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GM reveals incentive package as it tries to shed workers – Kansas City Star

June 2, 2009 · Leave a Comment

GM reveals incentive package as it tries to shed workers – Kansas City Star.

It seemingly has become an annual (or semiannual) event, but area autoworkers are being given another chance to leave the troubled industry.

 

The latest incentive package from General Motors Corp. came as part of the concessions the United Auto Workers union accepted last week in the company’s ongoing restructuring.

GM is offering $20,000 cash and a $25,000 car voucher to production workers who decide to retire with their benefits.

For skilled-trades workers, the cash portion of the retirement package is $45,000 with the same car voucher.

For those not eligible to retire, GM also is offering more cash to walk away and sever all ties with the company, along with the $25,000 car voucher.

Employees with less than 10 years could get $45,000. Those with at least 10 years but less than 20 are being offered $80,000. For those with 20 years or more, it’s $115,000.

Those with 28 or 29 years at GM are being offered a bridge to retirement, with the company providing a monthly gross wage of $2,850 or $2,900 until qualifying for retirement.

Although GM has offered a series of separation packages since 2006, this one is in conjunction with the company’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing. This program begins June 9, and employees will have until July 24 to accept one of the offers.

The deadline could be moved back for several of the factories that are idled in June as part of GM’s decision to dramatically cut back 2009 production in an effort to reduce dealer inventories.

About 300 people from the Fairfax plant accepted the most-recent severance package. The Fairfax plant, which has about 2,300 hourly employees, has continued operating in preparation for the launch of the redesigned 2010 Buick LaCrosse. The facility also produces the Chevrolet Malibu and Saturn Aura.

Ford buyouts

Ford Motor Co. has pushed back the deadline on its separation program, which had been set to expire May 22. Initially offered on April 1, the retirement and buyout package available to all Ford hourly employees was extended to June 26, said Angie Kozleski, a Ford spokeswoman.

Ford’s offer for production workers set to retire is the same as GM’s, a $20,000 lump-sum payment and $25,000 car voucher. For skilled-trades workers, the cash payout is $40,000 with the same car voucher.

For any employee with at least one year on the job who wishes to sever ties with the automaker, Ford is offering a cash payout of $50,000 with the $25,000 car voucher.

Ford also has an education option.

The company is offering to pay up to $15,000 in annual tuition for two years.

Those who accept that option also will keep their Ford health benefits for those two years, according to Kozleski.

Ford has nearly 4,000 hourly employees at the Claycomo plant, building the F-150 pickup and the Ford Escape/Mercury Mariner SUV.

In two separation packages offered last year, only about 255 area Ford workers decided to leave the company.

To reach Randolph Heaster, call 816-234-4746 or send e-mail to rheaster@kcstar.com.

Posted on Mon, Jun. 01, 2009 10:15 PM

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Continental Pilot Claims Missile Flew Near Plane. Liberty Co., FAA to discuss report of rocket near plane | Houston & Texas News | Chron.com – Houston Chronicle

June 2, 2009 · Leave a Comment

I can’t believe this happened on Friday and it was not on the news.  This was left up to the Sheriffs to investigate?  Where was homeland security?

By MIKE GLENN Copyright 2009 HOUSTON CHRONICLE

June 1, 2009, 11:38PM

Liberty County Sheriff’s officials are expected to meet with the FAA on Tuesday to discuss what a Continental Express pilot reported as a “missile or rocket” flying near his airplane.

A pilot reported to the Federal Aviation Administration that at about 8:15 p.m. Friday, an object passed within 150 feet beneath the aircraft, sheriff’s officials said.

The aircraft was near the southern edge of the county, flying at about 13,000 feet, officials said.

“The pilot, from what we understand, was former military. He was able to get the coordinates down real quick,” said Cpl. Hugh Bishop with the Liberty County Sheriff’s Department.

Sheriff’s deputies searched Friday night for signs of evidence where a missile might have been launched or landed.

“We couldn’t find anything,” Bishop said.

mike.glenn@chron.com

via Liberty Co., FAA to discuss report of rocket near plane | Houston & Texas News | Chron.com – Houston Chronicle.

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Obama says Irans energy concerns legitimate

June 2, 2009 · Leave a Comment

So he thinks that Iran just wants nuclear energy to make electricity?  Why aren’t we here in the U.S. making more nuclear energy plants to produce our own electricity and not have to be dependent on foreign oil for electricity, etc.?  Nuclear energy is supposed to be cleaner and better for the environment.  Does he really believe that Iran needs nuclear energy for electricity?  Don’t they have all the oil they can handle?

Obama says Irans energy concerns legitimate.

By NANCY ZUCKERBROD
The Associated Press
Tuesday, June 2, 2009 1:45 PM

 

LONDON — President Barack Obama reiterated that Iran may have some right to nuclear energy _ provided it takes steps to prove its aspirations are peaceful.

In a BBC interview broadcast Tuesday, Obama also restated plans to pursue direct diplomacy with Tehran to encourage it to set aside any ambitions for nuclear weapons it might harbor.

Iran has insisted its nuclear program is aimed at generating electricity. But the U.S. and other Western governments accuse Tehran of seeking atomic weapons.

“Without going into specifics, what I do believe is that Iran has legitimate energy concerns, legitimate aspirations. On the other hand, the international community has a very real interest in preventing a nuclear arms race in the region,” Obama said.

The comments echo remarks Obama made in Prague last month in which he said his administration would “support Iran’s right to peaceful nuclear energy with rigorous inspections” if Iran proves it is no longer a nuclear threat.

The president has indicated a willingness to seek deeper international sanctions against Tehran if it does not respond positively to U.S. attempts to open negotiations on its nuclear program. Obama has said Tehran has until the end of the year to show it wants to engage.

“Although I don’t want to put artificial time tables on that process, we do want to make sure that, by the end of this year, we’ve actually seen a serious process move forward. And I think that we can measure whether or not the Iranians are serious,” Obama said.

Obama’s interview offered a preview of a speech he is to deliver in Egypt this week, saying he hoped the address would warm relations between Americans and Muslims abroad.

“What we want to do is open a dialogue,” Obama told the BBC. “You know, there are misapprehensions about the West, on the part of the Muslim world. And, obviously, there are some big misapprehensions about the Muslim world when it comes to those of us in the West.”

Obama leaves Tuesday evening on a trip to Egypt and Saudi Arabia aimed at reaching out to the world’s 1.5 billion Muslims. He is due to make his speech in Cairo on Thursday.

Obama sounded an optimistic note about making progress toward resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, although he offered no new ideas for how he might try to secure a freeze on new building of Israeli settlements. The United States has called for a freeze, but Israeli leaders have rejected that.

Asked what he would say during his visit about human rights abuses, including the detention of political prisoners in Egypt, Obama indicated no stern lecture would be forthcoming.

He said he hoped to deliver the message that democratic values are principles that “they can embrace and affirm.”

Obama added that there is a danger “when the United States, or any country, thinks that we can simply impose these values on another country with a different history and a different culture.”

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IRAN: ELEPHANT IN THE ROOM – New York Post

June 2, 2009 · Leave a Comment

IRAN: ELEPHANT IN THE ROOM – New York Post.

Last updated: 4:32 am
June 2, 2009
Posted: 3:02 am
June 2, 2009

UNFORTUNATELY, Presi dent Obama is likely to use this week’s visits to Saudi Arabia and Egypt as stops on his Apology World Tour, repudiating Bush-era Middle East and War on Terror policies.

Instead of creating perceptions of weakness — which would only invite more provocations and attacks — he should rally Arab states to take a strong stand against the Iranian threat. It’s one thing on which we can all agree.

A Grovelpalooza

Israel: Bam Voyage’s ‘Missing Leg’

Just Don’t Apologize

Obama’s Iran policy has amounted to little more than rhetoric and wait-and-see diplomacy — all while Tehran launches missiles and enriches uranium.

If trends continue, a North Korean-style nuclear moment is in our future.

The Arab world is concerned not only about the prospect of nuclear-armed Iranian ballistic missiles but about how this could lead to Iranian hegemony in the Mideast.

Iran’s recent deployment of warships to the Arabian Sea for supposed anti-piracy operations was a message heard loud and clear by Tehran’s neighbors, especially rival Riyadh.

This trip gives Obama a bully pulpit, and he should make the most of it, pulling the Arabs together to deal with this common threat.

In fact, containing (or, even better, rolling back) the Iranian juggernaut would help the Palestinian-Israeli situation by removing Iran — and its henchmen Hezbollah, Hamas and Syria — as Israel’s short-term focus.

Israel, naturally, is drawing a bead on the wolf closest to the sled — the existential threat posed by Iranian nukes and missiles.

More of Obama’s feel-good, blame-America-first speechifying will do little to help dissuade Islamist terrorists from their deadly ways. Instead, it will make America look like a paper tiger — just like Osama bin Laden said.

It’d be better if the president focused on something on which we, the Arabs and the Israelis can agree — defanging the Iranian terrorist, nuclear and missile threat to the region and beyond.

Peter Brookes is a Heritage Foundation senior fellow and a former deputy assistant secretary of defense.

peterbrookes@heritage.org

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South Korea Deploys Warship as North Readies Missiles (Update1) – Bloomberg.com

June 2, 2009 · Leave a Comment

South Korea Deploys Warship as North Readies Missiles (Update1) – Bloomberg.com.

By Heejin Koo

June 2 (Bloomberg) — South Korea deployed a high-speed naval vessel equipped with anti-ship missiles to its sea border with North Korea amid reports the communist nation is preparing to test-launch several mid-range and one ballistic rocket.

North Korea is readying as many as three medium-range missile in the Anbyon region, northeast of the capital of Pyongyang, Yonhap News reported today. There are signs the North may also be taking steps to test-fire its second longer-range, ballistic missile since April, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said yesterday.

Tensions have risen since North Korea tested a nuclear weapon and fired six short-range missiles last week, prompting international condemnation and a likely United Nations censure. Reports the North is preparing to test-launch a ballistic missile are “unconfirmed,” South Korean Defense Ministry spokesman Won Tae Jae said today.

North Korea will boost “self-defense capabilities in the face of the U.S. and its supporting forces that are trying to crush and isolate,” according to a report carried in the official Korean Central News Agency today. “Our self-defense capability is our sovereign right.”

Technology Not New

The North’s medium-range Rodong missiles have a range of about 1,300 kilometers (808 miles) and don’t represent new technology, said Baek Seung Joo, a director at the Korea Institute for Defense Analysis in Seoul.

“I don’t think it’s necessarily a real threat,” he said. “This is aimed at bolstering the morale of the Korean People’s Army and to announce to the world that they won’t tolerate any military provocation.”

Today’s South Korean ship deployment is intended to “render useless North Korea’s will to instigate a maritime clash and in the event of a provocation immediately punish them at the scene,” according to a navy statement.

North Korea threatened a military strike after the South joined a U.S.-led initiative to curb the spread of weapons of mass destruction. South Korea decided to participate in the Proliferation Security Initiative, or PSI, in response to the North’s second atomic test in three years.

U.S. Defense Secretary Gates late yesterday toured a missile-defense complex in Alaska, capping off a week-long trip of Asia in which he met with his South Korean, Japanese and Philippine counterparts.

‘Rogue State’ Launch

“If there were a launch from a rogue state such as North Korea, I have good confidence that we would be able to deal with it,” he told reporters.

China agreed last week with the U.S., Japan and Russia to work toward a UN Security Council resolution censuring North Korea. Yet, sanctions and pressure alone won’t be enough to persuade North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons program, China’s Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi told Japanese counterpart Hirofumi Nakasone today, according to Japan’s government. China supports a “well-balanced” resolution, according to the Japanese Foreign Ministry release.

Jockeying over who will succeed North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, who likely suffered a stroke last August, may be related to the nuclear weapon test and missile launches, former and current U.S. officials have said.

Kim has named his third son Kim Jong Un as his heir, the Dong-A Ilbo newspaper said, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation. North Korea notified its diplomatic offices and is teaching its people a song in praise of the anointed leader, the daily said.

Loyalty Oaths

Some intelligence reports indicate North Korea is requiring loyalty oaths to Kim Jong Un, a South Korean opposition lawmaker who sits on the National Assembly’s intelligence committee said in a radio interview today. The legislator, Park Jie Won, said the reports haven’t been confirmed and that he has “doubts about the information,” according to the transcript provided by SBS Radio.

Yonhap News said in February Jong Un had been designated heir, while Kim Jong Il promoted brother-in-law Jang Song Taek to a powerful military post in April.

Little is known about the youngest Kim. He is reportedly 26 years old, and was educated at an international school in Switzerland. He and older brother Kim Jong Chol have a different mother than the eldest son, Kim Jong Nam. Kim Jong Il succeeded his father, North Korea’s founder Kim Il Sung, as head of the impoverished country in 1994.

To contact the reporters on this story: Heejin Koo in Seoul at hjkoo@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: June 2, 2009 06:06 EDT

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Little Engine That Could? Governments Role in GM Bears Resemblance to Amtrak Route – Political News – FOXNews.com

June 2, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Amtrak fares are just as high as airfares and takes days to get from place to place.  Why can’t they get faster trains?  Wouldn’t they be more profitable if people could travel faster to where they want to go?

Little Engine That Could? Governments Role in GM Bears Resemblance to Amtrak Route – Political News – FOXNews.com.

General Motors is trying to prove that it is the little engine that could. But the bankrupt automaker may never fully climb the mountain ahead of it, if Amtrak is any example. 

Some analysts say the federal government’s effort to prop up the nation’s largest auto manufacturer is eerily similar to a 40-year effort to revive the nation’s ailing railroad system. Billions of taxpayer dollars later, Amtrak still needs the government to survive — and critics say General Motors appears to be headed down the same track.

“I see no hope whatsoever for the situation,” said Wendell Cox, a policy consultant who sat on the government-appointed Amtrak Reform Council a decade ago and draws parallels to the GM intervention today.

The Obama administration is committing $50 billion to General Motors — $30 billion on top of the $20 billion it has already invested. Administration officials will not speculate on when taxpayers may see a return on the White House-engineered investment, but they insist that Washington will cut off Detroit after that and will be a “passive” investor.

President Obama said Monday the U.S. government, which now owns 60 percent of GM, wants to prop up the company and then “get out” of the auto business. Under the restructuring plan, the Canadian government will take a 12.5 percent stake, and the United Auto Workers will have a 17.5 percent stake. Bondholders receive 10 percent.

Critics say this looks like Amtrak all over again.

Analysts said the government’s hope of creating an efficient mass transit service through a partial nationalization of the rail system was stymied by its inability to get tough on unions and rein in labor costs. The same could hold true, they say, as the Obama administration deals with the UAW.

Amtrak has fielded criticism over the years for being guided by officials with little or no transit experience. Today, Obama’s Auto Task Force has a combined experience of zero years in the auto industry.

With Amtrak, the government got too involved in decision-making, leading to inefficiencies in the system that would never be corrected, say analysts. Since its creation in 1970, Amtrak has sucked up $30 billion in taxpayer money, and the money is still flowing. The original aid package from Congress in 1970 was $340 million with an expectation the railroad would make a profit in five years.

The potential parallels are worth being concerned about, critics say.

“I think the $50 billion might as well be kissed goodbye. I would expect that this is just the beginning,” Cox, principal at the Wendell Cox Consultancy, said of the GM deal.

“I think the long-term outcome will be the same,” said Ronald Utt, a senior research fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation. “It’s unlikely to ever recover the huge investment that’s been made in it, and you will then be carrying this forever and ever and ever. (The government has) been carrying Amtrak now for more than 35 years.”

Conservatives in Washington treated Monday’s announcement with a hefty dose of skepticism. They called for a clearly stated exit strategy and said GM’s success is by no means assured.

“I think that President Obama is planning on staying in the automobile industry for quite some time,” Rep. Pete Hoesktra, R-Mich., told FOX News Radio. 

“Does anyone really believe that politicians and bureaucrats in Washington can successfully steer a multinational corporation to economic viability?” House Minority Leader John Boehner said in a written statement.

Though the rhetorical question might sound like a recycled GOP talking point, the analysts who spoke to FOXNews.com say the fear is justified. The government will have a hard time resisting getting closely involved in GM management, leading to the kind of problems that dogged Amtrak over the decades.

Utt and Cox said parochial, political interests have driven Amtrak to make ineffective decisions — like maintaining costly, long-distance lines and setting up inefficient routes that detour through low-population areas.

Amtrak has experienced a boost in ridership recently, which its management attributes in part to high gas prices and better service. Though it is still in the red, Amtrak reported a record 28.7 million passengers in fiscal year 2008, marking its sixth straight year of record ridership.

The company notes on its fact sheet that “no country in the world operates a passenger rail system” without public support.

At the same time, Amtrak reported earning $2.45 billion in fiscal year 2008, and racking up $3.38 billion in expenses. Congress last year committed another $13 billion over five years to the rail service, with proponents of the investment saying at the time that the service had been underfunded for too long and this would finally help “rebuild” Amtrak.

It’s unclear whether that will happen. And it’s unclear whether the Obama administration will be able to exit its budding relationship with GM as quickly and efficiently as it hopes.

Obama on Monday said the government would act as “reluctant shareholders” and has “no interest” in running GM — though the U.S. federal government will name a majority of board members.

Obama said the proceedings, though painful for all stakeholders, would “mark the end of an old GM and the beginning of a new GM.” He held up Chrysler’s quick, month-long bankruptcy proceedings as evidence that such a restructuring can be accomplished and that his critics were “wrong.”

Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., issued a statement saying he has “every confidence” GM will emerge at the top of the global automotive sector.

With more plants and dealerships set to close and more jobs expected to be lost as a product of the bankruptcy proceedings, the auto workers also claims it has made sacrifices — brushing off suggestions that it stands to reap benefits from bankruptcy.

“We gave Citgroup hundreds of billions of dollars and AIG hundreds of billions of dollars with no accountability,” said Brian Fredline, president of the UAW’s Local 602 chapter in Lansing, Mich. 

With GM, “We know where that money’s going. It’s going to support American industry and American jobs, and that’s how it will be spent. And if you want to get that taxpayer money back, buy a GM product. You’ll like it.”

FOXNews.com’s Judson Berger and FOX News’ Major Garrett contributed to this report.

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