Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

Couple wins $2.4 million from fabled Las Vegas slot machine

Written By kolimtiga on Minggu, 24 Agustus 2014 | 12.18

A New Hampshire couple won a $2.4-million jackpot at a vaunted Las Vegas slot machine, ending a 20-year run in which many contestants tried and failed to coax a giant payout from the recalcitrant machine.

Walter and Linda Misco of Chester, N.H., played for five minutes Friday night before inserting a $100 bill into the "Lion's Share" slot machine at the MGM Grand and hitting the jackpot.

The game, which is the last progressive slot machine left on the casino's floor, had tempted players since the 1990s with its ever-increasing jackpot. The casino said it was the most popular slot machine on the floor. 

"I had seen a story about the machine online and my wife and I walked by the machine when we arrived," Walter Misco, 66 and retired, said at a news conference after the win. "She said, 'You have to play this machine and win on this machine.' So I was just following orders from the boss."

With "Lion's Share" finally having paid out, casino officials are considering allowing the Misco family to take the machine back to New Hampshire.

Contact Matt at matt.hansen2@latimes.com or @mtthnsn.

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Couple wins $2.4 million from fabled Las Vegas slot machine

A New Hampshire couple won a $2.4-million jackpot at a vaunted Las Vegas slot machine, ending a 20-year run in which many contestants tried and failed to coax a giant payout from the recalcitrant machine.

Walter and Linda Misco of Chester, N.H., played for five minutes Friday night before inserting a $100 bill into the "Lion's Share" slot machine at the MGM Grand and hitting the jackpot.

The game, which is the last progressive slot machine left on the casino's floor, had tempted players since the 1990s with its ever-increasing jackpot. The casino said it was the most popular slot machine on the floor. 

"I had seen a story about the machine online and my wife and I walked by the machine when we arrived," Walter Misco, 66 and retired, said at a news conference after the win. "She said, 'You have to play this machine and win on this machine.' So I was just following orders from the boss."

With "Lion's Share" finally having paid out, casino officials are considering allowing the Misco family to take the machine back to New Hampshire.

Contact Matt at matt.hansen2@latimes.com or @mtthnsn.

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Couple wins $2.4 million from fabled Las Vegas slot machine

A New Hampshire couple won a $2.4-million jackpot at a vaunted Las Vegas slot machine, ending a 20-year run in which many contestants tried and failed to coax a giant payout from the recalcitrant machine.

Walter and Linda Misco of Chester, N.H., played for five minutes Friday night before inserting a $100 bill into the "Lion's Share" slot machine at the MGM Grand and hitting the jackpot.

The game, which is the last progressive slot machine left on the casino's floor, had tempted players since the 1990s with its ever-increasing jackpot. The casino said it was the most popular slot machine on the floor. 

"I had seen a story about the machine online and my wife and I walked by the machine when we arrived," Walter Misco, 66 and retired, said at a news conference after the win. "She said, 'You have to play this machine and win on this machine.' So I was just following orders from the boss."

With "Lion's Share" finally having paid out, casino officials are considering allowing the Misco family to take the machine back to New Hampshire.

Contact Matt at matt.hansen2@latimes.com or @mtthnsn.

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

For a pitcher struck in the head, a comebacker was a life-changer

Written By kolimtiga on Sabtu, 23 Agustus 2014 | 12.18

Up until his world went dark, Adam Schwindt remembers everything about the day that changed his life.

The pitch was a changeup, and the line drive made contact with his skull with a dull thud, flush, so that it bounced straight back past home plate.

He knows that he immediately went down and then stood up; that one teammate flagged down a police officer; that another made sure he didn't choke on his tongue and someone else applied a wet towel to the bleeding.

Lying in the dirt, he told a teammate his head hurt "so bad." And then, "Oh, God. I can't feel my legs."

Afterward, witnesses say, his eyes rolled back and he fell unconscious.

This year is the 25th since Schwindt, 45, was struck above the right ear by that line drive during a scrimmage when he was pitching for the University of San Diego. Serious accidents such as his occur about once a year among high school and college pitchers, research of reported incidents has found. Three major league pitchers have sustained serious head injuries the last two seasons. Each case brings renewed calls for extra protection for a while, and then the baseball world moves on.

Few, though, have come as close to death as Schwindt, and few have had their lives change as much as his.

Not long after he was hit, desperate messages filled up his parents' message machine, about 30 in all, his mother estimated: "He's probably not going to make it. Get here as soon as you can."

A priest at Sharp Memorial Hospital told them the same thing. When Schwindt had arrived, doctors, using the Glasgow Coma Scale, graded him a 4 out of 15. Three is the lowest possible score. He was given a 20% chance of survival.

A neurosurgeon performed immediate surgery, removing part of Schwindt's skull and excising damaged brain tissue in his temporal lobe. Then it became a waiting game.

On the 13th day after the procedure, Schwindt's mother received a phone call from the intensive care nurse. She feared the worst.

Something strange had happened as the woman tended to Schwindt.

"Son of a —!" she thought she heard him say, with an added expletive. He was awake.

Today, sitting at the kitchen counter of his spartan apartment in Torrance, Schwindt says he is happy and healthy, though his life was dramatically altered.

Schwindt had wanted to be an orthopedic surgeon and, before he was struck, was studying for medical school. Now he works as a car salesman. It doesn't pay great, but it is enough.

He shows few lingering effects from his injuries and in most respects has made a startling recovery. He has no visible scar, but when he gets tired his gait changes because tendons atrophied during the coma. Recently, when he was giving out his parents' phone number, he had to double-check to make sure he hadn't forgotten. He keeps a whiteboard on his front door to help him remember the day's important events.

Schwindt reads from a document that mentions his depleted cranial reserve. "A bunch of stuff that says you're missing part of your brain," he says with a laugh.

When he awoke from the coma, no one was quite sure how his brain would function. For days, he floated in and out of awareness.

Eventually, he was moved to rehabilitation. On the first day there, he was asked to recite the alphabet. I know my ABCs, he thought. But he got tripped up past "S." He was told to tie his shoes. He couldn't do that either. He had trouble reading and walking.

He ate among patients who moaned or didn't remember why they were in the hospital, and he grew discouraged. The doctors told him he'd be there for months. That was the only time he cried.

On the seventh day, surprising everyone, he was already out.

Soon, Schwindt felt good enough to go back to school. Wanting to push himself, he took invertebrate zoology, which he almost failed — he got a C-minus — and genetics, which he did fail.

Physically, though, he felt strong, and by the fall of 1991 he had begun an effort to rejoin the University of San Diego baseball team. He planned to wear a backward catcher's helmet to protect his head. The school objected, worried that he might get hurt again and it might be liable. Schwindt filed a lawsuit — not for money, but to be allowed to try out for the team.

Despite testimony from Schwindt's doctors that said he was able to play, the court ruled in favor of the university, finding in part that the school couldn't prevent the risk of reinjury.

"Were this a cat," the U.S. District Court noted, "it could be said he had already spent some of his nine lives."

After the suit, Schwindt said, his financial aid dried up. He couldn't afford school any longer, so he dropped out to work at his family's shipping and packaging store, which he ran for more than 20 years until deciding he needed a change. Long before, he had abandoned his dream of becoming a doctor.

Recently, he returned to school to finish his degree in biology. In his apartment, he has posted motivational messages on pieces of paper.

He also keeps the shirt and baseball pants he wore that day, both ripped in half from when the doctors cut them off. They are reminders that pitchers must be better protected.

For the first time, Schwindt is hopeful that baseball might be moving toward better safety. In June, San Diego Padres pitcher Alex Torres became the first major league pitcher to wear protective headgear.

Better technology will come sooner rather than later, Schwindt hopes. Even now, he can't bring himself to watch when a pitcher gets hit.

Early this month, Miami Marlins pitcher Dan Jennings was struck in the head by a line drive and suffered a concussion. Like Schwindt, Jennings collapsed and then got back up. He leaned into his catcher's arms and stared blankly ahead until he started wobbling and was helped to the ground.

Schwindt was watching television when news of the incident flashed across the screen. It promised to show video footage.

Schwindt got up from the couch, grabbed the remote and changed the channel.

zach.helfand@latimes.com

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

For a pitcher struck in the head, a comebacker was a life-changer

Up until his world went dark, Adam Schwindt remembers everything about the day that changed his life.

The pitch was a changeup, and the line drive made contact with his skull with a dull thud, flush, so that it bounced straight back past home plate.

He knows that he immediately went down and then stood up; that one teammate flagged down a police officer; that another made sure he didn't choke on his tongue and someone else applied a wet towel to the bleeding.

Lying in the dirt, he told a teammate his head hurt "so bad." And then, "Oh, God. I can't feel my legs."

Afterward, witnesses say, his eyes rolled back and he fell unconscious.

This year is the 25th since Schwindt, 45, was struck above the right ear by that line drive during a scrimmage when he was pitching for the University of San Diego. Serious accidents such as his occur about once a year among high school and college pitchers, research of reported incidents has found. Three major league pitchers have sustained serious head injuries the last two seasons. Each case brings renewed calls for extra protection for a while, and then the baseball world moves on.

Few, though, have come as close to death as Schwindt, and few have had their lives change as much as his.

Not long after he was hit, desperate messages filled up his parents' message machine, about 30 in all, his mother estimated: "He's probably not going to make it. Get here as soon as you can."

A priest at Sharp Memorial Hospital told them the same thing. When Schwindt had arrived, doctors, using the Glasgow Coma Scale, graded him a 4 out of 15. Three is the lowest possible score. He was given a 20% chance of survival.

A neurosurgeon performed immediate surgery, removing part of Schwindt's skull and excising damaged brain tissue in his temporal lobe. Then it became a waiting game.

On the 13th day after the procedure, Schwindt's mother received a phone call from the intensive care nurse. She feared the worst.

Something strange had happened as the woman tended to Schwindt.

"Son of a —!" she thought she heard him say, with an added expletive. He was awake.

Today, sitting at the kitchen counter of his spartan apartment in Torrance, Schwindt says he is happy and healthy, though his life was dramatically altered.

Schwindt had wanted to be an orthopedic surgeon and, before he was struck, was studying for medical school. Now he works as a car salesman. It doesn't pay great, but it is enough.

He shows few lingering effects from his injuries and in most respects has made a startling recovery. He has no visible scar, but when he gets tired his gait changes because tendons atrophied during the coma. Recently, when he was giving out his parents' phone number, he had to double-check to make sure he hadn't forgotten. He keeps a whiteboard on his front door to help him remember the day's important events.

Schwindt reads from a document that mentions his depleted cranial reserve. "A bunch of stuff that says you're missing part of your brain," he says with a laugh.

When he awoke from the coma, no one was quite sure how his brain would function. For days, he floated in and out of awareness.

Eventually, he was moved to rehabilitation. On the first day there, he was asked to recite the alphabet. I know my ABCs, he thought. But he got tripped up past "S." He was told to tie his shoes. He couldn't do that either. He had trouble reading and walking.

He ate among patients who moaned or didn't remember why they were in the hospital, and he grew discouraged. The doctors told him he'd be there for months. That was the only time he cried.

On the seventh day, surprising everyone, he was already out.

Soon, Schwindt felt good enough to go back to school. Wanting to push himself, he took invertebrate zoology, which he almost failed — he got a C-minus — and genetics, which he did fail.

Physically, though, he felt strong, and by the fall of 1991 he had begun an effort to rejoin the University of San Diego baseball team. He planned to wear a backward catcher's helmet to protect his head. The school objected, worried that he might get hurt again and it might be liable. Schwindt filed a lawsuit — not for money, but to be allowed to try out for the team.

Despite testimony from Schwindt's doctors that said he was able to play, the court ruled in favor of the university, finding in part that the school couldn't prevent the risk of reinjury.

"Were this a cat," the U.S. District Court noted, "it could be said he had already spent some of his nine lives."

After the suit, Schwindt said, his financial aid dried up. He couldn't afford school any longer, so he dropped out to work at his family's shipping and packaging store, which he ran for more than 20 years until deciding he needed a change. Long before, he had abandoned his dream of becoming a doctor.

Recently, he returned to school to finish his degree in biology. In his apartment, he has posted motivational messages on pieces of paper.

He also keeps the shirt and baseball pants he wore that day, both ripped in half from when the doctors cut them off. They are reminders that pitchers must be better protected.

For the first time, Schwindt is hopeful that baseball might be moving toward better safety. In June, San Diego Padres pitcher Alex Torres became the first major league pitcher to wear protective headgear.

Better technology will come sooner rather than later, Schwindt hopes. Even now, he can't bring himself to watch when a pitcher gets hit.

Early this month, Miami Marlins pitcher Dan Jennings was struck in the head by a line drive and suffered a concussion. Like Schwindt, Jennings collapsed and then got back up. He leaned into his catcher's arms and stared blankly ahead until he started wobbling and was helped to the ground.

Schwindt was watching television when news of the incident flashed across the screen. It promised to show video footage.

Schwindt got up from the couch, grabbed the remote and changed the channel.

zach.helfand@latimes.com

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

For a pitcher struck in the head, a comebacker was a life-changer

Up until his world went dark, Adam Schwindt remembers everything about the day that changed his life.

The pitch was a changeup, and the line drive made contact with his skull with a dull thud, flush, so that it bounced straight back past home plate.

He knows that he immediately went down and then stood up; that one teammate flagged down a police officer; that another made sure he didn't choke on his tongue and someone else applied a wet towel to the bleeding.

Lying in the dirt, he told a teammate his head hurt "so bad." And then, "Oh, God. I can't feel my legs."

Afterward, witnesses say, his eyes rolled back and he fell unconscious.

This year is the 25th since Schwindt, 45, was struck above the right ear by that line drive during a scrimmage when he was pitching for the University of San Diego. Serious accidents such as his occur about once a year among high school and college pitchers, research of reported incidents has found. Three major league pitchers have sustained serious head injuries the last two seasons. Each case brings renewed calls for extra protection for a while, and then the baseball world moves on.

Few, though, have come as close to death as Schwindt, and few have had their lives change as much as his.

Not long after he was hit, desperate messages filled up his parents' message machine, about 30 in all, his mother estimated: "He's probably not going to make it. Get here as soon as you can."

A priest at Sharp Memorial Hospital told them the same thing. When Schwindt had arrived, doctors, using the Glasgow Coma Scale, graded him a 4 out of 15. Three is the lowest possible score. He was given a 20% chance of survival.

A neurosurgeon performed immediate surgery, removing part of Schwindt's skull and excising damaged brain tissue in his temporal lobe. Then it became a waiting game.

On the 13th day after the procedure, Schwindt's mother received a phone call from the intensive care nurse. She feared the worst.

Something strange had happened as the woman tended to Schwindt.

"Son of a —!" she thought she heard him say, with an added expletive. He was awake.

Today, sitting at the kitchen counter of his spartan apartment in Torrance, Schwindt says he is happy and healthy, though his life was dramatically altered.

Schwindt had wanted to be an orthopedic surgeon and, before he was struck, was studying for medical school. Now he works as a car salesman. It doesn't pay great, but it is enough.

He shows few lingering effects from his injuries and in most respects has made a startling recovery. He has no visible scar, but when he gets tired his gait changes because tendons atrophied during the coma. Recently, when he was giving out his parents' phone number, he had to double-check to make sure he hadn't forgotten. He keeps a whiteboard on his front door to help him remember the day's important events.

Schwindt reads from a document that mentions his depleted cranial reserve. "A bunch of stuff that says you're missing part of your brain," he says with a laugh.

When he awoke from the coma, no one was quite sure how his brain would function. For days, he floated in and out of awareness.

Eventually, he was moved to rehabilitation. On the first day there, he was asked to recite the alphabet. I know my ABCs, he thought. But he got tripped up past "S." He was told to tie his shoes. He couldn't do that either. He had trouble reading and walking.

He ate among patients who moaned or didn't remember why they were in the hospital, and he grew discouraged. The doctors told him he'd be there for months. That was the only time he cried.

On the seventh day, surprising everyone, he was already out.

Soon, Schwindt felt good enough to go back to school. Wanting to push himself, he took invertebrate zoology, which he almost failed — he got a C-minus — and genetics, which he did fail.

Physically, though, he felt strong, and by the fall of 1991 he had begun an effort to rejoin the University of San Diego baseball team. He planned to wear a backward catcher's helmet to protect his head. The school objected, worried that he might get hurt again and it might be liable. Schwindt filed a lawsuit — not for money, but to be allowed to try out for the team.

Despite testimony from Schwindt's doctors that said he was able to play, the court ruled in favor of the university, finding in part that the school couldn't prevent the risk of reinjury.

"Were this a cat," the U.S. District Court noted, "it could be said he had already spent some of his nine lives."

After the suit, Schwindt said, his financial aid dried up. He couldn't afford school any longer, so he dropped out to work at his family's shipping and packaging store, which he ran for more than 20 years until deciding he needed a change. Long before, he had abandoned his dream of becoming a doctor.

Recently, he returned to school to finish his degree in biology. In his apartment, he has posted motivational messages on pieces of paper.

He also keeps the shirt and baseball pants he wore that day, both ripped in half from when the doctors cut them off. They are reminders that pitchers must be better protected.

For the first time, Schwindt is hopeful that baseball might be moving toward better safety. In June, San Diego Padres pitcher Alex Torres became the first major league pitcher to wear protective headgear.

Better technology will come sooner rather than later, Schwindt hopes. Even now, he can't bring himself to watch when a pitcher gets hit.

Early this month, Miami Marlins pitcher Dan Jennings was struck in the head by a line drive and suffered a concussion. Like Schwindt, Jennings collapsed and then got back up. He leaned into his catcher's arms and stared blankly ahead until he started wobbling and was helped to the ground.

Schwindt was watching television when news of the incident flashed across the screen. It promised to show video footage.

Schwindt got up from the couch, grabbed the remote and changed the channel.

zach.helfand@latimes.com

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

USC's Justin Davis gets more opportunities as Tre Madden sits out

Written By kolimtiga on Jumat, 22 Agustus 2014 | 12.18

Justin Davis began training camp as the third tailback on USC's depth chart behind Javorius Allen and Tre Madden.

He might have a higher profile in the Aug. 30 opener against Fresno State.

Madden is nursing a toe injury that could make him questionable for the first game.

Madden, who did not practice Wednesday or Thursday, saw a foot specialist but USC was awaiting exam results, Coach Steve Sarkisian said after practice.

"We're taking every precautionary action we can to make sure that Tre is great and ready to go when his time is called again," Sarkisian said.

Madden began training camp fit and recovered from the hamstring injury that plagued him during the second half of the 2013 season.

He rushed for more than 100 yards in four of the first five games before he was injured against Arizona.

Madden's recent absence has created more opportunities for Davis. The sophomore appears fully recovered from the broken ankle he suffered last season against Notre Dame.

Davis performed well in two training camp scrimmages at the Coliseum and in practice this week.

If Madden is sidelined for the opener, the Trojans would rely on Allen and Davis and fullbacks Soma Vainuku and Jahleel Pinner.

"We're not in the worst-case scenario," Sarkisian said. "But I sure would like to have Tre out there with us. He's a really talented guy."

Dixon stepping up

With Jalen Cope-Fitzpatrick academically ineligible, freshman Bryce Dixon and fifth-year senior Randall Telfer are the Trojans' only scholarship tight ends.

So Dixon has leaned on Telfer for guidance.

"Randall's been always by my side pushing me," Dixon said. "Kind of like a big brother."

Senior walk-on Chris Willson also has eased Dixon's transition to college football.

Dixon, 6 feet 4 and 240 pounds, moved from wide receiver to tight end before his senior season at Ventura St. Bonaventure High.

He catches and runs extremely well. The blocking component is improving.

"Over the course of getting stronger and getting technique down, I should be a real good blocker," he said.

Kicking game improving

Kicker Andre Heidari struggled early in training camp and appeared to be facing a challenge from newcomer Matt Boermeester.

But Heidari, who made 15 of 22 field-goal attempts last season, "is kicking the ball really well for us right now," Sarkisian said.

This will be Heidari's fourth season as the starting kicker. He has made 40 of 55 field-goal attempts.

Punter Kris Albarado has consistently kicked well since training camp began.

"Kris continues to just boom the ball," Sarkisian said.

Last season, Albarado averaged 37.1 yards per punt in a special-teams scheme designed to prevent returns.

The new staff apparently will not restrict Albarado.

Mitchell overcoming additional surgeries

Receiver Steven Mitchell is attempting to overcome more than the major knee surgery that sidelined him last season.

Since spring, Mitchell has undergone two surgical procedures for a groin issue.

The first forced the redshirt freshman to sit out the final three weeks of spring practice. A second procedure was performed during the summer.

Mitchell has struggled to regain the burst that made him a top recruit from Mission Hills Alemany High.

Sarkisian has not spoken of the surgeries with reporters when discussing Mitchell's progress during training camp. But when asked Wednesday night by The Times, Sarkisian said the combination of injuries and surgical procedures had limited Mitchell.

"When you don't have the chance to run and you're rehabbing a knee, then you are rehabbing your groin and you're not really physically doing leg activities, your strength just isn't the same," Sarkisian said. "He'll get it back and he'll be fine."

Mitchell was not among players made available to the media Wednesday or Thursday.

Quick hit

Several veteran players were given days off from practice during training camp to allow them extra rest. On Thursday, freshman offensive lineman Toa Lobendahn was held out for the same reason, Sarkisian said. Lobendahn is on track to start at guard and he also has practiced as the backup center.

Follow Gary Klein on Twitter @LATimesKlein

Follow Lindsey Thiry on Twitter @LindseyThiry

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Clayton Kershaw, Justin Turner lead Dodgers to 2-1 win over Padres

First it looked like Clayton Kershaw might throw his second no-hitter of the season. Then it looked like he might suffer a heart-breaking loss. And then finally it was just another masterpiece.

Kershaw received a major assist from Justin Turner, whose two-run homer in the eighth lifted the Dodgers to a 2-1 victory over the Padres Thursday before a Dodger Stadium crowd of 39,596.

Incredibly, it was the first time all season the Dodgers have rallied to win a game they trailed after seven innings. Until Thursday, the Dodgers had been 0-46 when trailing after seven.

Kershaw (15-3) had to be sharp because San Diego right-hander Tyson Ross was matching Kershaw scoreless inning for scoreless inning.

For a long while, Kershaw made a bid to become the first pitcher since Nolan Ryan in 1978 to throw two no-hitters in one regular season.

Kershaw had walked catcher Rene Rivera in the second inning, though he was erased on a double play. With two outs in the sixth, he had faced the minimum number of batters.

That's when the Padres finally managed their first hit, if from their least likely source.

Ross, all 6-foot-5 and 225-pounds of him, had been matching Kershaw's string of scoreless innings, but then he did something with the bat. The .170 hitter lined a clean single into left-center and over the glove of leaping shortstop Miguel Rojas for the Padres' first hit.

The Padres must have found that encouraging, because in the next inning they managed to break the scoreless deadlock.

Abraham Almonte led off the inning with a basehit and Kershaw then walked Jedd Gyorko. He was able to get Tommy Medica on a fly to center, Almonte tagging and taking third.

But Rivera proved a problem. He lined a 2-2 pitch into left to score Almonte, and despite pitching brilliantly, Kershaw found himself down.

Ross had retired 12 consecutive Dodgers and was fairly breezing when  Carl Crawford led off the eighth with an infield single off the glove of Ross. Crawford just did beat the throw.

That brought up Turner, who promptly drilled a 1-0 pitch over the left-center wall. It was his fourth home run of the season, but maybe his biggest. Bubbles were back in the dugout.

Kershaw went eight innings, holding the Padres to the one run on three hits. He walked two and struck out 10. After losing his last start, he has now won 12 of his last 13 decisions.

Kenley Jansen pitched the ninth for the Dodgers and allowed a walk and the tying run to advance to second, before striking out pinch-hitter Yasmani Grandal to end it and pick up his 36th save.

The Giants split a pair of games with the Cubs, so the Dodgers gained a half-game in the National League West standings, pushing their lead back to 3 1/2 games.

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Franchisee rights bill passes state Senate, heads to governor's desk

SACRAMENTO — Legislation to give small franchise owners protections against fast-food giants, convenience store chains and other corporations headed to the governor's desk Thursday after winning a difficult vote in the state Senate.

The bill, SB 610 by Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Santa Barbara), was one of the most hard-fought business proposals this year in the Capitol.

National and international franchise companies, such as McDonald's, Subway and Round Table Pizza, argued the proposal would upset basic contractual law to benefit a minority of disgruntled store operators.

Supporters — with the help of a powerful ally, the Service Employees International Union — countered that the bill would bring fairness to a David-and-Goliath relationship that has long favored the large companies.

"This protects the franchisee from unfair contract terms while continuing to allow the franchiser to eliminate poor performers and to protect the franchise brand," Jackson said.

The bill, which passed the Assembly last week, passed the Senate on a 23-9 vote after union and franchisee lobbyists spent hours working the ranks of so-called moderate Democratic members to round up the last few votes. Gov. Jerry Brown has not said whether he would sign it or veto it.

Discontented franchise owners, who have spent two years trying to get legislation passed, complained of being victimized by parent companies that force them to give up their stores or block transfers of ownership.

Some franchisees particularly want to stop what they call "churning." That happens, they say, when franchisers find an excuse to cancel a contract with a store owner so they can resell the location for a higher fee.

The big-brand franchising firms say there's nothing wrong with the current legal, contractual relationship between the large and small independent businesses.

Franchising is a $94-billion-a-year industry in California that employs nearly 1 million workers.

Robert Cresanti, executive vice president for public policy of the International Franchise Assn. in Washington, D.C., accused the SEIU of exploiting the franchise industry disagreements for its own aims. He said the union was seeking to fuel its national campaign to raise minimum wages for fast-food workers and ultimately unionize the restaurants.

"It's threat unlike we've ever seen," Cresanti said.

But SEIU spokesman Christopher Calhoun said: "I think that giving franchisees more power and control over small business is going to help workers in every way."

marc.lifsher@latimes.com

Twitter: @MarcLifsher

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

California lawmakers OK new campaign rules for water board members

Written By kolimtiga on Kamis, 21 Agustus 2014 | 12.18

Lawmakers on Wednesday approved new campaign rules in response to a controversy involving the political activities of suspended Sen. Ronald S. Calderon and his brother, former Assemblyman Tom Calderon, both Democrats from Montebello.

The legislation, which now goes to the governor, would bar elected water board members throughout California from accepting campaign contributions of more than $250 from donors with business pending before their boards.

The bill also would require board members to abstain from voting if they have accepted such a donation in the previous year.

Assemblywoman Cristina Garcia (D-Bell Gardens) proposed the rules in response to reports by The Times that the Calderons had made large campaign donations to most members of the Central Basin Municipal Water District board before it approved a consulting contract for Tom Calderon.

"Given the scandals in my backyard with the Central Basin, this was important to me," Garcia said. Her bill is AB 1728.

The U.S. attorney's office has subpoenaed records from the Central Basin district involving a contract with Tom Calderon. The Times reported last year that the district had paid Calderon more than $750,000 in consulting fees since 2004 for political and legislative advice.

Less than three months before an August 2012 vote to extend his last contract, a Tom Calderon campaign group gave $10,000 to the reelection committee of water board member Phil Hawkins.

Ed Vasquez, Rudy Montalvo and Art Chacon, who were then on the board, also voted for the extension. Vasquez's reelection committee received $6,433 in three contributions from Tom Calderon from February through May 2012. He also took in $4,400 from Sen. Ron Calderon that year.

Montalvo's reelection campaign received $6,262 from Tom Calderon in early 2012. Chacon's campaign for the water board had a $3,000 contribution from Sen. Calderon in 2010.

The state Senate suspended Sen. Calderon in March, after he was indicted on federal charges including bribery. Democratic Sens. Leland Yee of San Francisco and Roderick Wright of Los Angeles County were also suspended; Yee was indicted on public corruption charges and Wright was found guilty of perjury and voter fraud for lying about living in his district.

All three have pleaded not guilty and are being paid because Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento) said the state Constitution does not allow salaries to be withheld from suspended lawmakers.

On Wednesday, the Assembly approved a proposal (SCA 17 by Steinberg) for voters to consider in 2016 that would allow pay and benefits to be stripped from suspended legislators. The deadline for placing proposals on this year's state ballot has passed.

Lawmakers on Wednesday also gave final legislative approval to a measure that would prohibit elected officials and candidates from using their campaign funds to pay a spouse to work on the campaign. The bill is AB 2320 by Assemblyman Paul Fong (D-Cupertino).

Other measures sent to the governor would:

•Require that, beginning with the 2016 school year, all students complete one year of kindergarten — now optional — before being admitted to first grade. Assemblywoman Joan Buchanan (D-Alamo) created the bill, AB 1444.

•Create a one-year "innovation awards" contest in which three state departments would each provide prizes of $25,000 to Californians who have ideas for cutting the cost of state government and making it more effective. The measure is AB 2138 by Assemblyman Mike Gatto (D-Los Angeles).

•Require the California State University system to develop guidelines to allow high school computer science classes to be counted toward math credits required for admission to the universities. Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Pacoima) introduced SB 1200.

patrick.mcgreevy@latimes.com

Twitter: @mcgreevy99

melanie.mason@latimes.com

Twitter: @melmason

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger