Russ McCutcheon

Archive for July, 2011

State cites NY theme park in vet’s coaster death

Saturday, July 30th, 2011

BUFFALO — Operator error was to blame for an amputee Iraq war veterans deadly fall from a roller coaster and the amusement park was cited for having improperly trained workers, state officials said Friday.

Labor Department investigators found the Ride of Steel coaster at Darien Lake Theme Park Resort was mechanically sound and safety devices were working properly when Army Sgt. James Hackemer, who had lost his legs to a roadside bomb, was lifted from his seat near the end of the ride and thrown to the ground July 8.

The 29-year-old father of two died of blunt force trauma.

State investigators said operators did not follow rules posted at the rides entrance, which require that riders have both legs. A seatbelt and metal bar restrain riders by the legs, shins and lap.

Hackemer wasnt wearing his prosthetic legs when he shifted from his wheelchair into a front seat of the ride.

The Labor Department, which has regulatory authority over amusement park rides, said it issued two violations to Darien Lake: one for not properly training the rides operators on the safety and operations restrictions and the second because operators were unfamiliar with the coasters safety requirements. No fines or penalties accompanied the violations.

Christopher Thorpe, general manager of the amusement park between Buffalo and Rochester, refused to answer reporters questions about whether the ride operators ignored the safety rules or were unaware of them when they let Hackemer board.

The ride, which had been closed since the accident, was re-opened Friday after operators received fresh training in safety procedures and clearer safety signs were posted at the recommendation of the Labor Department. Managers also must now review all safety restrictions on every ride prior to the start of each operators shift, the department said.

The park also will increase the frequency of random, unannounced audits to make sure ride rules are being followed and it has hired a dedicated auditor, Thorpe said.

We were all devastated by this tragedy, and are committed to doing everything we can to prevent something like this from ever reoccurring, he said.

Thrill ride enthusiasts said theyd heard about the accident but werent afraid to ride the roller coaster.

Stuff happens, said 30-year-old Shawn Lingg of Rochester, who rode the coaster a few minutes after it reopened Friday afternoon. People get in car accidents all the time. They dont stop driving cars.

Bill Pufky of Cicero, who was in the first car along with his 11-year-old daughter Rachel, said Dad tightened everything a little tighter. He called the death a tragic and unfortunate accident.

Last week, the Genesee County Sheriffs Office concluded that operators violated park policy by allowing Hackemer on the ride but it decided not to file criminal charges.

Hackemer came out of his seat and its restraints on the last and second-highest of three hills on the coaster, which reaches speeds in excess of 70 mph and whose highest peak is 208 feet. The veteran struck the front of the eight-car train and fell about 150 feet, landing on a grassy area.

The park has not released the employment status of the rides operators or answered questions about their work history.

When Hackemer got to the park with about a dozen family members, including his 3- and 4-year-old daughters, he stopped at guest services to ask about procedures for disabled visitors, sheriffs investigators said. He was told to enter rides through the exit but he declined a pamphlet detailing the physical requirements for specific rides, telling staff he already had one.

Marshal’s office gets laptops

Friday, July 29th, 2011

The Opelousas City Marshals Office is now using recently-acquired laptop computers in three of its four police cars, said City Marshal Paul Mouton.

The laptops were obtained through a state grant with the help of state Sen. Elbert Lee Guillory, he added.

With the laptops, deputy marshals are able to run license plate numbers to verify a vehicle belongs to the person driving it, Mouton said.

They can also find out instantly whether the person they have stopped is wanted anywhere in the world.

The laptops gives deputy marshals in the field access to the National Crime

Information Center, better known as NCIC, a database with entries from around the world.

It makes identifying possible fugitives quicker and easier.

When we didnt have laptops, we had to go through other police departments and marshals offices, Mouton said. That meant making phone calls, instead of typing in a name.

The program, ThinkStream Dispatch Deluxe, also allows local members of the city marshals office to locate people who have fled the area because of arrest warrants, Mouton said.

Deputy Marshal Eastin Shelvin is in charge of the system, Mouton said.

His staff has attended a training session on the program at the Louisiana State Police Academy.

Other local law enforcement agencies have also added laptops to the equipment in cruisers to help improve efficiency in the field.

The Defining Carousel of the Amusement Park Age

Friday, July 29th, 2011

The Dentzel carousel of Echo Park is a gorgeous example of the merry-go-round industrys early 20th century output

If there is a symbol of the genteel era before thrill rides came to define amusement parks, it is the carousel. Beautifully carved and painted horses twirl in a circle, moving up and down on shafts according to the steady rhythm of hidden machinery. The William H. Dentzel Company of Philadelphia built this particular carousel at Glen Echo Park in Maryland near Washington, DC It is one of 200 similar installations scattered around the country. The Glen Echo Park carousel features especially high-quality carvings by Daniel C. Muller, a premier craftsman of the time.

Carousels are a fascinating technology because they show how certain desires can be fulfilled through a variety of technological means. We have long loved to be driven in a circle atop animal sculptures! The idea of the merry-go-round precedes the industrial revolution, tracing its roots back to 18th century Europe. Early models were powered by draft animals and were little more than sculptures on chains that flew outward by the centrifugal motion caused by the rotation of the carousel. When steam-powered machinery came onto the scene, shafted carousels run by steam engines were built. As electricity diffused, it became the motive power of merriness.

The photographs of the carousel are a mix of black and white and color photographs from the Library of Congress Built in America collection. In Bamp;W, we get a glimpse of the machinery that drove the animal menagerie, while the color photos show off the carvings in all their painted glory. There are also several action shots drawn from other Library of Congress collections.TheEcho Park carousel still runsseasonally. It opens for business around April of each year and closes in September.

The William H. Dentzel company still exists, too, though it has not reached its early 20th century heights. William H. Dentzel III and his children continue to build the amusements, sometimes, in keeping with the industrys long history of innovation, even powering them with solar panels.

See more from ourBuilt in Americaseries includingThe Climatron,a massive wind tunnel, a fallout shelter, and theEdison workshop.

Cantor Gaming, Shuffle Master team up for mobile device

Friday, July 29th, 2011

Cantor Gaming and Shuffle Master Inc. announced Wednesday that they have entered a joint licensing agreement under which Cantor Gaming will license Shuffle Master games, including Three Card Poker and Ultimate Texas Holdem, for its mobile gaming device.

Financial terms of the deal werent disclosed.

Shuffle Master will license Cantors technology for odds wagering, according to a statement.

Cantor Gamings eDeck includes the companys proprietary games such as XtraOdds, Blackjack and XtraOdds Baccarat. The mobile device lets customers wager on sports or play games throughout a hotel, including bars, lounges, restaurants and pools.

U.S. jobs crisis: It’s time for corporate leaders to step up

Friday, July 29th, 2011

Aside from asking for more government assistance, the overseers of US corporations can do more to address the jobs crisis in the US And theres reason to believe that some are willing to take on the task.

By Eleanor Bloxham, contributor

FORTUNE — Our nations number one problem is jobs — and much of the discussion on jobs today focuses on what government can do to solve the problem.

When I ask CEOs and directors about their boardroom discussions related to creating jobs, for example, they often say they focus on where to locate their companies based on the tax incentives provided by various state and local governments. Larger firm directors say boardroom discussions on jobs center on favorable tax rates so they can repatriate international profits to create jobs.

These are old, familiar solutions that look to government assistance to solve the problems of business and the economy. But we are faced with new realities today: governments at all levels (federal, state, local) are stretched financially to the breaking point.

So the real question is what, without government assistance, can the overseers of US corporations do to help solve the national demand for jobs?

Perhaps there is room for hope. We have an untapped reservoir of talent to solve job creation problems in this country — corporate boards — and we must tap that reservoir now.

A recent survey by McKinsey amp; Co. suggests that corporate board members are not satisfied with their performance as corporate overseers. According to the global survey of 1,597 board members — 31% of whom were board chairs — only 3% believed that the quality of [the] boards overall performance was excellent.

If you believe top leadership matters at all to a companys performance, imagine what could happen if we could improve boards capabilities. Imagine if we could get to the level where, rather than 3%, closer to 20 or 30% of all boards were, in fact, doing an excellent job. Imagine the impact that could have on the worlds economies.

The solutions are not out of reach. Nearly half of the board members surveyed by McKinsey agreed on the ways boards can do more and tap more of their own capacity. The directors surveyed believed more time spent on company matters, more appropriate mix of skills/backgrounds among board members, and better people dynamics that enable tough, constructive boardroom discussions were the most effective ways to improve overall board performance.

If you think about it, the solutions the board members recommended are related. If corporate overseers cant — and arent — having tough, constructive boardroom discussions, they wont be able to effectively address what it would take to upgrade the boards membership or spend more time on company matters.

With boards, as in much of life, the way people relate to each other trumps most everything else in determining successful outcomes. Tough, constructive discussions are a necessary precondition to solving corporate problems and they are required if we are to have any hope of solving the national demand for good jobs.

So, how do we address the ability of boards to grapple with difficult boardroom issues and make a real difference to corporations and the larger economy?

Some corporations have sought to solve the problem by addressing the leadership structure of the board itself.

A new report by Deloitte showed that 40% of Samp;P 500 boards of directors in 2010 had separate chairs (ie the CEO and chair were different people), up from 23% seven years earlier.

But while a separate chair is increasingly viewed as important to good governance, there is a growing recognition that this is but one stop on the path to more effective board leadership. In February, the Millstein Center on Corporate Governance at Yale produced a working paper to begin to address the effectiveness of working relationships between board chairs and CEOs. That working relationship is central to establishing the kind of clear-sighted dialogue required in boardrooms today.

Whatever the fix for board leadership and corporate oversight, clearly 3% excellence will not do. Not when our economic needs are so great and not while the talent to achieve real excellence exists.  Boards must lead in these times — not stand mesmerized by the siren calls to outsource and downsize (See: The US has waged a war on jobs). There is real hope if we seize the challenge and put jobs on the corporate board agenda.

Corporate overseers of US-domiciled companies have the capacity to assume responsibility for the success of the US economy. They can do more to improve the long term economic viability of the corporations for whom they are stewards while serving their country as well. The talent to solve our problems exists but, as with the rest of the nation, is either unemployed or under-employed when it comes to developing the long-term solutions we need.

Its time to put boards to work.

Eleanor Bloxham is CEO of The Value Alliance and Corporate Governance Alliance (http://thevaluealliance.com), a board advisory firm. 

Figure skaters get their turn

Friday, July 29th, 2011

Nearly a week of intense, high-speed, drama-filled roller speed skating is over. Now, the more artistic skaters get a chance to shine.

The USA Roller Sports Figure Skating National Championships take over Memorial Coliseum#146;s Expo Center from the USARS speed skaters, who wrapped their championships Saturday.

The figure skating championships run through Aug. 7 and feature wide-ranging age groups competing in freestyle, pairs and dance disciplines.

Though the figure skating field may not be as loaded with area competitors as the speed skating nationals were there were about 40 locals then there still will be plenty of talent.

And the figure skaters will be competing with added pressure: There are qualifying spots for the Pan Am Games and world championships on the line in the next two weeks.

#147;It#146;s a beautiful sport,#148; said USARS figure skating director Jane Wojnarowsky, who has been involved the sport for 47 years as a skater, coach and director. #147;It#146;s such a wonderful sport that offers so many things to all ages.#148;

The first six days of the figure skating event will feature youth skaters who qualified for nationals out of nine regions in the country.

The elite competition starts July 30, during which the world-class divisions will compete for spots in the world championships Nov. 14-27 in Brazil. The local event concludes Aug. 2 with the presentation of Team USA.

Some competitors to keep an eye on: Kyle Turley and partner Heather Menard and the pair of Hector Pereira and Andrea Flynn in the world class team dance division; Natalie Motley in the world class inline free skating division; and Erin Ovens-Scalzitti in the world class women solo dance division.

Turley and Menard are five-time national gold medalists and five-time world silver medalists. They#146;ll be competing Aug. 1-2.

Motley has won the nationals five times and is a two-time world silver medalist.

Ovens-Scalzitti won silver at last year#146;s world championships in Portugal.

Pereira and Flynn were junior world silver medalists and now compete in the world class team event.

#147;Elite events would be the most exciting,#148; Wojnarowsky said. #147;The freestyle, it depends on your likes and dislikes. The dance events are always very entertaining because of the variety, but because it#146;s dance, it doesn#146;t have the high lifts.

#147;The dance event has three categories within one event their compulsory dances and then their original dance, which is done to a jive rhythm this year, and the third portion is the free dance. They#146;re very exciting because it#146;s different music and that#146;s when they can be a little freer. The pairs are always exciting. The freestyle is exciting, watching the jumps and the spins.#148;

Qualifying for the Pan Am Games, held Oct. 13-30 in Mexico, will be Aug. 3. The adult competition for the national championship will be Aug. 2-7.

sclardie@jg.net

AP IMPACT: Gulf oil industry-gov’t ties persist

Friday, July 29th, 2011

2 days ago 

WASHINGTON (AP) — Ties between offshore oil and gas companies and the agency that regulates them are so pervasive that a year after new ethics rules took effect, as many as a third of inspectors in some Gulf of Mexico offices have been disqualified to avoid potential conflicts of interest.

That makes it difficult to hire knowledgeable and independent regulators in a region where oil and gas interests are deeply intertwined in the economy and culture, and where expertise and training needed to do the job often is found in the private sector.

Documents obtained by The Associated Press show that about 1 of every 5 employees of 109 involved in inspections in the Gulf has been recused from some duties because of the risk of coming into contact with a family member or friend working for a company the inspector regulates. Ten people hired since mid-August 2008 were barred for two years from performing work where they could be in a position of policing their previous employer — a company or contractor operating offshore.

In the Lafayette, La., office of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Enforcement and Regulation nearly 35 percent of inspectors have been disqualified because a friend or relative works for a company they could interact with on the job. In Lake Charles, La., nearly 30 percent of inspectors held their last job with an oil and gas company, meaning they can’t perform any duties involving their former employer for two years.

The numbers come from recusal forms under a new ethics policy instituted last year by the Obama administration to identify and prevent possible conflicts of interest before they arise.

Copies of the forms submitted by more than 100 inspectors, engineers and permit reviewers in five Gulf coast offices were obtained by the AP under the Freedom of Information Act. Personal information, such as the names of the employees, their friends and their family members, was blacked out to protect privacy. But the companies with ties to government workers were disclosed, and they represent a who’s who of the offshore oil and gas industry, from majors like Chevron, Shell and BP to smaller companies such as W&T Offshore Inc., Ankor Energy LLC and Hilcorp Energy Co.

While inappropriate behavior has been limited to a few individuals so far, as both Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Enforcement and Regulation Director Michael Bromwich have stressed, the forms quantify for the first time the extent of the bonds between the industry and the agency formerly known as the Minerals Management Service.

“The conflicts of interest addressed by this policy are not crimes or badges of shame,” Bromwich said in a statement provided to the AP. “The fact is that they exist because of the close-knit communities in which much offshore activity takes place; they cannot be wished away. The issue is not the conflicts themselves, which have existed for decades, but whether they are identified, addressed and managed.”

However, the number of disqualifications renewed calls by lawmakers for a stronger ethics policy to be put into law, one that also holds companies accountable and cannot be changed when new leaders come in.

“Our sense is the revolving door is still swinging too widely,” Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., said in an interview with the AP after he had reviewed the recusals.

Most of the recent hires came from Island Operating Co., which was the focus of an April 2010 inspector general’s report about the bureau’s Lake Charles office, and was mentioned in another IG report focusing on the Lake Jackson, Texas, office. The internal watchdog found that employees working for Island, an offshore contractor with nearly 1,300 employees, were hosting inspectors on hunting and fishing trips.

The reaction of the manager of the Lake Charles district office at the time summed up how the agency operated: “They do this all the time.”

“Obviously, we’re all oil industry,” Larry Williamson told the IG’s office when shown pictures of one of his inspectors on the plane en route to a football game. “Almost all of our inspectors have worked for oil companies out on these same platforms. They grew up in the same towns. Some of these people, they’ve been friends all their life.”

Island, in a statement, said it never sponsored hunting and fishing trips. Instead, its employees were hunting and fishing with people “with whom they had both personal and working relationships.”

The company said it occasionally took inspectors to informal lunches when they came to perform inspections, a common practice throughout the industry that Island said it has stopped.

The lunches, spokesman Brad Deutser said in a statement, were “done as part of our commitment to become a safer, more compliant company.”

Asked why the government appeared to be hiring inspectors from Island more than other companies, Deutser said it wasn’t unusual to expect that a small number of employees would be recruited by the government.

“The very characteristics that attracted us to hire these professionals in the first place are the same that (the government) is looking to build its organization with,” Deutser said.

Critics say nothing has changed, despite the Obama administration’s efforts.

“It’s nearly impossible to determine where the oil industry ends and the government’s regulatory agency begins,” Scott Amey of the Project on Government Oversight said after reviewing AP’s data. “These new instances indicate that BOEMRE staff are connected to individuals and oil companies, which raises concerns about lax oversight and the integrity of the agency. Without enhanced enforcement authority and independent oversight of these potential conflicts, I’m uncertain that BOEMRE can assure the public that it is truly watchdogging the offshore oil industry.”

Wyden has been pushing for tougher ethics rules since a 2008 inspector general’s report revealed that 13 individuals in the agency’s Lakewood, Colo., and Washington offices — which had no role in Gulf of Mexico oil and gas operations — influenced contracts, worked part-time as private oil consultants and had sexual relationships with oil company employees. Some also accepted golf and ski trips, snowboarding lessons and concert tickets from the oil companies.

That report was followed by two others that examined alleged misconduct in the Lake Jackson, Texas, and Lake Charles, La., district offices, which have jurisdiction over the Gulf of Mexico. In the case of Lake Charles, the IG found that accepting gifts from oil and gas companies was commonplace. In Lake Jackson, investigators discovered government workers tipping off companies about upcoming inspections.

“It just goes on and on and on,” Wyden said. “What we would like to do is fundamentally change the culture here to reduce the kind of conflicts we are talking about.” To do that, Wyden says, companies also need to be held accountable.

Others say the recusals at least are a step in the right direction.

“The bad news is the oil industry still has motive and opportunity to try to control regulators,” said Sara Gonzalez-Rothi, the legislative counsel for Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla. “But the good news is we wouldn’t even be seeing some of these potential conflicts and recusals were it not for the reforms we pushed through in the past few years.”

Nelson sponsored a bill that would have barred inspectors from working for the industry for two years after leaving the agency and required them to divest themselves of energy company stocks. Similar provisions are now part of a larger offshore drilling safety bill that is stalled in the Senate.

Follow Dina Cappiello on Twitter: (at)dinacappiello

Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Boyd Gaming Swings To 2Q Loss; Flooded Casino Hurts Revenue

Thursday, July 28th, 2011

DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

Boyd Gaming Corp. (BYD) swung to a second-quarter loss, due in part to Mississippi River flooding closing a casino for nearly a month.

Geographically diverse Boyd, which is one of Las Vegas’s oldest gambling companies, has seen …

5 golden rules for productive digital collaboration

Thursday, July 28th, 2011

Communication and productivity are interdependent, and in a distributed team, their relationship is abundantly clear. While a cozy, in-person meeting might easily segue into a waffly chat, the nature of distributed collaboration tends to highlight time-wasting more starkly.

Communication has evolved with technology, but many of those now IMing colleagues cut their teeth writing internal memos on typewriters. Cultural and generational clashes are both common in distributed collaboration, and more damaging than they might be if the working relationships had a face-to-face component.

Many have discussed email etiquette, but for the average web worker, the notion of politesse can seem archaic or even counterproductive in some circumstances. Here, then, are five golden rules for respectful, productive digital communication, whether youre using email, IM, video chat, phone, or other communications tools like document sharing and time tracking systems.

1. Have an agenda, and meet it

To keep digital exchanges functional, set an agenda. Whether its a one-line email, or a one-hour video conference, your interaction will be more productive if you stay on track. Your colleagues will appreciate it, because it shows respect for their time. And itll let you identify any part of the exchange thats off-topic, and end it perhaps suggesting an alternative time to address it before it gets out of hand.

Having an agenda helps cut down on time-wasting, but it also encourages responsiveness, since your collaborators know what you need, and dont need to wade through the waffle to give it to you.

2. Dont spam

In this context, spam is any form of unwanted or unnecessary communication. It doesnt need to involve multiple recipients: leaving your colleague a phone message, then sending a text, and following up with an email, is example of spam. Sharing your new document with a colleague whos on your team, but doesnt need to use it, is an example of spam.

Spam overwhelms us. It makes us stressed and cranky, and it makes maintaining focus difficult. Be astute in working out what to share with which team members, and learn to differentiate between information for informations sake, and necessary communication.

3. Respect time constraints

Having respect for the time constraints of your colleagues governs a range of collaborative behaviors.

Give collaborators time to receive your communication, digest it and formulate a reply around the other work theyre doing before you bug them for their response. Prioritize your communications points so that colleagues know whats most important, and tell them if somethings urgent. Conversely, dont earmark a task or communication as urgent if its not. As well as indicating the reason for your communication, identify your expectations of a response timeframe, so your colleague can prioritize your request.

Remember: while digital communications tools may seem immediate, were only human, and none of us can be in two places at once.

4. Be clear

Clarity and directness underpin digital collaboration. But, particularly in written or very short communications, choose your words carefully. Short can very easily come across as terse. Speak in a way thats appropriate to your colleague, and your relationship with them, as well as the communications medium your using.

Choosing the right tool for the job can influence your ability to communicate whats needed. Limits on length, or attachments and other inclusions, can hobble communications, so make sure you choose the medium that suits your needs best. Dont try to wedge a phone conversation into a voicemail, for example your garbled, rushed message will just add to the noise to your colleagues day. Instead, just explain why youre calling and ask them to call you back. Explain the details in person when they do.

Being clear is particularly important in shared, multi-party systems like document sharing and contact management systems. Stick to the guidelines your team has set for aspects like naming and storage conventions itll reduce confusion and communications noise, and generally make life easier for your colleagues.

5. Be open

Digital workers can end up hiding behind a smokescreen of task managers, email autoresponders, and voicemail all too easily if they feel overwhelmed. Lead by example. If youre asking a team member for something, be available to answer their questions about your request. Be diligent about responding to colleagues in an appropriate way using the foundations outlined here.

Accept that good digital collaboration takes time and mutual understanding it is, after all, communication between people. Relegating a colleague whose communications approach annoys you to the back of the queue is rarely productive; the best way to encourage others to collaborate with you in the way you want is to take the time to explain your preferences to them.

That conversation could eradicate the kind of uncertainty that undermines good distributed working relationships, and cement the foundations for ongoing productive collaboration.

Image courtesy stock.xchng user JR3.

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Mobile gaming revenue to exceed $16 billion by 2016

Thursday, July 28th, 2011

Revenue generated by mobile gaming is projected to increase from less than $5 billion in 2011 to a staggering $16 billion by 2016.

Indeed, mobile gaming is establishing itself as a serious form of mass entertainment, as it appeals to a diverse group of consumers across the world.

According to ABI senior analyst Aapo Markkanen, mobile gaming growth is being driven by next-gen touchscreen smartphones, as well as innovation in casual titles which attracts users from both genders and all age groups.

An ever-larger share of mobile gaming revenue [originates] from virtual goods and other purchases taking place within the game, explained Markkanen.

These in-app payments will account for about one-third of the 2011 revenue base, but by the end of 2016 their share will increase to almost half of the total. Also, the in-game advertising revenue will increase considerably, as more and more advertisers take advantage of mobile games mass-media potential.??

However, Markkanen warned that the dynamics of both casual gaming and the discovery of new content make it a risky hit-and-miss business – although content remains more important than luck.

Rovios Angry Birds is an early example of the sort of following that the most successful titles will be able to achieve, yet for one such hit there will be scores of failed attempts to catch consumers attention.

This is likely to result in further consolidation among developers, as can be seen from recent acquisitions made by industry giants such as Electronic Arts and Zynga, he added.