Daily Archives: April 19, 2010

New York Doorman Strike Looms

New Yorkers Brace for Doorman Strike

Can you imagine a place where even the guy that opens your door is in a union? Well this place actually exists. Its called New York City, and its coming to a neighborhood near you.

These people make $40,000.00 a year for opening doors! The people of New York have the upper hand in this issue. When Christmas rolls around, don’t give the doormen a dime. In fact, don’t use them. Carry your own stuff and push your own elevator button. Make them feel like fools for even trying to help you.

It has been nearly two decades since New Yorkers faced their last doorman strike, but as the deadline for a new contract for building workers approached, the questions being posed throughout the city remained largely unchanged on Sunday.

As the possibility of a strike loomed, a doorman on Park Avenue helped with packages on Sunday.

Who will safeguard my apartment as I sleep? Greet my children when they come home from school? Accept deliveries? Clean the hallways? Sort the mail? Operate the elevator? And who, for goodness sake, will let the cleaning lady in?

Residents, co-op boards and building management companies have been busy planning for the sudden complications that could come at 12:01 a.m. Wednesday with the possible departure of the building workers who, among many other things, hold open the city’s doors.

The Realty Advisory Board on Labor Relations has distributed a preparedness manual with recommendations for keeping buildings in operation in case of a strike. “A strike is not pleasant, nor should it be taken lightly,” according to the 45-page document. “During a period of work stoppage, pressures and problems develop which make building management very difficult.”

Throughout the city, security guards have already been alerted to arrive at buildings an hour before the negotiating deadline so they can take over for the first overnight shift in the event of a walkout. Many buildings would then adopt a more restrictive policy, with residents being required to use building keys, display identification to the security guards and pick up visitors or deliveries themselves. Some buildings are planning to take service elevators, storage rooms and garages out of operation if there is a strike.

“The whole operation of the building would basically be shut down and we’d rely on residents to pitch in just to get by,” said Dan Wurtzel, president of Cooper Square Realty, one of the largest residential management companies in the New York. “There’s a tremendous amount of preparation we have to undertake. Then, if it doesn’t happen, we can breathe a sign of relief. If it does happen, then we’re prepared to deal with it.”

Many buildings have also posted sign-up sheets for residents to volunteer to watch the front doors, clean hallways and take out garbage, though the forms in the lobbies of a handful of Upper East Side buildings remained mostly blank on Sunday afternoon.

Mary Ann Rothman, executive director of the Council of New York Cooperatives and Condominiums, has signed up for volunteer work in her own co-op.

“If there is a positive thing to be pulled out of this, it’s that it is an opportunity to get to know your neighbors,” she said, “and to come together to combat a little bit of adversity, because this is not the end of the world, though it may appear that way if the strike goes on.”

Arriving on Park Avenue on Sunday, Robert Neis, a marketing executive, immediately asked his doorman for assistance with the luggage from a family getaway to Shelter Island, N.Y. “It would be a bummer if they strike,” Mr. Neis said. “It’s a lot nicer when they help with the work.”

Harold Gerber, who runs a real estate business and has lived in his co-op on East 75th Street for more than two decades, said he was already worried about security, and grumbled at the prospect of hauling his own trash. “It will affect us tremendously,” he said.

Some doormen were skeptical that contract workers or volunteers would be able to take up their duties. Salvador Gonzalez, a doorman at a building on the Upper East Side, said that as the deadline approached, he has even added a new responsibility to his usual assortment of tasks: giving inquiring residents tips on how to do his job.

Though many residents on Sunday said they believed that a deal would be reached before the deadline, little progress was made during contract negotiations over the weekend, said Matt Nerzig, chief spokesman for Local 32BJ of the Service Employees International Union.

The 30,000 residential doormen, porters, superintendents, elevator operators and handymen now earn an average of $40,500 a year, with benefits raising the total to nearly $70,000, according to the Realty Advisory Board, which represents building owners. The workers are seeking wage increases, while building owners are pushing to reduce benefit costs.

“We’re working hard, we’re talking,” Ms. Rothman said. “There’s a lot of good will on both sides and very different feelings about the current economic situation.”

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Australian Cook Book Calls For “freshly ground black people” In Recipe

More evidence that people don’t value good proofreading anymore: A cookbook published by Penguin Group Australia included a recipe for spelt tagliatelle, and that recipe called for…it’s hard for me to write this…”freshly ground black people.”

It was supposed to say pepper, not people. And now the publishing house has to reprint 7,000 copies of the book “The Pasta Bible.”

According to this Associated Press report, found on the Huffington Post, the head of publishing at Penguin Australia called the typo a “silly mistake.” Which I understand.

What I don’t understand is his arrogance about the whole thing.

“We’re mortified that this has become an issue of any kind and why anyone would be offended, we don’t know,” Bob Sessions told The Sydney Morning Herald. “We’ve said to bookstores that if anyone is small-minded enough to complain about this…silly mistake, we will happily replace (the book) for them.”

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Obama Charging 17,000 A Plate To Speak At Democratic Fundraisers In LA

President Obama is coming to Los Angeles, but the rank and file democrats will not be able to afford to see him in person. It seems that the very people that elected Obama to office can’t afford the price of admission.

Obama’s speaking engagement will include dinner, but the cost for entry is $17,000.00 a person. This prices out the very people that the democrats keep enslaved with welfare and health care.

What this party will feature is the Hollywood elitists and the socialists from Sacramento. Its a VIP event only. So much for being the party of inclusion. It seems to us that Obama and the democrats only want the rich and famous to attend their fund raising events.

After meeting with senior advisors and talks with his special envoy to the Sudan, President Barack Obama will fly to Los Angeles, where he will speak at several fundraising events for Sen. Barbara Boxer and the Democratic National Committee Monday.

A reception will be held at the California Science Center and a fundraising dinner will take place at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.

Due to the president’s visit, several streets around the USC and Exposition Park area will be closed between 5:15 p.m. to 9:15 p.m.

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Arrest in Death of a TV Producer Bruce Beresford-Redman’s Wife Expected in Next 24 Hrs

LOS ANGELES (CBS) ― An attorney for the family of Monica Beresford-Redman, who was murdered in Cancun, Mexico, told KNX 1070 Monday that an arrest in the case is imminent.

Beresford-Redman, who ran a Brazilian restaurant in West Los Angeles, was found dead at Hotel Moon Palace on April 8.

Her husband, former “Survivor” producer Bruce Beresford-Redman, was questioned in her death and ordered not to flee Mexico. He is reportedly in the custody of the U.S. consulate.

Prosecutors in Cancun said they are conducting pathology and DNA tests.

According to Cancun police, the couple were heard fighting the morning of April 5. The next day, Bruce told police that Monica had disappeared on a shopping trip.

Her body was found three days later several hundred feet from the couple’s hotel room.

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Unemployment Hits 15 Percent in San Bernardino County

Unemployment rate goes back up to 15 percent in San Bernardino and Riverside counties

This figure does not include welfare recipients. If welfare recipients were included in these figures the numbers would be more like thirty percent.

The unemployment rate in the Inland Empire has gone back up again.

After the jobless rate decreased in San Bernardino and Riverside counties in February, the two-county rate rose to 15 percent in March, according to statistics provided by the Employment Development Department.

The March rate represents the second time in three months that unemployment has hit 15 percent. San Bernardino and Riverside counties had an unemployment rate of 15 percent in January and dipped slightly to 14.8 percent in February.

Fontana City Manager Ken Hunt said the short-term answer to the question of how to create jobs locally is to get construction moving forward again.

“The Inland Empire’s economy is based on the construction industry, and much of the downturn locally has been created by the bottom falling out of the housing market,” Hunt said in a recent blog on the City of Fontana website. “We are beginning to see some signs of recovery in this area. I am confident that we will continue to see improvement in this area during the next couple of years.”

Statewide, California’s unemployment rate increased to 12.6 percent in March, from 12.5 percent in February.

Nationwide, the unemployment rate remained at 9.7 percent.

In Riverside County, the unemployment rate now stands at 15.1 percent, up from 14.8 percent in February. Currently, 139,100 of the county’s 918,900-person labor force is out of work.

The jobless rate in San Bernardino County was slightly better. The unemployment rate now stands at 14.8 percent in March, down from 14.4 percent in February. According to the EDD figures, 128,900 of the county’s 870,800 workforce are unemployed.

Statewide, more than 2.3 million people are out of work.

“This is a sobering reminder that our focus in the Legislature must be finding ways to lift the restrictive regulatory burdens that have made California the most expensive place in the nation to do business,” said State Senator Bob Dutton (R-Rancho Cucamonga). “I hope that my Democrat colleagues feel the same way and will join me in passing some of the important pieces of legislation that will help improve California’s dismal business climate.”

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