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The things in my head go 'round and 'round

This is my life. You can't have it.

Archive for December, 2008


It’s all about the he said, she said bull@%&*

I read the Detroit Free Press pretty much every day now, though I am now living in Pennsylvania. I grew up on The Freep. My Dad used to read it every day. Matter of fact, he read two newpapers daily. The Freep, and The Herald-Palladium, which is a Benton Harbor daily. On Sundays, we would get the South Bend Tribune, and the Free Press. I grew up with the news on and in my head.

So I still am in that habit. And something about the goings on in Michigan are disturbing to me. It is very reminiscent of an old Limp Bizkit song.

Seems that folks are doing a lot of finger pointing when it comes to the Big 3 Auto Makers. Some blame Management, some blame the UAW, some blame the foreign car companies, some blame the states for buying manufacturers. Lots of blame going around. But not a whole lot of trying to figure out what the heck to do to correct the situation.

If the Big 3 go under 2.5 to 3 million auto workers, and supply company workers are out of work. Is that part of a free market system, to let the rotten fruit fall ? Yeah, but is it in the interests of the rest of the country? Hmmm. Does management need to trim their excesses? Yeah. Does the UAW need to give some also? Yeah. Will that piss everyone off? Oh yeah. We still have this “This stuff is mine, keep your hands off of it” mentality going on.

What is the solution? Can’t tell you. Though I can suggest that we need to get beyond the “he said, she said bull@%&*” before we can get to that solution.

What do you think?

Namaste.

FARM SHOW! FARM SHOW!!

There are times I envision myself as Animal from the Muppets.

Though I don’t play the drums. Not even when we play “Rock Band” on the Wii. The drums are not for me. But I do identify with Animal.

For those of you not familiar to Pennsylvania, in January we have a event called The Pennsylvania Farm Show. The Farm Show is considered to be the largest agricultural event held in the United States. It has been held every January since 1917.

The 2009 Pennsylvania Farm Show will run from January 10th through the 17th. Keeping Pennsylvania Growing is this years theme.

Ok. That is nice. But what about the important part? The food court. Yeah, I am all about the food court. Have to hit:

PA Cooperative Potato Growers, Inc. – This is the oldest Potato Cooperative in the United States, chartered in 1922. The money raised during Farm Show week helps to support the marketing and promotion of PA potatoes. Monies are also used to pay dues for PA growers to belong to National Potato organizations; fund research projects, and promotional opportunities for PA growers.

Products for Sale: baked potatoes, fresh cut French fries, potato donuts, potatoes and baked sweet potatoes.

Love them fries.

Then on to:

PA Dairymen’s Association – This organization is a service organization that provides scholarships, youth programs, and agricultural education programs across the Commonwealth. They also maintain the milk house facilities located in the Farm Show Complex. The Dairymen rely on the annual Pennsylvania Farm Show to fund their activities.

Products for Sale: milkshakes, milk/chocolate milk, ice cream sundaes, deep fried mozzarella cubes with marinara sauce and ice cream cones

Do yourself a favor, get the vanilla shake. It is wonderful.

Next:

PA Mushroom Growers Cooperative – This organization gives its proceeds to the American Mushroom Institute, which conducts research and supports mushroom growers throughout the United States.

Products for Sale: deep-fried breaded mushrooms, packaged fresh mushrooms and portabellos, mushroom soup, grilled portabellas, grilled portabella sandwich, mushroom salad and schroomies

My family hates mushrooms. They are closet communists. Deep fried ‘srooms are wonderful, the grilled portabella is to die for.

Moving on, ok, waddling on:

Penn Ag Industries Assoc./Penn Ag Poultry Council & Penn Ag Aquaculture Council. -

Products for Sale: fish sandwich, trout chowder and tortilla crusted tilapia, fresh bagels w/or w/o cream cheese, cinnamon sticky bun, shoofly pie by the slice or whole pies, whoopie pies with white or peanut butter icing, large cookies and cinnamon bun

The fish sandwiches here are absolutely delicious. And the tortilla crusted tilapia is something that I am going to have to save room for.

Can someone get me a gurney? Keep moving:

State Horticultural Association
– the SHAP booth at the Farm Show is committed to raising money for the apple and fruit tree industry. One of the major benefactors of our booth is the fruit research lab in Biglerville. The center is committed to development of new knowledge and education necessary to lead and support the successful transition of the industry to new production systems and markets. The fruit centers infrastructure transformation through orchard replanting into new production systems, equipment technology development and laboratory renovations will continue to allow our field to grow and address the changes that need to be made for the future fruit farmers to thrive in Pennsylvania.

Products for Sale: apple cider, fresh apples, apple dumplings with ice cream, apple butter, cider floats, caramel apples on a stick, dried apple snacks, and apple or peach sundaes.

Apple dumplings. With ice cream. Oh. My. God.

I am done. But one last stop, back to pick up a dozen potato donuts. Get some frosted, and some plain. You won’t be sorry.

Dieting starts after the Farm Show in Central Pennsylvania. See you at the gym on the 18th.

Namaste.

Yeah, I am holiday’d out

tropchristmas

Yeah, I am over the whole holiday thing. Can’t wait for this coming Sunday when I take down the tree, and put it back in the storage shed. That will be a good day.

The holidays are fine. I actually enjoyed them more this year for the first time in a long time. Why? Because I had the week of Christmas off. I didn’t have to go deal with the ugliness of retail right before the big day. That is what made the difference this year. I made beer, bottled beer. Made cookies, and fudge, and had just a great time with The Princess, and MLW.

But it now needs to end. I go back to work Saturday for an evening shift, have Sunday off to put Christmas back in storage, and the rest of the year starts.

Be safe this next week. Don’t drink and drive. Don’t let you kids drink and drive, and don’t let them ride with someone who has been drinking. Keep your family intact.

That is the reason for the season, dude.

namaste.

Not a good time to be a GM retiree

I have family who used to work in the auto industry. My Mothers family all live in the Westland, Canton areas which are communities surrounding Detroit. Of 11 brothers and sisters, a couple worked on the line. And retired from them.

My Uncles didn’t live outrageously. They had modest houses, in modest areas. Their kids went to college, got married, and moved out of their parents homes into their own. There were no $70 an hour retirees in my Mothers family. They were the middle class, who worked, took care of their families, saved money for retirement, and when they did retire, they lavished love on their kids and their grandkids.

That was a huge run-on sentence. Sorry.

Part of the $17.4 billion we are giving the Big3 is tied to GM funding their pension package with stocks. You can read about it in todays Detroit Free Press:

Strings on auto loans risky for retirees
Stocks would be used for half of health-care trust

BY KATIE MERX • FREE PRESS BUSINESS WRITER • December 25, 2008

Retirement health care for as many as three-quarters of a million Americans will be placed at high risk if conditions proposed as part of auto rescue loans are enforced by the incoming Congress and Obama administration, labor experts say.

At issue is a condition of the federal loans that calls for General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC to use company stock or the equivalent to pay half, or $10.5 billion, of the cash owed to a union retiree health-care trust.

“It’s as if we, as a nation, learned nothing from Enron, essentially risking the health care of retired and active workers in such a cavalier fashion,” said Harley Shaiken, a professor at the University of California, Berkeley who specializes in labor issues. “The great Enron lesson was: Don’t put all your eggs in one basket. … Putting half your eggs in the trust-fund basket is still a high level of risk.”

Enron workers lost the lion’s share of their retirement savings when the company’s once fast-gaining stock became virtually worthless. Enron workers received their matching contributions in Enron stock — then were prohibited from selling it until they were 50 — and many invested their own 401(k) contributions in company shares.

Since Enron’s collapse, many corporations have limited the amount of company stock their employees can hold in 401(k) accounts. Legislators and shareholder advocates argued for tougher regulations to protect individual investors.

That is why, Shaiken said, it is shocking that President George W. Bush “apparently bowed to political pressures from the Republican right in the Senate” and called for the retiree health care of so many Americans to be placed in jeopardy.

Shaiken says he believes the new Democratic Congress and President-elect Barack Obama will revisit conditions placed on the UAW, and particularly on the funding of the VEBA (voluntary employee beneficiary association), when they take office next year.

But others say it may not be possible for the automakers to achieve the degree of restructuring cost-cutting required to meet conditions of the federal loans by the end of March without abiding by the terms set by the Bush administration.

The White House agreed to provide as much as $17.4 billion in loans to carry GM and Chrysler through the first three months of 2009. But the automakers must demonstrate viability by March 31 or they will be forced to immediately pay back the loans or file for bankruptcy. As part of the loan agreement, the federal government set targets for restructuring that include union wage concessions, the change in VEBA funding and cutting the company’s bond debt by about two-thirds.

While the automakers can deviate from these targets, “absent a near-term economic recovery,” Citigroup auto analyst Itay Michaeli wrote in a note to investors this week, “we believe it would be difficult to deviate significantly from these targets and still demonstrate viability.”

Gary Chaison, professor of industrial relations at Clark University in Worcester, Mass., said that while the changes to VEBA funding are not optimal for the approximately 750,000 people for whom the new fund was supposed to provide health coverage beginning in 2010, it still may ensure more benefits than they otherwise would have received in retirement.

“I think this makes the best of a bad situation,” Chaison said. “If they pay a portion of the VEBA now, they might have enough to pay for the health-care benefits of the current retirees and they might get more later.”

But, Chaison said, his impression even from the time the UAW and automakers agreed to the VEBA in late 2007 was that it was questionable whether the health-care trust would last long enough to keep the commitments the UAW and automakers made.

Although the UAW described the VEBA as a solid plan to provide benefits to retirees and workers who were active as of the contract agreements last year, it was in part a defensive maneuver intended to protect workers from corporate bankruptcies that typically wipe out retiree benefits.

And it might not even have come to that, the UAW said when it pitched the VEBA to members. The automakers could have sought court approval to simply terminate retiree medical benefits.

At the time the UAW agreed to it, workers and analysts believed a VEBA would protect them from the risk of bankruptcy. While an automaker’s default seemed possible, just a year ago, few thought it would happen before the VEBA was funded and took effect in 2010.

But with the risk of illiquidity now an imminent possibility, the UAW on Dec. 3 agreed to postpone until 2012 the VEBA payments that were due from GM and Chrysler in 2010.

Now the government is asking the trust to accept half cash and half stock.

A UAW spokesman declined to comment on the proposed conditions for changing VEBA funding.

GM retiree Ralph Herndon of Otisville said he isn’t worried about getting half of the VEBA funding from GM stock — he has faith the company will rebound and survive — but he is worried about the management of stocks on Wall Street in general.

“GM stock doesn’t bother me,” Herndon said. “I’m not going to worry about the VEBA, because all the worrying we do is going to change nothing. I’m cautiously optimistic it will work out. … But if you expect me to save for my own retirement, someone needs to manage the managers on Wall Street better.”

Herndon said his 401(k) has dropped by half in the past year or so.

But many industry experts said the bet on GM stock is a risky one.

Several analysts this week cautioned that current GM equity investors could find the value of their holdings wiped out either by bankruptcy or by dilution from new government stakes in the company.

“The stock may go down to zero,” Chaison said. “My view of the VEBA is it was on shaky ground already. Now, if I were a retiree I would be hoping to come out of this with health-care benefits for the short-run. If I were a present employee, I wouldn’t count on the VEBA for health care. I would hope I would get a buyout or keep my job. The name of the game right now is to save jobs. Everything else is secondary.”

Good News for Detroit and GMAC

The auto lending arm of GM, known as GMAC has been granted status of bank holding company by the Federal Reserve. More from The Detroit Free Press:

Fed’s bank ruling buoys GMAC, GM
Dealers rejoice as bank status lets lender tap bailout funds

BY BRENT SNAVELY and JEWEL GOPWANI • FREE PRESS BUSINESS WRITERS • December 25, 2008

The Federal Reserve granted a request Wednesday from GMAC LLC to become a bank holding company, a designation that helps General Motors’ lending arm avert a potential bankruptcy, significantly improves GM’s chances of survival and provides an immediate sense of relief to auto dealers.
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“I just got the best Christmas gift in the world,” said Joe Serra, who owns 37 automotive franchises.

The Federal Reserve Board said it made the decision under “emergency conditions,” and is requiring both of GMAC’s owners — GM and Cerberus Capital Management L.P. — to give up control of the company.

GMAC’s future has been viewed as a wild card in GM’s restructuring plan. A bankruptcy by GMAC could have wiped out the main lender to GM dealers, potentially derailing a turnaround at the Detroit automaker.

The Federal Reserve’s move offers GMAC a lifeline, opening the door to GMAC for several funding options to lend money to dealers and consumers during a time of frozen credit markets brought on by the meltdown of the nation’s financial institutions.

“General Motors is pleased that GMAC has won bank approval,” Steve Harris, GM’s vice president of communications, said late Wednesday. “Over time, if this makes credit for GM customers and dealers more available, it is obviously a good thing for GM.”

GMAC spokeswoman Gina Proia said Wednesday, “We’re very pleased about the news. It’s a significant positive step for the company and really marks a turning point in our history.”

Becoming a bank makes GMAC eligible to tap the $700-billion Troubled Asset Relief Program. GMAC has applied separately to the U.S. Treasury for money and is awaiting approval. Congress passed the TARP in October in an effort to bail out the nation’s financial institutions and unfreeze the credit markets.

In addition to applying for money from TARP and being able to accept deposits, as a bank GMAC also plans to apply for a program to sell bonds that are backed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

“It provides GMAC with what we think is the best long-term solution for us to support the automotive finance business both for consumers and dealers,” Proia said.

GMAC, which lost $2.52 billion during the three months that ended Sept. 30, is in such bad financial shape that it is having difficulty funding auto loans to consumers as well as financing dealer inventory plans. In November, GMAC warned that Residential Capital LLC, its mortgage lending unit, could default on its loans by year’s end.

Without approval to become a bank, analysts said GMAC faced a bankruptcy filing that would have cut off financing to the roughly 85% of GM’s North American dealers with which it does business.

Most of GM’s auto dealers rely on GMAC for “floor planning,” an industry term that refers to a loan that allows dealers to buy vehicles from the manufacturer until they are purchased by consumers.

Serra said he got the news while in church on Christmas Eve. About 65% of Serra’s dealerships are GM franchises. Several months ago, Serra, president of Serra Automotive, said he put his vehicle inventory financing out for bid to other banks.

“But with what was going on recently …no other lenders were interested in taking all of my inventory,” he said. “Without floor planning, you cannot conduct business.”

Losing loans from GMAC could have snowballed into a steep sales decline for GM, which already has been pushed to the brink of insolvency by the financial meltdown, frozen credit markets and national recession.

Allowing GMAC to fail potentially would have undone progress GM could make with the $13.4 billion in loans it is getting from the federal government, announced by the Bush administration last week.

One of the biggest immediate consequences is that the plan requires Cerberus and GM to give up most of their ownership stakes in the financing arm.

Cerberus, which owns 51% of GMAC, would cut its ownership stake to as little as 33%, maintaining voting interest of as much as 14.9%. To cut its stake, Cerberus would distribute its stock in GMAC to its investors. GM, which owns 49% of GMAC, would cut its stake to less than 10% of GMAC.

The news was released after the market closed Wednesday. Shares of GMAC dropped 36 cents or 6.6% Wednesday to close at $5.11.

It is a wonderful life

snowy-christmas

Just finished watching Frank Capra’s “It’s a Wonderful Life” with Jimmy Stewart, and Donna Reed. I love that movie, and like to watch it every holiday. It rings a chord in me.

And it makes me cry everytime. Everytime. If you haven’t seen it in awhile, you have to. It brings back a simpler time. One that I wish we would return to.

Namaste.

Merry Christmas

The day has arrived, the presents have been opened, everyone is happy.

I am perplexed by the reaction of The Princess to her gifts. I had thought that at 13 a girl was beyond toys. But it seems that I was wrong. The biggest exclamations came from something called “moon sand”, and a “meeba”. I have to say that I have no clue what this items are, but as I am typing this The Princess is playing with her “meeba”. With a bow pasted to her head.

I love my girls.

Merry Christmas, have a safe and sane holiday.

Namaste.

Another GM plant closing

According to the AP wireservice, GM is closing their oldest plant. It is an SUV plant in Wisconsin that has been open since 1918. That is 85 years folks.

The only thing that GM has staying open is the plants where they are teamed with Isuzu.

And the times, they are a changin’.

Namaste.

Not just Detroit would be effected

The automotive industry is not located solely in Detroit. Workers at General Motors Corp.’s sport-utility vehicle plant in the Dayton suburb of Moraine are working their last day at the factory. About 1,080 hourly workers are employed at the plant.

And across the border in Indiana, Kokomo, with four Chrysler plants employing about 5,000 workers, helps support numerous auto parts suppliers, including Delphi Corp., an auto electronics supplier that has about 3,100 Kokomo employees.

Marion Mayor Wayne Seybold, whose city has a GM plant that employs 1,200 and has numerous suppliers, said he was relieved that Bush “stood up” and offered the loans to GM and Chrysler.

Just another example of the ripple effect.

Namaste.

It all started so simply

I had beer that needed to be bottled. A nice red ale. It had been in the fermentor for a couple of weeks. It was time to bottle it.

But first the bottles had to be cleaned. No biggie, put them in a 5% bleach solution over night and they will be ready. Which they were, but the kitchen had to be cleaned up before I could rinse the bottles.

And then after I rinsed the bottles, and sanitized the bottling bucket, I had to boil water and sugar for priming the wort. And so while the priming solution was cooling, I went out and delivered a case of beer to a friend who had given me a few cases of bottles. And then on the the Post Office where I dropped off a couple of things for MLW.

Then off to the liquor store for my BIL’s annual bottle of Crown Royal. The next stop was at Lowe’s for a tool for my FIL, and since Lowe’s didn’t have it, I went to Home Deport where I was informed that the tool in question wasn’t really that good. Got talked into another tool and headed home.

Where I promptly was caught in mid-afternoon traffic. Got home. Bottled the beer, cleaned up the kitchen a second time. Took the beer down to the cellar, had to clean up the section that I use for storage. Ended up taking 4 bags of junk out to the trash.

Went back upstairs, decided to make some fudge and magic bar cookies. And then cleaned up the kitchen for a freaking THIRD time.

Decided that tonight is a good night for pizza.

And it started out so freaking simply. I just needed to bottle some beer.

Namaste.