Postal Service is losing $25 million a day

USPS service delivery truck in a residential a...

By Aimee Picchi

The U.S. Postal Service is known for delivering the mail no matter if hurricanes or blizzards are obstructing the way. But now its pleading with lawmakers to deliver something for the agency: reforms that will stop the bleeding. Postmaster General Patrick R. Donahoe appeared before Congress on Wednesday and warned that the USPS is “losing $25 million every day, and we are on an unsustainable path.” He added that the agency could become “a significant burden” to taxpayers if its not allowed the flexibility to make changes. His appearance was the first since the USPS put off a plan to cut back to five-day delivery. But it doesnt appear that Donahoe has given up on the idea, according to the Washington Post. He believes the Postal Service has merely delayed its plan to end Saturday delivery, which was promoted as a way to save $2 billion annually. After the USPS announced the plan, some customers and postal workers complained and organized protests while Congress adopted a resolution to preserve six-day service. At least one thing is clear: The Postal Service is in a first-class mess, with losses mounting to $15.9 billion last year. The Postal Service is stymied by the need for congressional approval of its operations, because Congress oversees its budget and its retiree health benefits fund.

Read More Postal Service is losing $25 million a day- MSN Money.

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Key & Peele: Bone Thugs and Homeless

It’s been a long week! Have a laugh from Key & Peele.

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Hurricane Sandy Shook The U.S. Like An Earthquake

Hurricane Sandy off the Carolinas [detail]

By Becky Oskin

Hurricane Sandy’s fateful left turn toward the mid-Atlantic Coast in October last year lit up earthquake monitors all the way to Seattle, according to results presented at the Seismological Society of America’s annual meeting today (April 18).

When Hurricane Sandy veered on Oct. 29, the sudden increase in crashing ocean waves sent rumbles through the Earth detectable on seismometers. The wave-on-wave collisions created what are called standing waves, doubling the energy directed at the seafloor, scientists reported today. The ocean gave the seafloor a little shove, sending seismic waves through the Earth.

The tremors are roughly similar to a magnitude-2 or magnitude-3 earthquake, but have a unique signal on seismometers, distinct from the rapid shaking caused by earthquakes, said Oner Sufri, lead study author and a geophysics doctoral student at the University of Utah. [Watch Sandy shake the U.S.]

Hurricane Sandy’s tremors, called microseisms, were detected by Earthscope, a traveling array of about 500 portable seismometers that are tracing a roughly rectangular swath across the United States.

The earthquake-detection network also picked up waves pounding the Atlantic coastline, but the energy from colliding ocean waves was much more powerful, said Keith Koper, study co-author and director of the University of Utah Seismograph Stations.

“The turning of the storm created strong wave-on-wave interactions that increased the microseism energy,” Koper told OurAmazingPlanet. “When the storm turned north of the Bahamas, we saw a bump in the microseismic energy, and when it took that sharp left-hand turn, we saw an even bigger bump,” he said.

Sufri said he is examining microseisms from Hurricane Sandy and other natural ocean sources to use the tremors as a tool for investigating climate changes.

For example, as scientists better understand how hurricanes show up in seismic records, they could look at historic storms tracking across the country, before the advent of satellites, Sufri said.

“Because these microseisms are happening all over the Earth, we could have a better understanding of climate, ocean and solid-Earth interactions,” he said.

Read More Hurricane Sandy Shook The U.S. Like An Earthquake|Earthquakes & Hurricane Sandy | LiveScience.

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How long it takes to cover rent in major U.S. cities

By Matthew Tarpey

imagesMost experts agree that about one-third of your salary should go toward paying rent. Unfortunately, in some cities that’s a tough goal to achieve.

Using data from Economic Modeling Specialists International, along with average rent costs provided by numbeo.com, we’ve determined how many hours in the office it takes for a person making an average salary to cover the average rent in the 10 biggest U.S. cities. The numbers are based on a 40-hour workweek and a 50-week work year. Keep in mind that working 40 hours a week adds up to about 160 hours in the office each month.

1. New York: Average earnings: $69,400, Average hourly salary: $34.70, Average apartment rent (1 bedroom, in city center): $2,675*

Hours to cover rent: 77.1

2. Los Angeles: Average earnings: $56,400, Average hourly salary: $28.20, Average apartment rent (1 bedroom, in city center): $1,425

Hours to cover rent: 50.5

3. Chicago: Average earnings: $57,800, Average hourly salary: $28.90, Average apartment rent (1 bedroom, in city center): $1,500

Hours to cover rent: 51.9

4. Houston: Average earnings: $61,200, Average hourly salary: $30.60, Average apartment rent (1 bedroom, in city center): $1,200

Hours to cover rent: 39.2

Read More MSN Careers – How long it takes to cover rent in major U.S. cities – Career Advice Article.

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Paul Laurence Dunbar-We Wear the Mask

English: US postage stamp of 1975 (thus PD) de...

English: US postage stamp of 1975 (thus PD) depicting Paul Laurence Dunbar (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

My first experience with Paul Laurence Dunbar (1872-1906) was through my mother. She had a book of African-American poetry in our home. Once the innocence of childhood began to wane, I opened the book and began reading. This was my first and it moved me instantly. We all wear masks, but imagine for a second what types of masks our forebears had to wear to survive slavery, discrimination, bigotry, and Jim Crow. Imagine the masks we wear today just to keep our jobs, our homes, our families. Paul Laurence Dunbar was called by Frederick Douglass”the most promising young colored man in America.” He was most promising indeed.

We Wear the Mask

We wear the mask that grins and lies,
It hides our cheeks and shades our eyes,–
This debt we pay to human guile;
With torn and bleeding hearts we smile,
And mouth with myriad subtleties.

Why should the world be overwise,
In counting all our tears and sighs?
Nay, let them only see us, while
We wear the mask.

We smile, but, O great Christ, our cries
To thee from tortured souls arise.
We sing, but oh the clay is vile
Beneath our feet, and long the mile;
But let the world dream otherwise,
We wear the mask!

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Acceptance

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Boston aftermath brings out America’s worst prejudices

By David Sirota

Between a Saudi student’s profiling and irresponsible CNN and NY Post reports, our nation’s bigotry is on display.

imagesFor a country that so often purports to be color blind, that insists too many people of color are overly obsessed with race, and that claims to live up to Dr. King’s dream of not judging people “by the color of their skin but by the content of their character,” the last two days have revealed a much uglier reality. They have revealed that — “doth protest too much” claims to the contrary — America is anything but color blind, that too many white folk are the ones obsessed with race, and that Dr. King’s dream is still just that: a distant dream. And that’s not just a general truism that is irrelevant to this moment of national emergency — it is, on the contrary, a very specific point that must be made, right now, precisely because of that national emergency.Three seemingly separate events tell this story in all its hideous detail. First came the blatant ethnic/religious profiling of an Arab student injured at the Boston Marathon bombing. In that deplorable episode, he was immediately targeted as a suspect because — like thousands of others — he was running away from the blast, but unlike those others, he happened also to be Saudi.

Read More Boston aftermath brings out America’s worst prejudices – Salon.com.

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Jobs keep creeping out of downtowns

By Haya El Nasser

jobsThe recession put the brakes on job growth but did nothing to reverse a decades-long trend: job sprawl. Despite the economic slump, the share of metropolitan areas’ jobs farther from downtowns increased from 2000 to 2010, according to Brookings Institution research out Thursday. The share of jobs located in or near a downtown declined in 91 of the nation’s 100 largest metropolitan areas.”Job sprawl continued steadily,” says Elizabeth Kneebone, author of the report and fellow at the Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program.The number of jobs more than 10 miles and up to 35 miles from city centers increased 1.2% the last decade. The number of jobs 10 miles away or less fell.In 2010, nearly twice the share of jobs (43%) were at least 10 miles from downtown as the share within 3 miles (23%). The share of jobs 10 to 35 miles from the city center grew in 85 of the metro areas.But there are signs of a counter-current. As young professionals flock to city centers, companies that want the best and brightest are starting to follow, says Joe Cortright, senior research adviser for CEOs for Cities, a national organization of urban leaders. “Suburban office locations are not as attractive as they once were,” he says. “A big factor is gas prices.”He points to Swiss financial giant UBS, which just moved its trading floor from suburban Connecticut to Manhattan to be closer to where younger workers live.

Read more Jobs keep creeping out of downtowns.

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Bryan Stevenson – We need to talk about an injustice

Great presentation from human rights lawyer and founder of the Equal Justice Initiative discussing the unfairness of the American criminal justice system.

 

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Obama Gun Policy Agenda Comes To Maddening End

By Sam Stein & Jennifer Bendry

imagesIt ended in a flash. Months of work aimed at revamping the nations gun laws prompted by one of the worst shooting tragedies in U.S. history met an inglorious conclusion on the floor of the U.S. Senate on Wednesday. Every single measure pushed by President Barack Obama — expanded background checks, a strengthened federal gun trafficking statute, limits on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines — failed to receive the necessary 60 votes to prevent a filibuster. By the time all seven amendments including those sponsored by Republicans had been rejected, family members of gun violence victims were left sorrowed, the president was left seething and advocates for the bills were left searching for explanations. “Im going to keep on fighting,” Sen. Joe Manchin D-W.Va., sponsor of the background check bill, told The Huffington Post in an interview shortly after the votes. “The only thing I’ve said is I cannot knowingly put a loophole in a gun show or an Internet sale just for the sake of getting a vote. I cannot do that. But if there is some wording that would prohibit someone from misinterpreting what we are trying to do … I’m more than willing to listen to that and work with them.”The background check bill, Manchin noted, had been his “coming out party” in the Senate — the first high-profile piece of legislation in his 2 1/2 years in the chamber.

Read More Obama Gun Policy Agenda Comes To Maddening End.

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