Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Women & Work

 

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Contact Attorneys Neil O'Toole and John Sbarbaro
Phone: 303-595-4777
226 West 12th Avenue Denver, Colorado 80204

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Any content of this blog is intended for informational purposes only.It is not intended to solicit business, provide legal advice from The Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro, P.C. and does not serve as a medium for an attorney-client relationship. Therefore, The Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro, P.C. is not responsible for the information on this blog which may not apply to every reader. Always seek professional counsel if you have any legal matters. Contents within the blog of The Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro, P.C., logos and other related media are protected by the copyright laws of the United States and other jurisdictions.


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Monday, May 26, 2014

Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro, P.C. - Happy Memorial Day

Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro, P.C. thanks all of those who have given their lives to keep our country free.

Contact Neil O'Toole and John Sbarbaro
Phone: 303-595-4777
Located in the Denver Metro area.
226 West 12th Avenue Denver, Colorado 80204

Disclaimer 

Any content of this blog is intended for informational purposes only.It is not intended to solicit business, provide legal advice from The Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro, P.C. and does not serve as a medium for an attorney-client relationship. Therefore, The Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro, P.C. is not responsible for the information on this blog which may not apply to every reader. Always seek professional counsel if you have any legal matters. Contents within the blog of The Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro, P.C., logos and other related media are protected by the copyright laws of the United States and other jurisdictions.


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Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro, P.C. remembers Jerry Vale






The Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro was sad to hear the news of the passing of Jerry Vale.
Read the article below for a little bit of history on Jerry Vale.


Jerry Vale, a crooner of the 1950s and '60s who remained beloved among fans for his swelling renditions of romantic ballads, many of them Italian in language but universal in theme, died May 18 at his home in Palm Desert, Calif. He was 83.
His attorney, Harold J. Levy, confirmed the death but did not disclose a cause. Mr. Vale reportedly had suffered a stroke more than a decade ago. Mr. Vale grew up in an Italian American community in the Bronx and became in his heyday one of the most popular artists in the United States. His most noted hits included a 1956 recording of “You Don’t Know Me,” a country song of unrequited love, that sold more than 1 million copies.
His other numbers included “Two Purple Shadows,” “Have You Looked Into Your Heart,” and albums full of crowd-pleasing Italian standards such as “Al Di Là,” “Innamorata,” “Volare,” “Amore, Scusami,” “Ciao, Ciao, Bambina,” “Arrivederci, Roma” and “O Sole Mio.” He was for years a mainstay of Columbia Records where, the New York Times reported in 1964, he was the third best-selling male singer after Tony Bennett andAndy Williams. In later decades, Mr. Vale continued to perform in clubs around the country, his audiences and continued record sales a testament to the enduring appeal of his music.
Mr. Vale counted Frank Sinatra among his friends and traced his musical lineage to Perry Como and, before him, Bing Crosby. Mr. Vale’s serenades were compared by at least one observer to those of a Venetian gondolier, and he endeavored to preserve his genre’s lush and pleasing style, particularly as rock-and-roll commanded increasingly large audiences.
To fit in, he said, he would occasionally add a fast piece to a performance’s lineup.
“But I don't like it,” he told the Times. “I don’t like it one bit.”
Mr. Vale appeared with some frequency on television programs such as “The Ed Sullivan Show” and Johnny Carson’s “Tonight Show” and at venues ranging from the Copacabana nightclub to Carnegie Hall, both in New York.
Reviewing a 1963 performance on the latter stage, music critic John S. Wilson wrote in the Times that Mr. Vale was a singer in a “highly gimmick-conscious field” who had “hit on an astoundingly simple and effective gimmick.” He possessed, the critic wrote, “a warm, direct and lyrical voice projected with complete honesty and lack of pretension.” Genaro Louis Vitaliano was born July 8, 1930, in the Bronx. (He once told an interviewer that the doctor who delivered him mistakenly dropped the second “n” from the standard Italian spelling of his first name.)
Music figured prominently in his family get-togethers. In his youth, he shined shoes and swept floors in a barber shop where he fetched extra tips by singing.
By his teenage years, he was performing in supper clubs. He left school for a job in a factory, according the reference guide Contemporary Musicians, and later worked with his father, an engineer, on the excavation of sewage plants. Meanwhile, he continued to perform and became known on stage as Jerry Vale.
He was appearing at a club in the early 1950s when he caught the attention of the singer Guy Mitchell, who introduced him to Mitch Miller, the influential executive at Columbia Records. Mr. Vale’s first recording with the company, with accompaniment by Percy Faith and his band, was “You Can Never Give Me Back My Heart,”
Mr. Vale’s music was featured in the soundtracks of movies including “Easy Money,” the 1983 comedy starring Rodney Dangerfield, and mob dramas such as “Goodfellas” (1990) and “Casino” (1995); he made cameo appearances in the last two. He was the subject of the book “Jerry Vale: A Singer’s Life” (2000) by Richard Grudens.
In 1959, Mr. Vale married Rita Grapel, an actress. Besides his wife, survivors include two children, Robert Vale and Pamela Vale Branch; a sister; and three grandchildren.
Mr. Vale’s broad appeal led to frequent invitations to sing “The Star-Spangled Banner” at sporting events. (The invitations came so frequently, in fact, that he ultimately recorded the anthem and was honored by the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y.)
At one game in 1973, the New York Yankees found themselves in a fix when they discovered that both Mr. Vale and Robert Merrill, an operatic baritone who also had recorded the song for game-time use, were in attendance.
Rather than choose between the recordings — and risk slighting one of the singers — the Yankees management asked the men to perform a duet. The singers agreed, took their places behind home plate and, on the fly, belted out the anthem on national television.
Contact Neil O'Toole and John Sbarbaro
Phone: 303-595-4777
Located in the Denver Metro area.
226 West 12th Avenue Denver, Colorado 80204

Disclaimer 

Any content of this blog is intended for informational purposes only.It is not intended to solicit business, provide legal advice from The Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro, P.C. and does not serve as a medium for an attorney-client relationship. Therefore, The Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro, P.C. is not responsible for the information on this blog which may not apply to every reader. Always seek professional counsel if you have any legal matters. Contents within the blog of The Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro, P.C., logos and other related media are protected by the copyright laws of the United States and other jurisdictions.


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Friday, May 16, 2014

Fast-Food Strikes Go Global

On Thursday, the fast-food strikes that have been spreading around the country are going global.
Workers at restaurants like Burger King, McDonald's, Wendy's, and KFC are walking off their jobs in 230 cities around the world to demand a minimum wage of $15 an hour and the right to form a union without retaliation. Strikers will protest in 150 US cities, from New York to Los Angeles, and in 80 foreign cities, from Casablanca to Seoul to Brussels to Buenos Aires.
In Zurich, some protesters are wearing "sad hamburger costumes." In the Philippines, protestors staged a flash-mob at a Manila McDonald's during morning rush hour.
The wave of strikes—which began in November 2012, when hundreds of workers walked out of restaurants in New York City—has grown quickly over the past year and a half. The idea behind this coordinated international protest was not just to further raise the profile of the fast-food workers' movement. With labor unions declining in clout at home, organizers hope that the powerful international unions can help pressure US-based companies into making changes. Last week, the International Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco and Allied Workers' Associations—a labor federation composed of 396 trade unions that represent 12 million workers in 126 countries—held a summit in New York City where fast-food workers and union leaders finalized plans for the global strike.
The massive fast-food protests come a few weeks after a recent report on the industry by the left-leaning think tank Demos found that fast-food CEOs are paid a thousand times more than the average franchise worker, who makes about $8.69 an hour. Fast-food wages have dropped by 36 cents an hour since 2010. More than half of the families of fast-food workers rely on public programs like food stamps and Medicaid. (Check out our calculator to see if you could live on a fast-food wage.)
Though the industry has not yet raised wages by any significant amount, the strikes are having an effect. In a March filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, McDonald’s said worker protests might force the company to raise wages this year. And as Salon's Josh Eidelson reported earlier this month, the National Restaurant Association, the industry trade group, is growing increasingly worried about the fast-food protests, closely monitoring social media for plans of future actions.
And while Congress is unlikely to raise the federal minimum wage any time soon to the $10.10 an hour wage President Obama proposed in his 2013 State of the Union speech, states are taking up the fight. Over the past year, seven states and the District of Columbia have raised their minimum wages, and 34 states are considering bumping up pay for their lowest-paid workers. In late April, the mayor of Seattle proposed a $15 minimum wage.
Scott DeFife, an executive vice president for the National Restaurant Association, dismisses the movement's potential. As he told the New York Times on Wednesday, "These are made-for-TV media moments—that’s pretty much it."
Contact Neil O'Toole and John Sbarbaro
Phone: 303-595-4777
Located in the Denver Metro area.
226 West 12th Avenue Denver, Colorado 80204

Disclaimer 

Any content of this blog is intended for informational purposes only.It is not intended to solicit business, provide legal advice from The Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro, P.C. and does not serve as a medium for an attorney-client relationship. Therefore, The Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro, P.C. is not responsible for the information on this blog which may not apply to every reader. Always seek professional counsel if you have any legal matters. Contents within the blog of The Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro, P.C., logos and other related media are protected by the copyright laws of the United States and other jurisdictions.


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Thursday, May 8, 2014

Is the US Economy Becoming Dangerously Lethargic?


Jim Pethokoukis highlights an interesting chart today from a Brookings report. The authors are concerned about a declining rate of entrepreneurship in the United States:
Business dynamism is inherently disruptive; but it is also critical to long-run economic growth. Research has established that this process of “creative destruction” is essential to productivity gains by which more productive firms drive out less productive ones, new entrants disrupt incumbents, and workers are better matched with firms. In other words, a dynamic economy constantly forces labor and capital to be put to better uses. But recent evidence points to a U.S. economy that has steadily become less dynamic over time. Two measures used to gauge business dynamism are firm entry and job reallocation. As Figure 1 shows, the firm entry rate—or firms less than one year old as a share of all firms—fell by nearly half in the thirty-plus years between 1978 and 2011.
So fewer people are starting up new businesses, and this trend has been evident for several decades. Pethokoukis speculates that the problem might be too little uncertainty in the economy: "Maybe the U.S. private sector has become too conservative and cautious....The U.S. still generates lots of innovation overall, but maybe too much is of the job-killing sort rather than job-creating kind that marks a dynamic economy."
Maybe. But I'd really like to see a breakdown of what kinds of business creation have declined. My first guess here is that the decline hasn't been among the sort of Silicon Valley firms that drive innovation, but among more prosaic small firms: restaurants, dry cleaners, hardware stores, and so forth. The last few decades have seen an explosion among national chains and big box retailers, and it only makes sense that this has driven down the number of new entrants in these sectors. When there's a McDonald's and a Burger King on every corner, there's just less room for people to open up their own lunch spots. But if there's been a decline in the number of new small retailers, that may or may not say anything about the dynamism of the American economy. It just tells us what we already know: national chains, with their marketing efficiencies and highly efficient logistics, have taken over the retail sector. Amazon and other internet retailers are only hastening this trend.
But is this what's really driving the downward trend in new business creation? The Brookings report doesn't give us any clues. But it sure seems like this is the absolute minimum we need to know in order to draw any serious conclusions about what's really going on here.
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Contact Neil O'Toole and John Sbarbaro
Phone: 303-595-4777
Located in the Denver Metro area.
226 West 12th Avenue Denver, Colorado 80204

Disclaimer 


Any content of this blog is intended for informational purposes only.It is not intended to solicit business, provide legal advice from The Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro, P.C. and does not serve as a medium for an attorney-client relationship. Therefore, The Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro, P.C. is not responsible for the information on this blog which may not apply to every reader. Always seek professional counsel if you have any legal matters. Contents within the blog of The Law Office of O'Toole & Sbarbaro, P.C., logos and other related media are protected by the copyright laws of the United States and other jurisdictions.


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