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How Did Walmart Get Cleaner Stores and Higher Sales?

BENTONVILLE, Ark. — A couple of years ago, Walmart, which once built its entire branding around a big yellow smiley face, was creating more than its share of frowns.

Shoppers were fed up. They complained of dirty bathrooms, empty shelves, endless checkout lines and impossible-to-find employees. Only 16 percent of stores were meeting the company’s customer service goals.

The dissatisfaction showed up where it counts. Sales at stores open at least a year fell for five straight quarters; the company’s revenue fell for the first time in Walmart’s 45-year run as a public company in 2015 (currency fluctuations were a big factor, too).

To fix it, executives came up with what, for Walmart, counted as a revolutionary idea. This is, after all, a company famous for squeezing pennies so successfully that labor groups accuse it of depressing wages across the American economy. As an efficient, multinational selling machine, the company had a reputation for treating employee pay as a cost to be minimized.

But in early 2015, Walmart announced it would actually pay its workers more.

That set in motion the biggest test imaginable of a basic argument that has consumed ivory-tower economists, union-hall organizers and corporate executives for years on end: What if paying workers more, training them better and offering better opportunities for advancement can actually make a company more profitable, rather than less?

It is an idea that flies in the face of the prevailing ethos on Wall Street and in many executive suites the last few decades. But there is sound economic theory behind the idea. “Efficiency wages” is the term that economists — who excel at giving complex names to obvious ideas — use for the notion that employers who pay workers more than the going rate will get more loyal, harder-working, more productive employees in return.

Walmart’s experiment holds some surprising lessons for the American economy as a whole. Productivity gains have been slow for years; could fatter paychecks reverse that? Demand for goods and services has remained stubbornly low ever since the 2008 economic crisis. If companies paid people more, would it bring out more shoppers — benefiting workers and shareholders alike?

Deep in a warren of windowless offices here, executives in early 2015 sketched out a plan to spend more money on increased wages and training, and offer more predictable scheduling. They refer to this plan as “the investments.”

The results are promising. By early 2016, the proportion of stores hitting their targeted customer-service ratings had rebounded to 75 percent. Sales are rising again.

That said, the immediate impact on earnings and the company’s stock price have been less rosy.

The question for Walmart is ultimately whether that short-run hit makes the company a stronger competitor in the long run. Will the investments turn out to be the beginning of a change in how Walmart and other giant companies think about their workers, or just a one-off experiment to be reversed when the next recession rolls around?

The future health of the United States economy, and the well-being of its workers, may well depend on the answer.

Pressure From Investors

On the morning of Feb. 19, 2015, Walmart’s 1.2 million employees across the United States gathered — many in front of their stores’ vast walls of televisions for sale — to watch a video feed by their chief executive. Doug McMillon, wearing a sweater and sitting in the office once occupied by the company founder Sam Walton, more or less acknowledged that Walmart had made a mistake. It had gone too far in trying to cut payroll costs to the bone.

“Sometimes we don’t get it all right,” Mr. McMillon said in the video. “Sometimes we make policy changes or other decisions and they don’t result in what we thought they were going to. And when we don’t get it right, we adjust.”

What most store employees probably didn’t know was that Mr. McMillon and his executive team, who had been promoted into their jobs a year earlier, were under extraordinary pressure from investors. They needed to reverse a slide in business and fight off threats in all directions — dollar discounters on the low end, Amazon online, direct competitors like Target and countless rivals specializing in one slice of Walmart’s business, from grocery chains to home-improvement warehouses.

People were shopping more — at Walmart’s rivals.

The company offers its millions of shoppers a simple way to make their dissatisfaction known. On the back of sales receipts is a message, “Tell us about your visit today,” along with instructions to log on to a website and answer questions about the store: Was it clean? Were they able to get what they came for quickly? Were employees friendly?

In early 2015, the answers that poured into Walmart’s global headquarters were, in a word, awful. The people paid to analyze the company tended to agree, too. A report by analysts at Wolfe Research in 2014 included photographs from a visit to Walmart of a sad-looking display of nearly empty bins of oranges and lemons and disorganized shelves of crackers.

“Walmart U.S.’s relentless focus on costs does seem to have taken some toll on in-store conditions and stock levels,” they wrote. The analysts wryly added: “If an item is not on the shelf, you cannot sell it.”

The company had been busy raising profits by cutting labor costs. The number of employees in the United States fell by 7 percent from early 2008 to early 2013, for example, a span in which the square footage of stores rose 13 percent.

Some of that reflects technological advances, like self-checkout kiosks. But when Mr. McMillon and a new team came in to reverse the slide starting in early 2014, they diagnosed the problem as having taken the cost-cutting logic too far.

From store managers nationwide, they heard that years of cost-cutting meant Walmart had become viewed as a last-ditch option for employment — not the place that ambitious people might want to work. They were under such pressure to keep labor costs low that the employees they hired showed little loyalty or career-building devotion to their jobs.

“We realized quickly that wages are only one part of it, that what also matters are the schedules we give people, the hours that they work, the training we give them, the opportunities you provide them,” said Judith McKenna, who became chief operating officer in late 2014, in a recent interview. “What you’ve got to do is not just fix one part, but get all of these things moving together.”

That is how Walmart decided to build 200 training centers to offer a clearer path for hourly employees who want to get on the higher-paying management track. And it said it would raise its hourly pay to a minimum of $10 for workers who complete a training course and raise department manager pay to $15 an hour, from $12. It said it would offer more flexible and predictable schedules to hourly workers.

The news from Bentonville made headlines worldwide. The federal minimum wage had been $7.25 since 2009, and the labor market had awarded meager pay gains for people at the lower end of the spectrum for decade, facts that helped increase Walmart’s bottom line. Now, the United States’ largest private employer — Walmart has about 2.3 million workers around the world — was signaling it was about to gingerly try a different approach, putting $2.7 billion where its mouth was.

Walmart says its average pay for a full-time nonmanagerial employee is now $13.69 an hour, up 16 percent since early 2014. In the same span, consumer prices have risen 2.1 percent.

Back to the Classroom

On a Thursday morning in late summer, at a Walmart Supercenter No. 359 in Fayetteville, Walmart trainees followed instructors around to learn what this particular store was doing right, and wrong, on this particular day. Teresa Rasberry praised a display of University of Arkansas tailgating equipment — coolers, grills and folding chairs — complemented by a fluttering effect created by putting electric fans beneath overhead banners for Razorbacks football.

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Teresa Rasberry, an instructor, teaches Walmart employees how to make attractive displays, like lining up bottles so they make vertical stripes of color. CreditMelissa Lukenbaugh for The New York Times

“See how it pulls the eye?” she asked the trainees. “Step back and think about how the customer sees it.”

Not so good was an end display of Mr. Clean, in which the various colors of the cleaning solution were jumbled together. Lining up the bottles so they make vertical stripes of color pulls more buyers in, she said.

“It may sound silly,” Ms. Rasberry said, “but it works! I’ve tested it myself!”

Back in a classroom, Walmart department managers discussed why a $15.86 bottle of Clairol hair coloring might be a bad fit for a store located in a place with an $80,000 average income. Women in that income bracket are more likely to get their hair colored at a salon, an instructor, Amanda Forslund, explained.

This is one of the first of Walmart’s planned 200 training academies. New department managers will come in for two weeks of training covering general retail principles (customer service, inventory management) as well as specialized training for their specific area (the bakery or electronics, for example).

Walmart’s pay increases got most of the attention. But the new training and prospect of better career paths for hourly staff members could be more significant in the long term.

It’s not that the retail industry doesn’t offer potential paths to good incomes. Starting pay for an assistant store manager at Walmart is $48,500, and the manager of one of its large stores can make comfortably above $100,000.

The problem — described by Walmart managers and people outside the company who study labor markets — is that there is no clear path for an entry-level worker to get there. Much training is impromptu, and chains have tended to view their hourly workers as interchangeable cogs rather than resources worth investing in.

That reputation has been particularly strong at Walmart.

“I didn’t used to think this would be something I would want to do, to work at Walmart,” said Garrett Watts, a 22-year-old newly promoted customer service manager at a store in Fayetteville. “There’s a stigma with it. It used to be, if you worked at a Walmart, it was the equivalent of a fast-food restaurant.”

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Garrett Watts runs customer services for a Walmart in Fayettville, Ark. He was hired at $9 an hour and now makes $13. He is setting his sights on an assistant store manager job. CreditMelissa Lukenbaugh for The New York Times

He had gone to college for two years, suspended his education and was working as a desk clerk at a hotel when he switched to Walmart this year, lured not by the starting wage but by what he had heard from a friend about the potential to rise within a giant company. He was soon promoted to department manager and runs customer services for the store. He was hired at $9 an hour and now makes $13.

“I wanted something that wasn’t a stopgap, but could be a real career,” Mr. Watts said. He is starting to set his sights on one of those $48,000-a-year assistant store manager jobs.

‘Step in the Right Direction’

Walmart’s announcement of what it refers to as “the investments,” made during the all-staff videoconference in 2015, became something of a Rorschach test. To macroeconomists, it suggested that a falling unemployment rate was finally creating the response that theory suggests it should: employers raising wages to attract the workers they need.

To labor activists, it was a sign that political campaigns to raise the minimum wage were paying off. To Wall Street analysts, it was the company owning up to the weaknesses long apparent in customer surveys and sales numbers.

And in the company’s own framing, it was about doing the right thing. “It’s clear to me that one of the highest priorities today must be an investment in you, our associates,” Mr. McMillon said in the video.

It was all of these things, Ms. McKenna acknowledged.

The improving economy made it harder for Walmart to get good workers without paying more. Political momentum toward a higher minimum wage meant that entry-level pay would soon be rising in many places anyway. And executives really had concluded that customer service woes and slumping sales were because of underinvestment in employees.

To some critics, though, it still amounted to a half-measure, and one framed to maximize public attention. “In our minds this is certainly a step in the right direction, but it’s typical Walmart in that it’s minimal and there’s a lot of spin on top of what’s really happening,” said Daniel Schlademan, a founder of the labor group Our Walmart, which wants the company to have a starting wage of $15 an hour.

In particular, new hires typically do not receive the $10 minimum wage until they finish a training program that is supposed to take six months but frequently stretches longer. And a promised increase in the predictability and flexibility of hourly workers’ schedules is being tested in only 650 smaller “neighborhood market” stores. It has not been rolled out to the full 4,500 Walmarts.

“The economic reality is that they put a great deal of pressure on managers to keep labor costs and hours down,” Mr. Schlademan said.

And the actions fall well short of what Zeynep Ton, an associate professor of operations at the Sloan School of Business at M.I.T., calls a “good jobs strategy,” in which a retailer builds its entire operating philosophy around better-compensated staff members who are empowered to make decisions. Companies like Costco and the grocer Wegman’s have a base pay closer to that of what the retail activists seek and are successful by many measures. (Costco pays entry-level workers at least $13 an hour, with hourly pay reaching up to $22.50).

But while Walmart’s changes aren’t as extensive as advocates would prefer, the company has shifted, in relative terms, up the industry’s pay scale. In early 2014, Walmart’s self-reported average full-time pay was 3.7 percent higher than the average hourly earnings for nonmanagerial workers at general merchandise stores calculated by the Labor Department. Now, it is 13.7 percent higher.

“It’s about being competitive in the market and making sure the talent pool of applicants was the right talent pool,” Ms. McKenna said.

That sounds an awful lot like a reference to the concept of an “efficiency wage.”

Above the Market Rate

The idea is that, sometimes, it is in an employer’s best interest to pay more than necessary to get a worker into a job. The 18th-century economic thinker Adam Smith described the need to pay a goldsmith particularly well to dissuade him from stealing from you. More recently, economists (including Janet L. Yellen, the Federal Reserve chairwoman, who worked on these topics as an academic economist in the 1980s) have found evidence that people are more productive when they are paid above the market rate.

An employee making more than the market rate, after all, is likely to work harder and show greater loyalty. Workers who see opportunities to get promoted have an incentive not to mess up, compared with people who feel they are in a dead-end job. A person has more incentive to work hard, even when the boss isn’t watching, when the job pays better than what you could make down the street.

Economists have found evidence of this in practice in many real-world settings. Higher pay at New Jersey police departments, for example, led to better rates of clearing cases. At the San Francisco airport, higher pay led to shorter lines for passengers. Among British home care providers, higher pay meant less oversight was needed.

What is interesting about this is that, if you look at what’s ailing the broader United States economy, it looks a lot like what you would expect if employers were, en masse, failing to understand the possibility of efficiency wages.

Employers have succeeded at holding down labor costs. The “labor share” of national income — the portion of the national economic pie that goes to workers’ pay, as opposed to corporate profits and elsewhere — has fallen. And average pay for nonmanagerial workers has grown more slowly than the overall economy.

This has coincided with disappointing results for the economy. Worker productivity has been rising slowly for the last decade, and prime working-age Americans are staying out of the work force in droves. This implies that plenty of people don’t see jobs out there that offer sufficient pay or opportunity to make the jobs worth doing.

Individually, employers may think they are making rational decisions to pay people as little as possible. But that may be collectively shortsighted, if the unintended result is less demand for the goods and services they are all trying to sell to these same people.

Just maybe, in other words, employers across the country are pushing down labor costs like Walmart, circa 2014 — and this is one of the major culprits behind disappointing economic results since the start of the 21st century.

“The management philosophy that became popular in the 1980s that led companies to cut pay for low-wage workers, fight unions and contract out work may have been profitable for the companies that practiced it in the short run,” said Alan Krueger, a Princeton economist and leading scholar of labor markets. “But in the long run it has raised inequality, reduced aggregate consumption and hurt overall business profitability.”

Customer Surveys Improve

If you buy that theory — and, to be clear, it is more theory than settled fact — it means that the results of the Walmart experiment matter a great deal. That implies that if large companies were to spend more to pay and train their workers, it could create gains for the economy as a whole. And it would ultimately be better for those same businesses.

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Kimberly Cook is an instructor for employees of Walmart, which plans 200 training academies.CreditMelissa Lukenbaugh for The New York Times

So, 19 months in, what is Walmart finding?

Those customer surveys that were so terrible at the start of 2015 have improved, with “clean, fast, friendly scores” rising for 90 consecutive weeks. Surveys by outside groups, like the investment banker Cowen & Company, point to more satisfied customers as well.

That seems to have done the trick in reversing the sales slump. At stores open at least a year, sales were up 1.6 percent over a year earlier in the most recent quarter. That’s better than it sounds. Overall sales at general merchandise retailers are down 0.4 percent this year compared with last, according to census data.

The profit landscape is less sunny. Operating income for Walmart’s United States stores was down 6 percent in the most recent quarter, reflecting higher labor costs and other new investments. The company’s stock has underperformed the overall United States stock market and an index of major retailers since the program was announced, suggesting investors are not convinced that these investments will pay a lucrative return anytime soon.

Walmart Stock Has Lagged 

The retailer’s share price has underperformed the market since announcing investments in worker pay and training.

Percent change from Feb. 18, 2015
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But at the store level, managers describe a big shift in the kind of workers they can bring in by offering $10 an hour with a solid path to $15 an hour. “We’re attracting a different type of associate,” said Tina Budnaitis, the manager of Walmart No. 5260 in Rogers. “We get more people coming in who want a career instead of a job.”

Senior executives speak in the language you might expect from a manager worried about paying an efficiency wage. “Our associates are an asset,” said Ms. McKenna, the chief operating officer. “You don’t try to have the very lowest cost of an asset. You try to have the right asset. So rather than thinking about the lowest cost, the question is how do you get the best productivity.”

The question for Walmart, and perhaps the economy as a whole, is whether these changes turn out to be one-off, or part of a shifting philosophy of how work and compensation should work in a 21st-century megacorporation.

“Out of the gate, they’ve seen some improvement, but I think that’s because they were doing Retail 101 so poorly,” said Brian Yarbrough, a retail analyst at Edward Jones & Company. “The better question is what happens next year and the following year. The low-hanging fruit has been harvested.”

Ms. McKenna declined to be specific about what might come next. And of course in a volatile corporate world, an unexpected recession or management change, or rise of a new competitor, could upend any plans. But she suggests that the company’s changes should not be viewed as a one-time event.

“This is a journey,” she said.

In the short term, the Walmart experiment shows pretty clearly that paying people better improves both the work force and the shoppers’ experience, but not profitability, at least not yet.

Still, here is one other nugget the company has found. The extra wages it is paying its workers don’t all go out the door on payday, executives said. Spending at the stores by employees has risen — offering a possible metaphor for what those efficiency-wage economists argue might happen across the economy, if wages were to climb.

20 Companies That Are Going to Be Huge (and Are Hiring Now)

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20 Growing Companies That Are Hiring Now

20 Companies That Are Going to Be Huge (and Are Hiring Now)

Trump ‘amazingly accessible’

donald trump

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President-elect Donald Trump is already impressing lawmakers on Capitol Hill by making sure he and his aides are easy to reach.
According to Tennessee Republican Sen. Bob Corker, Trump and his team are signaling that the incoming administration is one that will want to make decisions fast. And that requires that the president-elect be able to rapidly get information from involved parties with limited bureaucratic hold ups.
For now, according to Corker, Trump is facilitating that easy transfer of information by continuing to answer his personal cell phone.
Corker told a crowd gathered at a recent breakfast sponsored by the Christian Science Monitor: “The president (elect), as you know, still answers his cell phone number. It’s an amazingly accessible group of people. It’s really beyond belief. Sunday, I needed to talk to the president about something. I called him on his cellphone, he answered and we talked. And by the way, my phone says no caller ID, so I’m not saying it has anything to do with me. Nobody knows who it is that’s calling when I’m calling.”
If Trump’s penchant for accessibility follows him to the Oval Office, it’ll be a departure from the closed door governing style of the Obama administration. Lawmakers, along with members of the military and intelligence communities, often complained of the difficulty of communicating with key members of the Obama administration throughout the current president’s eight-year tenure.
It is worth noting, however, that Trump probably won’t be picking up his personal cell phone much longer. As Hillary Clinton learned, using personal communications devices for government communication isn’t a very good idea.
Still, if Trump manages to govern with an open door policy, his administration will go down as one of the most productive in history.

Township Electoral Board removes clerk candidate from ballot for April election

BREAKING: Township Electoral Board removes clerk candidate from ballot for April election

Erin Redmond, Assistant Editor
8:02 pm CST January 19, 2017

After three separate hearings, the Homer Township Officers Electoral Board has made a decision: Marcela Cuevas, a candidate for clerk in the upcoming April 4, 2017 Consolidated Election, is off the ballot.

The board met for the third time Thursday, Jan. 19 to announce its decision to sustain the objection filed by Renea Wojnowski, a resident of Lockport and Homer Township, that stated Cuevas was not eligible to run for the office of Township clerk at the time she filed her candidacy paperwork. Township Supervisor Pam Meyers and Trustee John Kruczek voted to sustain the objection (Remove Cuevas from the Ballot), while Trustee Vicki Bozen dissented (Keeping Cuevas on the Ballot).

“Any time you have a … decision on a political question there’s always two sides: one that wins and one loses,” Homer Township Attorney Jerry Sramek said. “We are the initial form for the decision of this, so I think it’s very important that part of our job is to clearly articulate the reasons for the decision being made, so that if this is not the final form for review, there’s an adequate basis of understanding for what we did and why we did it.”

While the board and both parties were in agreement that Cuevas was a resident of Homer Township for a year when she filed her candidacy paperwork Dec. 16, 2016,  — as it was determined at the previous meeting she moved into the Township Dec. 17, 2015 — Meyers and Kruczek were guided by the Schumann v. Fleming decision, which states a “qualified” candidate must be a resident for a year.

The written decision stated that the board believed Cuevas was not a “qualified” candidate when she was receiving petitions to run for office or when she signed her Statement of Candidacy Nov. 23, 2016.

“The candidate swears at the time of signing that he or she is qualified — not that he or she will be qualified by the time the Statement of Candidacy is filed,” Sramek read from the written decision. “ … Marcela Lynn Cuevas is not eligible for the candidacy of Homer Township clerk in the Consolidated Election of April 4, 2017, and, therefore, her name should not appear on the ballot for said office for said election.”

Cuevas was running with the Homer Township Independent Party against the winner of the Republican primary, which will be held Feb. 28. That race includes current Clerk Linsey Sowa.

Cuevas’ attorney, Thomas Condon, filed a motion to strike the objection at the Jan. 11 public hearing, but it was unanimously denied by the board, prompting a trial. Evidence provided by Wojnowski in the form of a mortgage document provided indisputable evidence that Cuevas was a resident as of Dec. 17, 2015. What was up for debate, however, was the timeframe in which the residency requirement is fulfilled.

Because 2016 was a leap year, Cuevas argued that the file date — Dec. 16, 2016 — fulfilled the one-year residency requirement.

Bozen wrote in dissent that, based on the evidence, she did not believe Cuevas moved to Homer Township with the sole purpose of running for office, citing the $35,000 down payment she made on her house in July 2015.

“… Had the candidate signed her Statement of Candidacy and petitions on Dec. 16, 2016, there would not be an issue, unlike the Schumann case where the candidate moved into the Township three months before filing for elected office,” Bozen’s dissent stated.

Condon appeared to express disdain that written statements were prepared ahead of time and that no public deliberation was made during the meeting. He asked Sramek to ensure that no deliberation was made outside of the meeting, to which the Township attorney assured him he only provided legal counsel.

While the decision was not unanimous, Wojnowski expressed gratitude one was made.

“I am thankful that it’s done today,” the objector said. “I was just really thankful as a citizen of the Township to have the opportunity to participate in these kinds of things and say how you feel and try to do what’s right. I’m just happy that things went the way that they did, and I was able to have my word heard.”

Condon and Cuevas declined to comment after the meeting on if the Homer Township Independent Party would attempt to further appeal the board’s decision.

For Current information See Press Release http://willcountynews.com/2017/01/21/homer-township-board-decision-to-be-appealed-in-will-county-circuit-court/

The Wollman Rink vs. the Congressional Budget Office

The Wollman Rink vs. the Congressional Budget Office

Originally published at Fox News.
The Wollman Rink vs. the Congressional Budget Office
Congressional Republicans are about to be confronted with the first great choice of the Trump era, and it will be interesting to see if they can apply the lessons of the November 8th victory and the country’s desire for real change.
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) is simply incompatible with the Trump era.
President-elect Trump won as an entrepreneurial change agent who would “drain the swamp”, get Washington under control, take charge of the bureaucracies, and get things done in an entrepreneurial, common sense way.
The Congressional Budget Office is the opposite of these commitments.
It is a left-wing, corrupt, bureaucratic defender of big government and liberalism. Its scoring of ObamaCare was not just wrong, it was clearly corrupt. CBO literally brought in the architect of ObamaCare to be the adviser on scoring the very Obamacare legislation that he helped write. The score was a lie. It was so wrong it was totally indefensible. A year later the CBO produced a new score that was so much more expensive that it was clear ObamaCare would have been defeated if it had been the original score.
In the four years during which I was Speaker of the House, CBO was consistently difficult to work with. If we hadn’t fought with them constantly we would never have balanced the budget.
President-elect Trump presents a perfect test case for CBO in one of his best stories, the repairing of the Wollman Rink in Central Park.
This story is told brilliantly in Trump’s bestselling book, The Art of the Deal.
Every citizen should read the chapter on fixing the Wollman Rink.
In 1980 the skating rink stopped making ice.
For six years at a cost of $13 million dollars the city bureaucracy failed to fix it. The very sophisticated, expensive system they installed did not work. You could tell it did not work because there was no ice.
Trump’s penthouse looks out over Central Park. He got tired of looking at the empty skating rink so he began taunting Mayor Koch in the newspapers.
Finally, Mayor Koch responded, saying the city would give Trump $3 million and six months to fix the skating rink.
What tells a lot about Trump and Trumpism was his reaction to Mayor Koch’s challenge.
Trump admits he did not know anything about fixing ice skating rinks. He also knew he had to solve the situation or be ridiculed.
There is a great deal to learn about President-elect Trump from studying his thought process.
He asked himself, ‘Who fixes ice skating rinks?’
He concluded, Canadians – because of their great love of hockey.
He then found the Canadian firm that had built the most ice skating rinks for the NHL.
Everyone recommended the same firm.
Trump called the company and their CEO explained the principles of building ice skating rinks.
The Canadians flew in and were astonished at how dumb the New York City bureaucracy had been.
Within four months, for $2,250,000, the Wollman Rink was fixed. In its first year back, 225,000 people used the rink.
If we are truly moving into the Trump era, we must confront the amazing public policy implications of this story.
An entrepreneurial, problem solving, red tape cutting approach had solved the skating rink for 1/5 the cost in 1/18 the time.
How would the Congressional Budget Office accurately score the Trump approach?
All the current estimates for the wall with Mexico assume traditional bureaucracy with traditional red tape moving at traditional speed (ultra slow).
All the current projections for getting back to the moon and on to Mars are based on NASA red tape, NASA bureaucracy, and a system so badly run we currently put American astronauts on the space station using Russian rockets.
Every reform effort will get a false score from CBO.
It is impossible for the current CBO to come anywhere close to an honest, accurate score of a red tape cutting, entrepreneurially hard charging system.
The current obsolete, inaccurate, and dishonest CBO bureaucracy should be replaced with two bold reforms.
First, a competitive system of bidding should provide three to five scores for every legislative proposal. Over time, the projections should be measured against reality and the worst performers should be dropped while new performers should be added.
Second, all the secret formulas which CBO today refuses to release should be made public.
In the modern information age, it should be possible for anyone to work through the scoring conventions and produce their own estimates.
Recognizing the importance of the Wollman Rink example and insisting on replacing the Congressional Budget Office would be a bold step in the right direction for Congressional Republicans.
Your Friend,
Newt

President Donald Trump’s full inaugural address

In case you missed it: President Donald Trump’s full inaugural address

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President Donald Trump vowed Friday to put America first as he handles his duties in the nation’s highest elected office. Trump’s inspiring speech was derided as “divisive” by some members of the mainstream media. But for Trump supporters, the president’s message represented the dawn of a new era of patriotism.

Here’s the speech:

Chief Justice Roberts, President Carter, President Clinton, President Bush, President Obama, fellow Americans and people of the world, thank you.

We, the citizens of America, are now joined in a great national effort to rebuild our country and restore its promise for all of our people.
Together, we will determine the course of America and the world for many, many years to come. We will face challenges. We will confront hardships. But we will get the job done.
Every four years we gather on these steps to carry out the orderly and peaceful transfer of power.
And we are grateful to President Obama and first lady Michelle Obama for their gracious aid throughout this transition.
They have been magnificent.
Thank you.
Today’s ceremony, however, has a very special meaning because today we are not merely transferring power from one administration to another or from one party to another, but we are transferring power from Washington, D.C., and giving it back to you, the people.
For too long, a small group in our nation’s capital has reaped the rewards of government while the people have bore the cost. Washington flourished, but the people did not share in its wealth. Politicians prospered but the jobs left and the factories closed.
The establishment protected itself, but not the citizens of our country. Their victories have not been your victories. Their triumphs have not been your triumphs. And while they celebrated in our nation’s capital, there was little to celebrate for struggling families all across our land.
That all changes starting right here and right now, because this moment is your moment.
It belongs to you.
It belongs to everyone gathered here today and everyone watching all across America.
This is your day.
This is your celebration.
And this, the United States of America, is your country.
What truly matters is not which party controls our government, but whether our government is controlled by the people.
January 20th, 2017, will be remembered as the day the people became the rulers of this nation again.
The forgotten men and women of our country will be forgotten no longer. Everyone is listening to you now. You came by the tens of millions to become part of a historic movement, the likes of which the world has never seen before.
At the center of this movement is a crucial conviction that a nation exists to serve its citizens. Americans want great schools for their children, safe neighborhoods for their families and good jobs for themselves.
These are just and reasonable demands of righteous people and a righteous public.
But for too many of our citizens, a different reality exists.
Mothers and children trapped in poverty in our inner cities, rusted out factories scattered like tombstones across the landscape of our nation.
An education system flush with cash but which leaves our young and beautiful students deprived of all knowledge.
And the crime and the gangs and the drugs that have stolen too many lives and robbed our country of so much unrealized potential. This American carnage stops right here and stops right now.
We are one nation, and their pain is our pain.
Their dreams are our dreams, and their success will be our success. We share one heart, one home and one glorious destiny.
The oath of office I take today is an oath of allegiance to all Americans.
For many decades we’ve enriched foreign industry at the expense of American industry, subsidized the armies of other countries while allowing for the very sad depletion of our military.
We’ve defended other nations’ borders while refusing to defend our own. And we’ve spent trillions and trillions of dollars overseas while America’s infrastructure has fallen into disrepair and decay.
We’ve made other countries rich while the wealth, strength and confidence of our country has dissipated over the horizon.
One by one, the factories shuttered and left our shores with not even a thought about the millions and millions of American workers that were left behind.
The wealth of our middle class has been ripped from their homes and then redistributed all across the world. But that is the past, and now we are looking only to the future.
We assembled here today are issuing a new decree to be heard in every city, in every foreign capital and in every hall of power. From this day forward, a new vision will govern our land.
From this day forward, it’s going to be only America first, America first. Every decision on trade, on taxes, on immigration, on foreign affairs will be made to benefit American workers and American families. We must protect our borders from the ravages of other countries making our product, stealing our companies and destroying our jobs.
Protection will lead to great prosperity and strength. I will fight for you with every breath in my body, and I will never ever let you down.
America will start winning again, winning like never before.
We will bring back our jobs.
We will bring back our borders.
We will bring back our wealth, and we will bring back our dreams.
We will build new roads and highways and bridges and airports and tunnels and railways all across our wonderful nation.
We will get our people off of welfare and back to work, rebuilding our country with American hands and American labor.
We will follow two simple rules; buy American and hire American.
We will seek friendship and goodwill with the nations of the world, but we do so with the understanding that it is the right of all nations to put their own interests first. We do not seek to impose our way of life on anyone, but rather to let it shine as an example. We will shine for everyone to follow.
We will reinforce old alliances and form new ones and unite the civilized world against radical Islamic terrorism, which we will eradicate from the face of the Earth.
At the bedrock of our politics will be a total allegiance to the United States of America, and through our loyalty to our country, we will rediscover our loyalty to each other. When you open your heart to patriotism, there is no room for prejudice.
The bible tells us how good and pleasant it is when God’s people live together in unity. We must speak our minds openly, debate our disagreements honestly, but always pursue solidarity. When America is united, America is totally unstoppable.
There should be no fear. We are protected and we will always be protected. We will be protected by the great men and women of our military and law enforcement. And most importantly, we will be protected by God.
Finally, we must think big and dream even bigger. In America, we understand that a nation is only living as long as it is striving. We will no longer accept politicians who are all talk and no action, constantly complaining, but never doing anything about it.
The time for empty talk is over. Now arrives the hour of action.
Do not allow anyone to tell you that it cannot be done. No challenge can match the heart and fight and spirit of America. We will not fail. Our country will thrive and prosper again.
We stand at the birth of a new millennium, ready to unlock the mysteries of space, to free the earth from the miseries of disease, and to harness the energies, industries and technologies of tomorrow. A new national pride will stir ourselves, lift our sights and heal our divisions.
It’s time to remember that old wisdom our soldiers will never forget, that whether we are black or brown or white, we all bleed the same red blood of patriots.
We all enjoy the same glorious freedoms and we all salute the same great American flag.
And whether a child is born in the urban sprawl of Detroit or the wind-swept plains of Nebraska, they look up at the same night sky, they will their heart with the same dreams, and they are infused with the breath of life by the same almighty creator.
So to all Americans in every city near and far, small and large, from mountain to mountain, from ocean to ocean, hear these words. You will never be ignored again.
Your voice, your hopes, and your dreams will define our American destiny. And your courage and goodness and love will forever guide us along the way.
Together, we will make America strong again. We will make America wealthy again. We will make America proud again. We will make America safe again. And yes, together we will make America great again.
Thank you. God bless you. And God bless America.
Thank you.

God bless America.

Chicago's gang violence catches highway drivers in crossfire

Chicago’s gang violence catches highway drivers in crossfire

 Thu Jan 5, 2017 | 6:02am EST  Reuters

FILE PHOTO – Chanel Crespo attends a vigil for her brother John Ortiz, who was shot and killed while driving on the Eisenhower Expressway, in Chicago, Illinois, U.S., December 6, 2016. REUTERS/Jim Young/File Photo
By Timothy Mclaughlin | CHICAGO

Jonathan Ortiz and other members of his rap group, No Nights Off, stepped onto the stage at Chicago’s House of Blues in mid-September for a concert they hoped would propel their young, promising careers.
Less than two weeks later, the 22-year-old Ortiz, who forebodingly rapped under the stage name “John Doe,” was fatally shot as he drove on an expressway in Chicago. His girlfriend Alexis Garcia also got a bullet lodged in her back.
Ortiz and Garcia were victims of the 38th shooting on Chicago-area expressways in 2016, a record-high number for a city stung by a murder rate not seen in two decades.

“It is overwhelming that this is the reality in Chicago, that you can drive on the expressway now and get shot at,” said Tanue David, a family support specialist with the outreach group Chicago Survivors, who is working with the Ortiz family.
Officials say gang violence is increasingly spilling over onto Chicago’s expressways, with innocent drivers sometimes caught in the crossfire, while the state police force is shrinking.
The Illinois State Police, which has jurisdiction over the expressways, blamed gang warfare for the increased highway shoot-outs in 2016 that pose “an extreme danger to the motoring public.”
Ortiz was shot on Interstate 290, one of five expressways within city limits where shootings took place.
PERSISTENT INCREASE
Ortiz and Garcia were shot on the morning of Sept. 29 while Ortiz drove her SUV not far from his mother’s home.
Chicago police said Ortiz had no criminal record and several family members and friends said he was not affiliated with a gang. He and Garcia met three years ago on the shores of Lake Michigan.
“He was calm, that’s how I knew that God took him fast,” Garcia, who grew up in a suburb of Chicago, said of the moments after Ortiz was shot.
In 2011 and 2012, there were nine shootings on city expressways, according to state police, which had no data prior to that.
That number jumped to 16 in 2013 and 19 in 2014. It nearly doubled the next year to 37 and climbed again in 2016 to 47. Three shootings last year were fatal.
The rise in highway shootings came as Chicago suffered a broader surge in violence that saw 762 people murdered in 2016, a 57 percent increase from 2015, and the highest number since 1996.
The number drew the attention of President-elect Donald Trump, who said that Chicago’s mayor must ask for U.S. government help if the city fails to reduce its murder rate. [nL1N1ES0LX]
Chicago police cite a number of factors, including splintering gang structures and police drawing back from confrontation out of fear of increased scrutiny for their actions.
Chicago police Superintendent Eddie Johnson has vehemently blamed lax regulations for gun repeat offenders. “The people committing these crimes think the consequences for their actions are a joke,” he said last month.
 

Homer Township Board Decision to Be Appealed in Will County Circuit Court

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Jan. 21, 2017
Homer Township Board Decision to Be Appealed in Will County Circuit Court
The Homer Township Independent Party will appeal the Homer Township Electoral Board’s decision to remove Marcela Cuevas as a candidate for Homer Township Clerk on the April 4 Consolidated Election ballot.  The Electoral Board removed Cuevas on Jan. 19 by sustaining an objection filed by township resident Renea Wojnowski.  Supervisor Pam Meyers and Trustee John Kruczek voted to sustain Wojnowski’s objection, while Trustee Vicki Bozen dissented.
“This decision by the Homer Township Electoral Board is the latest example of the dysfunctional political system in Illinois,” said Jim Orban, who is the Homer Township Independent Party candidate for Township Supervisor.  “The idea that our political opponents were sitting in judgement in this case was absurd.  We feel comfortable that once the facts are presented to an impartial party that knows the law, this decision will be overturned.”
Please direct any questions to Jim Orban, Homer Township Independent Party Chairman.  He can be reached at jimorban@yahoo.com or 630-561-1537.

Educational Choice Means Ditching The Department Of Education's Burdensome Regulations

Editors Note: The 10th amendment says “Powers not delegated to the United States (Federal Government ) by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.”
The States should make their own rules for education, and the Federal Government should get out of the Education business. That starts with dissolving the Department of Education.  The States alone have the authority to address education in their State with programs and goals each State determines in the best interest of their people.

Restoring Educational Choice Means Ditching The Department Of Education’s Burdensome Regulations


BY ROBERT HOLLAND December 2016
Obama Visits Powell Elementary School

Getty – Ron Sachs
 IJR Opinion is an opinion platform and any opinions or information put forth by contributors are exclusive to them and do not represent the views of IJR.
For the Feds in the U.S. Education Department, ‘flexibility’ means there’s nothing left to lose.
Flexibility is a quality Olympic gymnasts possess. When federal bureaucrats claim they are being flexible in administering massive programs of aid to elementary and secondary education, spectators would be wise to hold their chants of “USA! USA! USA!”
In the November 28 release of its final regulations for the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) – the successor to the late, unlamented No Child Left Behind – the U.S. Education Department (USED) repeatedly touts the “flexibility” that these new rules give states in setting education standards and testing students. Student assessment being the key to the whole system, USED boasts of “clarifying new flexibilities” for states and localities as they assess their kids’ cognitive and affective domains.
In fairness, when Congress passed ESSA and President Barack Obama signed it into law in December 2015, high-ranking politicos of both parties spouted the same line: states would have flexibility galore. For the past 11 months, Obama’s final-year education secretary, former New York State education commissioner and ardent Common Core fan John B. King Jr., has led his bureaucratic battalions in drafting and fine-tuning the requirements.
Granted, the law itself is rigid in continuing the NCLB mandate for testing all students every year in reading and math in grades 3–8 and once in high school. However, any slack cut by USED bureaucrats carries so many conditions as to constitute “flexibility” of the most rigid sort. To paraphrase a famous Kris Kristofferson-authored song (“Me and Bobby McGee”), flexibility is just another word for nothing left to lose.

Consider the supposed freedom given to up to seven states – just that many, no more – to experiment with “new and innovative tests.” The regulations set up a dizzying array of hoops through which states must jump to receive federal approval for their attempted innovation.
Just two of these are (1) demonstrating in advance how the new system “will meet statutory requirements for the alignment, quality, and fairness of the innovative assessment,” and (2) laying out a detailed plan by which the state will “sustain, or make progress, toward implementation in demographically diverse districts and schools throughout the demonstration period.”
Here is the real doozy: “States are required to ensure their innovative assessments produce results comparable to the statewide assessments and must determine comparability between the statewide assessment and the innovative assessment annually.”
In what genuine scientific experiment are the outcomes known with certainty beforehand? No worries, mate, because if the would-be innovating states are stumped, they can choose among four “methodologies” approved by the feds, or they can even propose their own – if they can prove to Washington, D.C. that their assessments are “equally rigorous” in somehow ensuring compatibility.
Elsewhere in the freshly minted regulations will be found not-so-subtle reminders that Common Core (CC) continues to endure, despite its unpopularity. States must “establish college- and career-ready standards and maintain high expectations when assessing all students against those standards.” That is the CC boilerplate. Furthermore, the federally required tests “must measure higher-order thinking skills, such as reasoning, analysis, complex problem-solving, critical thinking, effective communications, and understanding of challenging content.” That is straight out of progressives’ CC playbook.
Parents who assert their right to refuse to submit their children to intrusive Common Core-style assessments will find no flex-love in Secretary King’s ESSA rules. The feds recognize no parental right to opt out, and they expect states to come up with plans to penalize schools that fall below a test participation rate of 95 percent. King’s hard-nosed enforcement of Common Core as the Empire State’s education chief played no small role in provoking protests resulting in a statewide opt-out rate exceeding 20 percent in the 2014–15 school year.
If President-elect Donald Trump and Betsy DeVos, Trump’s designated secretary of education, are serious about terminating the federalized Common Core and restoring education power to the people, a starting point would be scuttling these ridiculous regulations. The ultimate goal ought to be ending the U.S. Department of Education’s corrosive impact on education by shutting it down altogether.

Another way to fool ‘Big Brother’ with Facial Recognition

Textile pattern to help hide face from camera recognition softwareAdam Harvey is at it again.
Back in 2013, we told you about his line of clothing that helps hide you from aerial drones and other surveillance.
The artist and independent researcher is now developing the Hyperface Project, which prints patterns onto clothing and textiles that render your face illegible to surveillance systems.
The patterns fool facial recognition by presenting “computer vision devices” that overload facial recognition software with patterns that closely resemble facial features like eyes and mouths. This diverts the “attention” of the surveillance programs away from your actual face.

If facial recognition doesn’t scare you yet, consider this: Facebook’s facial recognition software is so good that you can give it a photo of a full baseball stadium, and can “figure out how many people are sitting or standing in a picture, whether they’re smiling or not, if the background is indoors or out, and whether there’s a baseball game under way in the shot,” according to tech website The Next Web.
And researchers from the Shanghai Jiao Tong University in China revealed they had built an artificial intelligence algorithm that can “identify criminals by the curvature of their lip.”
One would think an ugly shirt is a small price to pay to stop computers from following your every move, or from interpreting your behavior as criminal because you have a certain look on your face.
But if that’s not your cup of tea, researchers at Carnegie Mellon University developed a 3D-printed pair of sunglasses that cost exactly 22 cents to make. The sunglasses, according to the study performed by the researchers, fools advanced facial recognition software by altering small bits of color information in a face.
You can also use this low tech way to beat high tech thermal vision-based systems from our colleague Brandon Smith, who has long advocated for development of more innovations to counter the police state we live in.

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