Departments of Labor and Justice launch initiative to cooperate on investigation and prosecution of workplace safety violations

Departments of Labor and Justice launch initiative to cooperate on investigation and prosecution of workplace safety violations

From OSHA Quick Takes
January 4, 2016, Volume 15, Issue 1

The Department of Labor and the Department of Justice have established a new initiative to prevent and deter crimes that jeopardize the lives and health of workers. The initiative strengthens the ability of the two departments to investigate and prosecute employers who fail to provide a safe workplace for their employees. Deputy Secretary of Labor Chris Lu joined Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates in signing the agreement during a ceremony at the Dept. of Justice on Dec. 17.

The Memorandum of Understanding calls for the Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division and the U.S. Attorney’s Offices to work with the Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration, Mine Safety and Health Administration, and Wage and Hour Division to investigate and prosecute worker endangerment violations. The worker safety statutes generally provide for only misdemeanor penalties, and the new initiative will encourage them to use the federal criminal and penal code and environmental offenses, which often occur in conjunction with worker safety crimes, to enhance penalties and increase deterrence.

Fed’s Mester prefers a bit quicker U.S. rate-hike pace

Fed’s Mester prefers a bit quicker U.S. rate-hike pace

Markets  |  Sun Jan 3, 2016 10:36pm EST

SAN FRANCISCO  |  By Jonathan Spicer and Ann Saphir
Reuters/Lucas Jackson

One of the Federal Reserve’s hawkish officials said on Sunday that while she prefers a slightly more aggressive approach, she is not opposed to her colleagues’ view that the U.S. central bank needs to raise interest rates only four times this year.

Loretta Mester, president of the Cleveland Fed, told Reuters in an interview she does not need to see clear evidence of inflation to back more policy tightening after an initial rate hike in mid-December. The Fed could act at any policy meeting, including one later in January, she said.

After lifting rates for the first time in nearly a decade, the Fed said further moves would be gradual and dependent on how the world’s top economy performs. The central bank last month forecasted four rate hikes in 2016, based on the median projection of its 17 top officials.

“I’m pretty comfortable with the median path … I think that’s not a bad description,” Mester, who votes on U.S. monetary policy this year under a rotation, said on the sidelines of an American Economic Association meeting.

“I’m probably a little steeper than that in the near term, just because I have a higher growth forecast.”

Mester expects the U.S. economy to grow at a 2.5 percent to 2.75 percent pace this year, slightly stronger than the 2.4-percent rate median forecast of her colleagues. That optimism allows her to view more than four rate hikes as appropriate, she said.

The comments from Mester, one of 10 voters on policy, suggests that while she leans toward marginally tighter policy than Chair Janet Yellen and others at the Fed, she may not be compelled to dissent.

“I think it’s reasonable to move on a gradual path, and I’m going to look at the data that comes in between now and the next meeting,” she said.

Last month’s rate hike from near zero was much anticipated but could yet upset world financial markets as the Fed weighs when to make another move. Traders in futures markets are predicting only two or three hikes this year.

Like most Fed officials, Mester, who has run the Cleveland Fed for a year and a half, expects inflation to rebound as the effects of weak oil prices and the strong dollar wane.

“I don’t see anything in the data that has changed the dynamics of inflation,” she told Reuters.

Evidence of inflation is not necessary for her to back another rate hike as long as her forecasts hold, Mester said. “Right now my forecast is that we will gradually see inflation move back up to 2 percent.”

The Fed’s target for inflation, which has been below target for years, is also 2 percent.

(Reporting by Ann Saphir and Jonathan Spicer; Editing by Dan Grebler)

Happy Holidays!

Happy Holidays!

 

One of the pleasures of each Holiday season is the opportunity to say “Thank you” for your business and team work which has made Gallman Consulting a successful company. When GPS started 30 years ago, we did not envision that our company would be the organization it is today.

 

It has been 30 years of empowering individuals, developing a staff team and business partners of which we are proud to be associated, and most importantly, working together to make a difference in the lives of all the people that surround us and whom we associate with every day. We are all truly privileged to work in a job where we can make a difference in the lives of others every day.

 

Wishing you and your loved ones all the wonder and magic of Christmas only to lead you into a very prosperous 2016!!

 

Blessings,

Charlie Gallman & Gallman Consulting Staff

 

 

Fed Raises Rates

Fed Raises Rates After Seven Years Near Zero, Expects ‘Gradual’ Tightening Path

Wall Street Journal (12/17/15) Jon Hilsenrath; Ben Leubsdorf

The U.S. Federal Reserve yesterday announced it will increase interest rates. Fed officials plan to increase the benchmark federal-funds rate from near zero to between 0.25% and 0.5%, and will adjust their strategy as they see how the economy performs. New projections show officials expect the fed-funds rate to climb to 1.375% by the end of 2016, to 2.375% by the end of 2017, and to 3.25% in three years.

Happy Birthday Georgette Sandifer!

Happy Birthday Georgette Sandifer!

Georgette, you deserve a carefree day!

Your birthday is a promise that life has more to offer you, more plans to make, more goals to reach and more dreams to see come true. It’s a pleasure to wish you a happy birthday!

Staff Apprec 2014 Georgette

Let’s all celebrate Georgette (Senior Director of Placement at Gallman Consulting)! 

GPS Elf on the Shelf!

GPS Elf on the Shelf will last 24 days! 

Be sure to visit our Gallman Consulting social media outlets (Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn) to view our scenes each day from our staff!

All GPS Branches (GPS Corporate, GPS Columbia, GPS Newberry, GPS Orangeburg, GPS Charleston, GPS Hot Springs and Gallman Consulting) will be participating with different Elf on the Shelf scenes each day!

Elf Deb 120115

Scene from Debbie St. Mark, GPS Corporate “Hermey loves Spirit!”

 

 

Gallman Consulting Gives Back!

Gallman Consulting Gives Back!

Gallman Consulting encourages our staff to Give Back to their community by volunteering.  Each Gallman Consulting team member is encouraged to volunteer 8 hours between now and the end of the year…this will be a paid working day by Gallman Consulting. 

We will continue Gallman Consulting Gives Back into 2016 by allowing each team member to volunteer one day per quarter through the year.  

Thank you Charlie and Becky Gallman for giving back!

Gives Back Charlie Becky

Pictured above: Charlie Gallman volunteering for Harvest Hope!  Charlie and Becky Gallman manning the WIS-TV phone bank on Thanksgiving for Families Helping Families!

Wage pressures coming?

NEW YORK Early indications of wage pressures in pockets of corporate America have begun emerging in recent weeks, suggesting labor costs could be a bigger headwind for U.S. companies in 2016.

Over the course of the latest corporate earnings reporting season, executives from nearly 20 S&P 500 companies have flagged labor costs, shortages or wage pressure as headwinds.

That is up from about a dozen companies who singled out these concerns a quarter earlier and a year ago, a sign that more companies are talking about wage issues, an analysis of earnings season comments by Thomson Reuters showed.

Wage inflation has been largely nonexistent in the plodding economic expansion out of the Great Recession, a key factor behind the robust recovery in company profits over the past six years even as sales growth has remained muted.

Now, though, a combination of rising U.S. payrolls, political pressures to increase state and federal minimum wages and some industry-specific issues, such as expensive labor contracts in the airlines and automakers and labor shortages in construction, could finally be gelling to force up labor costs.

“The conditions are beginning to be in place for something that has been languishing really since the bottom of the recession,” said Mark Dawson, chief investment officer at Rainier Investment Management in Seattle. “We’re closer to the point where wage pressures in certain areas are increasingly going to be seen. I would expect it to be more of an issue next year.”

Wage concerns that started popping up a year ago in a handful of industries such as fast food restaurants and retailers have persisted and are spreading to a more diverse range of companies, including homebuilding and construction companies and airlines.

Wal-Mart (WMT.N), the world’s largest retailer, has said next year’s earnings could decline as much as 12 percent, partly because of costs to raise entry-level wages.

Executives at Shake Shack (SHAK.N) have said it plans to increase menu prices in January, though they do not expect those higher prices to fully offset higher labor costs.

For home builders, tight labor markets have been a constraint.

“No question, labor is tight. Reports coming out of other builders, we’re not immune to it,” David Auld, D.R. Horton’s president and chief executive said in a Nov. 10 conference call.

The company said it has been able to offset the higher costs so far through its prices.

Among other homebuilders citing labor as an issue, PulteGroup (PHM.N) reported a quarterly profit decline and said construction delays from labor shortages dampened sales. Also, Chief Financial Officer Bob O’Shaughnessy said during the earnings call Pulte is paying more to attract and retain labor.

Similarly, real estate investment trusts Ventas (VTR.N) and Welltower (HCN.N) mentioned concerns about wage pressures in the recent reporting period.

“It’s something that we are very focused on,” Scott Brinker, Welltower’s chief investment officer, said in a conference call.

Some industries are expecting higher labor costs from renewed contracts, such as the case with airlines.

Contract negotiations are in the works for pilots at major U.S. airlines United (UAL.N), Delta (DAL.N) and Southwest (LUV.N) that could result in higher wages and costs in 2016. Hospital providers, too, are citing higher employee costs.

When it warned on results last month and cited higher labor costs, HCA Holdings (HCA.N) triggered a selloff in the hospital provider space. Its labor costs as a percentage of sales increased in the third quarter from a year ago.

Universal Health Services (UHS.N) CFO Steve Filton, though, said the industry was not yet experiencing the same wage pressure as it was a decade ago.

To be sure, plenty of companies are still laying off workers to cut costs further, especially in the energy sector, which is hard hit by falling oil prices.

Last month, nonfarm payrolls recorded their largest gain since December 2014, while the unemployment rate fell to a 7-1/2-year low of 5.0 percent.

The number of unemployed persons to job openings is as low as it was in 2007, according to U.S. government data.

Moreover, the debate over whether to raise the minimum wage has been gaining steam and is a hot topic among U.S. presidential candidates, suggesting the issue is likely to persist at least through next year’s election.

The current federal minimum wage is $7.25 an hour, compared with proposals for minimums of $12 to $15 an hour.

“It’s really a combination of more competition for low-wage workers, and the fact that there’s pressure to raise those wages in a number of jurisdictions and just in general,” said Rick Meckler, president of investment firm LibertyView Capital Management in Jersey City, New Jersey.

(Reporting by Caroline Valetkevitch; additional reporting by Jeffrey Dastin; editing by Linda Stern)

Read more at Reutershttp://www.reuters.com/article/2015/11/19/us-usa-companies-laborcosts-idUSKCN0T82WN20151119#6oo6L7YtbeCHOfzQ.99