk Downs and reached a host agreement with the city last week. "I can't control what's going to happen, we can only just keep going, one foot ahead of the other, and get everything done that we need to get done. It has by no means deterred us."

The proponents — a collection of casino foes who played a key role in defeating a Suffolk Downs casino plan in East Boston in November — are proceeding as if they are in the clear. On Dec. 9, Secretary of State William Galvin certified 72,901 signatures they had collected, exceeding the 68,911 needed to get on the ballot.

Revere Mayor Dan Rizzo, a strong casino supporter, said the initiative is frustrating.

"That horse left the barn back in November 2011, expanded gaming is allowed here in the state," Rizzo said. "Now, it's not good enough for them that they're not going to have a casino in East Boston. It's really become a huge distraction to what the state's trying to do, and that's create jobs and hundreds of millions of dollars in enhancements."


20.25 | 0 komentar | Read More

Market Basket’s CEO blasts board’s website

Market Basket CEO Arthur T. Demoulas has taken the grocery chain's contentious board to task over alleged inaccuracies on a website that it's using to communicate with workers.

In a letter to chairman Keith Cowan that Demoulas shared with employees, he stated his opposition to the "unprecedented" website and highlighted information on it that he said is significantly "wrong." He also asked the board to shut down the site.

"I am completely opposed to the board having a website," Demoulas said in the letter to Cowan. "Any company should speak to its associates, its customers and the public through its CEO. I urge you to promptly either close the website or, at a minimum, fix the site and eliminate the half-truths and inaccuracies."

Demoulas said the site takes the position of so-called "A" directors aligned with his rival, Arthur S. 
Demoulas, who waged an earlier campaign to remove his cousin from the CEO's post and rein in his duties amid a long-running family feud.

The board, meanwhile, has made only one of Demoulas' recommended changes to the site's "frequently asked questions" page, but updated others. It acknowledged that it's hired an executive search firm to "assure that both corporate succession planning and the identification and development of additional executive talent is an integral part of long-term planning ... The search firm is not looking for a new president."

The board has no intention to take down the site, according to a board spokeswoman. "The board has made it clear why it created the website, and the board will continue to use this vehicle to provide factual information to the company's stakeholders," she said.

A spokeswoman for 
Arthur T. Demoulas said he declined comment. In his letter to employees, Demoulas said he was forwarding the Cowan letter to "set the record straight."

"It is important that when the company decides to communicate with its associates, it do so truthfully," he said in the letter.


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Briar Group card breach investigated

An investigation of a new credit card security breach at the Briar Group will include ensuring the Boston restaurant chain complied with security measures outlined in a settlement with the state Attorney General's office after a 2009 data breach.

As part of its probe of reports that thieves had stolen and used the credit card information of Seaport District workers and visitors, the Attorney General's office said it had urged the Briar Group to determine if its payment system had been illegally accessed.

"We continue to work with the Briar Group and will review the findings of its internal investigation now that a breach has been determined in its systems," Christopher Loh, a spokesman for Attorney General Martha Coakley, said in a statement. "Data breaches are a serious concern, and we expect the Briar Group to assist consumers impacted by this breach."

The Briar Group, whose 10 restaurants and bars include Ned Devine's, Harp and Anthem, as well as M.J. O'Connor's and City Bar in the Seaport District, said that hackers had gained access to its customers' credit card information.

The company has not pinpointed the exact dates of the latest breach, but believes it occurred from sometime in October to early November. It also couldn't confirm yesterday how many customers were affected. A Briar Group spokeswoman said it was in compliance with both the settlement agreement and payment card industry data security standards.

"We feel confident that, based on the information we know to date, that it's no longer possible for the person who originally infiltrated this system to continue taking data," spokeswoman Diana Pisciotta said.

In 2011, the Briar Group agreed to pay $110,000 to settle a lawsuit filed by Coakley for its failure to secure customers' personal information during the 2009 security breach. A malicious software code had been installed on its point-of-sales computer system that April and was not removed until December. The judgment required the Briar Group to comply with Massachusetts data security regulations and the PCI standards, and to set up and maintain an enhanced computer network security system.

"We've put in completely new security systems and are working regularly with a company called McGladrey, who updates our system on a very regular basis," Pisciotta said.

McGladrey started investigating a possible breach in mid-November and installed additional security safeguards at that time, said Pisciotta, who had no information to share about the source of the breach and how it occurred.

The company is not offering free credit monitoring for affected customers.

The breach follows a massive one announced Dec. 19 by Target Corp. in which hackers got access to up to 40 million customer credit and debit cards from Nov. 27 to Dec. 15.


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Federal health market surpasses 1 million signups

HONOLULU — A December surge propelled health care sign-ups through the government's rehabilitated website past the 1 million mark, the Obama administration said Sunday, reflecting new signs of life for the problem-plagued federal insurance exchange.

Of the more than 1.1 million people now enrolled, nearly 1 million signed up in December, with the majority coming in the week before a pre-Christmas deadline for coverage to start in January. Compare that to a paltry 27,000 in October —the website's first, error-prone month — or 137,000 in November.

The figures tell only part of the story. The administration has yet to provide a December update on the 14 states running their own exchanges. While California, New York, Washington, Kentucky and Connecticut have performed well, others are still struggling.

Still, the end-of-year surge suggests that with HealthCare.Gov now functioning better, the federal market may be starting to pull its weight. The windfall comes at a critical moment for Obama's sweeping health care law, which becomes "real" for many Americans on Jan. 1 when coverage through the exchanges and key patient protections kick in.

"As we continue our open enrollment campaign, we experienced a welcome surge in enrollment as millions of Americans seek access to affordable health care coverage," Marilyn Tavenner, the head of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said in a blog post.

The fledgling exchanges are still likely to fall short of the government's own targets for 2013. That's a cause for concern, because Obama needs millions of mostly younger, healthy Americans to sign up to keep costs low for everyone. The administration had projected more than 3.3 million overall would be enrolled through federal and state exchanges by the end of the year.

Tavenner said fixes to the website, which underwent a major overhaul to address widespread outages and glitches, contributed to December's figures. But the problems haven't totally disappeared. Thousands of people wound up waiting on hold for telephone help on Christmas Eve for a multitude of reasons, including technical difficulties.

The administration released the figures Sunday while President Barack Obama was vacationing in Hawaii. Although the president has spent most of his time relaxing with friends and family, he stepped into work mode late Friday for an update from aides on his signature domestic policy achievement. The White House said Obama told his team to focus on minimizing disruptions for those switching plans.

For Americans who successfully chose insurance plans by Dec. 24, coverage should start on New Year's Day for those who pay their first month's premium by the due date, which in most cases has been extended until Jan. 10.

But insurers have complained that another set of technical problems, largely hidden from consumers, has resulted in the government passing along inaccurate data on enrollees. The White House says the error rate has been significantly reduced. Yet with a flood of signups that must be processed in just days, it remains unclear whether last-minute enrollees will encounter a seamless experience if they try to use their new benefits come Jan. 1.

The political fallout from the website's calamitous rollout could pale in comparison to the heat that Obama might take if Americans who signed up and paid their premiums arrive at the pharmacy or the emergency room and find there's no record of their coverage. Republican critics, already on the lookout for health-law failures to exploit in the 2014 midterm elections, would be emboldened to argue that shortcomings with the law's implementation have jeopardized Americans' health.

As make-or-break January approaches, officials are also working to prevent gaps in coverage for millions of Americans whose individual policies were canceled this fall because they fell short of the law's requirements. In one of a series of last-minute tweaks, the administration in December said even if those individuals don't sign up for new plans, they won't face the penalty the law imposes on Americans who fail to get insurance by March 31.

A key indicator of whether state-run exchanges are keeping pace with the federal exchange will come next month, when the administration releases full December figures. Overall, the goal is to sign up 7 million Americans before the first-year open enrollment period closes at the end of March.

A few states offering their own updates have posted encouraging totals, including New York, where more than 200,000 have enrolled either through the state exchange or through Medicaid, a government program expanded under Obama's health law to cover more people. In California, a tally released Friday showed nearly 430,000 have enrolled through the exchange so far.

"The basic structure of that law is working despite all the problems —despite the website problems, despite the messaging problems," Obama told reporters before departing for Hawaii.

Another major unknown is whether the recent surge in enrollments skewed toward older Americans whose medical needs are expensive to cover, or whether the administration succeeded in recruiting younger and healthier people whose participation is critical to the law's success. Those details for December are expected to be released in mid-January.

Meanwhile, with the website now able to handle higher volumes without crashing or clogging up, the government plans in January to ramp up outreach to consumers to encourage more people to sign up, the administration said.

___

Reach Josh Lederman at http://twitter.com/joshledermanAP


20.25 | 0 komentar | Read More

The Ticker

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 28 Desember 2013 | 20.25

Judge: Surveillance OK

The heated debate over the National Security Agency's bulk collection of millions of Americans' telephone records fell squarely into the courts yesterday when a federal judge in Manhattan upheld the legality of the program and cited its need in the fight against terrorism just days after another federal judge concluded it was likely not constitutional.

The ruling by U.S. District Judge William H. Pauley III and an opposing view earlier this month by U.S. District Judge Richard Leon in Washington, D.C., sets the stage for federal appeals courts to confront the delicate balance when the need to protect national security clashes with civil rights established in the Constitution.

Pauley concluded the program was a necessary extension of steps taken after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

1.3M losing unemployment today

An estimated 1.3 million Americans are bracing for a harrowing, post-Christmas jolt as extended federal unemployment benefits expire today, with potentially significant implications for the recovering U.S. economy. A tense political battle likely looms when Congress reconvenes in the new, midterm election year.

Nudging Congress along, a vacationing President Barack Obama called two senators proposing an extension to offer his support. From Hawaii, Obama pledged yesterday to push Congress to move quickly next year to address the "urgent economic priority," the White House said.

Hollywood 2013: Top box-office year

Despite a string of summertime flops, Hollywood is expected to have a banner year at the domestic box office, coming in just shy of $11 billion, the largest annual take ever. But because of higher ticket prices, actual attendance at North American theaters remained flat after a decade of decline.

With the current domestic box office tally nearly 1 percent ahead of last year at this time, 2013 could surpass 2012's overall haul of $10.8 billion by more than $100 million, according to box office tracker Rentrak.

First Night Boston now has an app

First Night Boston will have an app ­— available for download now — with schedules, maps and event information, the mayor's office said yesterday.

"We're thrilled to have this useful tool available for visitors to this year's First Night," said Mayor Thomas M. Menino in a statement. The app was made by Boston company Sparkline Digital.

  • Skanska USA announced the promotion of Paul Hewins to co-chief operating officer overseeing Connecticut, Massachusetts, Delaware and Pennsylvania for Skanska USA Building. Hewins has 28 years in the construction industry.
  • TD Bank has promoted Jacqueline M. Dawe to assistant vice president, merchant services representative II in Haverhill. She will continue to be responsible for generating new merchant account relationships and provide support to area stores and commercial lenders serving northern Massachusetts, including the Merrimack Valley and the North Shore.
  • Eastern Bank announced the appointment of Anthony George as a vice president and commercial lender in the bank's business banking division. George, based in the Norwell office, is responsible for serving small business owners on the South Shore, including Braintree, Marshfield, Scituate, Hull, Hanover, Hingham and Weymouth.

20.25 | 0 komentar | Read More

2014 Nissan Versa strikes right note

You know, for a little get-me-to-work-comfortably kind of car, I'll take the 2014 Nissan Versa Note SV hatchback.

I ventured up Interstate 95 to southern Maine thinking the Versa would struggle on the highway, but a pleasant surprise was in store. The ride was comfortable, compliant, relatively quiet, and the car moved calmly through traffic as long as you kept your foot heavy on the accelerator. Around town the car is quick and agile. It lacks some of the handling panache of other entry-level cars and you do get some rough road feel into the cabin, but the appointments in the upgraded SV trim with the optional technology package made up for the ride. Most of the surfaces were hard plastic, but the steering wheel was leather-wrapped and the multi-hued cloth interior was attractive.

The upgrades quickly rolled the base price of our tester from $14,800 to $19,545. But the extra touches turned this into more than a functional driver. The upgrades include some niceties such as a 5.8-inch touch display with voice recognition, Bluetooth telephone and streaming, Google connectivity and styling components such as 16-inch aluminum wheels, chrome trim and a push-button starter.

It's powered by a 1.6 liter, 109 horsepower four-cylinder motor mated to a continuous variable transmission. Although noisy under heavy acceleration, the CVT responds quickly without getting overly strung out like others. But the bonus is the stingy use of gas. Pumping out nearly 40 miles per gallon on the highway and roughly 30 around town keeps this runabout on the road for a long time between gas station stops, and that's a good thing because it only holds about 10 gallons.

I find the hatchback to have more curb appeal than the sedan. The short swept hood blends nicely into the styled body. The hatchback allows more rear legroom and a tidy storage area. Flip the rear seats down and the deck provides ample room for luggage or groceries.

The compact car field has many interesting offerings from the sexy and cute Fiat 500 and Mini Coopers to great drivers like the Ford Fiesta and Honda Fit to basic commuter cars like the Chevy Sonic and Hyundai Accent. All have good qualities, but I'd recommend this car based on its sturdiness and some of the standard features.

With good gas mileage, park-it-anywhere size — it's only 193 inches long — and don't-break-the-bank car payments, Nissan has clearly found a nice combination.


20.25 | 0 komentar | Read More

Target: Card PINs stolen

Security experts warned yesterday that even though personal identification numbers stolen from consumers' debit cards during Target Corp.'s data breach were "strongly encrypted," they still could be vulnerable to abuse.

Target customers who have not already done so should change their PINs, because such data has been decrypted, or unlocked, before, according to Gartner security analyst Avivah Litan.

"Nothing is infallible," she said. "It's not impossible, not unprecedented (and) has been done before."

Target, which announced Dec. 19 that hackers had gained access to sensitive customer information from up to 40 million debit and credit cards used at its U.S. stores from Nov. 27 to Dec. 15, yesterday confirmed customers' "strongly encrypted" PINs also were stolen.

But the Minneapolis retailer said it was confident the PINs were secure, because the "key" needed to decrypt them is not stored in Target's point-of-sales system and therefore could not have been taken during the cyber attack.

"We remain confident that PIN numbers are safe and secure," spokeswoman Molly Snyder said. "The PIN information was fully encrypted at the keypad, remained encrypted within our system and remained encrypted when it was removed from our system."

When a shopper uses a debit card at Target and enters a PIN, it is encrypted at the keypad with Triple DES, a "highly secure" data encryption standard used broadly in the United States, according to Snyder.

"The PIN information ... can only be decrypted when it is received by our external, independent payment processor," she said.

But there's still potential for hackers to gain access to customers' debit card accounts, said Shane Shook of cyber security firm Cylance Inc., which has investigated some of the biggest cyber breaches. Shook said many debit card holders use easy-to-guess PINs such as 1234 and, in some investigations, he's found more than 20 percent of PINs could easily be guessed.

Target, which is in the early stages of the breach investigation, said it will continue to share information as it's confirmed.

"While we believe their statement is accurate right now, we also know that they're continuing to conduct this forensic analysis," said Eva Velasquez, CEO of the nonprofit Identity Theft Resource Center in San Diego. "It stands to reason as they get deeper into that ... they will uncover more information."

Herald wire services were used in this report.


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Delta says it will honor man’s tix

Delta Airlines has reversed its decision — after repeated Herald inquiries — to deny a man planning a family vacation to Disneyland the rock-bottom fare he booked through Orbitz on Thursday due to a systemwide web glitch that also offered $68 Hub-to-Hawaii round-trip flights.

"I'm not so frustrated by losing the tickets, just more by the way they're treating me," said Abel Feldhamer of Long Island, N.Y., when he first contacted the Herald yesterday. "They're getting good press proclaiming they're honoring these fares when they're slapping some people in the face."

Feldhamer thought he had snagged six round-trip tickets using Orbitz between New York City and Los Angeles for a total of $152.46 during a Delta.com malfunction Thursday.

"Your flight and seats are confirmed," read an email from Orbitz. A Delta agent confirmed his reservation and seat selection over the phone. His credit card was even charged.

But five hours later — after he had booked a rental car and as his wife shopped for hotels — an Orbitz email arrived with the bad news.

"Due to limited availability, the airline was not able to confirm the flights you requested. As a result no tickets have been issued for this trip."

Feldhamer then called customer support lines for Orbitz and Delta — at one point even looping both in for a conference call. The Orbitz rep blamed Delta, which in turn claimed no tickets had ever been issued.

Feldhamer even filed a complaint with the U.S. Department of Transportation.

An Orbitz spokesman did not return a call or email from the Herald yesterday.

Delta spokeswoman Jennifer Martin yesterday afternoon insisted the airline would honor all incorrect fares "regardless of the channel booked" and urged people to call customer support if their booking agent incorrectly canceled the deal.

But moments later, Feldhamer received an email from Delta rep Sheri Lee, who wrote: "Upon review of your Record Locator ... it appears your purchase was not completed."

But when confronted with the seemingly conflicting messages, Delta spokeswoman Martin told the Herald the Feldhamer family would be able to take the Disneyland vacation after all.

"This customer is being contacted momentarily by Delta's Customer Care to correct this situation," said Martin. "The tickets they purchased will be honored."


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Duplex at FP3 has airy elegance

This spectacular duplex at FP3 on Congress Street has floor-to-ceiling glass from all living areas and bedrooms, with great views of the Financial District and Fan Pier out to Boston Harbor.

Built in 2006 as part of the 92-unit FP3 building designed by prominent Boston architect David Hacin, Unit 602 is in the new construction section of the complex and on two of the top four floors that sit like glass boxes atop the building.

The two-bedroom unit is filled with light, thanks to the wall of windows, light maple floors and unobstructed views over the surrounding brick warehouses.

On the sixth and seventh floors, the 1,751-square-foot unit has an airy feel thanks to its open plan and high ceilings. It's on the market for $1,751,000.

The building's lobby is nicely appointed, with a concierge and a gallery that features revolving shows of contemporary artists.

The units are off carpeted hallways with sconce lights and recessed doorways.

Unit 602 opens into a maple foyer with two closets — one for coats and storage, and the other with an LG washer and dryer.

A showpiece open living/dining/kitchen area is straight ahead with floor-to-ceiling windows. The living room has a two-story 
atrium and views of the 
Financial District on one side and Fan Pier and Boston Harbor on the other.

The dining area has a glass sliding door to a 352-square-foot private terrace with glass barrier walls and a Weber gas grill. The terrace has unobstructed views from Fort Point to the Financial District.

The custom kitchen has white, brown and glass Aiko cabinets and gray Corian countertops. There's a stainless steel LG refrigerator, a cabinet-enclosed Bosch dishwasher and a stainless Kitchen Aid gas stove and oven with a stainless steel backsplash. There's a large grey Corian-topped island with contemporary pendant lighting.

Off the kitchen is a half- bath with a gray porcelain tile floor and a pedestal sink.

A turning maple staircase leads to two bedrooms on the second floor. The master bedroom suite has maple floors, floor-to-ceiling windows and panoramic city views. An interior glass wall looks into the atrium and out to Fan Pier.

There's a large closet with built-in storage, a second closet and an en-suite master bathroom with gray porcelain tile floors and a two-tone porcelain tile walk-in shower. The wood vanity is topped with white Corian.

The second bedroom is on the small side, but has maple floors and those floor-to-ceiling windows with Financial District views. Across the hall is a second full bathroom, with a tile floor and porcelain gray tile around a raised soaking tub.

The unit has a Nest learning thermostat that lets the owner set the temperature via smartphone.

The monthly condo fee is a pricey $1,720, but includes heat and hot water.

There is no on-site parking, but the building has an arrangement with a nearby garage on Stillings Street, where it costs $360 a month for parking.

  • Address: 346 Congress Street, Unit 602 at FP3, South Boston
  • Bedrooms: Two
  • Bathrooms: Two full, one half
  • List price: $1,751,000
  • Square feet: 1,751
  • Price per square foot: $1,000
  • Annual taxes: $12,976
  • Monthly condo fee: $1,720 (includes heat and hot water)
  • Features: Duplex with floor-to ceiling glass windows and maple floors; living area has two-story atrium; great city views from all living areas and bedrooms; private terrace with gas grill overlooking Financial District; custom kitchen with Aiko cabinets, gray Corian countertops and high-end stainless steel appliances; master bedroom suite with interior glass wall overlooking atrium; a Nest learning thermostat that can be controlled by smartphone; in-unit washer and dryer; nicely appointed lobby with full art gallery; coffee house, and three Barbara Lynch establishments at street level.
  • Location: In South Boston's Fort Point neighborhood, with eateries and food shops; two blocks to Silver Line Courthouse station.
  • Built in: 2006
  • Broker: Warren Residential Group's Nick Warren at 617-855-9055 and Phillip MacArthur at 978-491-8510

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Avoiding another delivery disaster

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 27 Desember 2013 | 20.25

Online retailers should keep promises in check, and consumers should avoid last-minute Internet shopping to dodge another delivery debacle like the one this week that left many without their Christmas gifts, according to retail analysts.

But neither online sellers such as Amazon, nor delivery giant UPS is expected to sustain long-term damage for failing to make promised shipping deadlines, the analysts said.

"Shoppers' memories aren't that great," said Norwell retail consultant Michael Tesler. "It's always the next deal, the next credit card issue, the next item that everyone has to have. I don't see any ongoing ramifications."

Neither Amazon nor UPS would provide details on the scope of the late deliveries. FedEx said it shipped 99 percent of its ground deliveries on time, but didn't comment on its air shipments.

UPS said it expected to wrap up almost all late deliveries yesterday. "The volume of air packages in our system exceeded the capacity of our network, as demand was much greater than the forecast," spokesman Tyre Sperling said.

Tewksbury resident Marc Tortorici is waiting to hear back from Pottery Barn about his requested refund of an extra $15 delivery fee that he paid to ensure slippers for his wife would arrive by Christmas Eve. The package wasn't delivered until yesterday.

"As long as my $15 is returned, then I will not have an issue with either Pottery Barn or the carrier," he said. "But I will not order any item late next year, since I know they are over-promising what they can deliver."

IBM analytics said online sales in the weekend before Christmas surged 37 percent over the previous year.

Any short-term backlash won't reverse the growth of online sales, according to analyst Donald Broughton of Avondale Partners, but he does expect to see added delivery capacity next year and earlier cut-off dates for guaranteed last-minute deliveries.

"This is just a bump in the road on the great land rush of e-commerce," Broughton said. "When you have such huge surge in volume, it's going to come with issues."

Wedbush Securities analyst Michael Pachter called Amazon a "victim of its own success."

"Amazon has kind of lulled us as consumers into believing that we can wait to the very last second," he told Bloomberg Television. "It's Amazon's fault for guaranteeing it, and they're guaranteeing something that they don't control — which is the third-party carriers."


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Employment numbers spur Dow climb

The number of people applying for unemployment benefits last week dropped more than expected, another sign of continued growth in the economy that sent the Dow yesterday to a record high close.

"The underlying trend suggests job destruction continues to decline," said Sterne Agee chief economist Lindsey Piegza. "This is a welcome step in the right direction and further reinforces the Fed's assessment of a stronger labor market."

Initial unemployment claims — which are seen as an indicator of layoffs — dropped by 42,000 to 338,000 last week while the Dow Jones Industrial Average shot up more than 122 points to close at 16,479.88. It was the biggest decline in jobless claims in a year.

The jobless report was great news for Wall Street, but because trading slows in late December, any positive or negative news is magnified, said Christine Armstrong, Morgan Stanley senior vice president.

"It's very light volume. You can skew things," Armstrong said. "We're probably going to have the same thing next week."

Roughly 3.8 billion shares were bought or sold yesterday, 38 percent below the three-month average.

Although the numbers are heading in the right direction, this time of year makes jobless claims difficult to read, Piegza said.

"Claims are particularly volatile this time of year," she said.


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The Ticker

Twitter up 4.8 percent in continuing surge

Twitter stock jumped 4.8 percent yesterday to close at $73.31 a share on optimism by investors that the company has room to expand sales in advertising.

The stock has surged 32 percent over the past five days, 76 percent this month, and has nearly tripled since the microblogging social network went public at $26 a share in November.

Obama signs bipartisan budget deal

President Obama signed a bipartisan budget deal yesterday easing spending cuts.

Although the budget deal falls short of the grand bargain that Obama and congressional Republicans once aspired to, it ends the cycle of fiscal brinkmanship — for now — by preventing another shutdown for nearly two more years. But the rare moment of agreement may be short-lived.

Hanging over the start of the year is a renewed fight over raising the nation's borrowing limit, which the Treasury says must be resolved by late February or early March to avert an unprecedented U.S. default. Both sides are positioning behind customary hard-line positions, with Republicans insisting they want concessions before raising the debt limit and Obama insisting he won't negotiate.

McDonald's closes employee website

McDonald's Corp. has shut down a website intended to provide employees with work and life guidance after it generated negative publicity for the fast-food company.

The McResource program has been criticized for creating unrealistic budgets and offering advice that was out of touch with its workers' pay. The website, which was run by an outside company, also reportedly discouraged workers from eating fast food.

Amazon: Growth in Prime numbers

Amazon said yesterday it had signed up more than 
1 million new customers last week for its Amazon Prime membership program, which for $79 a year provides free two-day shipping on many items and a free streaming video service.

The company said the program continues to grow, with "tens of millions of members worldwide."

THE SHUFFLE

  • Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage in New England announced that it has hired Kevin Dumont, left, as a field trainer. He will serve as a trainer instructing affiliated sales associates in Southern Massachusetts and Rhode Island.
  • J Barrett & Co. announced that Andrea O'Brien, a full-time real estate agent, has joined the agency in its Beverly Farms office. O'Brien has extensive business experience in customer service, including management.
  • M/A-COM Technology Solutions Holdings Inc., a supplier of high performance RF, microwave and millimeter wave products, announced the appointment of Robert J. McMullan as its chief financial officer.

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Bay State shoppers take Target to task

Three Bay Staters are among Target shoppers who have filed nearly two dozen class-action lawsuits against the discount chain for allegedly failing to safeguard their credit and debit card information regarding a 19-day data breach by hackers.

Meghan Derba, a frequent Target shopper from South Easton, filed one of the lawsuits in U.S. District Court in Boston on Christmas Eve. "I did contact my lawyer, namely because I was just really shocked that such a large company could let something like this happen," she said. "I just want to make sure that my money that I support my family with isn't in jeopardy."

The lawsuits come as Reuters — citing a senior payments executive familiar with the situation — reported Wednesday that customers' encrypted personal identification numbers (PINs) were among the exposed data to which hackers had access during the cyber attack that affected as many as 
40 million debit and credit cards of Target customers.

Target spokeswoman Molly Snyder told Reuters that "no unencrypted PIN data was accessed," and there was no evidence that PIN data has been "compromised."

The data breach is likely to cost Target millions of dollars, given the experience of TJX Cos. In 2009, the Framingham owner of the T.J. Maxx, Marshalls and HomeGoods chains, agreed to pay $9.75 million and implement a new information security program after a data breach in 2005 and 2006 that affected at least 45.7 million card users. It also paid out millions to settle class-action lawsuits.


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T hopes companies will snap up station names

T riders could soon be getting off the train at Macy's — Downtown Crossing Station — or hopping on the Boloco — Blue Line.

The MBTA issued a request for proposals yesterday, seeking companies interested in buying the naming rights to nine stations and the Green, Red, and Blue lines. The Legislature included an amendment in last summer's massive transportation finance bill that lets the MBTA sell naming rights, with supporters estimating it could generate as much as $20 million for the cash-strapped T.

Naming a station presents an interesting opportunity for advertisers, Boston University marketing professor Tobe Berkovitz said.

"Every time a train pulls in, the announcer says the name of your brand," Berkovitz said.

Still, there could be some drawbacks.

"If something bad happens or if people have bad experiences at the station, then all of a sudden it is a negative," Berkovitz said.

The bidding starts at 
$1 million annually for five years for South Station, Airport, Downtown Crossing, Park Street, Back Bay, North Station, State Street, and Boylston stations, and $500,000 for Yawkey because the T says it has fewer daily customers.

Bids are due Feb. 27 and the naming rights will go to the "highest qualified bidder," according to MBTA spokesman Joe Pesaturo, with licenses expected to be awarded by July 1. The proposals must follow the MBTA's existing advertising standards, meaning alcohol and tobacco companies, as well as political parties and religious groups, are excluded.

It's not the first time the MBTA has floated the idea of naming rights — in 2001 no bidders stepped forward. And a proposal in 2011 drew criticism from a Washington, D.C., nonprofit that advocates limiting commercialization.

Berkovitz said the most natural fit would be sports teams and other attractions. In 2009, Barclays bought the naming rights to a Brooklyn subway station for $4 million over 20 years, to go with the now-complete Barclays Center, home to the New York Nets.


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The Ticker

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 26 Desember 2013 | 20.25

Maine powering back up

PORTLAND, Maine — Crews have restored power to some 43,000 people in Maine who had been without electricity since the weekend ice storm.

By noon yesterday, about 62,000 remained without power. That's down from more than 105,000 on Tuesday.

Utilities worked through Christmas day as a chill settled over the state. Some places were below zero on Christmas morning with highs only expected in the teens in many areas. Complicating efforts are expected wind gusts around 20 mph in some places, which could bring down more tree limbs.

The storm has claimed one life in Maine. State police say a 50-year-old Knox man died Tuesday when he tried to refill a generator with gas. They believe he was overcome by carbon monoxide fumes.

Emergency and warming shelters are open around the state.

Longmeadow wants $1M for casino

LONGMEADOW — The town of Longmeadow is seeking $1 million in upfront compensation from MGM Resorts International, citing traffic issues that would result if an $800 million resort casino is built in nearby Springfield.

Longmeadow Town Manager Stephen Crane told the Republican newspaper that the town is relying on a study done for the Pioneer Valley Planning Commission by an independent engineering firm.

The study found that Longmeadow and West Springfield would have the most impact from casino traffic among neighboring cities and towns.

The state's gambling law requires casino developers to negotiate mitigation agreements with surrounding communities.

MGM has rejected Longmeadow's demands, saying they are far out of line with other surrounding community agreements. The company says there's no definitive evidence that Longmeadow's traffic problems would be any worse.


TODAY

 The Labor Department releases weekly jobless claims.

 Freddie Mac, the mortgage company, releases weekly mortgage rates.

THE SHUFFLE

Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage in New England announced that it has hired Kathleen Medeiros, above, as a field trainer. Medeiros will be responsible for conducting a wide variety of educational and training courses for the company's sales associates in Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire and Rhode Island.

 Berkshire Bank announced that Gary Urkevich has been named SVP Information Technology. In this role, Urkevich will manage and direct all activities of the IT department to provide core services to the company, including client service, infrastructure, corporate systems, and information security.

 Cambridge Health Alliance, a community health system that serves Cambridge, Somerville, and Boston's metro-north communities, has named Assaad Sayah, M.D., as its chief medical officer. Dr. Sayah will provide physician leadership, ensure high quality care for patients, and be an advocate for CHA's physicians and all associates.


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Santa's sleigh delayed after snags at UPS, FedEx

NEW YORK — Santa's sleigh didn't make it in time for Christmas for some this year due to shipping problems at UPS and FedEx.

The delays were blamed on poor weather earlier this week in parts of the country as well as overloaded systems. The holiday shopping period this year was shorter than usual, more buying was done online and Americans' tendency to wait until the last possible second to shop probably didn't help either.

Neither company said how many packages were delayed but noted it was a small share of overall holiday shipments. While the bulk of consumers' holiday spending remains at physical stores, shopping online is increasingly popular and outstripping spending growth in stores at the mall.

The problems appear to have affected many parts of the country. The Associated Press spoke to people in Alabama, California, Georgia, Kansas, Louisiana, Nevada, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas and Virginia who didn't receive presents in time for Christmas.

Many were left with little or no time to make alternative plans.

Jeff Cormier and his Dallas family were among those who ordered gifts that didn't arrive.

He had three separate UPS packages — including two for which he paid extra for expedited shipping — delayed.

"I've had to apologize to three different people when I thought I had everything wrapped up and good to go way before," Cormier said.

He and his wife are celebrating their baby daughter's first Christmas and flew in his grandmother from Ohio to join them. Her gift, a customized iPhone cover with a photo of her new great-granddaughter, didn't come in time for Christmas.

"My wife and I had our presents to open. Our daughter had her presents to open. And my grandma, she didn't have anything to open," Cormier said.

"We apologize that our customers did not receive their packages on Christmas," said Natalie Godwin, a spokeswoman for United Parcel Service Inc.

Godwin said snow and ice in the Midwest last week and an ice storm that hit Dallas two-and-a-half weeks ago were partially to blame. She also said the volume of packages shipped exceeded the capacity of UPS but would not share the number of packages shipped or what the company's maximum capacity is.

UPS did not make pickups or deliveries Wednesday. Extra workers were being brought in Wednesday night to the company's hub in Louisville, Ky., to sort packages for Thursday and Friday delivery, according to Godwin.

Godwin said "UPS will honor its peak shipments commitments" to customers who used its air delivery service. Those shipping by ground have no guarantee past Dec. 11. Godwin said she didn't know if customers would receive refunds.

However, some FedEx customers are able to pick up packages Christmas Day at their local FedEx Express centers.

"We're sorry that there could be delays and we're contacting affected customers who have shipments available for pickup," said Scott Fiedler, a spokesman for FedEx Corp.

Between Thanksgiving and Christmas, FedEx handled 275 million shipments, according to Fiedler. Those that were not delivered in time, he said, "would be very few."

Three people told The Associated Press that when they tracked their packages online, FedEx said deliveries to their homes were attempted but failed because "the business was closed." During follow-up calls with customer service, they said they learned that the local depot was overwhelmed and didn't attempt delivery.

On Sunday, Eric Swanson ordered a doll for his daughter and a sweater for his wife through Amazon.com and one of its affiliated sites. As an Amazon Prime customer, there was a promise of two-day delivery, getting the gifts to his Carmichael, Calif. home just in time for Christmas. One was shipped via UPS, the other FedEx.

"I thought it would happen," Swanson said. Online tracking tools said the packages would arrive by 8 p.m. Tuesday. Neither did.

Amazon.com has been notifying some customers affected by the UPS delays that it will refund any shipping charges and is giving them a $20 credit toward a future purchase.

Amazon spokeswoman Mary Osako said the company processed orders and got them to its shippers "on time for holiday delivery" and is now "reviewing the performance of the delivery carriers."

While some customers may get money back, they might think twice about ordering online next year.

"My wife understands but my 5-year-old daughter ... I think we're going to let it be a surprise when it comes," Swanson said. "Next time, if I need to get a gift and cut it that close, I will just have to enter the fray and go to the mall."

__

Scott Mayerowitz can be reached at http://twitter.com/GlobeTrotScott.


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Resort closely tied to NH primary lies fallow

CONCORD, N.H. — Two years after the sale of the New Hampshire resort where the nation's first presidential votes were traditionally cast, no guests ply the halls.

The doors of the Balsams Grand Resort Hotel in Dixville Notch remain shut, and a few buildings have fallen to demolition crews. None of the 200 to 300 jobs that disappeared when it closed in September 2010 have come back.

Then there is the silence. The men who bought the hotel for $2.3 million, Dan Dagesse and Dan Hebert, are looking for more investors, but communication with local business leaders has trailed off.

The Balsams was one of the largest employers in the North Country, a region that has lost many manufacturing jobs in recent years. Coos County, where the resort sits, still has a 5.6 percent unemployment rate, highest in the state.

"The fact that it shut down a couple years ago was devastating," said Jonathan Brown, president of the North Country Chamber of Commerce. "It's a symbol of who we are. If it reopens in the near future, it would have a huge impact on how people are feeling about the economy in the area."

The resort, about 20 miles from the Canadian border, started as an inn in 1861 and was sold in 1895 to industrialist Henry Hale, who renamed it The Balsams. In 1918, he doubled the capacity to 400 guests. It features Old World elegance, fine dining and outdoor activities, including golf, boating and hiking. In the winter, it is popular with skiers and snowmobilers.

Brown said his group is hungry for any information about the hotel, where voters in in the wood-paneled Ballot Room were long the first in the country to choose candidates, both in the New Hampshire primary and the general election.

"I have heard very little in the last quarter of this year," he said. "As far as I'm aware today, the group that owns the Balsams is looking for some additional investment dollars."

Rick Tillotson, scion of the family that once owned the resort, lamented the lack of new developments and the slow pace of the renovation.

"There are definitely rumors going around," he said. "It's a big topic of conversation.

"The longer it sits empty, the more likely it is to remain empty, and what I hope to see in anyone's hands is something that employs people," he said. "We need those 200 jobs back; it's as simple as that. To everybody who stayed there, it was a wonderful place, but to everyone who lives here, it was a mainstream anchor to the economy."

When they bought the hotel, Dagesse and Hebert said they wanted to provide "a stable operation that we can all be proud of" and predicted an 18-month renovation schedule.

"We care deeply about restoring the Balsams Grand Resort Hotel to its full glory as a world-class destination resort and seeing it thrive for decades to come," Hebert said then.

Hebert and Dagesse did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

Benoit Lamontagne, the North Country regional specialist for the state's Division of Resources and Economic Development, said state officials continue to work with Hebert and Dagesse on legal, regulatory and financial issues because they recognize how crucial the Balsams is to the region's economy.

"Those are all jobs at the moment that have not been replaced and that can't be replaced locally," he said. "I think that's the biggest issue. When an employer shuts down in that part of the state, folks can't just walk across the street or drive 10 miles down the road and find another job. It just doesn't happen."


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Booming tech opportunities key Hub-Israel collaboration

Boston-area techies are heading to Tel Aviv for a marathon hackathon at Google in a trip that highlights the burgeoning relationship between the Israeli and Bay State tech sectors.

"Israel right now is at a really unique place in the tech world," said Max Kleiman-Weiner, an MIT Ph.D. candidate who is on the first tech-focused trip run by Birthright Israel, a program that sends Jewish young adults to tour Israel. "There's just so much happening in terms of startups and tech."

The trip, which includes half a dozen Boston-area techies, will culminate in a 36-hour hackathon — a marathon coding session — at Google's Tel Aviv office. The group will be split into teams and will work alongside Israeli developers to create a project under a not-yet-announced theme.

Israel's booming tech sector has made big news in the United States this year, most recently when Israeli social mapping service Waze was acquired by Google for close to $1 billion.

Israeli companies have also paid dividends for Massachusetts. A report earlier this month found Israeli-founded businesses brought nearly $12 billion in economic benefit to Massachusetts, and employed more than 6,600 people.

The report says future growth between Israel and Massachusetts will be a result of similarities in focus, including in robotics and biotech.

Kleiman-Weiner said Israel is especially interesting to him because his focus — machine learning — is taking off there.

"That space is particularly hot in Israel," he said. "For me it's definitely a place I want to keep my eye on and figure out what's going on there."

Gidi Mark, CEO of Birthright Israel, said the nonprofit chose to design the trip around technology out of a belief that it is a great global unifier.

"We believe that this is the beauty of the 21st century," Mark said.

That connection has already brought together the group. Kleiman-Weiner said he had not considered going on a Birthright trip, but the tech focus sold him.

He said while the technology and the companies the group will visit are interesting, he is most interested in meeting and making significant connections with other people who share his tech interests.

"During the time the groups are here, there is a development of long-term relationships that changes the perspective and the perception about each other," Mark said. "Many of them have identical spheres of interest."


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New app incorporates social media and driving

Dreading a long road trip home this holiday season? Relief is on the way in the crowdsourced driving app Waze.

Recently acquired by Google — reportedly for more than $1 billion — this brilliant app for iOS, Android and Windows Phone is a new take on GPS navigation. In short, it makes traffic social.

Waze, based in Israel, allows users to report — and commiserate about — road hazards, police activity and traffic conditions, with a critical mass of devotees leading to a stunning level of accuracy that, on my recent four-hour drives to and from New York, far surpassed that of Google Maps and my portable GPS.

However, you will want to make sure the passenger in the car — not the driver — is using Waze. While full-voice integration is surely the future, Waze currently requires a set of eyes on the screen.

What sets Waze apart from other traffic apps is that it makes calculations based on the vehicle speeds of other users. Both my Garmin GPS and Google Maps suggested that I exit the Mass Pike at the Brighton tolls — but Waze noticed cars were crawling and recommended an alternate route.

Even during a long, frustrating journey, using Waze allows you to at least feel like a good Samaritan. While using Waze, I was able to tell drivers on a particularly narrow stretch of Interstate 95 in Connecticut that a stopped vehicle in the right shoulder meant that those nearby should keep left.

But I'd be careful not to dub Waze a traffic safety app. The ability to report the location of speed traps — probably 
a key reason for its popularity — is likely not appreciated by the law enforcement community.

In true social network form, Waze users choose screen names and avatars that show their location on a map. You'll get the occasional "hi there" or "this stinks" message from other users. In an emergency, the ability to ask another user "do you have jumper cables" or "know how to change a tire?" is something that I'd consider if AAA or state trooper help were far off.

Google Maps is in the process of integrating some Waze features, and at some point, Google Maps will probably subsume all of Waze. In the meantime, Waze is a great way to make those endless holiday car trips a bit more bearable.


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Phishing scammers go after Target data breach victims

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 25 Desember 2013 | 20.25

Target Corp. is warning of "phishing" scam emails aimed at customers whose card information was compromised under the breach of its point-of-sales system.

"We are aware of limited incidents of phishing or scam communications," spokeswoman Molly Snyder said in a statement yesterday. "To help our guests feel confident that what they are hearing from Target is really from us, we are in the process of setting up a dedicated resource on our corporate website where we will post PDFs of all official communications that Target sends to our guests."

Target confirmed that it was partnering with the Secret Service and Department of Justice on the investigation of the Nov. 27-Dec. 15 breach that left credit and debit card information of an estimated 40 million customers vulnerable. Yesterday it said it wanted to make clear that "neither entity is investigating Target."

Meanwhile, JPMorgan Chase increased withdrawal and spending limits it had imposed on 2 million debit-card customers affected by the Target breach.


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Retailers tighten holiday policies to thwart fraud

If you didn't like your gift today, take note. Some retailers have tightened their return policies in a continuing attempt to curb fraud that will cost the industry an estimated $3.4 billion during this year's holiday period.

Return deadlines at Best Buy and Sears are the two "biggies," according to Somerville consumer advocate Edgar Dworsky.

"Both of them are cutting their return windows in half for certain or all goods," said Dworsky, who conducts an annual return policy survey.

Best Buy reduced its regular return period to 15 days from 30 for most customers in March, and it shortened its holiday return period, which now runs until Jan. 15 instead of Jan. 24. In addition, special orders no longer are refundable.

Sears' regular return policy for major appliances and vacuums is now 30 days, down from 60, and it has excluded those products from its extended holiday period.

"They're trying to cut their losses in some cases," Dworsky said. "Best Buy doesn't want people to use that digital camera for several weeks or months and then bring it back, because they're going to have to sell it as an open box item."

Nearly 6 percent of holiday returns are fraudulent, according to a recent National Retail Federation survey. Holiday return fraud accounts for 38.7 percent of the industry's estimated $8.76 billion in annual losses tied to return fraud.

That's why almost three-quarters of retailers require customers to show identification if they don't have receipts. Examples of fraud include returns of stolen items, using counterfeit receipts for returns, and "wardrobing" — the return of used, but non-defective merchandise such as special occasion clothing or electronics.

Toys R Us extended its holiday return period until Jan. 25 for most items, but certain electronics bought on or after Nov. 1 must be returned by Jan. 9. Other electronics must be returned within 30 days, down from 45 days.

Macy's, meanwhile, now charges a 15 percent restocking fee for the return of furniture and mattresses.

And if you're returning gifts in hopes of pocketing cash, don't count on that, even with a gift receipt.

"You can't convert that white elephant to cash in all likelihood," Dworsky said. "You're most likely to get an even exchange or a merchandise credit if there's nothing else you want at the store,"


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Post Office stuffs stockings with 3-cent stamp hike

The U.S. Postal Service delivered a surprise on Christmas Eve that may land them on some naughty lists as it announced a temporary 3-cent price increase on first-class stamps.

The hike, approved by an independent Postal Regulatory Commission, will raise the cost from 46 cents to 49 cents a letter. The commission justified the increase in the face of severe volume decreases, going back to 2008, and as a way for the Postal Service to recoup a reported $2.8 billion in losses.

The increase will take effect on Jan. 26 and will last no more than two years. The commission rejected a request to make the hike permanent.

There will be a 6 percent increase on bulk mail, periodical and package service rates. The mail industry is said to oppose the increase, saying charities and bookstores will suffer from the increased cost of mass mailings and package delivery.

The Postal Service reportedly lost $5 billion last fiscal year.

Herald wire services contributed to this report.


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Avoiding health insurance gaps takes persistence

CHICAGO — The deadline has passed, and so too the surprise grace period, for signing up for health insurance as part of the nation's health care law.

Now what?

For those who were able to navigate the glitch-prone and often overwhelmed HealthCare.gov website, there's still work to be done to make sure success online leads to actual coverage come the new year.

The first step experts recommend is to call your insurance company and double-check they received your payment.

What if you missed the Christmas Eve deadline and still want insurance in 2014, as the health law requires of most Americans? You may be without health insurance for a month, but you can still sign up for coverage that will start in February.

"Be patient, because they're trying to help you," said Tina Stewart, a 25-year-old graduate student in Salt Lake City who succeeded in enrolling in a health plan Tuesday morning. "It will take time."

The historic changes made by the Affordable Care Act take full effect on Jan. 1. People with chronic health conditions can no longer be denied health insurance. Those who get sick and start piling up medical bills will no longer lose their coverage. Out-of-pocket limits arrive that are designed to protect patients from going bankrupt.

But unless the 1 million Americans who have so far enrolled for coverage via the new marketplaces make sure their applications have arrived at their new insurance companies without errors, some may find they're still uninsured when they try to refill a prescription or make a doctor's appointment.

"The enrollment files have been getting better and more accurate, but there is still work that needs to be done," said Robert Zirkelbach, a spokesman for America's Health Insurance Plans, a trade group that represents the private insurance industry. "The health plans are still having to go back and fix some of data errors coming through in these files."

If everything went smoothly, consumers can expect to see a welcome packet arrive in the mail from their insurance company, Zirkelbach said. If not, a phone call to the insurer might clear things up.

"If a consumer signed up yesterday, they shouldn't expect the health plan to have their enrollment application today," Zirkelbach said. "Allow a couple of days to receive and process those enrollments."

Paying the first premium is crucial. Because of the changing deadlines for enrollment, most insurers have agreed to allow payments through Jan. 10 and will make coverage retroactive to Jan. 1, he said.

Anyone who missed the Christmas Eve deadline to enroll for insurance to start in January can still apply at HealthCare.gov for coverage to begin later. The federal website serves 36 states, but also directs people elsewhere to the online insurance site serving their state. The site also offers directions to local agencies offering in-person help.

After the disastrous rollout in October, the federal website received 2 million visits on Monday, and heavy — but not as heavy — traffic on Tuesday. White House spokeswoman Tara McGuinness said she had no immediate estimate of visitors Tuesday or how many succeeded in obtaining insurance before the midnight Christmas Eve deadline. The unexpected one-day grace period was just the latest in a string of delays and reversals.

Unless you qualify for Medicaid, you'll pay a monthly "premium" fee to an insurance company for coverage. Before the company covers actual medical costs, you may have to pay a certain amount called a deductible, in addition to a possible set fee for a doctor visit (copay) or a percentage of the cost of a medical service (coinsurance).

Federal tax credits are aimed at helping make premiums more affordable for households earning between 100 percent and 400 percent of the federal poverty line. That's $11,490 to $45,960 for an individual, $23,550 to $94,200 for a family of four.

Finally, note the next significant deadline isn't for a few more months. If you don't have coverage by March 31, you'll pay a tax penalty next year of $95 or 1 percent of your income, whichever is higher.

Ron Pollack, president of Families USA, a liberal advocacy group that has led efforts to get uninsured people signed up for coverage next year, said that's the deadline that matters most.

"The real significant deadline is March 31," Pollack said. "The enrollment period extends for another three months."

___

Associated Press Medical Writer Carla K. Johnson can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/CarlaKJohnson


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Health insurance guide: 3 next steps for enrollees

The Christmas Eve deadline to enroll via HeatlhCare.gov for health care insurance that starts Jan. 1 has passed.

The federal website received 2 million visits on Monday, and heavy — but not as heavy — traffic on Tuesday. A White House spokeswoman said there was no immediate estimate of visitors or how many succeeded in obtaining insurance before the deadline.

Here are some tips for those who met the deadline and those who didn't.

___

MET THE DEADLINE?

1. Allow a few days for your application to reach the insurance company providing your health plan, then call to make sure it has been successfully processed.

2. If you didn't click "pay now" when you enrolled, make sure you send your first monthly premium payment to your insurance company by Jan. 10. You won't be covered until you've paid.

3. Learn about the details of your health plan. What's covered? What do you pay for out of pocket? Find out which doctors and hospitals are covered in the plan's network. Learn what services the insurer provides, such as 24-hour hotlines and online health resources.

___

MISSED THE DEADLINE

1. If you're uninsured and still want coverage, you can still sign up. Your coverage will start as soon as Feb. 1 if you choose a plan and pay before mid-January.

2. You can window-shop to compare the details on plans available in your region. Click on "See plans before I apply" at HealthCare.gov. Many state online marketplaces also offer this window-shopping feature.

3. Enrollment ends March 31. Miss that deadline and you'll pay a tax penalty for next year of $95 or 1 percent of your income, whichever is higher. Some people may qualify for an exemption because of hardships or if their insurance policy was canceled.

___

SOURCES: America's Health Insurance Plans, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Consumers Union


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Suggestions sought for new Logan routes

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 24 Desember 2013 | 20.25

The state's largest employer group is urging businesses to weigh in on the next international destinations that Massport should target for nonstop flights from Boston.

With direct Boston-
Beijing service set to begin in June, the Logan International Airport operator is soliciting business leaders' help in convincing airlines to start additional routes.

"The employer feedback really does make a difference," said Christopher Geehern, spokesman for Associated Industries of Massachusetts. "When Japan Airlines instituted the direct flights between Boston and Tokyo, they actually started that route before establishing routes in other larger cities because of the clear demand expressed by the business community in Massachusetts."

In addition to the 2012 Tokyo service launch, a prior Massport survey led to direct Boston air service to Panama City that started in July. Massport also signed deals for direct Dubai and Istanbul flights to start next year.

"Massport has relied on the political, business and civic communities to help land five new international routes in the last two years, and we continue to engage those groups to help us determine potential routes that will be most beneficial to growing the regional economy," Massport spokesman Richard Walsh said. "It is no secret that Israel, Shanghai, Hong Kong and Brazil are among the new nonstop destinations that have generated significant interest."

Mexico City and Milan also are at the top of businesses' list, Geehern said.


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Retail sales slide for third consecutive week

Retailers felt the pinch of early promotions and a strong November last week, as in-store holiday sales and foot traffic that included the usually busy "Super Saturday" dropped a third straight week.

Sales fell 3.1 percent for the week from the same period last year while traffic plummeted 21.2 percent. Sales and traffic on Super Saturday — the last Saturday before Christmas, typically one of the busiest of the season — fell 0.7 percent and 18.1 percent, respectively.

"November was up 3.4 percent over a year ago, and the heavy discounts that we're seeing this year are clearly putting pressure on the number," said Bill Martin of ShopperTrak, a retail tracking firm.

Double-digit December declines in traffic from 19.9 percent to last week's 21.2 percent, meanwhile, show consumers' willingness and ability to "virtual window-shop," according to Martin.

"We're seeing about 3 to 3.5 store visits per shopping trip, compared to 2007, when it was 4.5 to 5 store visits," he said. "(There's) a lot less wandering around to look for things and more searching online."

But Martin is sticking to his prediction that sales for the November-December holiday period will increase for the fourth consecutive year, this time by a "mediocre" 2.4 percent.

"(Retailers) are getting the same sales, but they're getting them earlier," he said. "It will still end up being the largest holiday sales (period) on record ... and I think we'll carry some momentum into 2014."

That pickup should start the day after Christmas and Saturday, as shoppers use holiday gift cards and take advantage of post-holiday markdowns.


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$100M victims fund eyed in NECC case

Lawyers for creditors of the Framingham compounding pharmacy linked to a nationwide meningitis outbreak said yesterday they have reached a preliminary settlement that would set up a victim compensation fund worth more than $100 million.

Attorney William Baldiga said the agreement was reached among creditors, bankruptcy trustee Paul D. Moore, and the owners and insurers of the New England Compounding Center. The deal needs approval from a bankruptcy judge and likely would be filed in the next few weeks.

The company gave up its license and filed for bankruptcy protection after it was flooded with hundreds of lawsuits from people who received tainted steroid injections.

Baldiga represents the creditors' committee set up by the bankruptcy court. Most of the creditors are victims who have filed lawsuits.

About 750 people in 20 states have developed fungal meningitis, an inflammation of the lining of the brain and spinal cord, or other infections; 64 have died. Michigan, Tennessee and Indiana were hit the hardest.

A federal investigation of the company started more than a year ago but hasn't resulted in any criminal charges. The company's owners said in a press release announcing the settlement that they deny any liability or wrongdoing but want to play a major role in establishing a fund for people who died or suffered.

Victims have until Jan. 15 to file claims.

Baldiga said he expects the fund to grow significantly, with contributions from others who may have been sued. He said the settlement was reached over the weekend and those involved wanted to announce it as soon as possible so victims who are considering claims know that there is substantial money available.

The initial $100 million will come from cash contributions by the owners of NECC and proceeds from insurance, tax refunds and the sale of a related business.

Baldiga called it "an important step, but a first step only."

"We expect the fund to grow considerably as we proceed in the weeks and months to come," he said.


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China investigates vaccine maker after baby deaths

BEIJING — China has sent health experts to investigate a drug maker to see if the deaths of several babies in recent weeks were related to vaccines they received in a government immunization program.

State broadcaster China Central Television said Tuesday that a team of government investigators had been sent to Biokangtai, a drug maker based in the southern city of Shenzhen.

The company's hepatitis B vaccines have come under scrutiny since authorities suspended their use for liver disease after the first deaths of babies were reported.

Provincial and national health authorities have separately reported that since November about a half-dozen babies died shortly after they received hepatitis B vaccines made by Biokangtai.

One case has been ruled out as being caused by the vaccine while the others were still being investigated.


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World markets rise on eased China credit worry

AMSTERDAM — Global stocks posted further gains Tuesday as concerns over a cash crunch in China eased. Trading volumes were light in shortened Christmas Eve sessions.

Most markets have been strong in general over the past week following figures showing the U.S. economy is performing better than expected.

The advance has also come despite the Federal Reserve's decision to start reducing its monetary stimulus by $10 billion to $75 billion from January. Many had feared the decision to rein in its policy of quantitative easing, or QE, would be negative for stocks as the stimulus, in its various guises, has shored up markets over the past few years.

"Earlier fears that the Fed calling time on QE would knock the potential for a classic Santa rally certainly don't seem to be living up to expectations," analysts at Monex Capital Markets said.

European markets have risen for five sessions in a row. By mid-session Tuesday, Britain's FTSE 100 index was up 0.3 percent to 6,700, while France's CAC 40 rose 0.3 percent to 4,225. The German stock market, which hit a record high Monday, was closed.

U.S. stocks, which also hit records on Monday, appeared set for modest gains Tuesday. Dow futures rose 12 points to 16,250, while the broader S&P 500 futures rose a point to 1823.80. The main point of interest later will be data on durable goods orders and new home sales.

Earlier, Asian stocks advanced Tuesday after the People's Bank of China injected 29 billion yuan ($4.8 billion) into Chinese banks. Analysts believe the banks have been hording cash ahead of year-end to meet higher regulatory requirements.

Several spikes in bank-to-bank lending rates caused concern among investors that a cash shortage could force banks to restrain commercial lending and pressure the world's second-largest economy.

The rate banks charge each other for a one-week loan had surged as high as 9.8 percent on Monday, but they dropped to 6.2 percent Tuesday.

Tokyo's Nikkei 225 index inched up 0.1 percent to 15,889.33, after briefly surpassing the 16,000 level for the first time in six years in the morning session. China's Shanghai Composite added 0.2 percent to 2,092.91. Hong Kong's Hang Seng index gained 1.1 percent to 23,179.55.

In the currency markets, the euro was 0.2 percent weaker at $1.3676 while the dollar also rose against the yen, gaining 0.2 percent to 104.31 yen. In the oil markets, a barrel of benchmark crude was 2 cents lower at $98.89.

____

AP business writer Youkyung Lee contributed to this story from Seoul, South Korea.


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To clean up coal, Obama pushes more oil production

Written By Unknown on Senin, 23 Desember 2013 | 20.25

DE KALB, Miss. — America's newest, most expensive coal-fired power plant is hailed as one of the cleanest on the planet, thanks to government-backed technology that removes carbon dioxide and keeps it out of the atmosphere.

But once the carbon is stripped away, it will be used to do something that is not so green at all.

It will extract oil.

When President Barack Obama first endorsed this "carbon-capture" technology, the idea was that it would fight global warming by sparing the atmosphere from more greenhouse gases. It makes coal plants cleaner by burying deep underground the carbon dioxide that typically is pumped out of smokestacks.

But that green vision proved too expensive and complicated. So the administration accepted a trade-off.

To help the environment, the government allows power companies to sell the carbon dioxide to oil companies, which pump it into old oil fields to force more crude to the surface. A side benefit is that the carbon gets permanently stuck underground.

The program shows the ingenuity of the oil industry, which is using government green-energy money to subsidize oil production. But it also showcases the environmental trade-offs Obama is willing to make, but rarely talks about, in his fight against global warming.

Companies have been injecting carbon dioxide into old oil fields for decades. But the tactic hasn't been seen as a pollution-control strategy until recently.

Obama has spent more than $1 billion on carbon-capture projects tied to oil fields and has pledged billions more for clean coal. Recently, the administration said it wanted to require all new coal-fired power plants to capture carbon dioxide. Four power plants in the U.S. and Canada planning to do so intend to sell their carbon waste for oil recovery.

Just last week, former Energy Secretary Steven Chu announced he was joining the board of a company developing carbon capture technology.

The unlikely marriage of coal burners and oil producers hits a political sweet spot.

It silences critics who say the administration is killing coal and discouraging oil production. It appeases environmentalists who want Obama to get tougher on coal, the largest source of carbon dioxide.

It also allows Obama to make headway on a second-term push to tackle climate change, even though energy analysts predict that few coal plants will be built in the face of low natural gas prices and Environmental Protection Agency rules that require no controls on carbon for new natural gas plants.

"By using captured man-made carbon dioxide, we can increase domestic oil production, promote economic development, create jobs, reduce carbon emissions and drive innovation," Judi Greenwald told Congress in July, months before she was hired as deputy director of the Energy Department's climate, environment and energy efficiency office.

Before joining the Energy Department, Greenwald headed the National Enhanced Oil Recovery Initiative, a consortium of coal producers, power companies and state and environmental officials promoting the process.

But the environmental benefits of this so-called enhanced oil recovery aren't as certain as the administration advertises.

"Enhanced oil recovery just undermines the entire logic of it," said Kyle Ash of Greenpeace, one of the few environmental groups critical of the process. "They can't have it both ways, but they want to really, really bad."

That has become a theme in some of Obama's green-energy policies. To promote new, cleaner technologies, the administration has allowed companies to do things it otherwise would oppose as harmful to the environment.

For wind power, the government has shielded companies from prosecution for killing protected birds with giant turbines.

For corn-based ethanol, the administration underestimated the environmental effects of millions of new acres of corn farming. The government even failed to conduct required air and water quality studies to document its toll on the environment.

The administration wants to make similar concessions to make carbon-capture technology a success.

The EPA last week exempted carbon dioxide injection from strict hazardous waste laws. It classified the wells used to inject the gas underground for oil production in a category that offers less protection for drinking water.

Oil companies using carbon to get oil also aren't subject now to the tougher reporting and monitoring requirements that experts say are necessary to ensure the carbon stays underground, and they're fighting an EPA proposal that would require them to be if the carbon comes from power plants covered by the new federal rules.

"It amounts to looking the other way," said George Peridas, a scientist with the Natural Resources Defense Council, which supports using carbon for oil extraction. The group believes it replaces dirtier oil or oil produced in more environmentally sensitive places and reduces carbon in the atmosphere.

The administration also did not evaluate the global warming emissions associated with the oil production when it proposed requiring power plants to capture carbon.

A 2009 peer-reviewed paper found that for every ton of carbon dioxide injected underground into an oil field, four times more carbon dioxide is released when the oil produced is burned.

"There is no form of energy that is free of impacts. It is always about trade-offs and someone will always be unhappy," the paper's author, Paulina Jaramillo, the assistant professor at Carnegie Mellon University, said in an interview.

Administration officials counter by saying the oil was going to be extracted anyway, so the policy should only be seen as reducing carbon dioxide from coal plants.

The administration also promotes the benefits for energy security. Every barrel of oil produced here will mean one less produced abroad.

"We are taking carbon dioxide that would have gone to the atmosphere in coal plants, storing it and displacing imported oil with domestic oil," said Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz, asking a question posed by The Associated Press on C-SPAN's "Newsmakers" program in September.

In Mississippi, where Southern Company's Kemper County power plant eventually will supply two oil producers with carbon dioxide, Denbury Resources Inc. says it would not be able to produce oil there otherwise.

Denbury is already using carbon dioxide trapped beneath a salt dome near Jackson to produce oil in the state. But it can use more carbon dioxide than nature can provide. That's where the power plant comes in.

The federal support for Kemper lowers the cost of installing the carbon capture equipment, and ultimately, the cost of carbon dioxide for the oil producer.

The company has entered into a long-term contract with Southern for carbon dioxide. It will permit Denbury to recover a total of between 3.5 million and 4.2 million barrels of oil, a tiny fraction of the 91 million barrels of oil the world consumed daily last month. But for the oil companies, it still means millions of dollars more in revenue.

The nearly $5-billion project received $270 million from the Energy Department, prior to the Obama administration, and $279 million more in federal tax credits.

A member of Mississippi's Public Service Commission, Brandon Presley, bristled over what he described as pressure from Washington to approve the project, which already has meant a 15 percent increase in utility bills for Mississippi Power customers.

Secretary Chu wrote Presley a letter in May 2010 that said without the Kemper County project, the U.S. government might not be able to use the technology anywhere. The commission approved it over Presley's objection.

"The (Energy Department) is knee deep in this," Presley said. "I don't think you'll find anywhere in the country where you've found more heavy-handedness by the federal government or by elected officials than what went on here to try and get this passed."

In an interview with the AP, Chu said pairing oil production with pollution reduction is an imperfect method for "developing the capture and ramping up the technologies."

"It's not one for one," he said. "You are not sequestering all the carbon dioxide."

While Kemper is the first, it's not the only one.

The Energy Department has provided $1.1 billion to six projects that capture carbon and sell it to oil companies. Four of those projects are power plants.

The EPA recently highlighted two of those projects, with a combined $858 million in federal money, as a way to reduce power plant emissions. Both plan on selling the carbon dioxide to oil companies.

"We sold the carbon dioxide immediately," said Laura Miller, a spokeswoman for Summit Power's Texas Clean Energy Project, which is still working on getting the financing needed to break ground on the 400-megawatt power plant in West Texas. "The projects that are still alive are the ones that are selling the carbon dioxide."

Despite billions in federal aid, coal projects that simply stored carbon dioxide failed to take off.

In 2010, a plan for a $1.8 billion power plant in Illinois was replaced with a scaled-back project after it couldn't secure private financing. In July 2011, American Electric Power, shelved a project in West Virginia that had received $334 million in late 2009, in part because a Democrat-controlled Congress failed to enact legislation, backed by the administration, that would have created a marketplace for carbon dioxide.

Oil recovery provided a market for carbon dioxide in the absence of federal legislation or regulations that put a price on it. For power plant operators, it could help offset the cost of the technology to capture it.

But the marriage was rocky from the start.

Oil companies want to use the least amount of carbon dioxide possible to extract oil, not exactly what is desired in a strategy to reduce pollution. Oil producers, no stranger to federal regulations, don't want to deal with any more rules, such as strict and costly monitoring and reporting requirements aimed at verifying that the carbon doesn't escape.

On the coal side, it takes more energy, and thus more coal and more carbon dioxide pollution, to run the equipment needed to capture carbon and compress it to be sent down a pipeline to an oil field.

It's the other environmental effects that have local environmentalists concerned.

There still is a 31,000-acre surface mine, and the other pollutants that power plants emit that could sully the air locally. Southern Co. was recently cited by the state for discharges from its reservoir on site, which the company blames on excessive rainfall and the fact that equipment that draws water from the reservoir for use in the plant was not ready.

"If you add up all the environmental costs, this is not going to be green," said Stan Flint, a Jackson-based consultant who works with environmental groups.

In June, the Energy Department and California Energy Commission raised serious environmental concerns about a California-based carbon capture-enhanced oil recovery project funded by the Obama administration and recognized by the EPA when it released its power plant standards.

In a preliminary environmental evaluation, state and federal officials found the Hydrogen Energy California Project would fail to comply with laws and standards in eight out of 16 environmental areas evaluated. The concerns included whether the project would comply with state landfill rules and its impacts on the blunt-nosed leopard lizard, a protected species.

Other studies have looked at the association between carbon dioxide injection and earthquakes. A peer-reviewed study published in November linked for the first time earthquakes in Texas to the injection of carbon dioxide in oil fields.

Another potential risk is blowouts. Many oil fields that are ideal candidates for carbon dioxide injection have many old and abandoned wells that may or may not be plugged properly.

Denbury Resources has had a series of uncontrolled blowouts in recent years, as the pressure created by injecting carbon dioxide tests the cement plugs in long-shuttered wells. The largest, and one that was responsible for one of the largest environmental fines in Mississippi in the past decade, occurred in 2011 at the Tinsley Field, one of several old oil fields that will receive carbon from Southern Co.'s power plant.

The company paid $662,500 for a blowout that vented carbon dioxide, oil and drilling mud for 37 days. So much carbon dioxide came out that it settled in some hollows, suffocating deer and other animals, Mississippi officials said. The company ultimately drilled a new well to plug the old one, and removed 27,000 tons of drilling mud and contaminated soil and 32,000 barrels of liquids from the site.

The company still claims it's green because of the carbon it is storing as part of its oil production process.

___

Follow Dina Cappiello on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/dinacappiello

___

Associated Press writer Matthew Daly in Washington contributed to this report.


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