Monthly Archives: March 2006

ReBlog Looks Good But Is a True Beta

reBlog by Eyebeam R looks like something I am going to use when it gets out of beta.

It’s another fork of feed on feeds, with an attempt at a fancy front end that both succeeds and yet makes me want to get in and do my own RSS because it’s just not the way I want it.

But in addition to being a moderately classy server-side feed aggregator, reBlog offers the potential of creating a link blog with ease, so I can make a feed of all the posts I wanted to blog about but didn’t get around to, and run it as a sidebar, or a separate page. There’s a full-text quoting feature too, which I can see incorporating into some classroom blogs, and just to make it super-easy reBlog integrates with WordPress, Movable Type, and soon with Drupal and other goodies. Alas, the MT integration is for versions 3.1 and up, and this blog is still at 2.6.x. But all my other blogs are wordpress, and someday, in my copious free time, I may try to convert this one…

At the moment, however, there’s a bad bug in reBlog that’s dropping error messages like

Warning: Unknown class passed as parameter in …/reBlog/refeed/library/RF/ClientController.class.php on line 740

into places that they do not belong.

So unlike google’s gmail, this is a real beta, and I’m going to wait a version or two until they clean it up.

From the about ReBlog statement:

What is a reBlog?
A reBlog facilitates the process of filtering and republishing relevant content from many RSS feeds. reBloggers subscribe to their favorite feeds, preview the content, and select their favorite posts. These posts are automatically published through their favorite blogging software.

Why should you reBlog?
reBlogs are useful to individuals who want to maintain a weblog but prefer curating content to writing original posts. They can also enable organizations to tap the contributions of their employees, members, and communities-at-large in order to easily redistribute relevant content.

What if I don’t want to blog anything?
reFeed, the RSS aggregating component is damn sexy and worth using if you just want to read lots of content and not be constrained to one computer.

Posted in Software | 1 Comment

Official Word from UM

At last, an official statement from Donna Shalala:

A Message from President Shalala

Dear Student,

Welcome back from Spring Break. I hope you enjoyed your time off.

I have some important news to share with you. Last week, the work group I appointed to study wages and insurance benefits of the employees of outside service contractors completed their analysis of the local market and presented their findings to me.

Their conclusions were that some of our outside service contractors were paying hourly wages that were below market, that service contractors were having difficulty recruiting and retaining qualified employees due to low entry wages and minimal annual increases, and that some of the service contractors did not offer low-cost health insurance.

The work group’s findings made it clear that the University needed to take immediate steps to address wages and health insurance for hourly employees working for our outside service contractors.

I am pleased to report that, effective last Thursday, the University adopted and implemented a new policy that sets minimum standards for service contractors doing business on the University’s campuses. The primary components of the new policy are as follow:

  • Effective immediately, the minimum hourly wage for all employees of outside service contractors is $8.00 per hour. Housekeepers, who previously had a starting hourly wage of $6.40, now have a minimum starting hourly wage of $8.55. Groundskeepers, who previously had a starting hourly wage of $6.40, now have a minimum starting hourly wage of $9.30.
  • University service contractors are expected to recognize performance and length of service in their pay scales. Many current hourly employees are seeing additional increases that put their pay above the new minimums, based on their total years of service. The University will review wage rates annually and update the minimum standards of the policy consistent with changes in market conditions.
  • All service contractors are expected to offer health insurance to all of their employees, keeping monthly premiums low in order to encourage high participation by the employees. Contractors are expected to implement the health insurance within a month, which allows a reasonable time to negotiate physician contracts and conduct enrollment activities.

We are very satisfied that this new University program establishes a wage and benefit level that is near the top of the market. The new policy is already in effect, and hourly contract employees are now receiving increased wages. Most hourly contract employees received their pay increases in their paychecks yesterday, and the rest will receive their increases in paychecks this week — all retroactive to last Thursday.

I requested this study as a response to the outpouring of sentiment from our community — students, faculty, staff, alumni, trustees, donors, and the clergy. We adopted the new policy because the data and analysis clearly indicated a change was in order, but more importantly, it was the right thing to do. Universities should always lead the way, and providing fair wages and health insurance is a necessity.

It is also important to point out that the University’s position on the labor dispute has not changed. The University remains neutral and is not a party to those discussions. That is an issue to be decided between UNICCO, its employees, and the union.

Finally, I want to assure you that there will be no increase in tuition next year to cover the cost of this new program. Tuition is already high, and we intend to honor all published rates for the next academic year.

I appreciate your input on this issue during the past few weeks. And I know that you support our decision to provide increased wages and health insurance for the hourly employees of our service contractors. I wish I could assure you that the next few months will be quiet, as the union, service contract workers, and their employer engage in a debate over representation. We need to respect the process. Democracy is messy.

Best wishes,

Donna E. Shalala
President

It’s good to have something official, although I’d still like to see the whole text of the actual report.

I think we have to give UM credit here. UM may be a little late to the party (the faculty agitation on this issue started at least in 2001), but they’ve done some good things, and for that we should be happy and grateful. That doesn’t mean there isn’t some fine print to be worried about. The two chief items which jump off the page are the issue of how much “health insurance … [with] monthly premiums low in order to encourage high participation by the employees” will actually cost or what it will offer. The reality — which is no fault of UM’s or for that matter UNICCO’s — is that decent health insurance is increasingly expensive, and might even cost as much or more than some of these raises.

The even bigger problem, of course, is that if you view this move in context, it’s impossible to deny that the only reason this happened in 2006 is that the SEIU came in and organized people. That factor was absent in 2001, ditto 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005. Under the circumstances, it would be irrational for either the SEIU or the workers who support them to give up their drive for a union, as it is now painfully clear that it is only through collective action — headline-grabbing collective action — that they achieve anything.

And the fundamental impasse on the issue of how the workers’ sentiments should be measured (card or ballot) remains unresolved.

Posted in U.Miami: Strike'06 | 1 Comment

Households Are Selling Stocks and Deeper in Debt

Angry Bear has some facts for us about what is going on in the US household portfolio:

The following table displays the annual changes in the assets and liabilities of US households over the last several years.


Sources: FOF tables F.100 and B.100. Note that this data is actually for households and nonprofit organizations. Nonprofit assets are estimated to comprise about 6% of the total combined category.

A couple of aspects of this data strike me as interesting. First of all, for the seventh year in a row, US households acquired more financial liabilities than they did financial assets. Naturally, this is due to the fact that much of the debt taken on by households was taken on to buy real estate. The escalating price of real estate meant that in 2005 the gap between the financial assets that households acquired and the financial liabilities they incurred was by far the largest ever.

It’s also interesting to note that households (and their pension funds) were net sellers of equities during 2005.

OK. So households as a sector as selling stocks and deeper in debt in both mortgages and other other debt (credit cards!). Does this mean they are house rich and cash poor, or just poorer over all?

Not to mention that I read this to mean that households will be in bigger trouble when the housing bubble pops. And that there’s less cushion nationally if the dollar overhang tries to come home…

Posted in Econ & Money | 1 Comment

Weird Media Blackout at UM Relating to Strike Report

I’d like to read the university’s report on pay and benefits for contract workers. I’d like to link to it too. But there’s still nothing on the UM web site. Nothing.

I called UM’s usually efficient Media Relations. “Evlynne” — who wouldn’t give her last name — said that she didn’t know anything about getting copies of the report. And there was no statement available from the university. There is no press release. “Where did the Herald get its information?” I asked. “I don’t know,” she said. There will, she said, be a letter to the faculty on Monday. Then she put down the phone.

In fact, it turns out, the Herald sourced its story to an interview with Shalala. I called the President’s office. The person answering the phone said she didn’t know anything about copies of the committee’s report or a statement, and someone would call me back. So far, no one has.

Is it just that everyone is on vacation (it’s Spring Break) or is this just slightly odd?

Posted in U.Miami: Strike'06 | 1 Comment

Google Never Forgets

Here’s another Google subpoena case. It looks like I was wrong in my radio sound bite: we didn’t have months before this case came up — we didn’t even have days,

Police blotter: Judge orders Gmail disclosure: The subpoena asks for not only current e-mail but also deleted e-mail: “All documents concerning all Gmail accounts of Baker…for the period from Jan. 1, 2003, to present, including but not limited to all e-mails and messages stored in all mailboxes, folders, in-boxes, sent items and deleted items, and all links to related Web pages contained in such e-mail messages.”

Google’s privacy policy says deleted e-mail messages “may remain in our offline backup systems” in perpetuity. It does not guarantee that backups are ever deleted. Baker estimated he may have tens of thousands of e-mail messages in his Gmail account.

Remember: Google never forgets. And it can all be traced back to you.

[yes, yes, I’m not speaking to the .00001% of you who know how to route things through anonymizing proxies and actually do so on a routine basis, ok?]

Posted in Law: Internet Law | 7 Comments

New Florida Chief Justice is UM Graduate

Justice R. Fred Lewis, a graduate of the University of Miami School of Law, will be the 52nd Chief Justice of the Florida Supreme Court.

And students say their career options are limited?

Posted in Florida | 2 Comments