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Happy World Toilet Day...
On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 18:00:02 -0500, "D.Duck" wrote:
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message .. . On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 16:49:13 -0500, " JimH" ask wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... Let us all give thanks to Thomas Crapper for this wonderful invention. Which is also used on boats, so it's appropriate. http://www.cwwa.ca/internationalwaterdays_e.asp I cannot wait to find out what we celebrate tomorrow! ;-) Armageddon. Hey, that was my guess for the other day. You plagiarizing? Yep. |
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"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 17:47:49 -0500, HK wrote: I suspect neither of you know what a steamfitter does. He doesn't replace sewage traps. I know what a steam/pipe fitter does. It's a five year apprentice ship program - just like a freakin' plumber. The only difference is steam/high pressure welding. Most of the union qualified welders flunked our basic vacuum welding (TIG) test. And, (scaringly) some held a "N" code for nuclear related welding. Eisboch |
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Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 17:47:49 -0500, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 20:42:06 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 12:41:41 -0500, HK wrote: It takes a lot more education, training, and skill to become a steamfitter than it does to become a college graduate. Harry - give it up - please, you are making an ass of yourself. Do you know where Harry went to college? Hell, it probably takes the Navy about 16 weeks to train one. I suspect neither of you know what a steamfitter does. He doesn't replace sewage traps. I know what a steam/pipe fitter does. It's a five year apprentice ship program - just like a freakin' plumber. The only difference is steam/high pressure welding. I wonder if they could quote me a better price on replacing my mom's trap. ;( |
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JimH wrote:
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 12:41:41 -0500, HK wrote: It takes a lot more education, training, and skill to become a steamfitter than it does to become a college graduate. Harry - give it up - please, you are making an ass of yourself. 4 years for a college grad. 5 years for a steamfitter. Eh? Do they get paid during those 5 years? |
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"Reginald Smithers III" wrote in message ... JimH wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 12:41:41 -0500, HK wrote: It takes a lot more education, training, and skill to become a steamfitter than it does to become a college graduate. Harry - give it up - please, you are making an ass of yourself. 4 years for a college grad. 5 years for a steamfitter. Eh? Do they get paid during those 5 years? Of course. And the major qualification is the 5 years .... not competence. Eisboch |
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Happy World Toilet Day...
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 16:49:13 -0500, " JimH" ask wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message . .. Let us all give thanks to Thomas Crapper for this wonderful invention. Which is also used on boats, so it's appropriate. http://www.cwwa.ca/internationalwaterdays_e.asp I cannot wait to find out what we celebrate tomorrow! ;-) Armageddon. Anybody watch that half hour cable program on the prophecies for year 2012. Better enjoy your boating now...... things could get nasty in 5 years. |
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Happy World Toilet Day...
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Happy World Toilet Day...
Eisboch wrote:
"Reginald Smithers III" wrote in message ... JimH wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 12:41:41 -0500, HK wrote: It takes a lot more education, training, and skill to become a steamfitter than it does to become a college graduate. Harry - give it up - please, you are making an ass of yourself. 4 years for a college grad. 5 years for a steamfitter. Eh? Do they get paid during those 5 years? Of course. And the major qualification is the 5 years .... not competence. Eisboch Of course, that was a rhetorical question. There is a world of difference between someone going to school for 4 -5 yrs, and getting paid to work. The problem union workers have is they don't deliver the increase in productivity and quality to justify their cost. |
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On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 18:18:14 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message .. . On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 17:47:49 -0500, HK wrote: I suspect neither of you know what a steamfitter does. He doesn't replace sewage traps. I know what a steam/pipe fitter does. It's a five year apprentice ship program - just like a freakin' plumber. The only difference is steam/high pressure welding. Most of the union qualified welders flunked our basic vacuum welding (TIG) test. And, (scaringly) some held a "N" code for nuclear related welding. What annoyed me was the whole equivilency thing. What the job requires is a basic high school education - nothing more or less. The rest is all OJT. It took me 8 years after I graduated with a degree in math to finish out my education and I was working the whole time. Ain't no way a freakin' plumber's education is equivilent to that. |
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"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... It took me 8 years after I graduated with a degree in math to finish out my education and I was working the whole time. Ain't no way a freakin' plumber's education is equivilent to that. Until you get a leak in the basement at 1am. Eisboch |
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Happy World Toilet Day...
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 18:00:02 -0500, "D.Duck" wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message . .. On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 16:49:13 -0500, " JimH" ask wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message m... Let us all give thanks to Thomas Crapper for this wonderful invention. Which is also used on boats, so it's appropriate. http://www.cwwa.ca/internationalwaterdays_e.asp I cannot wait to find out what we celebrate tomorrow! ;-) Armageddon. Hey, that was my guess for the other day. You plagiarizing? Yep. Well, OK then.... |
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" JimH" ask wrote in message ... We are talking about qualifications and competencies at this point, not benefits, lawyers or job security. Focusing on welding, anybody .... union or not .... can be tested and certified to several different qualification requirements, including "N" code, "U" code and others. Participation in a union is not a requirement for taking the test or being qualified. Union and non-union qualifications are exactly the same. Eisboch |
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On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 18:47:39 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message .. . It took me 8 years after I graduated with a degree in math to finish out my education and I was working the whole time. Ain't no way a freakin' plumber's education is equivilent to that. Until you get a leak in the basement at 1am. Which has nothing to do with education, but availability. However, you make a good point. :) |
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On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 19:02:12 -0500, "D.Duck" wrote:
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message .. . On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 18:00:02 -0500, "D.Duck" wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 16:49:13 -0500, " JimH" ask wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message om... Let us all give thanks to Thomas Crapper for this wonderful invention. Which is also used on boats, so it's appropriate. http://www.cwwa.ca/internationalwaterdays_e.asp I cannot wait to find out what we celebrate tomorrow! ;-) Armageddon. Hey, that was my guess for the other day. You plagiarizing? Yep. Well, OK then.... Fine - be that way. |
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Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
Let us all give thanks to Thomas Crapper for this wonderful invention. Which is also used on boats, so it's appropriate. http://www.cwwa.ca/internationalwaterdays_e.asp I payed homage to Thomas twice today and I may throw in a third thanks. |
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HK wrote:
Reginald Smithers III wrote: HK wrote: Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Let us all give thanks to Thomas Crapper for this wonderful invention. Which is also used on boats, so it's appropriate. http://www.cwwa.ca/internationalwaterdays_e.asp If I had a youngster today, I'd advise them to enter a union apprenticeship program for either plumbing or electrical. No matter where these society goes, it is going to want indoor plumbing and electricity. There's a chance the nuke plant near us might be expanded. If so, it will mean several years of very high paying work for union plumbers and electricians, among others. We're talking about $100,000+ a year, family-supporting jobs for hardworking men and women who have the skills to do the necessary critical work. I had a plumber quote me $465 to change the trap under my mothers sink. I think he is making more than they make at the nuke plant. Of course, I didn't hire him, I did it myself. Yeah, well, if you weren't such an a**hole, the plumber might have charged $125. I would still do it myself. 20 minutes work and about $10 in supplies. The nuke plant plumbers are mostly steamfitters. It takes a lot more education, training, and skill to become a steamfitter than it does to become a college graduate. You can learn to be a steamfitter in the military and you can learn to operate a nuke plant in the military too. |
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Eisboch wrote:
"Reginald Smithers III" wrote in message ... JimH wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 12:41:41 -0500, HK wrote: It takes a lot more education, training, and skill to become a steamfitter than it does to become a college graduate. Harry - give it up - please, you are making an ass of yourself. 4 years for a college grad. 5 years for a steamfitter. Eh? Do they get paid during those 5 years? Of course. And the major qualification is the 5 years .... not competence. Eisboch Untrue. If they can't cut it, they are dropped. |
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JimH wrote:
"Eisboch" wrote in message ... "Reginald Smithers III" wrote in message ... JimH wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 12:41:41 -0500, HK wrote: It takes a lot more education, training, and skill to become a steamfitter than it does to become a college graduate. Harry - give it up - please, you are making an ass of yourself. 4 years for a college grad. 5 years for a steamfitter. Eh? Do they get paid during those 5 years? Of course. Irrelevant. And the major qualification is the 5 years .... not competence. Eisboch That may be the key. I wonder what the final certification qualifications are Do you know? There are competency exams all along the course of study, and a very difficult final. Book exams and practical skills exams. |
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"HK" wrote in message . .. There are competency exams all along the course of study, and a very difficult final. Book exams and practical skills exams. Very true. And the same is true of a non-union technical school. The bottom line is that the test for certification or license in whatever trade or level therein has nothing to do with being union or not. The requirements for certification or license are the same. Eisboch |
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BAR wrote:
HK wrote: Reginald Smithers III wrote: HK wrote: Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Let us all give thanks to Thomas Crapper for this wonderful invention. Which is also used on boats, so it's appropriate. http://www.cwwa.ca/internationalwaterdays_e.asp If I had a youngster today, I'd advise them to enter a union apprenticeship program for either plumbing or electrical. No matter where these society goes, it is going to want indoor plumbing and electricity. There's a chance the nuke plant near us might be expanded. If so, it will mean several years of very high paying work for union plumbers and electricians, among others. We're talking about $100,000+ a year, family-supporting jobs for hardworking men and women who have the skills to do the necessary critical work. I had a plumber quote me $465 to change the trap under my mothers sink. I think he is making more than they make at the nuke plant. Of course, I didn't hire him, I did it myself. Yeah, well, if you weren't such an a**hole, the plumber might have charged $125. I would still do it myself. 20 minutes work and about $10 in supplies. The nuke plant plumbers are mostly steamfitters. It takes a lot more education, training, and skill to become a steamfitter than it does to become a college graduate. You can learn to be a steamfitter in the military and you can learn to operate a nuke plant in the military too. I also replaced the drains, so it was $65 and 45 min. She lives a hour from me, but it was still worth it. |
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Eisboch wrote:
"HK" wrote in message . .. There are competency exams all along the course of study, and a very difficult final. Book exams and practical skills exams. Very true. And the same is true of a non-union technical school. The bottom line is that the test for certification or license in whatever trade or level therein has nothing to do with being union or not. The requirements for certification or license are the same. Eisboch Which explains why skilled union membership has declined. Construction trades in cities have suddenly shifted from over 75% unionized to under 25%. Only the commercial sector of construction has retained 50% or greater union representation. The inability to prevent non-union companies from taking significant market share has undercut union membership. Meanwhile the forces of economic liberalization (neoliberalism), capital mobility, and globalization have improved tremendously the material standard of living enjoyed by workers in the United States; and mass immigration from Mexico has continued to restructure the domestic labor force.[2] |
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JimH wrote:
"Reginald Smithers III" wrote in message ... HK wrote: Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Let us all give thanks to Thomas Crapper for this wonderful invention. Which is also used on boats, so it's appropriate. http://www.cwwa.ca/internationalwaterdays_e.asp If I had a youngster today, I'd advise them to enter a union apprenticeship program for either plumbing or electrical. No matter where these society goes, it is going to want indoor plumbing and electricity. There's a chance the nuke plant near us might be expanded. If so, it will mean several years of very high paying work for union plumbers and electricians, among others. We're talking about $100,000+ a year, family-supporting jobs for hardworking men and women who have the skills to do the necessary critical work. I had a plumber quote me $465 to change the trap under my mothers sink. I think he is making more than they make at the nuke plant. Of course, I didn't hire him, I did it myself. It takes 5 minutes to change a trap. Why did you even bother calling a plumber? BTW, no offense but I do not believe you received a $465 quote to change a trap. No way. I believe it. |
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BAR wrote:
JimH wrote: "Reginald Smithers III" wrote in message ... HK wrote: Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Let us all give thanks to Thomas Crapper for this wonderful invention. Which is also used on boats, so it's appropriate. http://www.cwwa.ca/internationalwaterdays_e.asp If I had a youngster today, I'd advise them to enter a union apprenticeship program for either plumbing or electrical. No matter where these society goes, it is going to want indoor plumbing and electricity. There's a chance the nuke plant near us might be expanded. If so, it will mean several years of very high paying work for union plumbers and electricians, among others. We're talking about $100,000+ a year, family-supporting jobs for hardworking men and women who have the skills to do the necessary critical work. I had a plumber quote me $465 to change the trap under my mothers sink. I think he is making more than they make at the nuke plant. Of course, I didn't hire him, I did it myself. It takes 5 minutes to change a trap. Why did you even bother calling a plumber? BTW, no offense but I do not believe you received a $465 quote to change a trap. No way. I believe it. It is Jim's MO to call people a liar. He has called Eisboch, SWS a lair when they made simple statements. It doesn't surprise me what he would call me one. |
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Don White wrote:
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 17:28:01 -0400, "Don White" wrote: What the $%$%! Our new high school in the center of the city cost between $20-30 million and everybody's crying about that. How many students? 1400 That's a middle school in my county. |
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Don White wrote:
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 16:49:13 -0500, " JimH" ask wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... Let us all give thanks to Thomas Crapper for this wonderful invention. Which is also used on boats, so it's appropriate. http://www.cwwa.ca/internationalwaterdays_e.asp I cannot wait to find out what we celebrate tomorrow! ;-) Armageddon. Anybody watch that half hour cable program on the prophecies for year 2012. Better enjoy your boating now...... things could get nasty in 5 years. You must have missed the show in the late '90's where 2000 was when the world was going to explode, implode or otherwise be devoid of humans. |
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On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 19:48:46 -0500, BAR wrote:
HK wrote: Reginald Smithers III wrote: HK wrote: Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Let us all give thanks to Thomas Crapper for this wonderful invention. Which is also used on boats, so it's appropriate. http://www.cwwa.ca/internationalwaterdays_e.asp If I had a youngster today, I'd advise them to enter a union apprenticeship program for either plumbing or electrical. No matter where these society goes, it is going to want indoor plumbing and electricity. There's a chance the nuke plant near us might be expanded. If so, it will mean several years of very high paying work for union plumbers and electricians, among others. We're talking about $100,000+ a year, family-supporting jobs for hardworking men and women who have the skills to do the necessary critical work. I had a plumber quote me $465 to change the trap under my mothers sink. I think he is making more than they make at the nuke plant. Of course, I didn't hire him, I did it myself. Yeah, well, if you weren't such an a**hole, the plumber might have charged $125. I would still do it myself. 20 minutes work and about $10 in supplies. The nuke plant plumbers are mostly steamfitters. It takes a lot more education, training, and skill to become a steamfitter than it does to become a college graduate. You can learn to be a steamfitter in the military and you can learn to operate a nuke plant in the military too. And it doesn't take no 8000 hours! |
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" JimH" ask wrote in message ... "Eisboch" wrote in message ... " JimH" ask wrote in message ... "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 17:47:49 -0500, HK wrote: John H. wrote: On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 20:42:06 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 12:41:41 -0500, HK wrote: It takes a lot more education, training, and skill to become a steamfitter than it does to become a college graduate. Harry - give it up - please, you are making an ass of yourself. Do you know where Harry went to college? Hell, it probably takes the Navy about 16 weeks to train one. I suspect neither of you know what a steamfitter does. He doesn't replace sewage traps. I know what a steam/pipe fitter does. It's a five year apprentice ship program - just like a freakin' plumber. The only difference is steam/high pressure welding. Add another (minimum) 6 months for that skill and certification Tom. Add other time for high pressure vessel training and you cannot compare a plumber to a steam pipe fitter. The training requirements and potential exposures are worlds apart. Not to start an argument with you but you are way off base on this one. Bull. Eisboch Whatever. I at least made a case. Knowing a lot of welders and a few pipefitters over my lifetime, most of the welders are not college material. Good pay as a pipefitter. Big shortage these days. The local Chevron Refinery has $500mm in upgrades required. They are short welders. Good job for a lot of people. One of the major errors in education these days, is the concept that all should go to college. Maybe 20% of the people, but the education establishment 20-30 years ago, decided that college prep and not any industrial courses were the norm. At least in California. I do art welding as a hobby and the local Junior College has a great welding program. they are in the running for the National Science Foundation grants to increase the female representation in welding and automotive areas. A big percentage of the people in the welding certification program are never going to be qualified to be engineers. They will be great welders, but not the degreed designers. |
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"CalifBill" wrote in message ... And you can go to your local Junior College and get in the welding program. 2 years or so you get to graduate with an Associates degree and welding certification. Seems like those of us who worked our way through college probably had more than 8000 hours of school and work experience. I am not familiar with all the various levels of certification for welders. I know that many welders are not certified at all while some have multiple certifications. We occasionally performed contracts that required a "U" stamp, "N" stamp or both. The drawings had to be signed off by a registered professional engineer and the welders that worked on the project were required to be tested and certified to those stamp requirements. My point in this discussion is that the certification requirements are the same for both union and non-union welders. Eisboch |
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"John H." wrote in message ... On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 19:48:46 -0500, BAR wrote: HK wrote: Reginald Smithers III wrote: HK wrote: Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Let us all give thanks to Thomas Crapper for this wonderful invention. Which is also used on boats, so it's appropriate. http://www.cwwa.ca/internationalwaterdays_e.asp If I had a youngster today, I'd advise them to enter a union apprenticeship program for either plumbing or electrical. No matter where these society goes, it is going to want indoor plumbing and electricity. There's a chance the nuke plant near us might be expanded. If so, it will mean several years of very high paying work for union plumbers and electricians, among others. We're talking about $100,000+ a year, family-supporting jobs for hardworking men and women who have the skills to do the necessary critical work. I had a plumber quote me $465 to change the trap under my mothers sink. I think he is making more than they make at the nuke plant. Of course, I didn't hire him, I did it myself. Yeah, well, if you weren't such an a**hole, the plumber might have charged $125. I would still do it myself. 20 minutes work and about $10 in supplies. The nuke plant plumbers are mostly steamfitters. It takes a lot more education, training, and skill to become a steamfitter than it does to become a college graduate. You can learn to be a steamfitter in the military and you can learn to operate a nuke plant in the military too. And it doesn't take no 8000 hours! My brother was a Seabee and was nuclear certified welder. The Navy sent him to the Hobart school in Ohio for part of the training. HE could weld before he entered the service as we both grew up working and playing and cleaning a large machine shop. Dad owned one of the bigger ones in the SF bay area. No f'n 8000 hours of study to get the N certification. He was one of the builders of the nuclear reactor at the US Antarctic station. And if you went to college, you probably spent more than 8000 hours total getting your degree. How about the 3-4 hours outside classroom for research and homework for each hour of lecture? |
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"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 16:50:14 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: "D.Duck" wrote in message om... If I had it to do all over again I'd have 4 kids. One would be a doctor. One would be a dentist. One would be an electrician. One would be a plumber. How about a fifth? A mortician to plant at the end of your visit here. You seem to have everything else covered. We could always adopt. Trust me on this - you don't want doctors in the family. Ever. They have the habit of butting into your status and insisting on seeing things like test reports and establishing relationships with your own doctor. You can't get away with anything. Oddly, they seem to leave Mrs. Wave alone. :) My mom is an RN. Same thing. Hard to get away with faking sickness for a day at home. |
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"HK" wrote in message ... It takes a lot more education, training, and skill to become a steamfitter than it does to become a college graduate. If they're so smart why do they continue to let people like Ullico handle their money? http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/s...e,226126.shtml WASHINGTON, Nov. 16 PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The U.S. Department of Labor today announced a settlement requiring Union Labor Life Insurance Co. (ULLICO) of Washington, D.C., to pay back nearly $16.7 million in fees and compensation to benefit plans that invested in Separate Account J (J for Jobs), a pooled separate account holding plan assets for the benefit of employee benefit plan investors. In addition, the insurer must pay $3.3 million to an escrow account to cover additional civil penalties and excise taxes resulting from alleged violations of federal employee benefits law. "Self-dealing by pension fiduciaries at the expense of workers' retirement plans cannot be tolerated," said Secretary of Labor Elaine L. Chao. "This $20 million settlement is a loud and clear message to all plan fiduciaries that they will be held accountable when their actions are detrimental to workers' benefit plans." The settlement, if approved by the court, successfully resolves a department investigation concluding that Union Labor Life had used its authority over the separate account to unilaterally set its own compensation in violation of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). In addition to the monetary recovery, the settlement permanently bars Union Labor Life from retaining compensation from any source in connection with Separate Account J without advance disclosure of the compensation and approval by appropriate independent plan fiduciaries. The order broadly prohibits the insurer from exercising any unilateral discretionary authority over the compensation it receives as a fiduciary or service provider to ERISA-covered benefit plans. The Labor Department filed the lawsuit simultaneously with the settlement, which is subject to court approval. The lawsuit alleges that Union Labor Life violated ERISA when it failed to properly disclose its compensation and receive approval from plan fiduciaries independent of Union Labor Life for funds taken directly from the investment account, as well as payments received from third-party borrowers, such as loan commitment fees, construction administration fees and lender inspection fees. The insurer allegedly kept, among other fees, millions of dollars from loan applicants who failed to go forward with loans even though the plans assumed virtually all the risk of funding those loans. Separate Account J invests in secured mortgages on real estate development projects constructed with union labor. The sole investors are ERISA-covered plans. The Labor Department's legal action resulted from a comprehensive investigation conducted by the Philadelphia Regional Office of the department's Employee Benefits Security Administration and the department's Office of the Solicitor. Chao v. ULLICO Civil Action Number 1:07-cv-02089 U.S. Department of Labor releases are accessible on the Internet at http://www.dol.gov/. The information in this news release will be made available in alternate format (large print, Braille, audio tape or disc) from the COAST office upon request. Please specify which news release when placing your request at 202-693-7828 or TTY 202-693-7755. The Labor Department is committed to providing America's employers and employees with easy access to understandable information on how to comply with its laws and regulations. For more information, please visit http://www.dol.gov/compliance. U.S. Department of Labor |
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BillP wrote:
"HK" wrote in message ... It takes a lot more education, training, and skill to become a steamfitter than it does to become a college graduate. If they're so smart why do they continue to let people like Ullico handle their money? Oops! |
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"BAR" wrote in message . .. BillP wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... It takes a lot more education, training, and skill to become a steamfitter than it does to become a college graduate. If they're so smart why do they continue to let people like Ullico handle their money? Oops! If I remember correctly Harry was working on the "J for Jobs" project. |
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BillP wrote:
"BAR" wrote in message . .. BillP wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... It takes a lot more education, training, and skill to become a steamfitter than it does to become a college graduate. If they're so smart why do they continue to let people like Ullico handle their money? Oops! If I remember correctly Harry was working on the "J for Jobs" project. I seem to remember that he made a killing on a sweetheart stock deal at about that time too. I wonder what he spent the money on. Oh, wait I think it was a 36' Zimmerman like Lobsta' boat build to his specificaitons. |
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BillP wrote:
"BAR" wrote in message . .. BillP wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... It takes a lot more education, training, and skill to become a steamfitter than it does to become a college graduate. If they're so smart why do they continue to let people like Ullico handle their money? Oops! If I remember correctly Harry was working on the "J for Jobs" project. As part of my consulting agreement with the parent holding company, I handled some publicity for the "J" fund, but that was a minor bit of work for me. I was mostly involved with marketing in connection with the restructuring of the organization, which was successful. "Was" is the operative word, since I haven't been involved there for more than three years. Poor babies...both of you are nothing more than floorsweepers in rec.boats. |
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