Tuesday 29 March 2011

Making Money Job






Welcome to Wise Bread's Best Money Tips Roundup! Today we found some awesome articles on 43 ways to save money, foods you don't need to buy organic, and how to keep your head after losing your job.


Top 5 Articles


43 Ways To Save Money — Want to save money? Throw away catalogs without looking at them. [The Consumerist]


The Clean 15: Foods You Don't Need to Buy Organic — Don't shell out extra money to buy organic grapefruits or mangos. [WalletPop]


Surviving Unemployment: How to Keep Your Head After Losing Your Job — If you have recently lost your job, keep your head on straight by coming to terms with the fact that your new job is to find a job. [The Huffington Post]


7 Creative Ways To Save Money On Your Vacation — Save money during your next vacation by avoiding souvenirs and shopping. [Smart On Money]


6 Tips For Scoring A Cheap Wedding Dress — Wedding season is almost upon us. If you are a bride shopping for a dress, save money by shopping online. [LearnVest]


Other Essential Reading


4 Different Types of Taxes and How to Minimize Them — Try to lower your property taxes by appealing your homes property tax assessment. [MoneyCrashers]


Place Your Bets Again: 83 Gut-Busting Restaurant Challenges for Free Food — Could you and 3 friends eat a 50 pound burger in 3 hours? Check out all 83 of these crazy restaurant challenges for free food. [Coupon Sherpa]


How To Hold a Family Meeting — Before you have a family meeting, take some time to determine your goals for the meetings. [Parenting Squad]


Combat Rising Food Prices — Beat rising food prices by buying on a schedule. [Being Frugal]


Are You Making These 7 Resume Mistakes? — Don't make the mistake of listing your references on your resume. [Cash Money Life]








Hullabaloo








Tuesday, March 08, 2011




 

Making Things Worse

by digby


Who could have ever imagined that electing a criminal tea partier to the highest office in the state would cause problems?


Rick Scott, the conservative Republican billionaire who plucked the governor’s job from the party establishment in November with $73 million of his own money and the backing of the Tea Party, vowed during his campaign to run the troubled state like a corporate chief executive (which he was) and not a politician (which he proudly says he is not).

And now it has become a problem, some of his fellow Republicans say.

“The governor doesn’t understand there is a State Constitution and that we have three branches of government,” said State Senator Mike Fasano, a Republican from New Port Richey who upset Mr. Scott with rough handling of his staff during a testy committee hearing. “They are talking about the attitude that he is still the C.E.O. of his former health care corporation, and that is not going to work in this state, in Tallahassee, in my district. The people believe in three branches of government.”

Republican lawmakers in Florida were hoping for a smoother transition. Instead, they say, they got top-down management from a political novice.

With the Legislature convening on Tuesday for a potentially arduous two-month session that is bound to usher in major cuts in spending and jobs and radical changes to education, pensions, unemployment benefits and Medicaid, the governor will be tested on a broader, more public scale. Florida faces an estimated $3.6 billion budget shortfall this year and has a stubborn 12 percent unemployment rate.

“I think there have been some understandable growing pains because government doesn’t function like a corporation,” said Speaker Dean Cannon, a Republican from central Florida, taking a more measured tone than Mr. Fasano.


Read the whole article. Basically, he believes that he is now a monarch and can do anything he wants without any input from the other electe4d leaders. And here's a little taste of what he plans to do:


Mr. Scott is single-minded in his plans to shake up Florida and create jobs. He wants to create a business-friendly environment, chop up the bureaucracy, peel away regulations and hand out $1.7 billion in tax cuts for corporations and property owners in the first year of his budget. Privatizing Medicaid and prisons is also high on the agenda.

In his budget proposal, Mr. Scott is seeking to eliminate more than 8,500 state jobs, including in the Corrections and Health Departments. His budget for the state’s already lean public schools is $1.75 billion less than this year’s, mostly because federal stimulus money dried up.

And he wants to cut costs in Florida’s pension fund by requiring more than 600,000 government workers, including police officers, teachers, firefighters, judges and retirees, to contribute 5 percent to their retirement. New employees would use plans similar to a 401(k). This has angered state workers, who have gone without a general raise since 2006. They plan large demonstrations around Florida on Tuesday.


Maybe this is what Floridians wanted, but I doubt it. On the other hand, it's what they should have expected. Rick Scott may be the looniest, most dishonest, powerful elected official in the country. And it was easy to see that going in. Stay tuned.


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