2013년 12월 2일 월요일

About 'top accounting firms in chicago'|..., because you have the memo, Mr. Sulzberger. The top item is I see a need for a reporter's... on the part of the editorial staff. In particular, your chief medical reporter, Dr. Lawrence...







About 'top accounting firms in chicago'|..., because you have the memo, Mr. Sulzberger. The top item is I see a need for a reporter's... on the part of the editorial staff. In particular, your chief medical reporter, Dr. Lawrence...








When               the               American               economy               going               through               what               some               have               called               the               biggest               downturn               since               the               Great               Depression,               one               might               wonder               if               any               parts               of               the               country               have               still               thrived               during               the               recession.

What               were               the               best               cities               to               find               a               job               during               2009?

A               variety               of               Internet               lists               rate               the               best               cities               to               find               a               job               in,               and               Madison,               Wisconsin               topped               the               list               by               Ajilon               Professional               Staffing               for               the               past               year.

Besides               that               list,               other               lists               rating               the               best               cities               for               employment               will               also               be               examined.

The               city               which               many               call               "recession               proof,"               was               picked               for               its               high               number               of               new               jobs               and               low               unemployment               rate.

It               had               an               unemployment               rate               of               3.5%               in               October               2008,               while               the               national               rate               was               at               that               time               6.5%.

In               December,               2009,               with               the               national               rate               at               around               10%,               the               rate               was               still               only               5.8%.
               Experts               say               Madison               may               be               one               of               the               best               cities               to               find               a               job,               in               2009               or               any               year,               because               the               University               of               Wisconsin               is               a               major               employer.

In               addition,               the               research               arm               of               the               school,               the               Wisconsin               Alumni               Research               Foundation,               has               been               responsible               for               growth               the               health               care,               biotech,               and               medical               device               industries.

Scientists               affiliated               with               the               school               receive               grants               and               help               patent               new               discoveries.
               According               to               Adecco               Staffing,               Madison               also               benefits               from               a               wide               range               of               industries,               from               start               ups               to               well               established               companies.

As               the               seat               of               state               and               county               governments,               a               lot               of               people               also               find               public               jobs.
               Other               cities               recognized               by               Ajilon               as               among               the               best               to               find               a               job               in               2009               also               benefited               from               government               jobs               helping               bring               about               a               low               unemployment               rate.

The               city               of               Washington,               D.C.

is               the               largest               employer               for               the               town.

In               addition               to               the               jobs               traditionally               created               by               the               local               government,               more               were               created               by               the               wars               in               Iraq               and               Afghanistan               and               the               creation               of               the               Department               of               Homeland               Security.
               Many               also               receive               jobs               in               Washington               because               of               the               many               law               firms,               defense               contractors,               nonprofit               agencies,               and               professional               associations.
               Baltimore,               Maryland,               also               has               a               low               unemployment               rate               and               benefits               from               being               so               close               to               Washington,               D.C.

Many               local               residents               drive               to               the               nation's               capital               every               day               to               work.
               Boston               also               has               not               been               hit               by               the               economic               downturn               as               have               other               cities.

While               New               York               City               lost               thousands               of               financial               industry               positions               during               the               Recession,               Boston               only               lost               around               900.

Boston               also               benefits               from               hedge               funds,               deposit               banks,               and               trust               services.

These               financial               institutions               were               not               as               affected               by               the               economic               downturn               as               much               as               large               institutions               in               New               York               City.
               According               to               jobs.aol.com,               other               cities               which               were               a               good               place               to               find               a               job               in               the               past               year               were               Richmond,               Virginia,               and               Milwaukee,               Wisconsin.
               Even               though               the               unemployment               in               Richmond               has               increased               from               3.1%               to               4.4%,               the               rate               is               still               far               below               the               national               average.

The               rate               may               have               remained               low               because               it               does               not               depend               on               one               or               two               large               companies               to               provide               the               bulk               of               jobs               for               the               area.

There               are               many               jobs               in               manufacturing,               public               accounting,               and               service.

There               are               also               many               jobs               available               because               the               area               is               only               three               hours               from               the               nation's               capital.

There               are               also               plenty               of               jobs               because               of               the               military               bases               in               the               area.
               Milwaukee,               Wisconsin,               was               another               of               the               top               cities               in               the               country               to               find               a               job.

The               unemployment               rate               was               only               4.8%,               barely               unchanged               from               a               year               prior               at               4.7%.

The               health               care               industry               has               provided               many               jobs               to               help               elderly               citizens               in               the               city.

Because               of               the               low               cost               of               living               in               the               city,               many               environmental,               health               care,               and               energy               companies               have               relocated               to               Milwaukee               from               Chicago.
               According               usnews.com,               other               cities               which               were               a               good               place               to               look               for               a               job               in               2009               were               Anchorage,               Alaska;               Arlington,               Virginia;               Columbus,               Ohio;               Honolulu,               Hawaii;               and               HoustonTexas.
               Anchorage               experienced               the               20th               straight               year               of               job               growth.

Although               the               city               may               have               been               hurt               by               the               recession,               it               still               maintained               job               growth               because               of               the               energy               industry,               tourism,               and               jobs               in               education,               and               government               (which               provides               20%               of               the               jobs               in               the               city).
               Arlington,               Virginia,               has               benefited               from               jobs               from               the               Federal               Government               and               a               variety               of               private               employers,               such               as               Lockheed               Martin               and               U.S.

Airways.
               Columbus,               Ohio,               has               benefited               from               strong               distribution               and               transportation               industries.

The               city               has               also               benefited               from               hospitality,               healthcare,               the               tech               industry,               manufacturing,               and               jobs               from               Ohio               State               University,               Bob               Evans,               and               other               employers.
               Honolulu               has               benefited               from               tourism,               government               jobs,               health               care,               and               banking               jobs.
               Houston               has               benefited               from               having               affordable               houses,               27               Fortune               500               companies,               including               Marathon               Oil,               healthcare               jobs,               and               low               prices               for               commodities.
               Citations:
               The               10               best               U.S.

cities               to               find               a               job               in               by               2009               Tara               Weiss               Msnbc.msn.com               
               Local               Unemployment               Statistics,               no               author               listed,               Bls.gov               
               Find               a               Job,               no               author               listed,               jobs.aol.com               
               America's               Best               Places               to               Find               a               Job               2009               by               Liz               Wolgemuth,               Usnews.com






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    2013년 12월 1일 일요일

    About 'accounting firms montreal'|...Elan as Tysabri sales rise Irish Times - Dublin,Ireland Irish pharmaceutical firm Elan has narrowed it first half loss on the back of a strong rise in...







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    2013년 11월 30일 토요일

    About 'new york city accounting firms'|... of exploitation and oppression and out of the wombs of a frail world new systems of justice and equality are being born. The shirtless and...







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    "Irony               of               ironies,               all               is               irony"               has               become               my               motto               in               my               three-year               job               hunt,               with               apologies               to               Ecclesiastes.
    The               very               same               day               that               I               accepted               this               assignment,               I               finally               heard               on               my               job               application               to               the               Library               of               Congress.

    I               had               applied               to               the               Library               of               Congress               sometime               at               the               end               of               summer               2009.

    In               September,               optimistic               about               my               chances               of               finding               employment               with               the               federal               government,               I               had               moved               to               Washington,               D.C.

    to               do               an               internship               with               the               National               Whistleblower               Center,               where               my               skills               as               a               legal               editor               and               as               a               blogger               could               be               put               to               some               use.
                   I               finally               heard               from               them               after               a               wait               of               over               nine               months.
                   We               regret               to               inform               you....
                   I               have               now               been               unemployed               for               over               three               years.

    For               the               seemingly               1,000               applications               I               have               made               in               that               time,               I               have               received               only               two               replies:               This               one               from               the               Library               of               Congress,               and               another               from               the               online               news               aggregation               site               The               Daily               Beast.

    They               had               emailed               me               to               tell               me               that               the               job               I               had               applied               for               had               been               abolished.
                   Iron               Man
                   Forget               the               irony,               let's               talk               about               The               Iron               Man               of               Unemployment               Competition.
                   About               the               time               I               was               applying               to               the               Library               of               Congress,               my               friend               Peetah,               with               whom               I               used               to               work               with               at               database               provider               Information               Access               Co.

    of               Foster               City               back               in               the               heyday               of               Silicon               Valley,               on               finding               out               I               still               hadn't               landed               a               permanent               job               after               two+               years               of               trying,               asked               me               if               I               wasn't               making               a               bid               for               the               "Ironman               of               Unemployment"               title               currently               held               by               our               friend,               Big               Tommy.
                   Big               Tommy,               a               professional               librarian,               had               gotten               the               blues               after               a               split-up               with               his               gal               pal               at               the               turn               of               the               new               millennium.

    They               were               going               to               get               married,               but               she               wanted               kids,               and               he               didn't.

    He               quit               his               job,               moved               in               with               his               mother               in               a               shack               on               the               Canadian               border,               and               hasn't               worked               since.
                   He               does               get               a               small               pension               from               the               Social               Security               Administration,               for               being               mentally               or               emotionally               disabled.

    The               last               time               I               saw               him,               around               Xmas               time,               what               had               seemed               to               us               like               a               well-meaning               scam,               to               get               that               pension,               had               morphed               into               the               real               thing.
                   I'm               not               one               of               those               people               who               gets               comfort               from               the               travails               of               people               who               are               worse               off               than               I               am.

    But               I               do               suffer               from               high               levels               of               anxiety.

    I               have               been               ignoring               Tommy               Boy's               letters               (he               doesn't               believe               in               late               20th               Century               technology               like               email)               after               I               left               the               District               of               Columbia               with               the               new               year.
                   The               irony               of               Peetah's               question               is               that               several               months               after               he               asked,               he               was               laid               off.

    I               haven't               gotten               a               reply               to               any               of               my               emails               to               him               since.
                   Laid               Off
                   Peetah               and               I               were               first               laid               off               from               our               jobs               at               IAC               back               in               2003,               when               the               lot               of               us               were               sacked               and               our               jobs               outsourced               to               India.

    IAC               had               been               the               leading               database               provider               in               the               world,               and               we               had               worked               as               content               editors,               creating               and               editing               "content"               to               go               into               that               database.
                   In               the               1990s,               some               of               our               databases               cost               $600               an               hour               to               access.

    Once               owned               by               Ziff-Davis,               we               were               sold               to               Thomson               Corp.,               the               huge               newspaper               chain               that               had               seen               the               future               and               determined               it               was               digital,               for               something               north               of               $300               million,               a               good               chunk               of               cash               in               the               mid-1990s.
                   By               the               late               1990s               and               the               rise               of               graphical               browser               with               Netscape,               IAC               was               under               siege.

    In               the               days               before               Netscape,               searching               what               was               then               not               even               called               The               Information               Superhighway               meant               Boolean               searchs               on               a               green               or               amber               screen.

    No               graphics.
                   With               Netscape               and               the               boom               in               Internet               search               came               the               new               paradigm               that               has               buffeted               the               information               industry               ever               since:               The               "users"               wanted               everything               for               free.
                   By               the               fall               of               2003,               the               part               was               over               for               the               employees               at               IAC,               including               me               and               Peetah.

    We               had               gone               through               wave               after               wave               of               layoffs               since               the               late               '90s,               and               now               it               was               out               turn.

    In               my               own               words,               we               were               "unceremoniously               $#!%canned,               our               jobs               packed               off               to               India.

    (We               had               started               outsourcing               to               India               in               the               early               1990s:               We               had               been               the               pioneers.)
                   I               had               been               with               the               company               for               14               years.
                   Peetah               took               the               opportunity               to               go               get               a               master's               in               divinity               from               the               Unitarian-Universalist               Church,               but               for               some               reason,               perhaps               a               disagreement               over               dogma,               he               was               never               ordained.
                   We               friends               kidded               him               that               it               must               be               that               he               believed               in               god               that               got               him               the               sack               from               the               Unitarians.
                   All               was               not               lost               as               at               grad               school,               he               met               the               woman               who               would               be               his               wife.

    They               had               two               children.

    He               eventually               got               a               job               as               a               content               editor               at               a               New               England               information               company.

    The               news               to               the               former               employees               (we               keep               in               touch               after               all               these               years)               astounded               the               only               one               of               us               left               with               the               parent               company,               who               couldn't               believe               that               any               information               company               in               the               United               States               was               hiring               any               domestic               staff.
                   He               is               now               in               his               early               50s               and               unemployed,               with               two               small               children.
                   After               I               was               laid               off,               I               eventually               worked               my               way               up               the               ladder               from               a               $7/hr               job               at               a               testing               company               in               California               to               a               $15/hour               position,               but               a               scandal               broke               when               the               company               was               found               to               have               fudged               test               results               at               the               request               of               one               of               the               big               states               who               were               trying               to               meet               the               new               "No               Child               Left               Behind"               standards.
                   I               never               got               the               permanent               job               I               had               hoped               for,               as               they               laid               off               temporary               staff.

    (A               friend               of               mine               who               was               doing               free-lance               work               for               the               same               company               was               laid               off               finally               last               year.)
                   Eventually,               I               ran               out               of               money               and               was               living               in               my               old               Cadillac               on               the               beach               at               Carmel-by-the               Sea.
                   It               was               back               East               for               me,               after               my               sister               and               step-mother               sent               me               $1,000               each               for               the               trip!
                   Legal               Editor               
                   
                   I               decided               to               move               to               a               river               town               in               Upper               State               New               York,               near               Tarrytown.

    I               liked               the               idea               of               being               near               Sleepy               Hollow,               setting               of               the               Washington               Irving               story               that               was               one               of               my               favorite               tales               as               a               child.

    An               old               Army               buddy               and               his               wife               lived               there,               and               I               soon               found               out               that               an               old               college               pal               lived               there               too.

    I               was               just               45               minutes               from               my               father,               who               was               a               prostate               cancer               survivor               closing               in               on               80               years               old,               and               my               stepmother,               who               was               17               years               his               junior               and               nearing               retirement               age.
                   I               had               never               seen               much               of               my               father               during               my               life,               and               this               would               be               a               chance               of               not               only               getting               closer,               but               of               helping               him               (and               my               stepmother)               as               they               made               their               life               transition,               with               her               retirement.
                   Near               the               apartment               I               rented               was               a               legal               publisher               with               a               name               that               rang               a               bell               with               me               as               it               was               evocative               of               one               of               my               favorite               novels.

    I               was               extremely               upbeat               and               positive               in               those               days,               and               I               knew               I'd               get               a               job               there.

    One               day,               reading               the               local               paper,               I               saw               they               were               hiring.
                   I               applied.
                   I               had               been               a               Russian               linguist               in               the               military,               and               the               "boss"               had               studied               Russian               in               college.

    We               hit               it               off               well,               and               I               was               offered               a               job               as               a               legal               editor,               which               I               accepted.
                   I               was               now               a               legal               editor,               though               I               had               no               background               in               the               law.

    But               an               editor               is               an               editor,               and               I               had               been               working               with               words               for               decades,               even               in               the               Army,               and               I               picked               up               the               new               skill               set               required               of               the               job               fairly               quickly.

    And               became               a               good               one,               too.
                   But               fate               intervened.

    My               stepmother               came               down               with               pancreatic               cancer               and               my               father's               health               fluctuated               with               hers.

    If               she               had               a               good               day,               he               had               a               good               day;               if               she               had               a               bad               day....

    When               she               died,               he               died               six               weeks               later.
                   During               this               domestic               drama,               the               small               family               owned               publisher               I               worked               for               was               taken               over               by               the               biggest               publishing               company               in               the               world,               which               had               offices               in               New               York               City.

    Two               things               quickly               became               apparent:               We               were               going               to               move               to               Manhattan,               and               there               was               not               going               to               be               any               boost               in               pay,               despite               the               fact               that               the               move               would               boost               most               of               the               employees'               expenses               by               $150/mo.
                   There               was               also               frank               talk               by               the               new               company               of               how               the               editing               functions               of               the               entire               organization               were               being               shipped               out               to               India.

    The               specter               of               another               job               lost               to               South-Asian               subcontinent               loomed.

    I               seriously               began               thinking               (again)               of               fulfilling               my               father's               wish               for               me               and               going               to               law               school,               even               though               I               was               now               in               my               late               40s.

    (A               law               degree               is               de               rigeur               for               the               highest               level               of               legal               editing.)
                   My               father's               health               deteriorated               so               rapidly               after               his               wife               went               into               the               hospice               I               gave               up               my               apartment               and               moved               in               with               him               across               the               Connecticut-New               York               border.

    My               commute               was               45               minutes,               but               once               the               move               to               New               York               City               was               implemented,               it               was               going               to               be               two               and               one-half               hours               --               one               way.
                   And               then               my               father               passed,               six               weeks               after               my               stepmother,               and               there               soon               came               a               day               that               I               had               used               up               all               my               vacation,               personal               days               and               family               leave.
                   I               quit               and               got               unemployment               benefits               as               any               move               of               an               employer               of               over               eight               miles,               under               New               York               labor               law,               meant               that               you               qualified               for               UI.
                   I               never               dreamed               I'd               be               getting               99               weeks               of               benefits!

    Thank               god               for               the               Democrats               retaking               both               Houses               of               Congress               and               the               White               House.
                   Job               Hunting
                   Each               month,               as               part               of               the               unemployment               insurance               process,               I               had               to               send               to               the               state               the               names               of               10               employers               I               contacted               that               month.

    I               supplied               the               New               York               UI               Bureau               with               over               200               names,               which               became               increasingly               difficult               as               the               numbers               of               employers               hiring               editors               was               shrinking.
                   I               applied               for               jobs               in               New               York,               Boston,               Washington,               D.C.,               Los               Angeles,               California,               the               Monterey               Bay               Area               and               even               back               in               Silicon               Valley/San               Francisco               Bay               Area.

    I               expanded               my               job               search               from               various               permutations               of               editor,               including               a               job               I               wasn't               even               qualified               for,               technical               editor,               to               any               job               that               entailed               writing               skills,               like               public               relations.
                   Employers               since               the               recession               in               the               first               Bush               Administration               have               not               generally               accepted               submissions               of               resumes               from               outside               the               geographic               area.

    So,               I               used               the               addresses               of               friends               and               families               in               the               geographic               areas               that               I               was               seeking               employment.

    Which               were               legion.

    Because               if               I               didn't               look               in               other               geographic               regions,               there               simply               wasn't               10               jobs               in               a               month               in               the               New               York               Metro               area               to               submit.
                   The               broadening               of               my               horizons               didn't               help.

    I               only               ever               got               two               acknowledgments               to               my               hundreds               of               submissions,               both               negative.
                   Early               on               in               my               three               year               quest               for               a               "good               job"               (a               private               joke               between               my               father,               a               former               aluminum               siding               salesman,               and               myself               --               in               response               to               my               bitching               about               my               low-paid               career,               coupled               with               my               refusal               to               heed               his               advice               and               become               a               lawyer               (a               "license               to               steal"               as               he               put               iThe               t),               Dad'd               coo,               "Don't               you               want               a               good               job?"               h               and               we'd               both               laugh)               I               was               perusing               the               employment               pages               of               the               New               Hampshire               Union               Leader               back               in               my               hometown               of               Manchester,               New               Hampshire,               which               was               three               hours               away               from               where               I               was               living               in               my               father's               house               in               Connecticut.
                   Lo               and               behold,               the               Union               Leader               itself               was               advertising               for               freelance               editors               at               $29/hr               to               work               on-call.

    I               remember               violently               rejecting               the               idea               of               working               for               the               Union               Leader               in               my               mind,               as               it               was               still               a               right-wing               reactionary               rag,               just               as               it               was               in               my               youth.

    I               despised               its               politics               and               the               slant               of               its               stories               and               never               bothered               to               apply               for               the               job,               despite               my               experience               working               deadline               pressure               as               an               editor               in               the               Army               and               later               in               Silicon               Valley.
                   I               don't               know               if               I'd               make               such               a               choice               today.

    Whether               I'd               have               the               luxury               of               having               political               convictions.
                   I               haven't               see               a               similar               ad               since,               as               the               Union               Leader,               like               most               newspapers,               continues               to               shrink               as               its               readers               (and               its               advertising               revenue)               are               bled               away               by               the               'Net.

    It's               copy               editing               is               pretty               sloppy               these               days.
                   It               was               the               'Net               that               had               killed               my               first               civilian               job               after               my               military               service,               back               in               2003.
                   The               Big               Hurt
                   The               English               news               magazine               The               Economist               recently               reported               that               the               middle-class               in               America               is               under               siege               due               to               the               outsourcing               of               mid-skilled               jobs               paying               middle-class               wages               to               India               and               other               pats               of               the               developing               world.

    Editing               not               only               is               a               mid-skilled               job               increasingly               being               outsourced,               but               even               low-level               legal               functions,               once               performed               by               the               new               hires               of               law               firms,               is               being               done               in               India.

    (The               job               market               for               law               school               grads               in               2009               was               the               worst               on               record.)
                   I'm               facing               a               reckoning               which               many               unemployed               Americans               are               facing:               My               mid-skilled               job               likely               is               not               "available"               to               me.
                   During               my               three               year               odyssey               of               unemployment,               I               turned               50,               and               the               U.S.

    Supreme               Court               recently               gutted               Great               Society-era               anti-age               discrimination               employment               laws.

    Outside               of               the               education               field               where               some               school               system               like               to               hire               older               candidates               with               prior               job               experience               primarily               as               they               will               not               rack               up               the               years               of               seniority               that               will               make               them               higher-paid               and               huge               pension               liabilities               in               the               long-term,               most               employers               don't               want               the               older               candidate.

    We               are               associated               with               a               higher               level               of               costs               when               it               comes               to               health               insurance,               for               one               thing.
                   So,               what's               a               guy               to               do               if               he               doesn't               want               that               Big               Brass               Ring               of               the               Iron               Man               of               Unemployment               title?
                   Retraining               is               obviously               first               on               the               list,               but               in               this               job               market,               with               so               many               mid-skilled               jobs               that               pay               living               wages               disappearing,               being               retrained               for               what               is               a               proposition               that               sows               confusion.

    As               a               veteran,               I               plan               to               mosey               on               down               to               what               Bruce               Springsteen               in               "Born               in               the               U.S.A."               called               "my               V.A.

    man"               and               hope               he               doesn't               say,               "Son,               ya               gotta               understand...."
                   (I               should               say,               mosey               on               down               again,               for               the               guy               who               handles               workfare               at               the               V.A.

    hospital               did               an               online               job               search               for               me               after               finding               out               I               didn't               qualify.

    One               of               the               jobs               he               showed               me               during               this               exercise               in               futility               was               a               job               posted               by               examiner.com.

    "I               already               work               for               them,"               I               told               them,               "and               I               made               exactly               16               cents."               I               didn't               tell               him               I've               yet               to               collect               my               wages               from               this               "employer"               that               has               its               "job               offerings"               posted               all               over               the               Web.)
                   "Son,               ya               gotta               understand...."
                   I               understand               all               too               well.

    With               the               real               level               of               unemployment               at               18-20%               when               shorn               of               the               accounting               legerdemain               of               the               Reagan               &               Clinton               Administrations               to               understate               the               true               rate               of               the               jobless               now               nearing               Great               Depression               level               eras               it               may               be               time               to               either               surrender               to               my               father's               wish               and               become               the               world's               oldest               law               school               grad               or               lower               my               sights               and               hope               that               the               new               super               Wal-Mart               development               plan               goes               through.

    And               that               they'll               hire               me,               though               I               lack               retail               experience.
                   One               tip               I               can               pass               on               to               all               unemployed:               Don't               become               dependent               on               your               Unemployment               Insurance               check.

    It's               welcome,               and               you               paid               for               it               with               your               payroll               taxes,               but               it               can               be               a               disincentive               to               really               going               out               there               in               the               trenches               and               taking               a               less               than               perfect               job               that               is               a               job               nonetheless.
                   I'd               like               to               get               back               into               that               positive               frame               of               mind               that               I               had               half-a-decade               ago,               when               I               walked               into               that               small               publishing               house               on               the               banks               of               the               Hudson               River               brimming               with               confidence,               just               knowing               I'd               get               that               job.

    It's               a               special               place               you               have               to               will               yourself               into,               with               not               just               positive               thinking               but               with               an               actual               communion               with               a               higher               entity               or               life               force.
                   Unfortunately,               the               discouragements               of               long-term               unemployment               can               being               a               person               to               begin               to               doubt               the               positive               intentions               of               that               higher               entity               or               life               force.

    But               don't               you               believe               it.






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