Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Uber prices to surge again this New Year's Eve



NEW YORK (AP) — New Year’s Eve: It’s the day to overpay for everything from that glass of flat Champagne to the impossibly high heels you’ll wear just once, to — once again — that ride from Uber.


The ride-hailing app expects this New Year’s Eve to be its busiest night ever. Due to high demand — and because it can — Uber is bringing back surge pricing, a boon to its drivers but a bane to passengers. Fares can increase sevenfold during the busiest hours between 12:30 a.m. and 2:30 a.m.


There are other options depending on where you live, however, in addition to public transportation or just staying home. Upstart rivals are seeking to undercut Uber on price and there’s even a company offering to drive you home in your own car.





Uber prices to surge again this New Year's Eve

NHS sex attacks 'up 50% since 2011'



Police have received more than 1,600 reports of sexual abuse in NHS hospitals, private clinics and health centres in the last three years, new figures have suggested.


According to a Freedom of Information request by the Guardian, data from 38 out of 45 police forces in the UK reveals a 50% increase in reports since 2011 and totalling 1,615 alleged attacks including 157 rapes.


The paper said the Metropolitan Police had been told of 17 rapes and 124 other sexual offences, accounting for 20% of all reports, with mental health patients being particularly vulnerable.


Luciana Berger, shadow minister for public health, told the paper: “A zero-tolerance approach to sexual abuse must be pursued in the NHS. All victims should feel safe to come forward and every incident properly dealt with by the police, courts and health service, to ensure every perpetrator is brought to justice.


“Ministers must order an immediate review of security, with a focus on mental health units.”


Responding to the Guardian, an NHS England spokesman said: “It is of course essential that both NHS and independent hospitals do everything to ensure that patients are safe and feel safe in their premises, and where concerns arise the police must be able to bring to bear the full force of the law.”




Source Article from https://uk.news.yahoo.com/nhs-sex-attacks-50-since-2011-054255957.html



NHS sex attacks 'up 50% since 2011'

Rock guitarist Slash seeks divorce



Former Guns N’ Roses rocker Slash has filed for divorce from his wife of 13 years.


Court documents filed in Los Angeles cited irreconcilable differences for Slash’s split from Perla Hudson.


The London-born guitarist, whose real name is Saul Hudson, and his wife married in 2001 and he also filed for divorce in 2010, citing irreconcilable differences. The couple have two sons, 10-year-old Cash and London, 12.


The court documents said the couple separated on June 15.


Slash, 49, has had success as a solo star and in the bands Velvet Revolver and hard rock band Guns N’ Roses, with whom he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2012.





Rock guitarist Slash seeks divorce

China service sector growth picks up in December



BEIJING (Reuters) – Growth in China‘s services sector picked up slightly in December, a government study showed on Thursday, helping to offset further weakness in manufacturing which is weighing on the world’s second-largest economy.


The official non-manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index, or PMI, rose to 54.1 in December from November’s 53.9, well above the 50-point line that separates growth from contraction on a monthly basis.


A similar activity study showed growth in China’s factory sector slowed as expected in December, underlining the challenges facing the government as it tries to avert a sharper economic slowdown.


Many analysts expect economic growth in the fourth quarter to slow marginally from 7.3 percent in the third quarter, suggesting full-year growth will undershoot the government’s 7.5 percent target and mark the weakest expansion in 24 years.


(Reporting by Judy Hua and Ben Blanchard; Editing by Kim Coghill)





China service sector growth picks up in December

China December factory PMIs suggest economy cooling further, more stimulus expected



BEIJING (Reuters) – China‘s factory activity sputtered in December, underlining the challenges facing the country’s manufacturers as they fight rising costs and softening demand in a cooling economy.


After a rough 2014, the world’s second-largest economy looks set to start the new year on a weak note, reinforcing expectations that Beijing will roll out more stimulus to avert a sharper slowdown which may trigger job losses and debt defaults.


A property slump is expected to last well into 2015, companies will continue to struggle to pay off debt and export demand may remain erratic, leaving only the services sector as the lone bright spot in the economy.


China’s official Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) slipped to 50.1 in December from November’s 50.3, a government study showed on Thursday, clinging just above the 50-point level that separates growth from contraction on a monthly basis.


Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast a reading of 50.1.


“This indicates that industrial growth is still in a downward trend, but the pace (of declines) is slowing,” Zhang Liqun, an economist at the Development Research Centre, said in a statement accompanying the report.


“The current economic situation is in the process of returning to stability from slowing down,” Zhang said.


A similar private survey on Wednesday showed activity shrank for the first time in seven months in December. That survey focuses on smaller companies, which are facing greater strains, notably higher financing costs and problems getting loans.


The official survey looks more at larger, state-owned firms, which have been more resilient to the protracted downturn, partly due to generous government subsidies and better access to credit.


Many analysts expect economic growth in the fourth quarter to slow only marginally from 7.3 percent in the third quarter, though a raft of weak data suggest that may be too optimistic.


That means full-year growth will undershoot the government’s 7.5 percent target and mark the weakest expansion in 24 years.


Economists who advise the government have recommended that China lower its growth target to around 7 percent in 2015.


MORE STIMULUS EXPECTED


In a bid to spur growth and keep borrowing costs down, the central bank unexpectedly cut interest rates for the first time in more than two years on Nov. 21. It has also injected more funds into the banking system in recent months and relaxed restrictions to persuade risk-averse banks to lend more.


In addition, the economic planing agency has been approving more infrastructure projects.


While its recent moves may have bought the central bank some time to see if conditions improve, many economists still expect more interest rate cuts as well as reductions in banks’ required reserve ratios (RRR) this year, perhaps as soon as the first quarter.


That would allow banks to lend more money at more attractive rates, but authorities will still need to find a way to stimulate genuine demand at a time when many businesses are pulling back.


SOME ENCOURAGING SIGNS?


Some hopeful signs have emerged from recent data, though analysts say they may only partly offset the downdraft from the weak property market and its knock-on effect on other industries, which is weighing on demand for everything from furniture and glass to cement to steel.


Growth in China’s services sector, which accounts for close to half of the economy, remains robust, though firms are still shedding jobs. The official non-manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index, or PMI, rose to 54.1 in December from November’s 53.9.


Authorities want services to overtake manufacturing as the bigger driver of activity in coming years.


Export demand may also be bottoming out, with a stronger U.S. economy helping to offset weakness in Europe and Japan.


An index for new orders – a proxy for foreign and domestic demand – retreated to 50.4 in December from November’s 50.9. But new export orders shrank at a slower rate, climbing to 49.1 in December from 48.4 in November.


The private HSBC/Markit activity survey showed new export orders increased.


The official PMI also indicated big Chinese factories were weathering the downturn better than their smaller counterparts, as banks prefer to lend to state-owned firms, assuming the government will bail them out to prevent any defaults.


The PMI for large manufactures was 54.6 last month, while business shrank for small-to medium-sized factories.


(Reporting by Judy Hua and Ben Blanchard; Editing by Kim Coghill)





China December factory PMIs suggest economy cooling further, more stimulus expected

First baby of 2015? It's a secret in many places



PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Bye, bye Baby New Year. The crowning of the year’s first baby is being kept secret in many communities as hospitals say safety concerns trump tradition.


Community Health Systems — one of the country’s largest health care operators — recently ordered its 207 facilities to stop publicizing the first baby of the year, citing the potential for abductions and identity theft. Other U.S. hospitals have either removed themselves from the new year’s tradition altogether or limited the amount of information provided to the media.


“We know the birth of the new year baby is a joyous and exciting event, but protecting patient safety and privacy is our most important responsibility,” said Tomi Galin, a spokeswoman for the Franklin, Tennessee-based company.


She pointed to guidance from the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, which has suggested health care providers obtain parental consent and eliminate home addresses and other identifying information from birth announcements or stop providing them to media.


Still, the head of the center’s missing children division said, the tradition of publicizing a hospital’s first birth of the year is relatively low-risk.


“We’ve never given direction to hospitals that they shouldn’t do it,” said the center’s Robert Lowery, stressing caution, not overreaction.


Community Health’s decision to opt-out of the New Year’s baby business made front-page headlines this week in many states after local journalists learned they would need to look elsewhere for news on the usually slow holiday.


The company’s Pennsylvania spokeswoman, Renita Fennick, said doctors will still let parents know if their baby arrived first and that new moms and dads could still contact the media on their own — so long as reporters and photographers stayed away from the maternity ward.


The Geisinger Health System, which competes with Community Health in Pennsylvania, said it would eliminate hometowns from its 2015 New Year’s birth announcements.


Galin said Community Health’s policy change came after several of the company’s hospitals stopped publicizing New Year’s births on their own. She described it as a preventative measure and that it was not a reaction to threats or abduction attempts.


The Joint Commission, a health care accreditation organization, suggested hospitals stop providing birth notices to local newspapers more than a decade ago after a rash of hospital abductions, but it has not required that they be eliminated.


Commission spokeswoman Elizabeth Zhani says hospitals decide whether to stop providing birth notices based on a risk assessment.


Other hospitals continue to highlight the first baby of the year, same as ever, with parents’ permission.


The New York Health and Hospitals Corporation, which runs the city’s 11 public hospitals, gets written permission before releasing the mother and baby’s names, measurements and borough of residence. They also send out a photo.


“If there is hesitation from the family, we will only release the information they are comfortable with,” city hospitals spokeswoman Jen Bender said. “We’ve only had positive experiences promoting the first baby of the new year.”





First baby of 2015? It's a secret in many places

Fireworks spectacular heralds 2015



Millions of revellers have seen in the new year with fireworks spectaculars in London and Edinburgh dazzling crowds.


Thousands gathered along the Thames to see a dazzling display centring on the London Eye, accompanied by a electronic soundtrack and followed by Auld Lang Syne.


Tickets were introduced for the first time in London, with numbers kept to 100,000, down on the estimated 500,00 last year.


Meanwhile, up to 75,000 people are expected to gather on the streets of Edinburgh for the world-famous event which will see Lily Allen headline the Concert In The Gardens.




Source Article from https://uk.news.yahoo.com/fireworks-spectacular-heralds-2015-001957081.html



Fireworks spectacular heralds 2015

UK 'facing productivity puzzle'



The UK is facing a productivity “puzzle”, with the country lagging behind its economic rivals, according to the head of conciliation service Acas.


Sir Brendan Barber said UK labour productivity measured by GDP (economic output) per hour worked in 2007 was 9% below the average for countries in the G7 – Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States of America.


He said in his new year message that by 2013 the figure had grown to 19%, the biggest gap since 1992.


Sir Brendan said: “Previous solutions debated have ranged from improved education and skills levels to easier access to finance and better corporate governance. These may all have relevance but we are still left with a productivity puzzle.


“What is often overlooked which I feel will have a big role to play is the workplace itself, through better workplace management and employment relations.


“The workplace so often gets overlooked when the focus is on institutions and policy. One striking finding from the latest survey in the Workplace Employment Relations series was that businesses that had established good relations with their workers were less likely to have been damaged by the recession.


“At Acas we believe that prevention is always better than the cure and it is clear that good relations at work is key to building a solid recovery.


“All these issues will no doubt feature strongly in the 2015 general election debate.”


Sir Brendan, chairman of Acas, predicted more days of co-ordinated industrial action in the public sector in 2015 over pay.


He added: “With the economy now beginning to show distinct signs of recovery, although unevenly across the country, workers are expecting this good news to be reflected in their pay packets.


“This is certainly happening in some parts of the private sector but pay has not risen in the same way within the public sector, which is inevitably leading to employment relations tensions.”




Source Article from https://uk.news.yahoo.com/uk-facing-productivity-puzzle-001023803.html



UK 'facing productivity puzzle'

NYPD seeks to engage with 'Twitter school,' blog



NEW YORK (AP) — As city officials work to soften the New York Police Department’s image and change how officers engage with citizens through reforms and training, part of the effort is happening online.


The nation’s largest police department, once a slow adopter of social media, has created a blog and punched up Facebook use. And there are now 101 Twitter accounts department-wide after top brass were sent to an in-house “Twitter school.”


“We’ve given the commanding officers the tools, the guidelines and the training, and most importantly … the responsibility to do the work,” said Zachary Tumin, the department’s deputy commissioner for strategic initiatives. “Twitter is part of that work and part of those bridges we seek to build and reinforce.”


After the Dec. 20 shooting death of two patrolmen by a man who vowed online to kill “pigs,” NYPD officers sent out and received dozens of messages of support for the slain officers.


Mayor Bill de Blasio and Police Commissioner William Bratton are trying to rebrand the NYPD to counter criticism that it tramples on civil rights. The crime-fighting tactic known as stop-and-frisk is being reformed. Officers are undergoing three days of training on use of force and how to communicate with the public after the chokehold death of Eric Garner on July 17, and police in several precincts are trying out body cameras.


New York had largely eschewed the Internet until recently, while other, smaller departments embraced it. Boston used Twitter to rebut rumors and spread updates after the Boston Marathon bombings. The Denver department has more than 20,000 likes on Facebook since joining in 2012. Toronto’s police have more than 300 accounts, and officers must attend three days of training. In Dalton, Georgia, the department’s blog tells readers about emergencies and other news and provides information on police — including praise and suspensions.


In the past year, the NYPD’s public relations unit developed a blog. Bratton has his own Twitter account. And the department has expanded from one main account, @NYPDNews, to 101 covering every precinct and some special commands. Officers are encouraged to send out helpful, pithy messages and respond directly to the communities they serve.


“We want those voices out there,” Tumin said.


The department also has sent its commanders to a “school” taught by in-house social media experts who encourage humor and helpfulness and discourage releasing investigative details or starting arguments.


“Don’t engage in a Twitter war with someone. You won’t ever win,” one trainer said.


“I can investigate and arrest someone. I just can’t figure out what to say in this tiny little box,” one captain said. “I’m going to have to call my daughter and have her come help me.”


During one hourslong tutorial at John Jay Criminal College this month, about a dozen commanding officers learned to set up handles and view messages, and were taught the difference between direct messages and regular messages. Trainers used as an example the online demise of former U.S. Congressman Anthony Weiner, who accidentally sent out a sexually explicit photo meant for private use.


Commanding officers also sent out their first tweets.


“The 63 Precinct is now officially on Twitter. Looking forward to sharing with the residents of our great community !!! #Brooklyn” The precinct links to a copy of the city’s official social media policy, and now has 308 followers.


The department has produced a 34-page “Twitter handbook” to help officers manage the Wild West of the Internet, where even well-meaning messages can be undone by legions online.


Earlier this year, @NYPDnews invited people to post feel-good photos posing with New York’s finest with the hashtag #myNYPD. Instead, they found themselves awash in hundreds of images of baton-wielding cops arresting protesters, pulling suspects by the hair, unleashing pepper spray and taking down a bloodied 84-year-old man for jaywalking.


The NYPD community affairs chief sent out a message following the grand jury decision not to indict an officer in Garner’s death that read: “The #NYPD is committed to rebuilding public trust. #Wehearyou” The effort was panned because Garner’s last words were “I can’t breathe.”


And a commander in Harlem remarked on his private account about a woman who fell onto the subway tracks and died: “Let me guess, driver’s fault right?” he wrote. Online activists lambasted him, and he apologized and removed the link.


There have been some successes, too. An image last winter of an NYPD officer giving boots a homeless man became national news. When a subway train derailed last spring, one precinct shared traffic information and alternate routes until the problem was resolved.


And Community Affairs Chief Joanne Jaffe tweeted a photo of a handwritten note left by a passer-by that was tacked to the entrance of 1 Police Plaza: “It takes courage and discipline to do your duty in times like these. Thank you for serving and protecting these citizens with respect. Have a blessed day.”





NYPD seeks to engage with 'Twitter school,' blog

British acts fill albums' top 10



UK acts, led by Ed Sheeran, have filled the entire top 10 of best-selling artist albums over the past 12 months for the first time, according to new figures from the British music industry.


Brit stars – who also include Sam Smith, Olly Murs and Pink Floyd – have squeezed out US stars from the top-seller list as music sales topped the £1 billion level for a second consecutive year.


Sheeran’s album X achieved a total of 1.7 million sales, the biggest one-year total since Adele’s 21 in 2011, while Smith’s In The Lonely Hour clocked up 1.25 million. In 2013 there were no artists who broke the one million barrier.


Figures for 2014 released by music trade body BPI showed that, for the first time, physical albums accounted for less than half of total album consumption throughout the year, with digital services accounting for 51%.


Digital growth has been led by the explosion of streaming which doubled in the past year, with revenue – calculated from the money generated by subscription services such as Spotify and Deezer – growing to £14.8 million in the UK, and amounting to 15 billion plays. And it now brings in half the £29.7 million revenue of downloads – up from less than a quarter the previous year.


Although CD sales are down nearly 8%, losing five million in a year, the other main physical format vinyl has continued to enjoy a resurgence with almost 1.3 million sales. It marks a 65% increase, with Pink Floyd’s The Endless River and Am by Arctic Monkeys among the big sellers, and the figure is the biggest one-year vinyl sale since 1995.


Streaming is predicted to flourish even further this year with Apple expected to give an extra push or a possible relaunch for the Beats service it acquired last year, together with a new music subscription which is set to be launched by YouTube.


The Now That’s What I Call Music series continued to generate huge sales with Now 89 the biggest selling compilation of the year – and the third biggest-selling album overall – while the Frozen soundtrack is the second biggest various artists release of 2014.


The data has been compiled by the Official Charts Company which has been unable to find any other Brits-only artist album top 10 in its research.


The best-selling album list has now been topped by a British act for the past 10 years.


Although overall sales are above £1 billion for a second successive year, the figure is down on the 2013 level by 1.3%.


Geoff Taylor, chief executive of the BPI, said: “The remarkable success of British artists in 2014 is exciting news for the future. Our record labels are backing home-grown talent like Ed Sheeran, Sam Smith and George Ezra, who in turn are catching fire around the world.”


Tony Wadsworth, the outgoing chairman of the BPI, said: “The UK recorded music industry invests in a truly global business, as labels continue to find, develop, support and succeed with world class artists making world-class music.”


Kevin Brown, the head of label relations at Spotify, said: “We expect streaming to go from strength to strength in 2015, as more music fans discover how easy it is to enjoy a whole world of music on demand.”


:: Top selling albums of 2014, according to the Official Charts Company:


1. Ed Sheeran – X


2. Sam Smith – In The Lonely Hour


3. George Ezra – Wanted On Voyage


4. Paolo Nutini – Caustic Love


5. Coldplay – Ghost Stories


6. Paloma Faith – A Perfect Contradiction


7. One Direction – Four


8. Olly Murs – Never Been Better


9. Pink Floyd – The Endless River


10. Take That – III





British acts fill albums' top 10

Stage, screen actor Edward Herrmann dies at 71



Edward Herrmann, the towering, melodious-voiced actor who brought Franklin D. Roosevelt to life in films and documentaries, won a Tony Award and charmed audiences as the stuffy dad on TV’s “Gilmore Girls,” died Wednesday. He was 71.


Herrmann died at Memorial Sloan Kettering Hospital of brain cancer, his son, Rory Herrmann said. The actor, who had been hospitalized for several weeks, was surrounded by family members including his wife, Star, and his three children, his son said.


“He was full of knowledge and kindness and goodness. … He always wanted to share the great and beautiful things in life,” said Rory Herrmann. That included art, music and classic cars.


The 6-foot-5 actor’s favorite role was playing President Roosevelt, his son said, which he did in projects including the TV movies “Eleanor and Franklin” (1976) and its sequel “Eleanor and Franklin: The White House Years” (1977) and in the 1982 movie musical “Annie.”


Herrmann also provided the voice for FDR in Ken Burns’ documentary series “The Roosevelts: An Intimate History,” which aired on PBS earlier this year.


His urbane tones were heard on a variety of other documentaries and on hundreds of audio books including Laura Hillenbrand’s “Unbroken.” He had recently narrated a documentary on cancer, Rory Herrmann said.


He appeared frequently on the big screen, in major films including “Reds” and “The Wolf of Wall Street,” and was an acclaimed stage actor whose Tony-winning performance came in 1976 for a revival of “Mrs. Warren’s Profession” opposite Lynn Redgrave.


His other Broadway credits included the original run of “Love Letters” in 1989, “The Deep Blue Sea” with Blythe Danner in 1998 and “Plenty,” for which he received a 1983 Tony nomination.


Television was also a familiar home, with recent appearances on “The Good Wife” and “How I Met Your Mother. His best-known role came on the 2000-07 series “Gilmore Girls,” on which he portrayed the patrician father of a single mother, played by Lauren Graham.


“My friend Ed Herrmann was the kindest, classiest, most talented man,” Graham posted on Twitter. “It was an honor and a joy to know him, a devastating blow to lose him.”


Herrmann, a native of Washington, D.C., graduated from Bucknell University and studied his craft on a Fulbright scholarship to the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art in 1968-69.


In a 2004 interview with The Associated Press, he waggishly shared his tips for theater audiences — especially those who offer standing ovations even for routine performances.


“Turn off your cellphone, your pagers, don’t talk, don’t unwrap the candy and DON’T STAND,” he said.


Besides his wife and son, Herrmann’s survivors include daughters Ryen and Emma. A private funeral was planned, followed by a public memorial early next week, Rory Herrmann said.


___


AP Film Writer Lindsey Bahr in Los Angeles and AP researcher Barbara Sambriski in New York contributed to this report.





Stage, screen actor Edward Herrmann dies at 71

On the Charts: There Is Taylor Swift and There Is Everybody Else



By |

December 31, 2014

REMEMBER WHEN THERE WERE 10 OR 20 TAYLOR SWIFTS EVERY YEAR?: There is Taylor Swift, and there is everybody else. Adele, Beyonce and the Frozen soundtrack have managed to sell a lot of albums, but only Swift’s 1989 is a reminder of the old days — according to Billboard, it’s the first to hit more than 200,000 sales in each of its first nine weeks since Usher’s Confessions in 2004. This week, the number is 326,000 copies, or 430,000 “equivalent units,” which is newfangled chart shorthand for  including track sales and streaming data. Because 1989 is not streaming via Spotify or others, we can assume much of this number comes from singles — “Blank Space” is iTunes’ Number One song this week, and “Shake It Off” is Number Seven.





Related

20 Best Albums



IN THE NEXT VIDEO, HE COULD POSSIBLY EVEN DO SOMETHING!: If I were J. Cole, I’d rush out a hot video to restart momentum for the strong 2014 Forest Hills Drive, which made its debut at Number One, then, like almost every non-Taylor Swift album this year, plunged in its second and third weeks. The album’s first video, “Apparently,” just Cole and a blue background, has drawn 6.8 million YouTube views since it came out earlier this month. And the album itself sold 104,000 copies, a decrease of 12 percent and a drop from Number Four to Number Six. It moved 120,000 “units.”



SO MUCH FOR BEYONCE-STYLE END-OF-YEAR SURPRISES: It’s a sloooooow end-of-year week for new releases — no debut sold more than Fabolous’ The Young OG Project, and that was only 71,000 units and Number 12 on the charts. Everything else is stagnant. Nicki Minaj’s The Pinkprint drops 47 percent in sales, with 105,000 copies and 156,000 “units,” sticking at Number Two, while Pentatonix’ That’s Christmas To Me, which clearly wins the holiday-album sweepstakes, remains at Number Three with 121,000 sales, a drop of 41 percent, and 131,000 units. This leaves an opening for some revived titles, particularly the Guardians of the Galaxy soundtrack, which jumped 30 percent with 80,000 albums sold and going from Number 16 to Number Nine.





On the Charts: There Is Taylor Swift and There Is Everybody Else

City Link Confirms Thousands Of Jobs Lost



The administrators of courier firm City Link have announced 2,356 job losses after a bid to buy the company failed.



Many workers found out about the firm’s collapse on Christmas Day and had been warned to expect “substantial redundancies”.



Announcing the job losses on New Year’s Eve, the administrators at EY said an offer that was made for City Link had not been acceptable.



The bid, made by a consortium, “offered no money up front and significantly undervalued the assets to be acquired”, the administrators said.



They said: “The administrators proposed an alternative structure that would be acceptable and common in these situations.



“The consortium, despite attempts to make them reconsider, declined to amend their original offer.”



Coventry, where the firm has its head office, faces the highest number of redundancies, with 350 jobs lost.



There have also been more than 100 job losses in Hatfield, Heathrow and Warrington.



The administrators said 371 people have been retained to deal with remaining parcels and to help with winding down its operations.



Hunter Kelly, joint administrator of City Link Limited, said: “The company endured substantial losses, which ultimately became too great for it to continue as a going concern, and City Link Limited entered administration following an unsuccessful sale process.”



RMT union general secretary Mick Cash said: “The confirmation from the administrators that they have just sacked 2,400 staff and are pulling the plug on any efforts to save City Link is a disgraceful and cynical betrayal that will wreck the lives of our members, many of whom are owed thousands of pounds.



“RMT does not believe that those pulling the strings had any interest in saving this business and were happy to cut and run leaving a trail of human misery in their wake.



“The City Link collapse has blown the lid off the cosy relationship between bandit capitalism and the political elite.”



Business Secretary Vince Cable said: “This is very sad news for the City Link workers and their families at a particularly difficult time of year.



“The Government has put arrangements in place to help employees who are made redundant and we stand ready to help.”



Around 30,000 parcels are waiting to be collected from City Link depots.



Administrators say they expect depots to remain open until “approximately” 6 January.




Source Article from https://uk.news.yahoo.com/city-confirms-2-356-job-losses-171259876.html



City Link Confirms Thousands Of Jobs Lost

Bad weather hinders search for victims in AirAsia crash



By Fergus Jensen


PANGKALAN BUN, Indonesia (Reuters) – Rescue planes and helicopters sat grounded near the coast of the Indonesian island of Borneo on Wednesday as bad weather hampered the search for victims in the crashed AirAsia jet.


Officials were forced to suspend aerial missions as heavy rain and low visibility made it difficult to recover bodies four days after the Airbus A320-200 disappeared from the radar en route from the Indonesian city of Surabaya to Singapore.


“I went to the search area this morning and saw there was no way we could do a search,” said Dwi Putranto, a senior air force official.


“Now we are standing by in case remains can be evacuated,” he said, adding that over 100 divers and rescue workers were “ready to search”.


Search and rescue official Sunarbowo Sandi said bodies and debris were being scattered by strong currents and monsoon weather conditions.


“All the wreckage and bodies have drifted around 50 kilometres and we’re expecting all the bodies will end up on the beaches around here,” Sandi said.


“That is why we are searching all the beaches, because the current is moving.”


Seven bodies have been pulled from the sea so far, an official said. Two of those bodies have been flown to Surabaya for identification. Tatang Zaenudin, another search and rescue official, said earlier that one of the bodies had been found wearing a life jacket but he later said no victim had been recovered with a life jacket on.


The search area was narrowed to 120 square nautical miles and 22 ships continued to hunt for the remaining victims and for the plane’s black box, said Putranto.


But the agonizing wait could be a long one for family members and rescue workers.


“The clouds are very low in the target area,” Sandi said. “Everyone is praying for more friendly weather.”


(Writing by Kanupriya Kapoor; Editing by Mike Collett-White, Mark Bendeich, Toni Reinhold)





Bad weather hinders search for victims in AirAsia crash

Chinese stocks and dollar were stars, oil big loser in 2014



By Rodrigo Campos


NEW YORK (Reuters) – China and the United States headed the list of 2014 top-performing equity markets among larger economies while crude oil prices closed in the red to cap a massive yearly slump.


The U.S. dollar on Wednesday added slightly to gains that have made it the year’s star major currency.


On Wall Street, stocks fell on Wednesday but the S&P 500 closed 2014 near its record high. The index hit records in more than 50 sessions throughout the year.


“Markets put in a solid year in spite of significant headwinds that could have easily derailed a multi-year bull market,” said Peter Kenny, chief market strategist at Clearpool Group in New York. “The most the bears got out of this year was a 10 percent correction on an intraday basis, and the markets stubbornly moved higher, and for good foundational reasons.”


The S&P 500 ended its third straight year of double-digit percentage gains. The benchmark added 11.4 percent this year. The Dow Jones industrial average gained 7.5 percent, and the Nasdaq Composite gained 13.4 percent for the year.


On a total return basis, the S&P 500 gained 13.7 percent this year.


On the day, the Dow fell 160 points, or 0.89 percent, to 17,823.07, the S&P 500 lost 21.45 points, or 1.03 percent, to 2,058.9 and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 41.39 points, or 0.87 percent, to 4,736.05.


In Latin America, Argentina’s benchmark stock index added 59 percent in 2014 and Brazil’s Bovespa shed nearly 3 percent. Colombia’s IGBC fell 11 percent and Mexico’s IPC was little changed, up less than 1 percent.


The stand-out equity performer among top economies this year was China, where the CSI300 index ended 2014 with gains of near 52 percent. The index added more than 25 percent in December alone, its best month since April 2007, in part as foreigners won wider access to Chinese stocks.


“China stocks have done really well this year and the dollar move has also been very interesting,” said Alvin Tan, an FX strategist at Societe Generale in London. “It barely moved against the other major currencies in the first (half) of the year and all the big gains came in the second.”


The dollar ended 2014 up 12.8 percent against a basket of major currencies, its best performance since 1997. An expected start to a Federal Reserve tightening cycle may strengthen the dollar’s appeal in the new year.


The euro, undermined by bets that the European Central Bank will have to start buying government bonds to avert deflation, was down 0.5 percent at $1.2098, having touched a 2-1/2-year low of $1.2095.


The Russian rouble was down 5 percent on the day as a more than 76 percent plunge for the year marked its worst performance since Russia defaulted in 1998. [EMRG/FRX]


The young bitcoin currency is closing the year only slightly better than the rouble, falling 57 percent at about $318. It peaked at $995 last January.


U.S. government debt that matures in 20 years and beyond booked a 27 percent return, according to Barclays. That would be its biggest annual gain since 2011, when it generated a 33 percent return.


On its last session of the year, the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note was up 6/32, the yield at 2.1703 percent.


Crude oil prices, already down by half from this year’s peak, slumped again on Wednesday. Brent fell as much as 3.7 percent to trade below $56 a barrel and U.S. crude was down 3 percent at its session low. Weak Chinese manufacturing data and demand concerns weighed on prices.


Brent was last down 0.6 percent at $57.55 a barrel and WTI fell 0.6 percent to $53.80 a barrel. For the year Brent is down 48 percent and WTI is down 46 percent. [O/R]


Copper, of which China is the biggest consumer, looked set to post its biggest annual decline in three years at 14.4 percent, while traditional safe-haven gold was to close the year just shy of 2 percent lower. Silver fell 19.4 percent in 2014 after a more than 35 percent drop in 2013.[GOL/]


(Additional reporting by global financial markets teams; Editing by Dan Grebler, Leslie Adler and Meredith Mazzilli)





Chinese stocks and dollar were stars, oil big loser in 2014

If You’re Feeling Like Leelah Alcorn, ‘There’s A Lot Of Support Out There’



Yesterday (December 30) MTV News reported that transgender teen Leelah Alcorn had committed suicide, leaving a note on Tumblr that, “My death needs to mean something.” The note quickly went viral, and has sparked a discussion about how this could be a rallying cry for more transgender equality and activism.


That said, some worry it could be misinterpreted into a belief that suicide can equal results.


In an interview with MTV News, The Trevor Project CEO Abbe Land stressed multiple times that suicide is not the answer, and that no one is ever alone, no matter how alone they might feel. She encouraged anyone who needs help to reach out to The Trevor Project by calling 1-866-488-7386 or visiting their website. This includes parents who want to help their LGBTQ children.


“I think what’s really important to know is that there’s a lot of support out there,” Land said. “Here at The Trevor Project, we have many trained counselors who can talk to you 24/7. We’re an accredited lifeline; our counselors go through over 40 hours of training. They’re aware of all the issues to talk to someone and can give them the resources they need. If someone feels like their family isn’t there for them, their friends aren’t there for them, they can reach out to The Trevor Project. It’s sometimes hard to reach out, but it’s one of the best things you can do.”



Leelah described feeling alone and cut off, saying this was a result of how her parents had treated her.


“Many times in the area [where a person lives] there might be local options and we can link people to [those] options,” Land continued. “I don’t know what Leelah might have tried, but it certainly seemed she felt there was no one who cared. There could have been local resources she didn’t know about. The more a person reaches out to someone who can identify local resources, the more help there is for the next person.”


Land added that suicide is not a way to get back at someone. “If you are feeling like you want to get back at your parents, I would say to reach out and talk to other people so you can know that taking your life is not the answer. It doesn’t solve [the problem]. We can help you find the best way to handle it so you have your life and can live it and be yourself.”


From what Leelah said, it also appears her parents may have put her in what’s called “conversion therapy,” where a therapist attempts to turn a gay person heterosexual or a transgender person cisgender.


“We know that conversation therapy doesn’t work,” Land continued. “Conversion therapy is being banned in state after state. The city of Washington, D.C. just banned it, California banned it, New Jersey banned it. We don’t know everything that went on with the therapy Leelah got, but from Leelah’s point-of-view it was not therapy that was helpful to her. As science wins out, people are recognizing that that kind of therapy is not effective therapy; it’s damaging. We are who we are and you can’t change us. You can accept us.”



Leelah had also asked that trans rights groups be supported. Land listed off The Transgender Law Center and the National Center for Transgender Equality as good ones to support.


As many people read Leelah’s story and grapple with how to respond, perhaps these words of hers need the most attention: “Fix society. Please.”


Fixing society, activists would say, comes through better understanding of LGBTQ issues, better understanding of mental illness, and a push for equality for all people. And to know it’s always okay to reach out and it’s always okay to ask after another person.


“If you have a friend you think is feeling suicidal or very depressed, give them The Trevor Project number to call,” Land concluded. “You can say to somebody, ‘Are you thinking of taking your own life?’ It’s okay to say that and give them a resource. We can all help save somebody.”


If you are transgender and thinking about suicide, or know someone who is, please contact The Trevor Project at (866) 488-7386.






If You’re Feeling Like Leelah Alcorn, ‘There’s A Lot Of Support Out There’

Second man held over robbery death



A second man has been arrested in connection with the death of a retired caretaker who was attacked during a robbery at his home on Christmas Day.


Stephen Starkey, 61, was injured when he was robbed at his home in the Lowedges area of Sheffield on December 25 by a man who took a PlayStation 3 console and cash from him, police have said.


He died later in hospital.


Tonight, South Yorkshire Police said a 37-year-old man arrested in connection with the incident had been released on bail pending further inquiries but detectives had now arrested a 40-year-old man on suspicion of murder.


Earlier, Mr Starkey’s friend and neighbour Derek Wilkinson, 79, said Mr Starkey managed to get over the road to his house to raise the alarm after he was assaulted on Christmas morning.


Mr Wilkinson said his friend even managed to walk into an ambulance after he was treated by paramedics in the pensioner’s home.


He said Mr Starkey was able to tell him how he was barged to the ground by someone who called at his door.


He said his friend came over the road to raise the alarm because his attacker had taken his phone.


Mr Wilkinson said that Mr Starkey lived by himself and had been attacked earlier this year in a similar incident.


He said: “This bloke had come and knocked him down in the doorway and pinched his things off him.


“He (Mr Starkey) come over to me and we rung for ambulances and police and things like that.


“He was very shook up.


“He’d done his shoulder, cracked his shoulder, I think, and they’d knocked him about.”


Mr Wilkinson said he had lived in the street for 40 years and his friend had been in the house where he lived by himself for 30 years.


He said: “I knew him very well – a very big friend of mine.


“He was a smashing fella. He was a very nice fella and he’ll be missed.”


Mr Wilkinson said Mr Starkey used to work locally as a caretaker for the council’s housing department but had retired.


He said: “It’s a very quiet area usually. Fairly quiet. They’re all bought properties, mainly.”


Asked what he thought about the person who attacked his friend, he said: “I wouldn’t like to say.”


Other neighbours said Mr Starkey was not in good health and frail. Police described him as vulnerable.


South Yorkshire Police confirmed Mr Starkey had died in hospital after he was attacked on Christmas Day.


It a statement, the force said: “The 61-year-old man who died after a reported assault and robbery at his home in Lowedges on Christmas Day has been named as Stephen Paul Starkey.


“Mr Starkey was at his home in Reney Crescent on Thursday 25 December when at around 10.30am a man entered his property, allegedly assaulting him and stealing items.


“Mr Starkey was taken to hospital to be treated for his injuries where he later died.


“The family of Mr Starkey have asked for privacy while they grieve their loss and request the media to respect this wish at this difficult time.”


The statement said that a post mortem examination is yet to be carried out


Earlier police said Mr Starkey was inside his home when he answered a knock at his door.


They said the man entered the house and took a PlayStation 3 and cash before fleeing the scene.


Yesterday, as Mr Starkey was still fighting for his life in hospital and before an arrest was made, Detective Inspector Richard Partridge said the assault took place “on Christmas Day in broad daylight”.


He said: “We believe that the suspect deliberately targeted this man’s house, forcing his way into the property and injuring a vulnerable member of the community before stealing valuables.”


Today the only sign of the attack at Mr Starkey’s mid-terrace home was the fingerprinting powder left around his front door by the police.


A team of uniformed officers were combing the wider area, using long sticks to search in the ankle deep snow.


Mr Starkey’s home is in an estate of houses on the southern edge of the city, not far from the main A61 route to Chesterfield.


Since the incident, Mr Starkey’s small front garden, which is lined with potted plants, has had a covering of snow.


The 40-year-old man arrested on suspicion of murder remains in police custody.





Second man held over robbery death

NYPD seeks to engage with 'Twitter school,' blog



NEW YORK (AP) — As city officials work to soften the New York Police Department’s image and change how officers engage with citizens through reforms and training, part of the effort is happening online.


The nation’s largest police department, once a slow adopter of social media, has created a blog and punched up Facebook use. And there are now 101 Twitter accounts department-wide after top brass were sent to an in-house “Twitter school.”


“We’ve given the commanding officers the tools, the guidelines and the training, and most importantly … the responsibility to do the work,” said Zachary Tumin, the department’s deputy commissioner for strategic initiatives. “Twitter is part of that work and part of those bridges we seek to build and reinforce.”


After the Dec. 20 shooting death of two patrolmen by a man who vowed online to kill “pigs,” NYPD officers sent out and received dozens of messages of support for the slain officers.


Mayor Bill de Blasio and Police Commissioner William Bratton are trying to rebrand the NYPD to counter criticism that it tramples on civil rights. The crime-fighting tactic known as stop-and-frisk is being reformed. Officers are undergoing three days of training on use of force and how to communicate with the public after the chokehold death of Eric Garner on July 17, and police in several precincts are trying out body cameras.


New York had largely eschewed the Internet until recently, while other, smaller departments embraced it. Boston used Twitter to rebut rumors and spread updates after the Boston Marathon bombings. The Denver department has more than 20,000 likes on Facebook since joining in 2012. Toronto’s police have more than 300 accounts, and officers must attend three days of training. In Dalton, Georgia, the department’s blog tells readers about emergencies and other news and provides information on police — including praise and suspensions.


In the past year, the NYPD’s public relations unit developed a blog. Bratton has his own Twitter account. And the department has expanded from one main account, @NYPDNews, to 101 covering every precinct and some special commands. Officers are encouraged to send out helpful, pithy messages and respond directly to the communities they serve.


“We want those voices out there,” Tumin said.


The department also has sent its commanders to a “school” taught by in-house social media experts who encourage humor and helpfulness and discourage releasing investigative details or starting arguments.


“Don’t engage in a Twitter war with someone. You won’t ever win,” one trainer said.


“I can investigate and arrest someone. I just can’t figure out what to say in this tiny little box,” one captain said. “I’m going to have to call my daughter and have her come help me.”


During one hourslong tutorial at John Jay Criminal College this month, about a dozen commanding officers learned to set up handles and view messages, and were taught the difference between direct messages and regular messages. Trainers used as an example the online demise of former U.S. Congressman Anthony Weiner, who accidentally sent out a sexually explicit photo meant for private use.


Commanding officers also sent out their first tweets.


“The 63 Precinct is now officially on Twitter. Looking forward to sharing with the residents of our great community !!! #Brooklyn” The precinct links to a copy of the city’s official social media policy, and now has 308 followers.


The department has produced a 34-page “Twitter handbook” to help officers manage the Wild West of the Internet, where even well-meaning messages can be undone by legions online.


Earlier this year, @NYPDnews invited people to post feel-good photos posing with New York’s finest with the hashtag #myNYPD. Instead, they found themselves awash in hundreds of images of baton-wielding cops arresting protesters, pulling suspects by the hair, unleashing pepper spray and taking down a bloodied 84-year-old man for jaywalking.


The NYPD community affairs chief sent out a message following the grand jury decision not to indict an officer in Garner’s death that read: “The #NYPD is committed to rebuilding public trust. #Wehearyou” The effort was panned because Garner’s last words were “I can’t breathe.”


And a commander in Harlem remarked on his private account about a woman who fell onto the subway tracks and died: “Let me guess, driver’s fault right?” he wrote. Online activists lambasted him, and he apologized and removed the link.


There have been some successes, too. An image last winter of an NYPD officer giving boots a homeless man became national news. When a subway train derailed last spring, one precinct shared traffic information and alternate routes until the problem was resolved.


And Community Affairs Chief Joanne Jaffe tweeted a photo of a handwritten note left by a passer-by that was tacked to the entrance of 1 Police Plaza: “It takes courage and discipline to do your duty in times like these. Thank you for serving and protecting these citizens with respect. Have a blessed day.”





NYPD seeks to engage with 'Twitter school,' blog

Nielsen's top programs for Dec. 22-28



Prime-time viewership numbers compiled by Nielsen for Dec. 22-28. Listings include the week’s ranking and viewership.


1. NFL Football: Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, NBC, 20.71 million.


2. “The OT,” Fox, 16.18 million.


3. NFL Football: Denver at Cincinnati, ESPN, 16.03 million.


4. “Sunday Night NFL Pre-Kick,” NBC, 15.14 million.


5. “Football Night in America,” NBC, 11.16 million.


6. “60 Minutes,” CBS, 11.05 million.


7. “NCIS,” CBS, 10.51 million.


8. “Undercover Boss,” CBS, 9.18 million.


9. “NCIS: Los Angeles” (Special), CBS, 8.89 million.


10. “The Big Bang Theory,” CBS, 8.62 million.


11. “Mike & Molly,” CBS, 8.52 million.


12. “The Mentalist,” CBS, 8.48 million.


13. “CSI,” CBS, 7.84 million.


14. “NCIS: New Orleans,” CBS, 7.70 million.


15. “The Big Bang Theory” (Special), CBS, 6.85 million.


16. “NCIS: Los Angeles,” CBS, 6.84 million.


17. Holiday Bowl: Nebraska at USC, ESPN, 6.80 million


18. “Scorpion,” CBS, 6.58 million.


19. “How the Grinch Stole Christmas,” ABC, 5.96 million.


20. “America’s Funniest Home Videos,” ABC, 5.91 million.


___


ABC and ESPN are owned by The Walt Disney Co.; CBS is a division of CBS Corp.; Fox is owned by 21st Century Fox; NBC is owned by NBC Universal.





Nielsen's top programs for Dec. 22-28

Ebola spreads in Sierra Leone as global cases top 20,000 - WHO



GENEVA (Reuters) – The Ebola virus is still spreading in West Africa, especially in Sierra Leone, and the worldwide toll from the epidemic stands at 7,905 deaths among 20,206 known cases at year-end, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Wednesday.


Sierra Leone reported 337 new cases in the past week, including 149 in Freetown, the highest incidence in the capital of the former British colony in four weeks, the WHO said in its latest weekly update.


(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay)





Ebola spreads in Sierra Leone as global cases top 20,000 - WHO

India to check on toilet use in 'real time'



India‘s government Wednesday announced a nationwide scheme to check whether people are using toilets as part of a cleanliness drive championed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.


Since October the government has provided 503,142 new household latrines. But experts say most of these end up being used as storerooms since many people consider toilets unhygienic and prefer to squat in the open, believing it more sanitary to defecate far from home.


Sanitary inspectors will go door-to-door to “check and verify the use of toilets” with mobile phones, tablets or iPads and upload the results onto a website in “real time”, a government press release said.


“Earlier, the monitoring was done only about the construction of toilets, but now the actual use of toilets will be ascertained,” it said.


Modi announced the cleanliness drive in his Independence Day speech in August, pledging a toilet in every household by 2019.


UNICEF estimates that almost 594 million people — or nearly 50 percent of India’s population — defecate in the open, with the situation worst in dirt-poor rural areas.


Lack of toilets and other sanitation problems costs India nearly $54 billion annually through illnesses such as diarrhoea and lower productivity, a 2012 World Bank study found.


The latest government monitoring programme is aimed at motivating people to use the toilet.


“Sanitation is a mindset issue. (The aim is to) create demand by triggering behaviour change,” the government statement said.





India to check on toilet use in 'real time'

Ex-Gambling Addict Reunited With Sword He Sold



A Sandhurst graduate who sold his coveted “sword of honour” to fund his online gambling addiction has been reunited with it after two years.



Justyn Rees Larcombe received the sword – handed annually by the Queen to the top student of each course at the military academy – in 1992.



But in 2012, at the height of a gambling addiction which cost him £750,000 and a six-figure job in the City, he sold it for just £200.



The ex-Army major, 46, from Tonbridge in Kent, thought he would never see the sentimentally-priceless item again.



He’d held it at his wedding day and had planned to pass it down through the generations.



Yet in a chance encounter, a retired Kent-based Army officer-turned-military-collector found the sword in a shop in Leicester.



He tracked down Mr Larcombe using his local newspaper to alert him to its whereabouts, because he was confused as to why anyone would let it go.



The sword has now been bought back by Mr Larcombe – and takes pride of place above his fireplace.



He said: “The loss of my sword was so symbolic. In 2012 I had hit rock bottom and sold the sword.



“But now I have it back, it feels like such a healing thing. It feels like I have come full circle.



“My primary aim in life now is to highlight how dangerous gambling can be.”



Mr Larcombe’s family were reunited this Christmas, and he says his “recovery now feels complete”.



He now works as a consultant in London and volunteers for a debt advice service.



He has written a book about overcoming his troubles called Tails I Lose.




Source Article from https://uk.news.yahoo.com/ex-gambling-addict-reunited-sword-sold-171233167.html



Ex-Gambling Addict Reunited With Sword He Sold

New Year’s Eve: From ‘Walking Dead’ To Taylor Swift, Here’s What To Watch



If you’re planning to ring in 2015 from the comfort of your couch tonight, then good: It means you’ll have a front row seat for the best New Year’s Eve party that you can attend in your best pair of lazy pants.



MTV’s New Year’s Eve 2015 will broadcast live tonight from Times Square, where Victoria Justice and “Guy Code”‘s Charlamagne will host a countdown to the new year, while comedians from “Girl Code” and “Guy Code” stop by to reminisce about the best and most memorable moments from 2014… also known ’round these parts as The Year of the Booty.




[ video unavailable on this device ]




Our party kicks off at 11pm ET. But if you’re considering your options and wondering what other, lesser New Year’s Eve parties might be airing on TV tonight, we’ve got you covered. Here’s what’s happening:





  1. Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest

    Ryan Seacrest will be joined by Jenny McCarthy and Fergie for ABC’s New Year’s Eve countdown — which ends with a performance by Taylor Swift, of course.







  2. New Year's Eve with Carson Daly

    Those old enough to remember Carson’s stint as host of MTV’s Total Request Live can tune in to NBC and enjoy the nostalgia of seeing him host the network’s NYE party featuring performances by Tony Bennett, Lady Gaga, Seth MacFarlane, Blake Shelton, Gwen Stefani and Pharrell Williams.







  3. nye-no-nudity-new

    When Cooper and Griffin team up for CNN’s New Year’s countdown, anything can happen… and probably will.







  4. Pitbull Performs In MelbourneGetty Images

    Fifth Harmony and others will perform at Fox’s New Year’s party, live from Miami.







  5. walking_dead_castAMC

    If you’d rather avoid the spectacle of flying confetti and dropping balls altogether, this is as good a time as any to tune into AMC’s back-to-back-to-back (x infinity) showings of every episode of “The Walking Dead,” which will not only fill the final hours of your new year but also get you several days deep into 2015! The last available episode (the mid-season finale of Season 5) airs at 5:00am on Saturday, January 3.







  6. Screen Shot 2014-12-30 at 3.14.12 PMNetflix

    Although Netflix designed this video for use by parents who want to trick their children into going to bed before midnight on New Year’s Eve, there’s no reason why you can’t use it to ring in the new year early and then go to bed at a sensible hour, where you will be fast asleep long before the first hard-partying revelers start to puke on their shoes.







New Year’s Eve: From ‘Walking Dead’ To Taylor Swift, Here’s What To Watch

No health insurance? Penalties to rise in 2015



WASHINGTON (AP) — The cost of being uninsured in America is going up significantly next year for millions of people.


It’s the first year all taxpayers have to report to the Internal Revenue Service whether they had health insurance for the previous year, as required under President Barack Obama’s law. Those who were uninsured face fines, unless they qualify for one of about 30 exemptions, most of which involve financial hardships.


Dayna Dayson of Phoenix estimates that she’ll have to pay the tax man $290 when she files her federal return. Dayson, who’s in her early 30s, works in marketing and doesn’t have a lot left over each month after housing, transportation and other fixed costs. She’d like health insurance but she couldn’t afford it in 2014, as required by the law.


“It’s touted as this amazing thing, but right now, for me, it doesn’t fit into my budget,” she said.


Ryan Moon of Des Moines, Iowa, graduated from college in 2013 with a bachelor’s degree in political science and is still hunting for a permanent job with benefits. He expects to pay a fine of $95. A supporter of the health care law, he feels conflicted about its insurance mandate and fines.


“I hate the idea that you have to pay a penalty, but at the same time, it helps other people,” said Moon, who’s in his early 20s. “It really helps society, but society has to be forced to help society.”


Going without health insurance has always involved financial risks. You could have an accident and end up with thousands of dollars in medical bills. Now, you may also get fined. In a decision that allowed Obama’s law to advance, the Supreme Court ruled in 2012 that the coverage requirement and its accompanying fines were a constitutionally valid exercise of Congress’ authority to tax.


In 2015, all taxpayers have to report to the IRS on their health insurance status the previous year. Most will check a box. It’s also when the IRS starts collecting fines from some uninsured people, and deciding if others qualify for exemptions.


What many people don’t realize is that the penalties go up significantly in 2015. Only 3 percent of uninsured people know what the fine for 2015 will be, according to a recent poll by the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation.


Figuring out your potential exposure if you’re uninsured isn’t simple.


For 2014, the fine is the greater of $95 per person or 1 percent of household income above the threshold for filing taxes. It will jump in 2015 to the greater of 2 percent of income or $325. By 2016, the average fine will be about $1,100, based on government figures.


People can get a sense of the potential hit by going online and using the Tax Policy Center’s Affordable Care Act penalty calculator.


Many taxpayers may be able to get a pass. Based on congressional analysis, tax preparation giant H&R Block says roughly 4 million uninsured people will pay penalties and 26 million will qualify for exemptions from the list of more than 30 waivers.


But it’s unclear whether taxpayers are aware of the exemptions.


Deciding what kind of waiver to seek could be crucial. Some can be claimed directly on a tax return, but others involve mailing paperwork to the Health and Human Services Department. Tax preparation companies say the IRS has told them it’s taking steps to make sure taxpayers’ returns don’t languish in bureaucratic limbo while HHS rules on their waivers.


TurboTax has created a free online tool called “Exemption Check” for people to see if they may qualify for a waiver. Charges apply later if the taxpayer files through TurboTax.


Timing will be critical for uninsured people who want to avoid the rising penalties for 2015.


That’s because Feb. 15 is the last day of open enrollment under the health law. After that, only people with special circumstances can sign up. But just 5 percent of uninsured people know the correct deadline, according to the Kaiser poll.


“We could be looking at a real train wreck after Feb. 15,” said Stan Dorn, a health policy expert at the nonpartisan Urban Institute. “People will file their tax returns and learn they are subject to a much larger penalty for 2015, and they can do absolutely nothing to avoid that.”


The insurance requirement and penalties remain the most unpopular part of the health care law. They were intended to serve a broader purpose by nudging healthy people into the insurance pool, helping to keep premiums more affordable.


Sensitive to political backlash, supporters of the health care law have played down the penalties in their sign-up campaigns. But stressing the positive — such as the availability of financial help and the fact that insurers can no longer turn away people with health problems — may be contributing to the information gap about the penalties.


Dayson, the Phoenix resident, says she’s hoping her employer will offer a health plan she can fit into her budget, allowing her to avoid higher fines for 2015.


In Des Moines, recent college graduate Moon has held a succession of temporary local and state government jobs that don’t provide affordable coverage. The penalties are on his mind.


“When it gets up to $325, I hope I have a career that actually offers me a good health care plan,” he said.


___


Associated Press Social Media Editor Eric Carvin contributed to this report.


___


Online:


Tax Policy Center ACA penalty calculator: http://tinyurl.com/mrppjoe


TurboTax Exemption Check: http://bit.ly/1xu9hDl





No health insurance? Penalties to rise in 2015

Large explosion targets Yemeni Shiite rebels



SANAA, Yemen (AP) — Witnesses say a strong explosion has struck a gathering of Shiite rebels in the central Yemeni city of Ibb.


It was not immediately clear how many people were killed or wounded in the explosion at a cultural center where the rebels, known as the Houthis, were preparing for celebrations of the prophet Muhammad’s birthday this weekend.


No group claimed responsibility for the apparent attack, but Yemen’s powerful local al-Qaida affiliate has targeted the rebels in the past.


The Houthis seized large areas of Yemen, including the capital Sanaa, earlier this year as part of a protracted power struggle with President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi. Their critics view them as a proxy for Shiite Iran that wants to dominate the country, charges the rebels deny.





Large explosion targets Yemeni Shiite rebels

Low-risk 'worm' removed at hacked South Korea nuclear operator



By Meeyoung Cho


SEOUL (Reuters) – South Korean authorities have found evidence that a low-risk computer “worm” had been removed from devices connected to some nuclear plant control systems, but no harmful virus was found in reactor controls threatened by a hacker.


Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power Co Ltd said it would beef up cyber security by hiring more IT security experts and forming an oversight committee, as it came in for fresh criticism from lawmakers following recent hacks against its headquarters.


The nuclear operator, part of state-run utility Korea Electric Power Corp, said earlier this month that non-critical data had been stolen from its systems, while a hacker threatened in Twitter messages to close three reactors.


The control systems of the two complexes housing those reactors had not been exposed to any malignant virus, Seoul’s energy ministry and nuclear watchdog said in a joint statement on Tuesday, adding the systems were inaccessible from external networks.


Energy Minister Yoon Sang-jick told a parliamentary session that evidence of the presence and removal of a “worm” – which the ministry said was probably inadvertently introduced by workers using unauthorised USB devices – was unrelated to the recent hacking incidents, drawing scepticism from some lawmakers.


“I doubt control systems are perfectly safe as said,” Lee Jung-hyun, a lawmaker in the ruling Saenuri party, told the committee hearing.


Worries about nuclear safety in South Korea, which relies on nuclear reactors for a third of its power and is the world’s fifth-largest nuclear power user, have mounted since the 2011 Fukushima disaster in Japan and a domestic scandal in 2012 over the supply of reactor parts with fake security certificates.


“We will prepare fundamental improvement measures by enhancing nuclear power’s safe operation and hiking information security systems to the highest level following this cyber attack case,” Korea Hydro and Nuclear Power said in a statement.


Seoul prosecutors have not ruled out possible involvement of North Korea in the cyber attack on the nuclear operator, which Pyongyang has denied.


Korea Hydro and Nuclear Power President and CEO Cho Seok told the hearing that all control systems of the country’s 23 nuclear reactors were safe against malignant codes. On Sunday, he said that cyber attacks on non-critical operations at the company’s headquarters were continuing, although he did not elaborate for security reasons.


The nuclear plant operator said on Tuesday it was increasing the number of staff devoted to cyber security from 53 to around 70, and would set up a committee of internal and external experts to oversee security.


Chun Soon-ok of the opposition New Politics Alliance for Democracy party said: “The government’s nuclear power policies have lost people’s trust and whatever broke out only makes people concerned more.”


(Editing by Tony Munroe and Alex Richardson)





Low-risk 'worm' removed at hacked South Korea nuclear operator

Gambian president 'returns home' after failed coup



Gambian President Yahya Jammeh returned from abroad overnight after a failed coup by disaffected soldiers while he was abroad, a military source said Wednesday.


Jammeh, who had been on a private visit to Dubai, went directly to the presidential palace in the capital Banjul where he was shown the bodies of the attackers killed during the attempted coup, the source told AFP from Bissau.





Gambian president 'returns home' after failed coup

Praet - Weaker oil prices may call for more ECB action: paper



FRANKFURT (Reuters) – The European Central Bank’s chief economist said weaker oil prices could unhinge inflation expectations and that the ECB may need to launch quantitative easing (QE) to keep prices stable.


Peter Praet told Boersen-Zeitung there was a risk that ECB measures including cutting rates to record lows, offering banks cheap long-term loans and buying secured private debt, might not be enough – especially against a backdrop of weaker oil prices.


Praet said the plunge in oil prices could mean euro zone inflation is negative during “a substantial part of 2015″ and that price competition resulting from weaker oil prices could contribute to “the de-anchoring of inflation expectations”.


Were ECB interest rates not already near zero, “there would have been a unanimous decision to cut rates”.


“If my assessment is that there is a need for further accommodation, and if I were willing to cut rates if that had been possible, then I should not be paralysed by the fact that the only option is to buy sovereign bonds,” Praet said.


“Unfortunately” sovereign bonds were the only securities with significant market volume, he said, adding that the corporate bond market was too small and bank bond purchases could raise concerns as the ECB is also the bank supervisor.


There has been substantial opposition to large-scale purchases of sovereign bonds, especially from Germany, which fears such a step would ease pressure on governments to reform and force it to stand in for risks accumulated elsewhere.


Praet said there had not been a decision on how to deal with the issue of risk-sharing should the Governing Council decide to launch sovereign QE, or bond purchases with new money, which it could do as early as at its next policy meeting on Jan. 22.


He said one option would be to buy according to the outstanding debt of a country, but this would lead to a higher degree of risk-sharing. Another option would be purchases without loss-sharing in the event of default.


Finally, the ECB could minimise risks by buying only top-rated bonds, but here much bigger volumes would be needed to have the desired impact on inflation, Praet said.


Euro zone inflation stands at 0.3 percent and ECB staff expect it to reach 0.7 percent next year. But those projections were made before this year’s huge drop in oil prices, which fell to 5-1/2 year lows on Tuesday.


“With the recent oil prices, inflation would be even lower, even substantially lower than expected so far. This is especially true for 2015 — when the effect would amount to 0.3 to 0.4 percentage points, which could mean negative inflation during a substantial part of 2015,” Praet said.


“Some might say we should ‘look through’ it again, as we always did in the past.


“Others might say — and I personally lean towards that argument — that in an environment in which headline inflation might become negative and in which inflation expectations are extremely fragile we cannot simply ‘look through’.”


(Reporting by Eva Taylor; Editing by Catherine Evans)





Praet - Weaker oil prices may call for more ECB action: paper

AirAsia victim with life jacket raises new questions about plane's last moments



By Fergus Jensen and Gayatri Suroyo


PANGKALAN BUN/SURABAYA, Indonesia (Reuters) – A body recovered on Wednesday from the crashed AirAsia plane was wearing a life jacket, an Indonesian search and rescue official said, raising new questions about how the disaster unfolded.


Rescuers believe they have found the plane on the ocean floor off Borneo, after sonar detected a large, dark object beneath waters near where debris and bodies were found on the surface.


Ships and planes had been scouring the Java Sea for Flight QZ8501 since Sunday, when it lost contact during bad weather about 40 minutes into its flight from the Indonesian city of Surabaya to Singapore.


Seven bodies have been recovered from the sea, some fully clothed, which could indicate the Airbus A320-200 was intact when it hit the water. That would support a theory that it suffered an aerodynamic stall.


The fact that one person put on a life jacket suggests those on board had time before the aircraft hit the water, or before it sank.


And yet the pilots did not issue a distress signal. The plane disappeared after it asked for permission to fly higher to avoid bad weather.


“This morning, we recovered a total of four bodies and one of them was wearing a life jacket,” Tatang Zaenudin, an official with the search and rescue agency, told Reuters.


He declined to speculate on what the find might mean.


A pilot who works for a Gulf carrier said the life jacket indicated the cause of the crash was not “catastrophic failure”. Instead, the plane could have stalled and then come down, possibly because its instruments iced up and gave the pilots inaccurate readings.


“There was time. It means the thing didn’t just fall out of the sky,” said the pilot, who declined to be identified.


He said it could take a minute for a plane to come down from 30,000 feet and the pilots could have experienced “tunnel vision … too overloaded” to send a distress call.


“The first train of thought when you get into a situation like that is to fly the aircraft.”


Most of those on board were Indonesians. No survivors have been found.


Hernanto, head of the search and rescue agency in Surabaya, said rescuers believed they had found the plane on the sea bed with a sonar scan in water 30-50 metres (100-165 feet) deep. The black box flight data and cockpit voice recorder has yet to be found.


Authorities in Surabaya were making preparations to receive and identify bodies, including arranging 130 ambulances to take victims to a police hospital and collecting DNA from relatives.


“We are praying it is the plane so the evacuation can be done quickly,” Hernanto said.


Strong wind and waves hampered the search and with visibility at less than a kilometre (half a mile), the air operation was called off in the afternoon.


“We are all standing by,” Dwi Putranto, heading the air force search effort in Pangalan Bun on Borneo, told Reuters.


“If we want to evacuate bodies from the water, it’s too difficult. The waves are huge and it’s raining.”


Indonesian President Joko Widodo said his priority was retrieving the bodies.


Relatives, many of whom collapsed in grief when they saw the first grim television pictures confirming their fears on Tuesday, held prayers at a crisis centre at Surabaya airport.


AirAsia Chief Executive Tony Fernandes has described the crash as his “worst nightmare”.


EXPERIENCED PILOT


The plane was travelling at 32,000 feet (9,753 metres) and had asked to fly at 38,000 feet. When air traffic controllers granted permission for a rise to 34,000 feet a few minutes later, they received no response.


Online discussion among pilots has centred on unconfirmed secondary radar data from Malaysia that suggested the aircraft was climbing at a speed of 353 knots, about 100 knots too slow, and that it might have stalled.


Investigators are focusing initially on whether the crew took too long to request permission to climb, or could have ascended on their own initiative earlier, said a source close to the inquiry, adding that poor weather could have played a part as well.


The Indonesian captain, a former air force fighter pilot, had 6,100 flying hours under his belt and the plane last underwent maintenance in mid-November, said the airline, which is 49 percent owned by Malaysia-based budget carrier AirAsia .


Three airline disasters involving Malaysian-affiliated carriers in less than a year have dented confidence in the country’s aviation industry and spooked travellers.


Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 went missing in March on a trip from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 passengers and crew and has not been found. On July 17, the same airline’s Flight MH17 was shot down over Ukraine, killing all 298 people on board.


On board Flight QZ8501 were 155 Indonesians, three South Koreans, and one person each from Singapore, Malaysia and Britain. The co-pilot was French.


The AirAsia group, including affiliates in Thailand, the Philippines and India, had not suffered a crash since its Malaysian budget operations began in 2002.


(Additional reporting by Cindy Silviana, Charlotte Greenfield and Michael Taylor in JAKARTA/SURABAYA/PANGKALAN BUN, Jane Wardell in SYDNEY and Anshuman Daga in SINGAPORE; Writing by Mark Bendeich and Robert Birsel; Editing by Nick Macfie)





AirAsia victim with life jacket raises new questions about plane's last moments

Paltrow: Women can have it all



Gwyneth Paltrow has said women need to realise it is possible to be strong and independent, and still be feminine and sexy at the same time.


The Oscar-winning actress and mother – who has become an entrepreneur and businesswoman through her lifestyle website Goop – told Harper’s Bazaar UK magazine that she believes women can have it all.


Gwyneth said: “I think we are a generation of women who are different in a lot of respects, and some of us want to be ambitious, and for it not to be a dirty word.


“We want to be feminine and soft, we want to be maternal, we want to be sexual, we want to be explorers – and we can be a combination of all of these archetypes. You can be powerful, but you can also be vulnerable…


“[I have] learnt the power of kindness and the importance of non-judgmental ways of looking at others.”


The 42-year-old star – who came under fire for her choice of words when she announced on her website in early 2014 that she and husband Chris Martin were “consciously uncoupling” – also said women need to be more supportive of one another.


Gwyneth said: “Women really need to examine why they’re so vitriolic to other women; why they want to twist words, why they want to read about someone else in a negative light and why that feels good to them… But I also know a huge tribe of women who are loving and supportive of other women, in ways that are completely transformative.


The star admitted she has thought about whether she was right to split from the Coldplay frontman after 10 years of marriage, but said they are now well and truly in the friend zone.


Gwyneth said: “We’ve made a lot of mistakes, and we’ve had good days and bad days, but, I have to say, I’m proud of us for working through so much stuff together – and not blaming and shaming.


“Of course, there are times when I think it would have been better if we had stayed married, which is always what your children want. But we have been able to solidify this friendship, so that we’re really close.”


The Iron Man star, who lived in London with Chris for several years, also admitted how much she is enjoying starting a new life back in Los Angeles with her two children Apple and Moses.


She revealed: “There’s a deep comfort about it because it’s so familiar. The other day I was lying on the grass and the kids were playing and I was looking at the blue sky and the palm trees – and there was something about the weather and the smell and I was, like, eight years old again. I had such a strong memory of being a kid here – it’s a really nice place to be a little kid, and it’s great to watch my children have that experience.”


The full interview appears in the February issue of Harper’s Bazaar UK, on sale January 2, 2015 and online at www.harpersbazaar.co.uk.





Paltrow: Women can have it all

Spotify's Top 10 most viral tracks



The following list represents the most viral tracks on Spotify, based on the number of people who shared it divided by the number who listened to it, from Monday, Dec. 22, to Sunday, Dec. 28, via Facebook, Tumblr, Twitter and Spotify.


UNITED STATES


1. Joe Cocker, “With A Little Help From My Friends” (A&M Records)


2. Joe Cocker, “You Are So Beautiful” (A&M Records)


3. Joe Cocker, “Feelin’ Alright” (A&M Records)


4. The Weeknd, “Earned It (Fifty Shades Of Grey) – From The” Fifty Shades Of Grey” Soundtrack” (Republic Records)


5. Joe Cocker, “You Can Leave Your Hat On” (Parlophone Records Ltd.)


6. Madonna, “B—- I’m Madonna” (Interscope Records)


7. Mat Kearney, “One Black Sheep” (Republic Records)


8. Joe Cocker, “Up Where We Belong” (Parlophone Records Ltd.)


9. Bebe Rexha, “I’m Gonna Show You Crazy” (Warner Bros. Records)


10. Modest Mouse, “Lampshades On Fire” (Epic Records)


UNITED KINGDOM


1. Joe Cocker, “With A Little Help From My Friends” (A&M Records)


2. Joe Cocker, “You Are So Beautiful” (Parlophone Records Ltd.)


3. Mark Ronson, “Daffodils” (RCA Records)


4. Joe Cocker, “Unchain My Heart” (Parlophone Records Ltd.)


5. Madonna, “Ghosttown” (Interscope Records)


6. Wealdstone Raider, “Got No Fans” (Wealdstone Records)


7. Joe Cocker, “Up Where We Belong” (Parlophone Records Ltd.)


8. Lo-Fang, “You’re the One That I Want” (4AD)


9. Joe Cocker, “You Can Leave Your Hat On” (Parlophone Records Ltd.)


10. The Weeknd, “Earned It (Fifty Shades Of Grey) – Fifty Shades of Grey / Soundtrack” (Republic Records)


GLOBAL


1. Joe Cocker, “With A Little Help From My Friends” (A&M Records)


2. Joe Cocker, “You Are So Beautiful” (Parlophone Records Ltd.)


3. The Weeknd, “Earned It (Fifty Shades Of Grey) – From The” Fifty Shades Of Grey” Soundtrack” (Republic Records)


4. Joe Cocker, “You Can Leave Your Hat On” (Parlophone Records Ltd.)


5. Madonna, “B—- I’m Madonna” (Interscope Records)


6. Madonna, “Devil Pray” (Interscope Records)


7. Madonna, “Ghosttown” (Interscope Records)


8. Joe Cocker, “Unchain My Heart” (Parlophone Records Ltd.)


9. Joe Cocker, “Up Where We Belong” (Parlophone Records Ltd.)


10. Joe Cocker, “Feelin’ Right” (A&M Records)





Spotify's Top 10 most viral tracks