Friday, August 2, 2013

California pension funds took in $33.8B, paid out $28.2B last year

ACW CALPERS BLD.JPGCalifornia's state-managed public employee pension funds took in $33.8 billion from employer and employee contributions in 2012 and paid out $28.2 billion in benefits to 874,734 retirees, according to a new Census Bureau report.

There are five state-managed pension funds but the two biggest, the California Public Employees Retirement System and the State Teachers Retirement System, account for all but a fraction of their overall economic activity.

Collectively, the five held $430.2 billion in assets of various kinds - corporate stocks being the largest single bloc at $177 billion -- in 2012 but had $592.2 billion in calculated obligations for 1.9 million public employee members of the systems, the report said.

Investment earnings in 2012 were just under $14 billion, while employees contributed $6.2 billion and state and local governments kicked in another $13.7 billion.

The report did not include any numbers for the systems' unfunded liabilities, although no one disputes that there are some. The size of those liabilities, however, is the subject of much political debate because they hinge on actuarial assumptions of how many public employees retire and when they retire, and future pension fund earnings.

Generally, the funds assume a "discount rate" -- the same as their assumption of average earnings -- of about 7.5 percent a year, although they vary a bit from fund to fund. Critics have said that is too high and artificially lowers unfunded liabilities, whereas a lower rate, closer to the corporate bond rate used by private funds, would be more realistic.

The Governmental Accounting Standards Board has been pressing state and local governments to at least report what liabilities would be with lower rates, even if they are not officially adopted.

Last year, the Legislature and Gov. Jerry Brown adopted a relatively mild pension reform plan aimed at reducing future liabilities, but its effect has yet to be felt. The plan also encourages local governments, which either operate their own pension funds or contract with CalPERS, to do the same and it's a burning issue at the local level.

It's also an issue for two California cities, Stockton and San Bernardino, that have filed for bankruptcy protection. Their federal bankruptcy court proceedings have been dominated by uncertainty as to whether pension obligations can be reduced in bankruptcy, or are legally off limits.

PHOTO: CalPERS building in Sacramento. March 3, 2008. The Sacramento Bee/ Anne Chadwick Williams

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© Copyright The Sacramento Bee. All rights reserved.

Source: http://blogs.sacbee.com/capitolalertlatest/2013/08/california-pension-funds-took-in-338b-paid-out-282b-last-year.html

Higher costs hurt Big Oil profits, which could mean higher gas prices

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Source: http://www.dailyrecord.com/article/20130801/NJBIZ/308010039/1005/RSS

Train of Thought Derailed: How an Accident Can Affect Your Brain

A survivor of last week's deadly train derailment in Spain illustrates how disaster can alter your mind


Image: Flickr/elentir (Contando Estrelas)

My cousin Guillermo Cassinello Toscano was on the train that derailed in Santiago de Compostela, Spain, last week when it went around a bend at twice the speed limit. Cassinello heard a loud vibration and then a powerful bump and then found himself surrounded by bloody bodies in wagon number nine. Shaking, he escaped the wreckage through either a door or a hole in the train?he cannot recall?then sat amid the smoke and debris next to the track and began to cry. Seventy-nine passengers died.

Cassinello doesn?t remember everything that happened to him. The same mechanisms that kept his brain sharp enough to escape immediate danger may also make it harder for him both to recall the accident, and to put the trauma behind him. "The normal thing is that the person doesn't remember the moment of the accident or right after," says clinical psychologist Javier Rodriguez Escobar of trauma therapy team Grupo Isis in Seville, who helped treat and study victims of the 2004 Madrid train bombings. That's because the mind and the body enter a more alert but also more stressed state, with trade-offs that can save your life, but harm your mind?s memory-making abilities.

As the train fell over, several changes would have swept through Cassinello?s body. His adrenal glands, near his kidneys, would have released adrenaline (also known as epinephrine) into his bloodstream. The adrenaline would have directed blood to the powerful muscles of his arms and legs, where it would help him escape the wreckage faster. The hormone would have raised his heart and breathing rates. It also would have stimulated his vagus nerve, which runs from his spine to his brain. Although adrenaline cannot cross the blood?brain barrier, the vagus can promote noradrenaline production in the brain. That hormone activates the amygdala, which helps form memories.

Just the right amount of noradrenaline, researchers have found, can boost memory storage; too much can destroy it. Figuring out the balance could allow researchers to harness the hormone. Neuroscientist Christa McIntyre at the University of Texas at Dallas and colleagues have been studying how the chemical shapes memory-making in rats (her team is planning a human trial). When the team stimulated rats? vagus nerves the animals? memories improved. McIntyre has to keep the dose low, however, because other experiments have shown that too much noradrenaline appears to impede memory-making[OR, TO VARY: formation]. Researchers are still trying to determine whether the excess noradrenaline directly causes the memory lapses or if the hormone is associated with high stress levels that cause some other chemical system to interfere. "That's the part we don't really understand: if there's too much [noradrenaline] or if there's another system that kicks in and puts a brake on it," McIntyre says.

Cassinello's memory lapses may be due to a noradrenaline overflow. But there may be other explanations for the gaps in his memory. His brain may have narrowed his attention at the time of the crash to only those things that matter for survival, such as escaping the train, leading him to ignore things that do not, such as whether the path out of the train passed through a door or a hole. Researchers have shown that humans report selective hearing during stressful events and that stressed people pay attention to different things than do unstressed people (pdf).

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/~r/sciam/biology/~3/bXTZwGRta84/article.cfm

Golf Rankings for World Golf Championships - Bridgestone Invitational

1. Tiger Woods [Yahoo Class A] - World Ranking: #2

Woods is coming off a T6 from two weeks ago in The Open Championship to give him half a dozen finishes of sixth or better in eight stroke play events this season. Tiger has won at Firestone seven times, three times in a row from 1999-2001 and four times in a row from 05-09. Over the last three years he's finished T78, T37 and T8. Woods is first in both scoring average and All-Around Ranking.

2. Phil Mickelson [Yahoo Class A] - World Ranking: #10

Mickelson is coming off his first British Open victory and has landed a total of four podium finishes over his last six starts. However, he?s finished outside of the top 40 eight of the last nine years at Firestone. Lefty is currently first in birdie average and eighth in All-Around Ranking.

3. Adam Scott [Yahoo Class C] - World Ranking: #7

Scott won this event in 2011 after a T9 the year before. He only managed a T45 in 2012, but is coming off a T3 in the British Open. Scott is third in scoring average, 13th in total driving and 17th in All-Around Ranking.

4. Brandt Snedeker [Yahoo Class A] - World Ranking: #4

Snedeker won last week?s RBC Canadian Open and has finished 17th or better in four straight starts. He?s played Firestone each of the last two years to disappointing T33 and T50 results. Snedeker is good for second in birdie average, seventh in scoring average and fourth in All-Around Ranking.

5. Lee Westwood [Yahoo Class C] - World Ranking: #11

Over his last nine worldwide starts, Westwood owns seven top-15s and is coming off a second-high T3 at the British Open. Since 2008 he?s notched three finishes inside the top 10 at Firestone. On Tour he?s 11th in scoring average.

6. Dustin Johnson - World Ranking: #21

Johnson took himself out of contention late in the final round of last week?s RBC Canadian Open to finish with a share of second. D.J. has played Firestone each of the last four years finishing 22nd or better three times. He?s now made four straight cuts with a pair of top-10s.

7. Justin Rose [Yahoo Class B] - World Ranking: #5

Rose recorded a pair of top-15s around his victory in the U.S. Open, but is coming off a missed cut in the British Open. At Firestone he?s recorded a pair of top-fives, including last year. Rose ranks first in total driving, second in scoring average and second in All-Around Ranking.

8. Matt Kuchar [Yahoo Class B] - World Ranking: #9

Over the last three years Kuchar owns two top-10s and hasn't finished outside of the top 20 at Firestone. His streak of 21 consecutive cuts made is the longest active on Tour. Kuchar is also sixth in scoring average.

9. Henrik Stenson [Yahoo Class C] - World Ranking: #58

Stenson hasn't played Firestone since 2010, but is coming off a solo runner-up performance in The Open Championship. Prior to that he finished T3 in the Scottish Open and T10 in the BMW International Open, all European Tour events. On Tour Stenson ranks third in total driving and 10th in scoring average.

10. Steve Stricker - World Ranking: #8

Stricker has played Firestone each of the last six years with four straight finishes inside the top 15. Last year he finished a career-best T2. Stricker hasn't played since a T10 in the John Deere Classic and a T8 a month earlier at the U.S. Open.

11. Rory McIlroy [Yahoo Class A] - World Ranking: #1

McIlroy owns three straight finishes inside the top 10 at Firestone, but is stuck in quite a slump. Over his last five worldwide starts he's missed three cuts and hasn't recorded a top 40. McIlroy is far too talented and should get this thing figured out soon.

12. Charl Schwartzel [Yahoo Class C] - World Ranking: #16

Schwartzel finished a career-best T24 at Firestone last year and has made three straight cuts. This season he?s finished inside the top 30 each of his last four starts. Schwartzel ranks fourth in both birdie average and scoring average.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/FantasyFootballToolbox/~3/dkPgbqDPh-Y/article.cfm

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

North Pole not flooded -- but lots of melting in the Arctic

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Widespread media reports of a lake at the North Pole don't hold water -- but scientists who deployed the monitoring buoys are watching closely as Arctic sea ice approaches its yearly minimum.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/MeyKE2ijyVc/130730163142.htm

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Is This the New Vajazzle? London Colorist Now Offers ?Downstairs Dye? Job

vajazzle

via LikeGIF

Just when it feels like any other normal Wednesday, you come across something that makes you look at the world a little bit differently. Listen to this: London colorist Alex Brownsell of Bleach salon is now offering a ?downstairs dye? job, which is exactly what it sounds like. Yes, in an inspiring move people have started dyeing the hair down there to match their manes, a true show of dedication and one-up to past trends like Vajazzling, geometric shapes and the archaic bikini wax.

According to Brownsell, her salon, Bleach, offers multicolor, tie-dye and leopard print styles among others, which is a pretty big range given how much they have to work with. Beyond the practically endless options and learning that it?s pretty much painless, we?d rather not think about the details.

We live by the ?to each their own? motto, so if this feels like your thing, get ready: Bleach is coming out with their own line of products in October, and Brownsell?s hoping to open a New York location by the end of the year. Whether or not they?ll offer downstairs dye jobs is undetermined, so you?ve got some time to make up your mind. One thing to think about, though: What about the roots?

Image via Istock

[The Cut]

Source: http://beautyhigh.com/vajazzle-bikini-area-hair-dye/

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RE: Taken With Force

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Taken With Force

[1 ROLE LEFT!] Two girls and two guys are kidnapped and held hostage in a dreary cellar without knowing why and without knowing where. Can they survive on their kidnappers whims of insanity and violence?

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