In Albany, Georgia, saggy pants are a sartorial faux pas—and quite the little moneymaker. On Nov. 23 of last year, the city instituted a ban on anyone wearing pants (or skirts!) more than three inches below the hips. Since then, 187 citations have been issued, raking in $3,…
Continue reading …While Amanda Knox plans a final plea for her life tomorrow, her father says he’s not worried that her words may work against her in an Italian courtroom. “I really don’t think so,” Curt Knox said on Today . “It’s going to be a heartfelt statement she’s going to make. I…
Continue reading …The Greek economic tragedy took another hair-raising turn today, Reuters reports. Enacting an austerity plan to attract EU and IMF loans, politicians there announced a new plan to place 30,000 workers in a “labor reserve” where they will earn partial pay and be laid off in a year. “The…
Continue reading …LinkedIn asked more than 17,000 professionals around the globe to name their biggest workplace pet peeve—and, surprisingly, the top spot went to something a bit more serious than leaving your smelly food in the office fridge. The top five: Those who don’t take ownership of their actions. Co-workers…
Continue reading …Companies are observing nearly every move you make and selling your personal data for billions of dollars—and Washington appears helpless to stop them, the Los Angeles Times reports. Whether it’s your smart phone, cable box, Facebook page, or video game, devices are amassing reams of data on your location,…
Continue reading …Roseanne Barr really wants heads to roll on Wall Street, Real Clear Politics reports. Not only does the comedian, author, and Wall Street protester say guilty bankers should pay back earnings over $100 million, she wants a very sharp blade hanging over their heads: “If they are unable to live…
Continue reading …Joe Biden’s brother received a mysterious package full of white powder yesterday that sent him to the hospital and sparked a Hazmat emergency, the Palm Beach Post reports. Francis Biden, 57, had powder pour onto his skin when he opened the package, which was addressed from India to his home…
Continue reading …A government warplane mistakenly bombed an army position in southern Yemen, killing at least 30 soldiers and wounding many more, military and medical officials said today. The officials said the bombing, which took place last evening in the southern Abyan province, targeted an abandoned school used as shelter by soldiers…
Continue reading …One in twenty nurses expect to lose their post in next year while similar proportions expect fewer hours or responsibilities Almost 75,000 nurses expect to lose their jobs, have their hours cut or see their roles downgraded in the next year, according to a survey that highlights the growing impact of the NHS’s financial squeeze. Five per cent of the NHS in England’s 410,000 nurses – some 20,500 in all – believe their posts will disappear in the next 12 months. Another 24,600 anticipate a cut in hours, while another 28,700 expect to have their jobs reassessed as involving fewer responsibilities. The findings, extrapolated from a Royal College of Nursing (RCN) poll of 8,000 of its members, have prompted renewed claims that the coalition is not honouring repeated promises to protect the NHS frontline from cuts. The nurses’ fears come as more acute and mental health trusts across England decide to reduce their nursing workforce as part of efforts to help in the NHS’s £20bn cost-saving drive. For example, Plymouth hospitals NHS trust plans to cut 281 posts, including 145 nursing jobs, to save £31m this year. The RCN is concerned that 130 existing nursing vacancies at the trust have led to staff shortages in some areas of medical care, and that patient safety could be at risk. As part of plans to restructure community services in London, Camden and Islington NHS foundation trust, which deals with mental health services, will lose 69 posts, including those of nurses, psychologists and social workers. Portsmouth hospitals NHS trust aims to shed 99 posts by next April, including at least six nurses, three of which are specialist nursing posts, giving care to people with long-term medical conditions. In the RCN’s biannual employment survey: • 54% of respondents reported that staffing levels of nurses had decreased in their workplace in the past year. • 57% said they worked over and above their contracted hours either every shift or several times a week, with 16% saying that they did so every shift. Forty per cent said their employer had initiated a recruitment freeze. • 19% had seen posts disappear in the past year. • 13% had seen beds or wards closed. Dr Peter Carter, the RCN’s chief executive and general secretary, said: “Nurses are at the heart of all that is good about the NHS and this is yet more evidence that the frontline is not being protected. “We know the government wants to protect services, but nurses are wilting under the strain of longer working hours, taking on the burden on unfilled vacancies and reduced staffing levels. “All these short-term measures are likely to leave patients with longer waiting times, poor care and a worse NHS. It is absolutely critical that trusts make sure they have the right numbers and balance of staff to deal with this.” Nurses say the cuts are affecting patient care. Some 52% said they were too busy to give patients the level of care they would like to provide, while 32% said that the quality of care was
Continue reading …US drone attack killed cleric and propagandist but not al-Qaida bomb expert, says source Al-Qaida’s top bombmaker in Yemen did not die in a drone strike on a convoy, a senior Yemeni official said, a report that dashed the hopes of US officials. The US drone strike on 30 September killed US-born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki and American propagandist Samir Khan, who published an English-language web magazine that spouted al-Qaida’s anti-western ideology. US intelligence officials had said it appeared that bombmaker Ibrahim al-Asiri was among the dead. But the Yemeni official listed those whose bodies had been identified and said Asiri was not one of them. The official spoke on condition of anonymity. Saudi-born Asiri, 29, who is of Pakistani descent, was tied to the so-called underwear bomb used in an attempt to bring down a Detroit-bound jetliner on Christmas Day 2009. hit an abandoned school. Global terrorism al-Qaida Yemen Middle East guardian.co.uk
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