Friday, October 23, 2009

Los Angeles Medical Marijuana Laws


There is still no limit or laws governing Los Angeles medicinal marijuana laws, and so the long-awaited ordinance is convening soon. They are currently proposing laws on the matter and may send them straight to the council just to speed things along.

This will all happen next week, according to to Council President Eric Garcetti’s office.

“I am very disappointed that the judge won't let us do our job,” Smith, the chairman of the Public Safety Committee, said earlier this week, adding that it would force the council to move quickly.

The council’s planning committee has spent years debating how to control dispensaries and just recently sent the proposed ordinance to Smith’s committee.

The measure, drafted by City Atty. Carmen Trutanich’s office, would prohibit sales of medical marijuana. In Smith's view, that means most dispensaries would be forced to close, including the 186 that the city allowed to operate despite adopting a moratorium on dispensaries in 2007.

“I would prefer to stop all sales of medical marijuana in the city, but the ordinance proposed by City Atty. Trutanich comes as close as the law will allow,” he said. Most dispensaries in the city sell marijuana and pay state sales taxes, though operators say the transactions are donations and they are just recouping their operating costs.

The proposed ordinance would require all the dispensaries that opened after the moratorium to close immediately, and bar them from reopening for six months. The original 186 dispensaries would be allowed to remain open for six months to give them time to comply with the rules.

Photo: Medical marijuana. Credit: Los Angeles Times archives.

Friday, July 31, 2009

Law blocks Iowa school's call for jamming device

By MICHAEL J. CRUMB | Associated Press Writer
12:23 PM CDT, July 31, 2009

DES MOINES, Iowa - A small northern Iowa school district has hung up on a plan to block students from using their cell phones in class.

The St. Ansgar school board proposed buying a jamming device to keep students in the combined middle and high school from calling and texting during class, but the idea died because of a federal law that outlaws use of such equipment.

"As far as we are concerned it's a moot point right now and we're not going to pursue it at all," Jim Woodward, the superintendent of the St. Ansgar school district, said Friday.

St. Ansgar, which already has banned cell phones, is not the first district to weigh using a jamming device to keep students from using them in class.

The Penn Hills district in Pittsburgh considered jamming cell phones last spring but dropped the idea after learning of the Federal Communications Commission law. The Mead school district near Spokane, Wash., bought a jammer for less than $100 and conducted a three-day test before learning it was illegal. In Canada, the Port Hardy Secondary School on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, also conducted a test that was abandoned because of legal concerns.

Even New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg has suggested jamming wireless signals to keep students from using their cell phones during class.

But under current law, the FCC can only grant federal agencies -- not state or local authorities -- permission to jam cell phone signals. The jamming devices prevent cell tower transmissions from reaching phones.

Correctional leaders from more than two dozen states recently signed a petition asking permission to jam cell phone signals inside state penitentiaries and thwart inmates' forbidden phone calls.

In the case of the schools, officials said they were frustrated that students kept using phones in class despite the ban.

"I don't think they have a place in the educational environment," said Ed Kleinwort, a member of the St. Ansgar school board. "The educational environment is supposed to be about students learning and teachers teaching and teachers can't teach over a cell phone. If a student is busy on the cell phone they aren't learning."

He likened it to a student chewing gum or wearing an offensive T-shirt in class.

"It's a distraction ... and we need to minimize the distraction," Kleinwort said.

Donnie Thorson, whose son graduated last spring from St. Ansgar, said school officials took away his son's cell phone after he was caught using it in class.

"Somehow they have got to keep those kids from texting during class," he said.

James Hendrickson, a physical education teacher at St. Ansgar, said cell phones are a huge problem, with some classes being interrupted almost every other hour. Even his class is not immune from interruptions.

"When I have activities and they don't change and have their backpacks with them or their pants on, once in a while it happens," Hendrickson said.

Woodward, the superintendent, said cell phones will continue to be a problem as long as students bring them to school.

"It's an addiction for some kids," he said.

He also raised concerns with continuing advancements in technology, suggesting they could make it easier for students to cheat.

"You never know with the capability that cell phones have today," Woodward said. "That means the playing field isn't level anymore."

Woodward believes jamming cell phones would be an effective way to deal with the problem but said the school won't do anything different.

"I guess we'll just go back to the honor system," he said.

------

Associated Press writer Amy Lorentzen contributed to this report.

Friday, July 24, 2009

Sunday Shopping in France?

Conservative supporters hail the law as a reformist boost for France's recession-stalled economy. But detractors on both the left and right just as energetically decry it as a vulgar consumerist assault on tradition, families and even French democracy. "We've got better things to propose to our fellow citizens than a life of commuting, sleeping and buying," lamented André Lardeux, one of many senators from the ruling Union for a Popular Majority party who defied President Nicolas Sarkozy by voting against his pet law to liberalize Sunday commerce.

Indeed, resistance to the bill was so high among conservatives that leftist opponents seemed surprised when they weren't joined by enough rightist defectors to defeat it. "The Senate has been transformed into a kind of chamber of followers with only one liberty: the one to say yes," said Leftist Radical party Senator François Fortassin after the legislation eked through with a 165 to 159 score.

Tiny though it may be, that victory promises to throw countless shop doors open every Sunday around France from here on out. The law - which supporters hope will go into effect later this year - designates about 500 spots with "tourism interests" that may start doing business on Sundays to exploit the presence of vacationing visitors. It similarly liberalizes trading in border regions where, in some areas, French stores that close one day a week lose out to rivals across the frontier who are allowed to stay open les dimanches.

Finally, the law also legalizes what, in fact, is an already common (albeit illicit) practice in shops and malls clustered around Paris, Lille and Marseille - though limits it to those areas. The text calls for Sunday work to be left optional for employees and paid higher than other days, but opponents say those stipulations will be ignored once bosses start ordering employees fearful of losing their jobs to take on dominical work behind closed doors, and on management's terms.

Mais non!, conservative backers retort. Theirs is a pragmatic, optional reform for a finite set of businesses interested in embracing it, they promise - not at all a mercantile free-for-all à l'américaine in which any shop or company owner can treat Sunday like any other day of the week. "This is only putting a bit of order in a confused situation, and is in no manner a change to [our] model of civilization," the bill's sponsor, Labor Minister Xavier Darcos, promised senators going into their vote in the wee hours of July 23. "If the goal of this text were to generalize work on Sundays, I'd never have backed it." (See pictures of President Obama in France.)

Sunday shopping a threat to French civilization? If Darcos' assurances sound excessive, they only reflect the resistance his Sarkozy-mandated bill has provoked. Leftists continue to assail its move to undermine a 1907 law prohibiting Sunday trading as only the first step toward the very generalization of travail dominical that Darcos denies. They also vow to challenge the law before France's Constitutional Council on the somewhat ironic grounds that by allowing only some shops to operate Sundays, it violates the rights of employees who may want to work on Sunday but whose shops are not covered by the reform.

Dissenting conservatives, meanwhile, denounce the law as a threat to an array of social and cultural traditions rooted in the seventh day being one of rest. They warn that family gatherings, leisure activities and even church attendance will suffer greatly as people are forced to don the dominical yoke of labor. Where will the next Renoir get his inspiration for another Bal du Moulin de la Galette? What would Seurat's Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte be without the Sunday bit? And how to defend the colors against the neighborhood rival if your goalkeeper and best center forward are down at the mall selling garden furniture?

France - or at least parts of it - will soon find out. And how will a society famous for being rabidly protective of its leisure time, long vacations and nominal 35-hour workweek respond? Probably with a Gallic shrug. Polls show 55% of French people oppose the law and 42% support it. Still, 40% of respondents say they'd heed a boss's call to work Sunday if it meant making more money, while another 30% say they'd welcome the chance to shop on Sundays. (See pictures of Bastille Day celebrations.)

That's the good news for Team Sarkozy. The bad is that polls also show the public already suspects what economists are warning about the change: that in contrast to the government's promises, Sunday trading will neither significantly increase economic activity nor create new jobs.

~ From Time.com

Friday, July 17, 2009

New York Man Admits to Stuffing Mom In Freezer to Cash Social Security Checks

COLCHESTER, N.Y. An upstate New York man has admitted that he put his 98-year-old dead mother in his freezer so he could keep cashing her Social Security checks.

State police discovered Herta Auslander's body in her son's freezer in October after receiving a tip that she'd died more than a year earlier. An autopsy concluded that she died of only natural causes.

Prosecutors say 69-year-old Rosland Auslander kept his mother in the freezer for 18 months at his home in Cooks Falls, about 100 miles northwest of New York City. After eluding capture for months, he was arrested at his home in March.

Auslander pleaded guilty to grand larceny and forgery charges in Sullivan County court Friday. He faces up to seven years in prison.

New York Man Admits to Stuffing Mom In Freezer to Cash Social Security Checks

COLCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) -- An upstate New York man has admitted he stuffed his 98-year-old dead mother in a freezer so he could keep cashing her Social Security checks.

State police discovered Herta Auslander's body in a freezer in October after receiving a tip she'd died more than a year earlier. An autopsy concluded she died of natural causes.

Prosecutors say 69-year-old Rosland Auslander kept his mother in the freezer for at least 18 months at his home in the hamlet of Cooks Falls, about 100 miles northwest of New York City. After eluding capture for months, he was arrested at his home in March.

Auslander pleaded guilty to grand larceny and forgery charges in Sullivan County court Friday. He could face up to seven years in prison at his October sentencing.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Friday, July 10, 2009

AP Source: AIG consults administration on bonuses

by Stephen Bernard

NEW YORK (AP) — American International Group Inc. is consulting with the federal government about its plans to pay millions of dollars in retention incentives and bonuses, a person familiar with the situation said.

AIG is working with the Obama administration's compensation czar, Kenneth R. Feinberg, to ensure the government and the insurer are on the same page before it pays out remaining bonuses due to employees tied to 2008 contracts, according to the person, who requested anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the talks.

New York-based AIG faced intense public and Congressional criticism in March when it paid out hundreds of millions of dollars in retention bonuses to employees months after receiving a bailout from the government.

The latest round of bonus payments has brought fresh anger from some on Capitol Hill.

"The reason that company collapsed and needed to be bailed out was because of the recklessness and irresponsibility of their top management" who took bonuses, said Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont. "At a time when millions of Americans are losing their jobs and seeing declines in their incomes, I think it is an outrage that anyone on the AIG leadership team is receiving (even) 5 cents in bonuses."

Some of the bonuses AIG is planning to pay out were promised to employees in 2008, before the government stepped in to ensure AIG would not collapse. Additional retention payments were awarded in an effort to keep executives from leaving the company after the government's initial bailout.

In September, the government provided AIG with an $85 billion rescue package amid the mushrooming credit crisis. In return, the government took about an 80 percent stake in the New York-based insurance giant. Since then, the government has provided additional rounds of support. AIG's available loan package now totals $182.5 billion, though it has not tapped all of the funds.

The latest round of bonus payments will include about $235 million for employees at AIG's financial products unit, according to a Wall Street Journal report. AIG's near collapse was not due to its traditional insurance operations, but instead risky derivatives contracts written by the financial products division. AIG is in the processing of winding down that unit.

AIG is also scheduled to pay out another portion of a much smaller set of bonuses to 40 high-ranking AIG executives. The 40 executives were awarded about a combined $9 million in bonuses for 2008. The insurer paid out half of the bonuses in March and is supposed to pay out the remainder in two installments, the first of which is scheduled for next week.

AIG is among the companies whose pay practices the government now oversees. But while AIG is discussing the outstanding bonuses with Feinberg, he cannot ultimately veto the upcoming payments.

Feinberg does have the power to reject pay plans he deems excessive at companies that benefited from large infusions from the government's $700 billion bank bailout fund. However, those powers only begin with pay packages for 2009 and can't be retroactively applied to 2008 compensation.

Feinberg also now has authority to review compensation for the top 100 salaried employees at those firms.

While not commenting specifically on the AIG bonus discussions, a Treasury Department administration official said Feinberg will help to ensure companies balance the need to retain talent, reward performance and protect taxpayers' investments.

"That process is just beginning now, and Mr. Feinberg has begun consulting with those firms about their compensation plans," the official said. "We are not going to provide a running commentary on that process, but it's clear that Mr. Feinberg has broad authority to make sure that compensation at those firms strikes an appropriate balance."

Hundreds of financial firms received money as part of the government's $700 billion program. Many of the largest banks have been repaying those funds quickly, in part, to enable avoiding scrutiny and restrictions on how they pay top executives.

AIG has been selling assets to raise cash in an effort to repay the government loans. It is also planning to spin off three of its major insurance subsidiaries into separate companies to raise capital necessary to pay back the government.

AP Economics Writer Martin Crutsinger and AP Business Writer Marcy Gordon in Washington contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Friday, June 26, 2009

Judge orders golfer John Daly to pay legal fees

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Professional golfer John Daly has been ordered to pay almost $272,000 in legal fees for his unsuccessful libel lawsuit against The Florida Times-Union.

Duval County Circuit Judge Hugh Carithers ordered Daly to pay $263,088 in attorney's fees, plus costs of $8,675.99 and 8 percent interest rate per year until it is paid.

Carithers dismissed the lawsuit in March. He ruled that former columnist Mike Freeman's statements in a 2005 column were either true or constitutionally protected opinion.

Calls to Daly's attorney, Lydia A. Jones, and Daly's agent, Bud Martin, and Times-Union publisher Lucy Talley were not immediately returned.

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.