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New Genealogy Database

The Logan Library is now offering access to World Vital Records. This database
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has family history, genealogy[...]

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Two Different Types of Collage Picture Frames

Viewing pictures of loved ones has a way of warming the heart. Whether it is seeing your parents at their wedding, seeing your daughter or son with their own children or seeing a beautiful sunset that you shared with your significant other; photos have a way of touching our past and incorporating it into our present.

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[ARTICLES] STEVE VAN DOREN AT VANS BOWLARAMA!

Steve Van Doren was in town recently as part of the annual Vans Warped Tour. From helping his father Jim Van Doren (founder of Vans) in the showrooms as a toddler to managing retail stores in his teens, Steve proved that he had a natural flair for marketing and PR that money can't buy. It might have something to do with his penchant for feeding fast food to the masses. After all, nothing breaks the ice like a waffle on a stick! We caught up with Steve just before Bowlarama went down to find out why Vans still seems like a family company. ALL PHOTOS COURTESY JOSH ROBENSTONE Hi Steve, first of all, welcome to Australia. Thanks! This is my fifth year back here back in Bondi, but probably my tenth time in Australia between the early days of the Vans Warped Tour in the ‘90s and now. It's one of my favourite places in the world, and when we bring new riders here, they don't wanna go home! I bet! You're described as an ambassador for the brand. Did this job exist or did you create it for yourself? Yeah! It worked out really well because my dad started Vans in '66 and I've been doing it for 44 years, from being a child watching him build the stores to helping out in my teens. I actually got involved in making the shoes and was put in charge of a warehouse in my late teens. Then I got married and moved to retail sales and was in charge of that from the ‘80s until the ‘90s. When my dad sold the company, I basically started doing marketing. My dad would never give me any money for it though, so we never really had marketing except for me going to skate events with Caballero and Alva and handing out flyers and stickers. When we were purchased by another company, we changed from being a manufacturing company (which made shoes in the US) and from '95 on Kevin Lyman started the Vans Warped Tour. So this is the 16th year for the Vans Warped Tour in the States, seeing 630,000 kids every summer... I've been on the tour every year. I'm getting to know all the bands and getting to meet the musicians and stuff... The Tour now includes skateboarding, snowboarding, surfing, wakeboarding, motocross, BMX... It all keeps me on a roll. What about competitive hot dog eating? Yeah, hot dog eating, right! That's where it all came from, I wanted to meet everybody. I mean, I knew our riders but how do you meet 330 snowboarders when they have goggles, helmets and jackets? So I brought a grill out and started BBQ'ing and they had to take the stuff off to eat, and I'd shake hands and get to meet ‘em. So every event for the last, like, 14 years, I normally bring the grill out. We do the Downtown Showdown with 3000 people there. I make 3000 hamburgers or hotdogs and get a chance to talk to everybody instead of just sitting in the stands and meeting, like, five. So it's kind of in the tradition. It's not that I like food or anything - which I do, (laughs) - but it's just a way that I kind of try and make you feel like Van Doren's still involved. And what does that entail? To me, to do that, you have to be involved, you have to be there. You have to be on site. You have to talk to people and listen to what the riders say. ‘Cos there's no events unless you have riders. If you don't have the backing of the skaters and surfers and snowboarders and BMX guys and motocross, you don't have an event. And as we've been trying to promote our brand through Vans Warped Tour events we've got to have a friendly alliance with the riders. I know to take care of them first before anything else. And sponsors who've worked with us over the years, of course you want to take care of them because they're tied into your brand. How did the title ‘Vans Ambassador' come about? The ambassador title I gave myself because everywhere I go, I'm going to have a good time. Last night I took everyone out to the Flying Squirrel and we got to sit down and have beers and talk to them about what's going on in their lives. I'm looking forward to being at the Bondi Bowl here on Saturday because I get a chance to talk to customers and media as well as get to watch the best bowl riders in the world. Every one of ‘em is here. Young guns that are coming up too, we push them. We've got a really nice line up of about 40 competitors that are going to be out here on Saturday. But the main thing is if I come to a country that I get to know what their culture's like, you know. Like I know pavlova. (Australian desert, kinda like a meringue cake) Vegemite? Well I haven't really grown fond of that one. I haven't met an American yet who has! Yeah I'm kinda passing on the mayonnaise with fries, you know... But by being an ambassador, I listen a lot, I look a lot to see what the kids are wearing and if I see any trends going on... What's going on at the moment? All I see is black vulcanised shoes. I know, I know! Which is nice in a way, it's kinda like meat and potatoes, bread and butter. I mean I was talking to my dad who turned 80 this year, who started our company Vans, and the shoe that was our number one back in '66 is the shoe that's number one today! With the economy being so crappy for the last 15-18 months we just had our best year ever, so you can't complain about that. People can afford a canvas shoe that they can throw in the wash. They know what they're getting, and at the same time it's our roots, it's our strength. I'm just done seeing the 2011 line that will be coming out and there are a few nice new styles and colours coming out, as well as a few new collaborations. Any hints? You know, I saw drawings of Rolling Stone and I'm pretty excited, I hope they make the cut. I saw drawings on the wall, no shoes yet but that's kind of exciting. There's some new styles like the mystery Chukka which is a style we haven't had for 40 years and it's doing very, very well. They have a new shoe that's called the 106 that's a little inspired by that. We also have the Off the Wall collection and then we have a Cali collection, two new collections that are more inspired by Vault, which are our top-of-the-line shoes that go to boutiques, but they'll take it into more channels of distribution. I've been seeing a lot of really, really cool solids right now, focusing on textures and materials. We like it when prints sell but I like it when vulcanised sells. You know, as many things as they do with new skate shoes, last night I saw the new Anthony Anthony Van Engelen on one of the guys, which was really nice but really plain. And you know, there's not a lot of lines to things now, it's kind of stepping back from the athletic-inspired, puffy shoe and we're taking advantage of that, and that's why Vans has been so hot for the past few years. You're not bringing back those breakdance shoes are you? Not yet! (laughs). Actually, we have about 120 stores in the USA and in our marketing office we have guys that do a video every month and put it in our stores. I'm in charge of going through my archives and retrieving old tapes and there was a breakdance video which I put in last month's video, it was sick! We had three breakdance teams in '83-'84. It's funny ‘cos I know that back then when checkerboard was popular, the follow-on was neon, and that's exactly what's happening now. There's a lot of bright stuff coming out. And how has Vans handled being bought by a big corporation? Since VF Corp bought us six years ago we've tripled our sales and grown, so things are working well that way. It is a public company. We're owned by a gigantic, huge corporation. But I do as much as I can try to keep it like a little family thing, even though it's much bigger than that. It's nice that they let me do that because I think it's the best place for me to be. I'm always an advocate for authenticity, we have a new campaign that's out right now, it's up across the US, and it has a lot of root elements in it. Like it shows a picture of a crazy stage diver at a Vans Warped Tour. And one of ‘em says ‘The Godfather' with a picture of me on one side with a guy with a big mohawk. And it's got a lot of things with surf, skate and snowboarding that's about our roots. Speaking of roots, seems to me, watching you guys last night, you've been with Cab (Steve Caballero) for 18 years or something ... 20! 20 years with a signature shoe. And even though technically it's not a family business anymore, there's definitely a family sort of feeling amongst you guys as well. What do you put that down to? Because not many companies have that. Yeah, that's one of the things that kinda gets back to grassroots. That's why I travel with ‘em. I've known them all for years. I know Alva really, really well. Stevie's about two years younger than me. Then you get Geoff Rowley, we've had a shoe with him for 10 years. I took him on a couple of trips with me, last one was to South America in a motorhome, cruising across the country for four or five days. I think it's real important that they know we really care about ‘em. And the only way you can do that is spend time. A lot of executives in many companies never come out and mingle with the guys that are building their brand. Bottom line. Yeah it's all numbers to them. We have a new president, Kevin, who does an awesome job. At the anniversary party of the Warped Tour, he was in the pits. So he's the closest thing to my inspiration, because he enjoys music and stuff but he interacts and comes down and finds out what's going on with different sports. Anybody who doesn't take the time away from their schedule can never understand it. My wife of 34 years just knows that's where my passion is. I've been lucky that we've got really quality people, we don't have to change ‘em every two years so it means there's some consistency there. One thing about us is that when we're trying to get younger riders, they can look at us and think, ‘If I go with that company, I'm going to be there a long time'. As long as they understand what the older generation knows, like giving interviews. Yesterday they had five hours worth of interviews, they'd skate for 45 minutes then come off and do a 10-minute interview. All day. Or sign autographs. We did a Vans book last year because there were a lot of different stories and a lot of people that have been with Vans for over 40 years, and we did a book signing, Cab and me. We did like five or six in different cities around the US and every time we were getting three hours-worth of people. There's a lot of people that respect and know us. So being part of that and creating that, putting the time in, it pays off I think. Being on the road so much, you strike me as the sort of guy that might enjoy a prank or a practical joke... Sure. (laughs) Or maybe you're on the other end of some as well? Yeah! I am sometimes. My daughter is 32, and we'll be doing a show on NBC, or a BMX or skate event and all of a sudden I'll get pied. My daughter will get some hanger-on to do it; ‘Go pie my dad, he'll love it!'. We make it a good time. I think it's going to be an even better year for Vans. Everything's going your way, as far as trends. The best thing is we have all of our designers travelling the world, finding out what sort of things are going on, and although I see many copies out there of Vans, that's keeping the trend going too. Hopefully our shoes always fit and perform better than the copies. How's your collection of Hawaiian shirts going? Good! Actually I got a new one on today. But the one person who's got more Hawaiian shirts than me is Weird Al Yankovic. Really? Oh yeah. He'll come down to the warehouse once a month and I'll show him where all the seconds and discontinued things are and he'll just sit there for hours. When I was in Australia last year, I went to a fabric shop, ‘cos when I go somewhere I like getting some fabric and then I go and I make my own shoes ‘cos I like having something that nobody else has. So there was this fuzzy stuff I found up here in this place in Bondi Junction, rainbow-coloured, fuzzy, hair sort of stuff... Sounds like Weird Al, he's fuzzy... Ha! Well I made a pair of high tops out of it and Al called in - and he wears the same size shoe as me - and I saw he was looking at them, so I said, ‘Okay, alright, I'm giving these up ‘cos I can only wear these on Halloween or something anyway man...', he loves them. He's a good guy. He's got something like a 100 plus pairs of Vans and he's got 300 Hawaiian shirts. The pair you had on last night were really cool. Are they going into production? They are, they're actually a Vault shoe. A guy by the name of Donnie Miller used to work for us in our skate area and he's a designer. The Donnie Miller slip-on we called the Slip Up because it was painted to look like a lace-up. So all the laces and stitching were painted on but it's a slip-on. I went up there for the launch party in my motorhome with my waffle machine and I was making waffles out the front and about 300 people stopped by to check out the new Slip Ups. You never stop having fun do you? No, I gotta keep doing that... That's another food thing though. At the tradeshow last month we made 350 waffles. What it does is it stinks the whole place out, and everybody's like, ‘Ooh, it smells like waffles, what is it?' and then they follow it ‘til they get to us. We say hi, give them the waffle on a stick which looks like the sole of our shoe except on the stick it says Vans, and in two minutes I can make six waffles on sticks. Just another way to say hello to people and break the ice. Do you think you'll be working at Vans forever? I guess until the day I don't feel this way anymore I'll keep working here. Some day I gotta have a restaurant though. I gotta talk to VF and tell them, I think we gotta have a Vans restaurant that's a combination of my favourite things in the entire world. A combination of In-N'-Out Burger with eight layer cakes and these special chips that I've had once... You know Hard Rock, with music? Think of that with all the sports that we do. But it's gotta be a fun place, like every three months I'm changing the face of it. So when somebody on Friday night says; ‘Where are we going to go eat?' they say, ‘Let's go down to Steve's!' They're gonna be dancing on the tables and having a good time. Everybody tells me you lose your ass in restaurants but who knows. I'm 54 and having a good time. You might have to retire to a desk job or something, just kind of take it easy. That'll never happen, I like travelling too much. I just gotta get my wife to travel with me more, that's all. Thanks Steve! READ OUR MEGA-FEATURE WITH STEVE VAN DOREN HERE.

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Aujourd'hui je l'ai fait

Route de Marseille"Today I did it and I'm still thinking about it." She did it? But what is "it"? The ad gives no clue but if you're like a majority of French people, a straight answer comes to mind and it's a naughty one. No doubt there's a twist though ; I suspect this is a clever two-tier campaign whose first set of ads is designed to arouse our interest before the second batch delivers the message. Realistically, someone is trying to sell us something. We'll soon find out who and what - I'll keep you posted - but in the mean time would you like to try and guess? Some other billboards bore captions such as "Today I did it and it was fantastic" and (showing a young male character) "Today I did it with my best friend". So - any ideas? Note: Today is the 5th anniversary of Eric Tenin's excellent blog Paris Daily Photo. Eric's "one photo a day of my city" concept is what gave birth to the now huge City Daily Photo network. From us all to whom Eric was and still is an inspiration, a big happy birthday PDP ! Congratulations to a great guy who has spread a lot of friendship and inspiration around the globe since his first post in 2005 ! To see thumbnail photos of all blogs participating in this massive event, please click here. Aujourd'hui je l'ai fait et j'y pense encore Elle l'a fait ? Fait quoi ? La pub n'en dit rien mais pour une majorité de français la réponse est automatique et éveille un sourire. Il ne fait aucune doute qu'il s'agit d'une campagne publicitaire en deux temps dont le premier volet doit aiguiser notre curiosité avant qu'un deuxième volet nous livre la clé. On veut nous vendre quelque chose, c'est sûr. Mais qui et quoi ? Nous aurons sûrement la réponse bientôt, je vous tiendrai au courant. En attendant, voulez-vous essayer de deviner ? Pour vous aider (ou pas) sachez que quelques-uns des autres messages disaient "aujourd'hui je l'ai fait... et c'était formidable" et (montrant un jeune homme) "aujourd'hui je l'ai fait... avec mon meilleur ami". Alors, des idées ? Note : aujourd'hui est le cinquième anniversaire de Paris Daily Photo, l'excellent blog d'Eric Tenin. Eric est celui qui a initié le concept "une photo par jour de ma ville" et qui en invitant des centaines d'autres à le rejoindre à donné naissance au réseau "City Daily Photo". Tous ceux pour qui Eric est une inspiration se joignent à moi pour souhaiter un bon anniversaire à PDP. Merci et bravo Eric d'avoir lancé autant d'amitié et d'enthousiasme autour du monde ! Pour voir la liste de tous les blogs participant à cet événement, cliquez ici.

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Logitech Performance Mouse MX

Mouse technology has come a long way since the rollerball mice of the 1980s. Logitech’s Performance Mouse MX drives that point home--it can be used on practically any surface, and it offers features that our first Mac mouse could never have dreamed of. Despite its deep feature set, the sleek Performance Mouse MX is a simple install. It uses a tiny Unifying USB receiver, which works with other wireless Logitech products simultaneously--handy if you’ve got several wireless peripherals but only have one spare USB port. The battery life is impressive--we used the mouse for over a month without charging it. When you do need to re-up, the MX comes with a micro-USB cable for recharging from either your Mac or a wall outlet, and its nifty LEDs display the charge level. Sure it's a hundred bucks... but it'll track on glass, man! The tracking on the MX is almost too good to be true--we even busted out some of our older Logitech mice to make sure we weren’t just imagining things. The mouse uses Logitech’s Darkfield Laser Tracking, which is a fancy sci-fi jargon way of saying its two lasers detect the most miniscule details on your surface and create a micro-road map. It can track on practically any surface--even clear glass. The precision of the MX makes us feel like we’re actually drawing on screen with a pen in hand. The MX is equipped with a hyperfast scrollwheel that even allows for horizontal scrolling. One of our favorite features is a button that lets you switch between free-spinning (for wicked-fast scrolling) or ratcheted scrolling (for line-by-line control). We used the well-placed thumb buttons for everything from jumping between windows in Exposé to moving backward and forward through our browser history to zooming in and out of photos and web pages. Whether you use your Mac for coding or just everyday web surfing, tweakable controls like these are a boon to productivity. Logitech’s Control Center software lets you customize button settings and also gives you an onscreen battery monitor that can track the power levels of multiple devices sharing the same Unifying receiver. It’s a neat trick, as is the MX mouse’s ability to charge while you work. It’s the small details that make the MX stand apart from cheaper alternatives. The downside (aside from its sky-high price)? Users with small hands like mine might not be totally comfortable using the beefy Performance MX mouse; coworkers with larger paws, however, weren’t bothered by its size or weight. And the mouse is right-hand only.

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Bird Identification

Here's a free forum to help you identify the birds in your backyard - you can post photos and a description for help from other bird watchers. If you're looking for some recommended birding books, check out our Garden Bookworm, or look for bird feeders and nest boxes in the Garden Watchdog. We also provide a bird watching forum and the BirdFiles database for our members!

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Responding to a Critic

If you follow us on Google Buzz, you probably saw a reader call our article on the FDA’s recent warning letter blitz a “misleading synopsis” of an article by the Washington Post. Just to clarify … we don’t “do” rewrites of other people’s work. Before we began this article, we were aware that this story had been covered by other media outlets—including the Washington Post. After all, knowing what’s going on in the world of “natural” health is an important part of what we do. But we do not copy anyone. We got this story the same way we get all our stories about the FDA’s official Warning Letters—by going to the FDA’s website at fda.gov and reading the latest news, warning letters and advisories. In preparation for the article this morning, we not only read the warning letters; we went to the distributors’ and manufactures’ sites and actually looked at photos of the products’ packaging to make sure we knew what we were talking about. If you’re a regular reader at LisaBarger.com you know we’ve been very critical of the “me-too” writers out there who go to a site like Wikipedia or WebMD and simply re-write an article they then pass off as their own original research. We’ve never done that here and won’t do it in the future. And when we DO get info from another site, we tell you. And regular readers also know that we have applauded the FDA’s past attempts to rid the internet of scam artists, charlatans and spammers. The “Is It A Scam?” and “Does It Work?” sections of LisaBarger.com were devoted to debunking the flood of bad info floating around out there. So that’s the story. Thanks for being a LisaBarger.com reader.

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Jay & Lisa

Jay and Lisa met in 2003 when mutual friends started dating. Though they enjoyed each other's company, at the time they were both committed to other people and not looking. However, life has a funny way of interrupting even the best-laid plans. Years later, when the others had fallen away, Jay and Lisa remained. Taken by her confident, caring ways Jay asked Lisa out. From that moment, everything fell into place and nothing ever felt so right. Lisa fell in love with a man whose facial expressions told her, and the world, exactly how he was feeling. She loved his strength, even when it was o.k. to show weakness. Jay fell in love with a woman who did everything with passion and never settled for second best. Together, these two are travelers -- adventurers with a love for finding new places, discovering new things, eating new food. It was on one of these adventures, in Vail, that Jay proposed and they knew they had a lifetime of adventures to come. However, there was one adventure they weren't expecting. Lisa was diagnosed with cancer in 2008. It was a devastating verdict for both Lisa and for Jay, the man who loved her. The weeks and months that followed were some of the most challenging the two have known. However with Jay's generous spirit and Lisa's unwavering strength, they overcame one of life's biggest obstacles and Lisa is now cancer free! What an amazing story these two have and I couldn't be more thrilled to be the one who was chosen to capture the celebration of their love. Jay and Lisa made their committment to one another official on Saturday at the Hotel Valley Ho in Scottsdale. This retro-style hotel was such a fun place for a wedding. There were so many bright popping colors and fun pieces of art to work with. Here's some of my favorite photos from the day: Lisa's mom and sister helped her into her gown: Jay and Lisa's golden retriever, Mason, hung out with the guys in their suite: The couple saw each other before the ceremony which gave us plenty of time to walk around the property and get some fun portraits: The ceremony was done in the round. What an amazing location: Jay ... Lisa did all of their own paper products and had so much fun doing them that they're thinking of making a business out of it. Mason did an amazing job as the ring bearer: Lisa looked unbelievable as her dad walked her down the aisle: The ceremony was officiated by my favorite officiant -- Scott Swanson -- and included a number of personal touches. A candle was lit and a rose was placed on the front table in rememberance of Jay's father and Lisa's grandmother. A friend sang "All you Need is Love" by the Beatles and Scott read some love letters from Jay ... Lisa to one another. I love what Jay ... Lisa shared in these letters to one another. Love Letter from Lisa: "I am certain that Jay is my reward for everything good I've ever done in my life. I am so incredibly lucky to have found both a best friend and an amazing partner in him. He loves me with everything he's got, all the time. And no matter how hard life gets, that never changes. I admire his strength to stand by me through our most difficult challenges and am grateful for his unwavering belief in us. He moves me to tears with the sincerity of his heart and I love that about him. His never-ending quest for all that is good and fair coupled with his smile are daily reminders why this was the best choice I've ever made. I often wonder if everyone sees him in this amazing light. Just get to know him a bit, and you'll know why I'm completely in love with him." Love Letter from Jay: "From the time I first laid eyes on Lisa I had a feeling that we would be together. There was something about her joyous smile and confidence. I loved that she was always happy and seemed like she would be a great person to get to know. Years later after our first date I knew that I was right in my feelings about Lisa and that we had a great future together. I love that she puts herself and her feelings out there and is always honest with me. I love her strength. The one thing that stands above all the rest in my things that I love most about Lisa is that she is a fighter. I knew that when she survived cancer it was because of positive outlook on life and her strength. She is my best friend, lover, partner and confidant." The cocktail hour was held on the roof of the hotel. I know I've said this once already in this post but what an amazing location! Here are some of the fun reception details. Flowers by Flowers by Jodi Cake by La Dolce Pesca The first dance: Jay and Lisa have some fun friends who know how to party! Desert House Productions DJs kept the tunes flowing and I had fun capturing the craziness on the dance floor: Who do you think caught the garter? Totally looks like purple shirt or groomsman should have had it, right? Instead it went down like most garter tosses I witness at weddings do -- no one caught it. It ended up on the floor. What's up with that guys? Girls have a way better percentage on you with the bouquet and the garter has to be easier to catch. It practically floats. Let's try to step up and be more manly men next time, k? :) Purple shirt guy ended up swipping it off the ground first and wore it on his head as the proud victor. Fun times! Click here to see more photos from the day in the slideshow!

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Lewisville City Council Meeting - Liveblog

I'll be live-blogging the Lewisville City Council meeting tonight, so please cut me some slack on spelling and formatting errors, and refresh often to see the latest. Quotes are paraphrased unless quoted. 5:30 PM - Workshop Meeting called to order. All Council members are here. There are about 17 spectators - of which some are probably city employees. First topic - Discussion of E-Verify for city vendors. Please refer to Claude King's memo on E-Verify E-Verify is a federal government program that allows employers to electronically verify employment eligibility of employees they have hired. The discussion is over whether the city should add a requirement to its outside contracts with vendors that vendors should sign up and maintain status in the program as a condition of contracts. Basic history of the program - was implemented several years ago as a pilot. Program has improved significantly since then. The biggest criticism was the perceived error rate. It's now in the high 90% range in accuracy. Ideally this would be used by all employers when accuracy has been improved. Federal government has implemented now for all of its contractors. It's not that simple to implement locally or unilaterally. Watts wants to clarify exactly what we're verifying - King answers that it's employment eligibility in the US only. Background is that IRCA currently requires all employers to collect I-9 data. It only applies to employers - not self employed or contractors. There is some room for interpretation. Part of the problem is that some employers stretch the definition of what a contractor is. E-Verify wouldn't solve that problem. The main purpose of E-Verify is to catch employers or employees who are lying about eligibility or presenting false documents. False rejections are a part of the error problem - saying someone is unable to work when they are legally allowed. There is a process the federal government has for employees to overcome that false determination. E-Verify does not detect identity theft. If the employee presents a valid name and SSN, it wouldn't pick up any problem. Photos and biometrics are being or will be added. King: "So if I had Lathan Watts name and SSN, I could work as him". Watts: "Anybody pick up on that - that I am clear to work?". King says false rejection is a small percentage. Lewisville has used E-verify for years, but has never received a no-hire message. King emphasizes that this will not pick up off-the-books employment. E-Verify is a federal voluntary program. You cannot use it to screen prospective employees or for any other reason. It can only be used for people that have been officially hired. Watts: It's illegal to use E-Verify as a hiring tool. People misunderstand that. If you do that you can be sued for discrimination. (But it happens all the time). Gorena: You must do the verification within 3 days. Then you have 90 days to fix problems or terminate the employee. King: Employers *may* use E-Verify on existing employees if they are federal contractors. There are numerous exceptions, rules, and interpretations on use. (See the memo) 12 states have E-Verify statutes, but some are just for state agencies and contractors. 3 require it for ALL employers in the state. one state prohibits its use, but there is a lawsuit. Tierney asks King to clarify the various state statutes out there. Mayor Ueckert wants to know whether any states require infinite levels of compliance among subcontractors. Issues for local use: - To whom should it apply? - What are the unintended effects? - Administrative effort -enforcement - Ordinance or staff directive? - Penalties for violation? Gorena says the feds handle all the penalties. We should require enrollment, but no penalty on our end. Thornhill: How would we enforce this? King: We'll talk about that more... Only the feds can enforce the actual use of the program. As a city, there are certain elements of documentation we can require that someone is enrolled, but we're not allowed by the feds to ask for certain information. City has hundreds of contracts of all various sorts - not just construction, but purchases too. The federal rule could be a model - it exempts commercial "off-the-shelf" purchases, contracts less than $100K, employees performing support work (Like A/P - accounting, etc.), and contracts less than 120 days. Watts: So if the construction company hires someone to answer the phone, they wouldn't have to check her. King: Correct. In the federal rule, only the prime contractor is legally bound to use E-Verify - not subcontractors. It's the prime that must ensure sub-contractor performance. Locally, we might consider a "COTS" definition, thresholds of size and time, exemptions for social service agencies, and other governmental entities. Tierney wants clarification of social service agencies. King explains that we purchase the services of the agencies who help our citizens. Tierney clarifies that we make them use E-Verify for their employees - NOT their clients. King: We also make contracts with other government entities like water districts who do work for us. One issue to think about : What about large contractors who have many employees who are not working in Lewisville. What about public safety contracts? Economic development agreements? The biggest question on this is how to handle sub-contractors. Staff doesn't always know how many levels of contractors there are. How would we get compliance? Watts: If we did this locally, would we make the general contractor enforce for their subs, or would we? Watts enumerates many layers of subcontractors in the construction industry. (There is now standing room only in the room) Watts goes on to explain that subcontractors are the ones who hire most of the labor. Primary or general contractor usually has some project managers. Mayor - a lot of these companies have NO employees. They just hire a lot of subcontractors. King - Subcontractors can provide enrollment verification from E-Verify - printouts of website screens and copy of MOU. Other than that, there's not much way to enforce whether a sub is following the rules. Sub could sign up for E-Verify, but not follow the rules. King says that in the federal program, contractors can possibly be held liable for subcontractors - points out Walmart case. Mayor now wants to move on to 287(g). King asks for 5 more minutes. King says unintended effects could be reducing the pool of subs, cost pass-throughs, and making the contractor use it for all their jobs, whether they are in Lewisville or not, due to federal mandates. King wonders if there is a city liability now based on whether we "should have known" because we're now paying more attention. Watts says that by doing all of this, we help the federal government prosecutor's case of constructive knowledge. We could be on the hook. Another problem is that the feds allow people to drop out of E-verify with 30 days notice. There is the "self-employed" gap. There is also the issue of the 90 day process in case of a no-hire. Whether to make this and ordinance or a directive: Ordinance is less flexible - holds the effect of law. We probably could not have criminal penalties, but we could cancel contracts if we had to. If this were an ordinance, someone would have to go to council for any variance. Mission Viejo doesn't seem to have strong enforcement or detection provisions. Stipulates an AG or DHS determination of violation as the trigger, but DHS and AG wouldn't notify the city necessarily. MV has never enforced. There are relatively few prosecutions of violations nationwide, and when there are, they often lag the violation by years. Alternative for the city - preferable - is to push this up to the state or federal level to ensure that everyone uses this. Incentives for voluntary compliance. Couple other ideas. Mayor: Your recommendation? King: Don't do it at this time. Think about alternatives, or push up to higher level Mayor: Now lets talk about 287(g).

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It's A Baby!

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Todd Bryant Weeks on HammondCast KYOU Radio and Jazz Advisory Board Meeting coverage by Jon Hammond

Todd Bryant Weeks on HammondCast KYOU Radio and Jazz Advisory Board Meeting coverage by Jon Hammond LINK FOR J4JA! PICTURES of CONCERT EVENT http://gallery.me.com/jonhammondband#100850&view=carouseljs&sel=0&bgcolor=white *WATCH THE VIDEO HERE: http://ia301512.us.archive.org/3/items/JonHammondToddBryantWeeksonHammondCastKYOURadio/ToddBryantWeeksonHammondCast_512kb.mp4 Todd Bryant Weeks, Author and Jazz Rep of Local 802 Musicians Union on HammondCast Show KYOU Radio interview with Jon Hammond discussing his in-depth biography of Oran Alfred Page aka Hot Lips Page entitled "Luck's In My Corner: The Life and Music of Hot Lips Page" 27 January 1908 – 4 November 1954 jazz trumpeter, singer, bandleader, scorching soloist and powerful vocalist. Publisher: Taylor & Francis, Inc. Also speaking about the Justice for Jazz Artists! cause: http://justiceforjazzartists.org/ the J4JA Adds Facebook Cause Page and Fair Standards for NYC Music Clubs. Send an email to jazzdept@local802afm.org or call 212 245 4802 X185 The Justice for Jazz Artists campaign continues to pick up speed, thanks for your support! © www.HammondCast.com Todd Bryant Weeks, Hot Lips Page, Luck's In My Corner, Justice For Jazz Artists, Jon Hammond, HammondCast, KYOU Radio, Local 802, Musicians Union, Pension, Trumpet, Bessie Smith, Dan Morgenstern Jon Hammond here folks *Member AFM Local 802 & Local 6: Here is an excerpt and photos of the very important issues being dealt with head on at today's Jazz Advisory Board meeting at AFM Local 802 Musicians Union. A 'who's who' of veteran jazz musicians attended and also young pro jazz musicians, including: drummer BERNARD PURDIE, JUNIOR MANCE, BOB CRANSHAW, JIMMY OWENS, Local 802 Asst to the President JOEL LeFEVRE, Local 802 Recording Vice President BILL DENNISON, CHARLES TOLLIVER, BENNY POWELL, 802 Jazz Rep. TODD BRYANT WEEKS, MATTHEW PLUMMER, RUDY SHERIFF LAWLESS, KEITH DAMES, COLIN DEAN and more. Things are just getting rolling so I personally encourage professional jazz musicians and fans and supporters of America's Music and Musicians to get involved now. Thanks for your support! Sincerely, Jon Hammond sign the petition to get the club owners to do the right thing as mandated by State of New York to contribute sales tax towards Pension Fund, and you can find a more thorough explanation on the Justice for Jazz Artists site and by contacting Mr. Todd Bryant Weeks at Local 802 directly tel. 212-245-4802 x-185 Excerpt: Fair Standards for NYC Music Clubs June 16th, 2009 While larger and more financially stable clubs and cabaret spaces offer reasonable compensation to performing musicians, there are a host of smaller venues that do not. The abuse ranges from notorious pay-to-play venues to those that charge for the use of sound equipment or require musicians to guarantee an audience. What can be done? What are “fair standards” for the treatment of musicians? Give us your feedback as we work to establish a “fair standards code” for these music venues. Send an email to jazzdept@local802afm.org or call 212 245 4802 X185. Campaign Picks Up Speed The Justice for Jazz Artists campaign continues to pick up speed. We now have over 270 petitioners! This number is up from 144 on May 1. We are currently seeking the endorsements of elected officials and religious leaders, even as we build our petition of jazz artists and musicians who work in other areas—particularly on Broadway and in the concert field. Here is our list of Coalition Endorsers at Present: American Federation of Musicians, Tom Lee, President; Sam Folio, Secretary Treasurer Local 802, Associated Musicians of Greater New York Local 802 Jazz Advisory Committee Local 802 Theater Committee Jazz Foundation of America Greater New York Labor-Religion Coalition, Rabbi Michael Feinberg, Executive Director New York Central Labor Council Jazz Ministry at St. Peter’s Church, Amandus J. Derr, Senior Pastor New School Jazz Department Faculty Committee Andy Kirk Research Foundation NY City Councilwoman Diana Reyna (D-34, Brooklyn) Rutgers-Newark Master’s Program in Jazz History and Research Dr. Lewis Porter, Jazz Historian and Educator Dan Morgenstern, Jazz Historian and former editor of Down Beat John Chilton, Jazz Historian Maxine Gordon (widow of Dexter Gordon) Gary Giddins, Jazz Journalist Nat Hentoff, Jazz Journalist Won’t you print up copies of the J4JA Petition and Fact Sheet and convince your fellow musicians to sign on? Then simply mail them in to the address below—or drop by the union’s Jazz Dept—on the 3rd floor. AFM Local 802 322 West 48th Street New York, New York 10036 Associated Musicians of Greater New York, AFM Local 802322 West 48th Street 3rd floorNew York, New York 10036 *LISTEN TO HammondCast 148 HERE: HammondCast 148 KYOURADIO with special guest HOUSTON PERSON tenor saxophonist band leader: "Since I Fell for YOU", Interview with Jon Hammond, "Tenderly" www.houstonperson.com JIMMY McGRIFF R.I.P. "I Got A Woman" and "River's Invitation" with Hank Crawford + Billy Preston © www.HammondCast.com Bob Cunningham, Bass, Bernard Purdie, Jon Hammond, Local 802, Musicians Union, NDR Jazz, Late Rent, Mikell's, Jazz Foundation of America, Elmar Lemes, ASCAP Network, B3 organ, XK-3c, Blues, Funky, Rhonda Hamilton, WBGO, Cephas Bowles, Gary Walker, Brian Delp, Josh Jackson, Sylvia Brewer ASCAP Network Behind The Beat with Jon Hammond "LATE RENT" Elmar Lemes photo of Jon Hammond playing XK-3 organ at Local 802 Monday Night Jazz Session sponsored by Jazz Foundation of America Jon Hammond MySpace HammondCast ASCAP Network Behind The Beat "NDR SESSIONS Projekt" Jon Hammond is an endorsed artist of Hammond Suzuki USA Jon Hammond and Bob Cunningham playing at Local 802 Monday Night Jazz Session sponsored by Jazz Foundation of America photo by Elmar Lemes Justice For Jazz Artists, Bob Cranshaw, Bernard Purdie, Jon Hammond, Todd Weeks, Local 802, Musicians Union, B3 organ, XK-3c, Accordion, ASCAP Network, Birdland, Blue Note, Smoke, Iridium, Jerry Nadler, KYOU Related articles by Zemanta HammondCast 15 with Al Jazzbeaux Collins appearance on KYOURADIO (lockergnome.com) Send to a friend

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