1. #5101
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    Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

    Quote Originally Posted by bsm2 View Post
    Yep Jobs Jobs Jobs glad you approve of the Great Plan President Biden has proposed.
    Is that why we didn't gain one half of new positions filled ? That is a failure.. not an achievement.

    Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk
    Last edited by Phil B.; 10-13-2021 at 01:55 PM.

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    Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

    Quote Originally Posted by Phil B. View Post
    Is that why we didn't one half of new positions filled ? That is a failure.. not an achievement.

    Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk
    More jobs available today than anytime in US History and more to come

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    Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

    House Approves Bill to Avert U.S. Default, Sending It to Biden
    The legislation, which the president is expected to sign quickly, lifts the debt ceiling until early December, when another congressional showdown looms.

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    Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

    Quote Originally Posted by bsm2 View Post
    More jobs available today than anytime in US History and more to come

    We still have 10 million people (out of 20 million) who haven't RETURNED to work since the pandemic began.
    Until we fill the jobs back up that were lost to the pandemic, we can't call it "job growth".
    Once you get those 10 million back to their posts, then we can talk about "growth".
    Omertà

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    Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

    Quote Originally Posted by FrohnB View Post
    We still have 10 million people (out of 20 million) who haven't RETURNED to work since the pandemic began.
    Until we fill the jobs back up that were lost to the pandemic, we can't call it "job growth".
    Once you get those 10 million back to their posts, then we can talk about "growth".
    ... speaking of job creation

    Biden administration announces plans for massive expansion of wind farms off US coasts


    The Biden administration is planning to aggressively expand offshore wind energy capacity in the United States, potentially holding as many as seven new offshore lease sales by 2025.

    The move was announced Wednesday by US Interior Secretary Deb Haaland and first reported by The New York Times.
    Haaland said the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management is exploring leasing sales along the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, in the Gulf of Maine, the New York Bight, the central Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico, as well as off the Carolinas, California and Oregon.

    "The Interior Department is laying out an ambitious roadmap as we advance the Administration's plans to confront climate change, create good-paying jobs, and accelerate the nation's transition to a cleaner energy future," Haaland said in a statement. "We have big goals to achieve a clean energy economy and Interior is meeting the moment."

    The administration in March announced a coordinated effort to bolster offshore wind energy projects in the United States in order to jump-start a "clean energy revolution."

    As part of that initiative, which spans multiple government agencies, the Departments of the Interior, Energy and Commerce committed to a shared goal of generating 30 gigawatts of offshore wind in the US by 2030. The Interior Department estimates that reaching that goal would create nearly 80,000 jobs.

    The Interior Department has already started lease sales for some of the areas Haaland mentioned on Wednesday.
    The administration in June announced a competitive lease sale for offshore wind in the New York Bight -- an area of shallow water between New York and New Jersey -- that it estimated could generate 7 gigawatts of energy, enough to power more than 2.6 million homes.

    In May, the administration approved the 800-megawatt Vineyard Wind project, located 12 nautical miles off the shore of Martha's Vineyard. Later that month, it announced the California coastline would be opened to wind power for the first time.


  6. #5106
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    Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

    Quote Originally Posted by SalesServiceGuy View Post
    ... speaking of job creation

    Biden administration announces plans for massive expansion of wind farms off US coasts


    The Biden administration is planning to aggressively expand offshore wind energy capacity in the United States, potentially holding as many as seven new offshore lease sales by 2025.

    The move was announced Wednesday by US Interior Secretary Deb Haaland and first reported by The New York Times.
    Haaland said the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management is exploring leasing sales along the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, in the Gulf of Maine, the New York Bight, the central Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico, as well as off the Carolinas, California and Oregon.

    "The Interior Department is laying out an ambitious roadmap as we advance the Administration's plans to confront climate change, create good-paying jobs, and accelerate the nation's transition to a cleaner energy future," Haaland said in a statement. "We have big goals to achieve a clean energy economy and Interior is meeting the moment."

    The administration in March announced a coordinated effort to bolster offshore wind energy projects in the United States in order to jump-start a "clean energy revolution."

    As part of that initiative, which spans multiple government agencies, the Departments of the Interior, Energy and Commerce committed to a shared goal of generating 30 gigawatts of offshore wind in the US by 2030. The Interior Department estimates that reaching that goal would create nearly 80,000 jobs.

    The Interior Department has already started lease sales for some of the areas Haaland mentioned on Wednesday.
    The administration in June announced a competitive lease sale for offshore wind in the New York Bight -- an area of shallow water between New York and New Jersey -- that it estimated could generate 7 gigawatts of energy, enough to power more than 2.6 million homes.

    In May, the administration approved the 800-megawatt Vineyard Wind project, located 12 nautical miles off the shore of Martha's Vineyard. Later that month, it announced the California coastline would be opened to wind power for the first time.

    So what happens when the wind drops below the minimum velocity?

    Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk

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    IT Manager 10,000+ Posts bsm2's Avatar
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    Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill


  8. #5108
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    Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

    Fed to ban US policymakers from owning individual stocks, restrict trading following controversy



    • The Federal Reserve announced sweeping new rules for its top officials Thursday, banning trading in individual stocks and bonds.
    • Those new rules come on the heels of a swelling ethics controversy over whether central bank officials should be able to trade while their policies can, and often do, move markets.
    • Officials will be restricted primarily to owning mutual funds, which they will have to hold for a year and will need permission to buy or sell.


    Responding to a growing controversy over investing practices, the Federal Reserve announced Thursday a wide-ranging ban on officials owning individual stocks and bonds and limits on other activities as well.

    The ban includes top policymakers such as those who sit on the Federal Open Market Committee, along with senior staff. Future investments will have to be confined to diversified assets such as mutual funds.

    Fed officials can no longer have holdings in shares of particular companies, nor can they invest in individual bonds, hold agency securities or derivative contracts. The new rules replace existing regulations that, while somewhat restrictive, still allowed officials such as regional presidents to buy and sell stocks.

    “These tough new rules raise the bar high in order to assure the public we serve that all of our senior officials maintain a single-minded focus on the public mission of the Federal Reserve,” Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said in a statement.

    Under the new rules, the officials will have to provide 45 days’ notice in advance of buying or selling any securities that are still allowed. They also will be required to hold the securities for at least a year, and they cannot buy or sell funds during “heightened financial market stress,” a news release announcing the moves said.

    “I’m hopeful that swift action will allow us to put this behind us and get us back focused on the job ahead,” Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic told CNBC during a “Closing Bell” interview.

    The rules come on the heels of disclosures that multiple Fed officials had been buying and selling stocks at a time when the central bank’s policies were designed to improve market functioning, particularly during the Covid-19 crisis.

    Since the early days of the pandemic, the Fed has purchased more than $4 trillion worth of bonds to bolster the economy through liquidity and low interest rates. It also bought billions in corporate bonds of some of the biggest names on Wall Street in an effort to ensure market functioning.

    “The optics are bad,” Selgin said of the previous Fed rules. “They needed a rule like this. I don’t think we need to feel sorry for them. They’ll do well enough with this restraint in place.”

  9. #5109
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    Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

    Unclogging The Ports Will Not Fix The Supply Chain’s Even Bigger Trucking Crisis


    This week the Biden administration addressed the most visible sign of the nation’s supply chain crisis: opening the Los Angeles and Long Beach, CA ports to work around the clock to unload cargo ships.

    Walmart, Target , FedEX, UPS, Los Angeles and Long Beach Port Authority directors and the International Longshore and Warehouse Union and Teamster leaders are all on board with the 24/7 plan.

    This may provide relief at the ports, but once the filled-to-capacity overseas containers reach land, there is another critical snag in the supply chain: a shortage of truckers and trucks to get those goods where they are needed. The current steps are a band-aid for the supply chain crisis, not a cure.

    “Removing the bottleneck in one area – the ports – doesn’t create flow,” says Douglas Kent, the executive vice president of strategy and alliances at the Association for Supply Chain Management (ASCM). “It’s commendable that the government is stepping in and trying to assist with port congestion, but other modes of transport that follow from there – rail and trucking – are stressed to breaking too. What they may be hoping for won’t resolve the overarching crisis.”

    Help wanted

    As in all parts of the retail infrastructure, there is a critical workforce shortage for truck drivers. But unlike many retail sales jobs where people can be put to work after a couple of hours of on-job training, the job requirements for trucking requires months of professional training. And too few people are lining up to take on the responsibilities of moving the big-rigs.

    While the new 24/7 plan may open the flow of products coming in from overseas, those products must be moved over land to get to where they are most needed. Effectively, it’s like funneling the gush of water from a firehose into thousands of tiny garden hoses with many crimps in them.

    Warehouses close to ports are filled to capacity. Skilled warehouse workers are in short supply. And trucks and truckers to move the goods are thin on the ground.

    “It seems like everything needed to get the supply chain going is in the wrong place at the wrong time or not available at all,” continues Kent. “The complexity of the orchestration of the supply chain is going to be a continuing issue.”

    A truck driver shortage has been building for the last two decades, according to the American Trucking Associations. Back in 2018, the Bureau of Labor Statistics estimated the average age of a truck driver was 55 year old, making him – less than 10% of truckers are women – 58 years old today. That means he was born in 1963, rapidly approaching retirement and at an age when stamina and reflexes are starting to fade.

    Supply-chain expert Tony Nuzio, CEO and founder of ICC Logistics and former editor of Transport De Regulation Report, says even if the ports are open 24/7, getting drivers to pick up a load at 2 o’clock in the morning remains a challenge. And what’s more, with all the truckers concentrated around the California ports that leaves available truckers MIA in other parts of the country.

    Becoming a road warrior

    Young blood is desperately needed to get behind the wheel and move products along. Derek Leathers, CEO of Omaha-based trucking company Werner Enterprises, told NPR, “Being a truck driver was something that carried a certain level of honor with it. They were kind of the ‘knights of the road,’ and we lost that somewhere along the way.”

    Hiring young drivers aged 18 to 21 years is a priority. “The biggest issue with truck drivers is they don’t want to be away from home and family for a week or ten days,” Nuzio shares. At that young age, they may be willing to make the personal sacrifices long-haul trucking demands, even see it as an advantage.

    “Finding truck drivers to make deliveries to consumers and businesses has been an issue for decades. And nobody’s come up with a solution to that,” he continues.

    One way to attract young people to trucking is through technology.

    “Even in the more manual jobs like truck driving and warehouse work, we’re introducing new technologies so people are learning digital capabilities that expand their knowledge base beyond just the physical movement of a truck or goods in the warehouse,” notes ASCM’s Kent.

    “It gives them a way to progress on a different career path that are potentially transferable from trucking to other supply-chain and logistics specialties,” he continues.

    Technology to the rescue

    This brings up another challenge for the supply chain. Just like truck driving has lost allure, logistics and supply chain management is not perceived as a particularly sexy career path for newly minted M.B.A’s, not to mention college, even high school graduates.

    “There has been a mad dash recently to alleviate the supply-chain challenges, but there are so many nodes in the chain that are interlinked across multiple companies and different kinds of transport. Everything has to work together seamlessly and too often it’s not,” shares Sam Lurye, founder of San Francisco-based logistics firm Kargo.

    While attending Stanford, Lurye didn’t set out to pursue a job in supply-chain logistics, but experienced firsthand the shortfalls in it when he worked for a large defense company. That company was developing cutting-edge, 21st century avionics technology but its supply chain management was stuck in the last century.

    “It was jarring to see such an advanced company not understanding where the parts were in its supply network,” Lurye says. “It became clear that very few people were really thinking about the logistics, as compared with people solving issues in fintech or consumer tech. Logistics is the lifeblood of the American economy and we need more people to apply themselves there.”

    He set out to build technology to bring visibility to all parts in the supply chain, grease the wheels figuratively where the kinks are and move product through the network.

    In studying the trucking node in the supply-chain network, he found that wait times at the dock for loading and unloading placed a huge strain on drivers, cutting into their earnings and the time available to drive.

    “Imagine going to the airport and being told they don’t know when your plane will take off,” he shares. “It’s that way for truckers. They arrive at the facility with no idea whether they will be there for 30 minutes, five hours or the entire day.”

    The Kargo technology network calculates the resources of the warehouse, factory or distribution center and provides an expected time of arrival and departure so the trucker can plan their next stops and route.

    “This helps optimize truckers’ work and brings more job satisfaction,” Lurye continues. “The current systems are horribly opaque. Data sharing fundamentally improves trucking efficiency so facilities know when a truck will arrive, giving them time to prepare shipments and be ready to unload and load the truck so it can get on its way.”

  10. #5110
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    Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

    ... Elevating supply-chain workers

    ASCM’s Kent sees one bright spot coming out of the current supply chain crisis and that is an elevation of logistics and supply chain professionals, from warehouse workers, truck drivers on up the corporate ladder.

    “This is going to bring more attention to the innovations and education necessary to ensure scalable growth at the business level,” he asserts.

    His organization estimates that over the next five years there will be need for some six million logistics and supply chain workers from the warehouse and highway on up, including 2.5 million in management and one million in the IOT side of the supply chain.

    ICC Logistic’s Nuzio argues that the supply chain manager should be given a seat at the C-level table. “Given the amount of money corporations spend on logistics and the critical role it plays for large retailers and manufacturing companies, the supply chain officer needs to be part of the C-suite.”

    ASCM’s Kent concurs. “A company is only as strong as its supply chain,” he says. “It is part of every organization’s strategy and critical to ROI.”

    Getting products out of the ports and onto the store shelves is the current priority but Kent warns that more trouble is waiting on the backend after the holiday shopping rush is over.

    “Forward logistics – getting products into the store or e-commerce warehouse and into the hands of the consumer – is this season’s issue, but come January, we are going to see reverse logistics arise as items are returned.

    Reverse logistics is equally, if not more complicated as forward logistics, given the costs of returns and managing the entire returns process,” he concludes.

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