05/16/2024

News

McDonald’s Ruling Sets Ominous Tone for Franchisers

McDonald’s Corp. could be treated as a joint employer with its franchisees in labor complaints, according to a National Labor Relations Board legal determination that could have far-reaching implications for how restaurant companies deal with their workers.

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US Second-Quarter GDP Expands at 4.0% Rate

The U.S. economy surged in the second quarter, more than offsetting a first-quarter contraction and putting growth back on an upward trajectory in 2014.

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Move Over Hollywood! Louisiana is Top for Film Production

With films like G.I Joe, The Butler and Enders Game shot in the Bayou State, last year it topped Film L.A.’s Feature Film Production Study as the number 1 location for motion picture filming. From 2002 to 2012 (the last year data was available), the industry created more than 14,000 jobs — more than half of which were between 2010 and 2012, according to the Louisiana Department of Economic Development.

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State Sees Surge in High-Paying White-Collar Jobs

Professional services jobs — engineers, architects, lawyers, accountants and consultants — are growing in California at more than twice the rate of overall employment since the recession ended in 2009, according to an analysis of state economic data.

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Reprot Shows Silicon Valley Leading US Economic Recovery

The report from the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research shows earnings growth in the manufacturing sector in Silicon Valley is up almost 30 percent.

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To Fight Inequality, Blue States Need to Shift Focus to Blue-Collar Jobs

A recent Brookings report  found that of the regions with the greatest income disparity only one, Atlanta, is located in a red-leaning state. These include San Francisco, Miami, Boston, Washington, D.C., New York, Oakland, Chicago and Los Angeles. The lowest degree of inequality was found generally historically more conservative cities like Ft. Worth, Texas; Oklahoma City; Raleigh, N.C.; and Mesa, Ariz. Income inequality has risen most rapidly in the probably the most left-leaning big American city of luxury progressivism, San Francisco, where the wages of the poorest 20% of all households have actually declined amid the dot-com billions.

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Film, TV Productions Follow the Money–Away from California, Says Report

Most film and television productions turned down for a subsidy from the state of California over a recent four-year period ended up shooting in other states or countries, according to a new report released Wednesday.

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The Challenges of Doing Business in San Diego

Walls’ massive database reveals San Diego region lost a net 3,440 jobs to out-of-state business moves from 1989 to 2011, or about .25 percent of current estimated employment in the area. California as a whole lost a net 231,000 positions, which amounts to about 1.5 percent of the latest statewide employment projections.

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Now California Might Get Tesla’s Gigafactory After All

However, Tesla’s on-again, off-again gigafactory flirtations with its home state have exasperated some outspoken critics of the way that California does business. Venture capitalist Tim Draper has made Tesla’s rebuff of California a talking point for his controversial “Six Californias” initiative. Losing Tesla strikes him as a smack-your-forehead example of the state’s dysfunctional business and political culture.

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California Semiconductor Company Opens Austin Office in US Expansion

Encore Semi Inc., a California-based semiconductor chip designer, has opened an Austin development office as part of a four-city national expansion.

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Wall Street Reform Law Only Half Done

According to law firm Davis Polk, 208 (52%) of the 398 total rulemaking requirements have been met so far. It’s an improvement from 2012, when just 31% of the Dodd-Frank rules were in force, but still lacking.

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California Adds 24,000 Jobs in June, Surpassing Pre-recession Peak

California’s unemployment rate dipped to 7.4% in June, a month in which the state finally recovered all the jobs lost during the recession.

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Second San Diego-based Firm to Move to Dallas

Omnitracs, a fleet management services company, said Friday that it will relocate early next year, generating 450 jobs and investing $10 million in Dallas. It plans to keep offices in San Diego and Baltimore.

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Australia Becomes First Developed Nation to Repeal Carbon Tax

In a vote that could highlight the difficulty in implementing additional measures to reduce carbon emissions ahead of global climate talks next year in Paris, Australia’s Senate on Thursday voted 39-32 to repeal a politically divisive carbon emissions price that contributed to the fall from power of three Australian leaders since it was first suggested in 2007.

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January Looms, Fuel Fight Heats Up

Absent changes, gasoline and diesel fuel beginning in January will be covered under a state auction program that requires petroleum companies to obtain carbon emission credits in order to continue to operate as they gradually choke off their greenhouse gases. The minimum cost of those credits, or allowances, is unknown, but experts believe they may be in the range of $12-to-$13 each, with each credit covering a ton of carbon emissions. Millions of credits may be sold and that cost is likely to be passed on at the pump. During a recent sale, emission allowances were selling at $11.34.

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