Saturday, November 29, 2008

TVB to lay off 200 employees


Television Broadcasts has confirmed it plans to lay off about 200 employees, with details to be announced in the next few days.

The layoff will affect various departments except for actors and show hosts. Termination letters will be sent starting on Monday.

External affairs deputy director Tsang Sing-ming said the production resources department will be the worst-hit.

Tsang said the layoffs are needed to maintain competitiveness. TVB has been recording surpluses for the past five years. 

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CTVglobemedia to Layoff 105 Toronto Jobs


CTVglobemedia has just announced it will layoff 105 people in its Toronto TV division. The majority of the layoffs are from the former CHUM Ltd division that CTVglobemedia purchased for $1.7 billion.  CTVglobemedia spokesperson Bonnie Brownlee also added that the company will not make any more layoffs in 2008 and no comments were made concerning 2009. The layoffs are a direct result of the global financial crisis as the company tries to cut costs.

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ABX to layoff 283 more workers this week


ABX Air says it plans to lay off another 283 employees at the DHL Air Park over the next week.

ABX spokeswoman Beth Huber said Tuesday these permanent layoffs are in addition to the elimination of 158 jobs that ABX Air announced last week.

The latest cuts include ramp loaders, hardware technicians, sort supervisors and hazardous-materials specialists.

When an employee is laid off, the separation does not go into effect immediately, said Huber. In most instances, a layoff presently means the worker has two weeks remaining of employment, she said.

Although there have been rounds of layoffs announced the past two weeks, that does not mean future layoffs necessarily will come in a similar clockwork fashion, Huber said.

A driving factor determining the timing of layoffs involves ABX tracking the volume of DHL Express freight to be processed at the air park. That’s because ABX wants to retain a sufficient number of workers to keep providing excellent service to DHL, Huber said.

On Nov. 10, DHL Express said it will exit the U.S. domestic freight business and focus on its international packages to and from America.

Pickup and delivery of DHL’s U.S. domestic shipments will end Jan. 30.

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Rompetrol Petrochemicals to temporarily layoff 130 employees


Reeling under the impact of the global economic crisis that has shrunk polymer demand, Rompetrol Petrochemicals plans to reduce polymer production for the next two months and temporarily lay off 130 employees from production and maintenance division, about 24% of its employees. This temporary step will also prevent polymer inventory build up. LDPE (low density polyethylene) plants are planned to be shut from December 10, 2008 to January 31, 2009, HDPE (high-density polyethylene) plants for a week longer, from December 1, 2008 to January 31 2009.

In the period of January-September 2008, polymer sales increased by 40% (182,000 tons), but operating profit has taken a direct hit due to stringent market conditions and rising feedstock propylene and ethylene costs. The period of September to November 2008 saw a quantum decline in polymer demand and prices. However, Rompetrol Petrochemicals will continue with its investment plans for 2008 estimated at US$9.5 mln.

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Steel maker's 2,444 jobs head list of layoff notices


Nearly 3,000 more Hoosiers are expected to lose their jobs starting early next year, thanks to a flurry of layoffs announced over the weekend.

Northwestern Indiana would take the biggest hit. About 2,444 employees at ArcelorMittal's steel plant in Burns Harbor learned Friday that they could be laid off indefinitely in January because of a slowdown in production.

In addition, five other companies across the state stand to lay off 500 workers.

The cuts include 92 marketing and sales positions at the Indianapolis office of Bluegreen Corp., a Florida-based vacation rental and time-share specialist.

ArcelorMittal said the recent drop-off in global steel production and the company's previously announced plan to reduce production in North America by 40 percent played into its decision.

Jim Robinson, director of United Steelworkers District 7, said the union is negotiating with ArcelorMittal to minimize the number of layoffs.

"Any discussion about the ultimate nature of what will happen is premature," Robinson said.

Several other companies on Friday informed the Indiana Department of Workforce Development of impending layoffs:

Accent Marketing Services in New Albany said it would cut 164 jobs by mid-January because of a lack of work.

Fleetwood's travel trailer and camper manufacturing operation in Crawfordsville said it would lay off 109 employees by mid-January.

Pennsylvania-based MI Windows and Doors' metal manufacturing facility in Lebanon will lay off 133 workers, though the cuts will take as long as a year to complete.

Hartford Metal Products in Hartford City, which is being sold and closing, will shed 38 employees.

In October, Indiana's unemployment rate was 6.4 percent, lower than the nation's and the rates of surrounding states.

Call Star reporter Tom Spalding at (317) 444-6202.

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Layoff notices mailed out at AK Steel


ASHLAND -- The first round of layoff notices affecting 545 employees at the AK Steel plant in Ashland have been sent out, and 100 more pink slips could be in the mail this week, a union official said Monday.

That will leave only about 35 to 40 union workers on the job through the rest of the year, said Mike Hewlitt, president of United Steelworkers of America Local 1865. Hewlitt said Monday.

While the laid-off workers will get a paycheck Thursday, and one more for two days of holiday pay they didn't work, they can't file for unemployment until Dec. 9, he said. The employees eligible for sub-pay from the company can't get those payments until after they get unemployment checks, Hewlitt said.

Bobby Lintz, a union trustee who has worked at the steel plant for eight years, was among those getting a layoff notice.

"They're saying it's temporary," said Lintz, a Franklin Furnace, Ohio, resident. "Regardless of what they say, there's always worry. You have doubts, especially with the economy. If they help out the Big Three (automakers), it will help the steel industry since we're a supplier."

Lintz, who has two children under the age of 5, says the family has cut back on Christmas this year. "It's going to be tougher. There's a two-week delay on unemployment."

He isn't looking for another job because he hopes to be called back to work at the steel plant.

Hewlitt said steelworkers can sign up for unemployment on line or stop by the union hall at 732 Carter Ave. or the career development center at 2822 Greenup Ave. in Ashland.

The company announced plans earlier this month to put the Amanda blast furnace on hot idle. A company spokesman said the layoffs could be temporary and workers could be called to work in January. Much of the work of tending the blast furnace during the shutdown will be done with salaried employees, something that concerns Hewlitt.

"Salaried people can't do our job under the contract," he said. "We want a plant to come back to. Can we get the plant back up is a question. If they use a fire watch, we could have 85 to 100 union people still working."

Hewlitt, who has worked at the plant for 40 years, thus far has been among those spared a pink slip. If the company idles the number 3 line, he expects to get a layoff notice, too.

A second round of layoff notices to 100 workers could be coming this week, he said.

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NEWSPAPER LAYOFF: Virginian-Pilot to cut 10 percent of work force


RICHMOND — The Virginian-Pilot will cut at least 125 positions, about 10 percent of its work force, mostly by laying off staff and closing or selling affiliated publications.

The Norfolk newspaper company will run its business section on Sundays only; shutter its 2-year-old free daily, Link; close or sell three out-of-state military-base newspapers; and trim the flagship paper’s size by at least 40 pages a week.

“I think I can confidently say it’s the worst week in the history of The Virginian-Pilot,” editor Denis Finley said Monday.

Finley said the newsroom will lose 15 employees, mostly editors and managers, in order to keep “as many reporters and content producers on the street as possible.” It also will drop two open positions.

That will leave the newsroom staff at 193, down 22 percent from 248 journalists in January 2007.

The cuts are expected by the end of the year.

Privately held Landmark Media Enterprises LLC, which owns the Virginian-Pilot and its subsidiaries, hopes to sell the newspaper, but newspaper officials said that didn’t influence the cost-cutting measures.

About 45 of the jobs to be lost are outside the Virginian-Pilot’s central coverage area, the Hampton Roads region of southeastern Virginia. The Pilot will sell or close three military base newspapers in Alabama, Georgia and Texas.

“We have a good staff and we will keep the quality of the journalism really high,” Finley said. “They’re still going to get a good report every day on the state of south Hampton Roads, there just will be a little less of it.”

Although the business section will be eliminated on weekdays and Saturdays, the newspaper is keeping a full business team, including an editor, who will produce stories for the front and Hampton Roads sections, Finley said.

The front section also will include a “market page” on Tuesdays through Saturdays that will include major indices, stocks of local interest and national and local business briefs. Stock listings will appear on The Pilot’s Web site. Those changes will begin on Jan. 12.

“One thing that’s a little troublesome is we’re in the worst economic crisis since the Depression and we’re getting rid of our business section,” Finley said. “However, the stories that really impact everyone in the community and are of national interest would probably appear on our front page anyway.”

Link, which was geared toward readers aged 18 to 34 and launched in October 2006, will close at the end of the year but may retain its Web site. Company officials have not decided whether to continue Port Folio Weekly, an alternative newspaper, or Mix, a multicultural monthly publication.

The newspaper is seeking new ways to generate revenue, like selling advertising space on the newspaper’s front page.

Newsstand prices are likely to rise — on top of a September increase of Sunday editions from $1.25 to $1.50.

The Pilot’s average circulation for weekdays is 174,573, down 3.4 percent from the previous year, according to an Audit Bureau of Circulations report for the six months that ended Sept. 30. The Sunday average was 200,457, down 4.3 percent.

The paper’s figures beat national average declines of 4.6 percent on weekdays and 4.8 percent on Sundays.

Newspapers nationwide continue to struggle as the economic downturn exacerbates the challenges they faced as advertising dollars moved online.

The nation’s largest newspaper, USA Today, owned by Gannett Co., said Sunday it will eliminate about 20 jobs in its newsroom next month to cut costs during the weak economy.

Finley said the mood in the newsroom is bad because workers don’t know if this will be the last of the cuts.

“Everybody is worried, everybody is I think depressed just over the state of the industry,” he said. “They don’t want to be working for a dying industry. They want to be working for a growing, robust industry.... The scariest part is that nobody really has it figured out yet.”

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Google Layoffs--10000 Workers Affected


Google has been quietly laying off staff and up to 10,000 jobs could be on the chopping block according to sources. Since August, hundreds of employees have been laid off and there are reports that about 500 of them were recruiters for Google.

By law, Google is required to report layoffs publicly and with the SEC however, Google has managed to get around the legal requirement. In fact, one of the ways Google was able to meet Wall Street’s Q3 earnings expectations was by trimming “operational” expenses.

Google reports to the SEC that it has 20,123 employees but in reality it has 30,000. Why the discrepancy? Google classifies 10,000 of the employees as temporary operational expenses or “workers”. Google co-founder Sergey Brin said, “There is no question that the number (of workers) is too high”.

The classification affords Google several advantages such as:

1) Hire full time employees without full time benefits. The classification enables Google to pay them above minimum wage, provide no health benefits, no insurance coverage, no stock options, and no offer of permanent employment.

2) By under-reporting actual employee headcount, Google looks good to Wall Street.  A low headcount gives the illusion that productivity per employee is more than it actually is, which in turn looks good in the eyes of Google shareholders which is ultimately good for Google’s stock in the short term.

So, how does Google get around the SEC requirement regarding material information? Google has hundreds of lawyers figuring out how not to get caught. One of them is by moving workers from job to job every few months so that their status remains temporary. That is why you probably have never spoken to the same person twice at Google and that is also why there is somebody new on the job and most times you know more about their job than they do.

A bulk of the workers have been there for up to five years and many know others who had been there for seven years or more moving from job to job.

There is no question the economic downturn is hitting Google hard and with the slowdown in online advertising, their troubles are just beginning.

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ArcelorMittal


ArcelorMittal will be cutting only 500 jobs instead of the 2400 originally planned or one of their steel mills in Indiana

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Employment figures rebound locally


Published: Wednesday, November 26, 2008 at 3:00 p.m.
Last Modified: Wednesday, November 26, 2008 at 10:39 a.m.

THIBODAUX - Unemployment in Terrebonne and Lafourche dropped to 4 percent in October after hitting almost 6 percent in September, new state data show.

"That can basically be attributed to people going back to work after the hurricane," said Patti Granier, a statistician with the Louisiana Workforce Commission.

The numbers, released Tuesday, are not adjusted for seasonal variations.

The Houma-Thibodaux metro area, which includes all of Terrebonne and Lafourche parishes, has the second-lowest unemployment in the state. Lafayette has the lowest jobless rate at 3.7 percent.

The average is 5.3 percent statewide and 6.1 percent nationally for October.

Houma-Thibodaux's unemployment is still higher than last year; it was 2.3 percent in October 2007 in both parishes. This October, it was 3.8 percent in Lafourche and 4.1 percent in Terrebonne.

Jobs were also generated statewide and locally. Louisiana added 5,000 non-seasonal jobs over October, with a growth of 9,700 since last October. Houma-Thibodaux added 700 over the month but is down 900 over the year.

In Houma, oil production gained 200 over the month; building construction gained 100.

It's difficult to know how much of these additions came on the rebound from hurricanes Gustav and Ike and how much represents new economic growth, Granier said.

In surrounding parishes, St. Mary posted a 5.2 percent jobless rate last month, Assumption 6.3 percent and St. James 8.2 percent.

Officials said the figures are encouraging, especially considering that unemployment rates are up in 47 states and the District of Columbia.

"It appears that the hurricanes did have a significant effect on our employment in September and that we've rebounded considerably from that," Tim Barfield, executive director of the Louisiana Workforce Commission, said in a news release. "The growth in the Louisiana workforce, both the number of people working and the number looking for work, indicates our economy is still growing and outperforming the nation."

Staff Writer Kathrine Schmidt can be reached at 857-2204.

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Swiss employment growth slows in Q3


 ZURICH, Nov 27 (Reuters) - Employment growth in Switzerland slowed in the third quarter and is likely to continue to weaken as the economy cools, data showed on Thursday.

Switzerland's non-farm payrolls rose 2.0 percent year-on-year in the third quarter to 3.956 million compared with growth of 2.4 percent in the previous three months, the Federal Statistics Office said.

The statistics office said the forward-looking indices pointed to a further slowing of employment growth as the outlook index fell 2.7 percent to 1.04 points, while the index of vacancies rose 0.5 percent to 207.3 points.

The survey among manufacturers for the Swiss Purchasing Managers' Index in October showed that firms cut back staff for the first time since 2005, while the unadjusted Swiss unemployment rate inched up in the month to 2.5 percent.

Switzerland is in the middle of a severe economic crisis and will see negative growth next year, Swiss National Bank board member Philipp Hildebrand was quoted on Wednesday as saying.
The SNB slashed rates last Thursday by a surprise full percentage point and analysts expect the SNB to cut again, possibly as early as next month.

Jan-Egbert Sturm, head of the KOF Swiss Economic Institute that produces the leading growth barometer, said the bank could cut by another 25 basis points in December.

"In theory there is still room to cut. A further central bank interest rate step downwards is therefore not unlikely, perhaps there will be a rate cut still this year," Sturm told the Basler Zeitung daily in an interview.

The November KOF indicator, which points to the economy's likely performance in six months' time, is due out on Friday. (Reporting by Emma Thomasson; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)  

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Kentucky’s Jobless Rate Falls


Web produced by: Jessica Noll

Kentucky’s seasonally adjusted preliminary unemployment rate for October 2008 dropped to 6.8 percent from September 2008’s revised 7.1 percent, according to the Office of Employment and Training (OET), an agency of the Kentucky Education and Workforce Development Cabinet.

October 2007’s jobless rate was 5.4 percent.

The U.S. seasonally adjusted jobless rate rose from 6.1 percent in September 2008 to 6.5 percent in October 2008, according to the U.S. Department of Labor.

Unemployment statistics are based on estimates and are compiled to measure trends rather than actually to count people working.

“Retrenchment by consumers, weakness in the automobile industry and fallout from the housing and financial crises continued to weigh on Kentucky's economy in October 2008. The manufacturing, construction, and trade, transportation and utilities sectors were particularly hard hit. The decline in the unemployment rate reflects individuals who have faced long-term unemployment becoming discouraged and dropping out of the labor force,” said Justine Detzel, OET chief labor market analyst.

Six of the 11 major nonfarm North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) job sectors reported employment increases in October 2008, while five decreased, according to OET.

A decline of 3,400 jobs in October 2008 brought Kentucky’s nonfarm employment to a seasonally adjusted total of 1,862,100. Since October 2007, Kentucky’s nonfarm employment has dropped by 12,400.

According to the seasonally adjusted employment data, the government sector, which includes public education, public administration agencies and state-owned hospitals, gained 2,700 positions between September 2008 and October 2008. The sector has grown by 10,000 jobs since October 2007 with roughly half of those positions in local government.

The educational and health services sector grew by 1,000 jobs in October 2008. Since last October, the number of jobs in this sector has risen by 300 jobs. This sector includes private and nonprofit establishments that provide either education and training or health care and social assistance to their clients.

The state’s other services sector, which includes such establishments as repair and maintenance businesses, personal and laundry services, religious organizations and civic and professional organizations, rose by 700 jobs in October 2008. This sector had 200 more jobs in October 2008 than in October 2007.

The number of positions in the natural resources and mining sector rose by 200 in October 2008. The sector has gained 900 jobs since October 2007 because of hiring in the coal mining industry.

The number of jobs in the financial activities sector increased by 200 in October 2008. This segment, which includes businesses involved in finance, insurance, real estate and property leasing or rental, has lost 1,200 positions over the past 12 months.

“This marks the first increase in employment in the financial activities sector since February 2008. The real estate and rental and leasing industry accounted for the job gains from September 2008 to October 2008,” said Detzel. “However, the year-over-year employment losses are indicative of the battered housing market and restrictive credit conditions impacting Kentucky.”

Kentucky’s leisure and hospitality sector reported an employment gain of 200 jobs in October 2008. Since October 2007, employment in the sector has declined by 2,700 positions. The leisure and hospitality sector includes arts, entertainment and recreation, accommodations and food services and drinking places industries.

The manufacturing sector lost 4,400 jobs in October 2008. Compared to October 2007, jobs in the sector were down by 15,500 in September 2008.

“This is the seventh time this year manufacturing employment has fallen. The durable goods subsector accounted for these job losses, reflecting layoffs at two automobile parts manufacturers and the closings of a plumbing manufacturer and an appliance motor manufacturer,” Detzel said.

“The woes of the automobile industry are reverberating through Kentucky’s economy with shock waves felt by employees, automobile parts suppliers and non-manufacturing enterprises such as railroads and trucking companies faced with a reduction of cargo. In contrast, the non-durable good subsector exhibited an increase in employment, which is indicative of expansions at an aluminum foil manufacturer and a plastics parts manufacturer.”

The construction sector recorded 2,400 fewer positions in October 2008. Since October 2007, employment in the construction sector has decreased by 4,300 positions.

Kentucky’s trade, transportation and utilities sector dropped by 1,200 jobs in October 2008. This area includes retail and wholesale trade, transportation and warehousing businesses and utilities. It is the largest sector in Kentucky with 390,200 employees. Since October 2007, the number of jobs in this sector has jumped by 2,600.

“Transportation, warehousing and utilities enterprises accounted for the majority of the decline in the number of jobs. Retail trade businesses also exhibited sizeable employment losses, which is indicative of multiple retail store closings,” Detzel said.

The number of jobs in the professional and business services sector dropped by 300 in October 2008. This area had 2,100 fewer employees in October 2008 than in October 2007. The professional and business services sector includes professional, scientific and technical services, management of companies and administrative and support management, including temporary help agencies.

The information sector decreased by 100 jobs in October 2008. This segment, which includes firms involved in publishing, Internet activities, data processing, broadcasting and news syndication, has lost 600 positions since October 2007.

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’ monthly estimate of the number of employed Kentuckians for October 2008 was 1,905,975 on a seasonally adjusted basis. This figure is up 4,260 from the 1,901,715 employed in September 2008, but down 29,219 from the 1,935,194 employed in October 2007.

The monthly estimate of the number of unemployed Kentuckians for October 2008 was 138,693, down 7,030 from the 145,723 Kentuckians unemployed in September 2008, but up 29,246 from the 109,447 unemployed in October 2007.

The monthly estimate of the number of Kentuckians in the civilian labor force for October 2008 was 2,044,668. This figure is down 2,770 from the 2,047,438 recorded in September 2008, but up 27 from the 2,044,641 recorded for October 2007.

Civilian labor force statistics include non-military workers and unemployed Kentuckians who are actively seeking work. They do not include unemployed Kentuckians who have not looked for employment within the past four weeks.

Kentucky’s statewide unemployment rate and employment levels are seasonally adjusted. Employment statistics undergo sharp fluctuations due to seasonal events, such as weather changes, harvests, holidays and school openings and closings.

Seasonal adjustments eliminate these influences and make it easier to observe statistical trends. However, because of the small sample size, county unemployment rates are not seasonally adjusted.

Learn more about the Office of Employment and Training, click here.

A complementary experimental hours and earnings series is available, click here.

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New Jersey Employment Losses Extend into October


The sharp retrenchment in national labor markets continues to take its toll in New Jersey. The state lost 6,000 payroll jobs in October, bringing total job losses to 27,200 this year. Private-sector employment in New Jersey over the same period has fallen by 25,000 jobs. The state’s unemployment rate increased to 6 percent from 5.8 percent a month ago — a level not reached since July 2003, when labor markets were still declining from the recession of 2001. The separate household survey indicated the number of unemployed in New Jersey increased by 9,200 in October, and by 85,300 for year. Also, the broad-based nature of the job declines last month indicate that the recession has spread beyond the original sectors of weakness (construction, manufacturing and finance) to affect nearly all areas of the economy.

The largest job losses in October occurred in the trade, transportation and utilities sector (down 2,500 jobs), with most of the losses occurring in retail trade. This is due to the precipitous decline in consumer spending in the last two months. The leisure and hospitality sector, also heavily reliant on consumer spending, was also affected significantly, with a loss of 1,600 jobs. Manufacturing jobs continued to plummet with a further loss of 2,000 jobs in October, bringing the decline for the year to 11,800 jobs. This represents a drop of 3.8 percent, the highest rate of decrease of any business sector. Employment also fell in finance (down 700 jobs) as the ongoing restructuring of the financial sector continues to hurt New Jersey. Construction employment continued to decline, by 200 jobs, as did other services (down 300 jobs), and information services (down 200 jobs).

Only two private business sectors gained jobs in October. Business and professional services added 200 jobs in October, the same gain as in September. However, prior to September, employment in the sector had increased by 2,700 jobs. The small increase over the last two months indicates that there has been a sharp deceleration in job growth in this large sector. A likely factor behind this is a decline in temporary employment, often one of the first labor market casualties in a recession. The other private business sector that gained employment was education and health, which increased by 1,200 jobs. Public sector employment edged up by 100 jobs.

One important caveat to the October report is that given the accelerating and steep changes that are occurring in labor markets, significant revisions to the state employment data are likely at the end of the year.

Nevertheless, both the payroll survey and the household survey are clearly indicating that the national recession is echoing loudly in New Jersey. 

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MUSC Furloughs 1200 and Layoffs Expected


By Tim Gehret
Reporter
Published: November 24, 2008

The Lowcountry’s largest state employer will eliminate jobs.

MUSC president Dr. Ray Greenberg announced today he expects a hand full of layoff’s to come after the holidays. Who will go is still undecided.
In the meantime, more than 1,200 MUSC employees will face a four-day mandatory furlough, or days off without pay, over four months starting in January.

“It is a big deal to employees who are living at the edge,” Greenberg said. “We struggled to keep it as low as possible.

The university has a total 5,000 employees. Which means more than 3,000, primarily high paid researchers, will be unaffected.
News 2 asked why the administration could not furlough all 5,000 employees for one day instead of a select 1,200 for four?

According to Greenberg researchers make money for MUSC.
“We can’t afford to have them not working. If they’re not here and not producing income, we lose more than we lose than from the state cuts.

He says the layoffs will only affect a hand full of employees. He clarified that projection as being around 10. He would not specify which positions saying the state has to approve those cuts.

While they wait, work must continue. That’s why a three day medical conference set for next month in the Virgin Islands will go on as planned. At least three top administrators will meet in St. Croix to discuss health disparities, an area of research MUSC is known for around the world.
One big reason this is significant, during the last round of cuts, MUSC announced it was postponing travel.
While the timing is unfortunate, Greenberg says these events have the potential to generate a lot of private money for research. Regardless of how it may look to the people being laid off or furloughed, not going, he says “would be negative for the institution and for the individual careers of the faculty involved.”

Several agencies, corporations, and universities co-sponsor the conference and officials say it is not being paid for with state money.

“I can assure you we don’t take any single day of furlough lightly here,” he says.

Greenberg himself will take eight days off which means he will forfeit about $7,000 in state money. He will continue to earn is hospital salary which is 451 thousand extra dollars a year.

His total salary is close to $700,000 a year.

The furlough will affect the College of Nursing, Dental Medicine, Academic Affairs Office, Library and the Office of Finance and Administration.

Here’s how the savings are expected to break down. 

The furlough is expected to save more than $1,000,000, not filling the 80 vacant jobs is expected to save MUSC close to $4,000,000


Layoffs will save MUSC more than $300,000. Miscellaneous cuts of more than $2,000,000 bringing the total projected savings to more than $7,000,000 

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US Gypsum plant to lay off 133 in Jacksonville


United States Gypsum has filed notice with the state that it will layoff 133 employees at its Jacksonville plant at the end of 2008

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Japan layoffs thousands of auto workers



apan layoffs thousands of auto workers

The global credit crisis is casting a dark cloud over Japan's automakers.

Nissan Motor, less than a month after announcing it would cut back production by 75,000 units, has reviewed the reduction plan and now says a total of 147,000 fewer cars will roll out of its factories until March next year. Nissan says it will lay off 1,500 non-regular workers, 500 more than its initial estimate.

In all, eight Japanese car makers have decided to reduce production by 700,000 cars until year's end. This is the first time in five years that production figures will pale next to that of sales.

They are leading to a surging number of people seeking unemployment benefits. In March, the number of recipients hovered below 500,000, but as of September it jumped by more than 100,000.

Source: Digital Chosunilbo

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Boeing to lay off 800 at IDS in Wichita


The Boeing Co. plans to cut 800 jobs, including management, at its Integrated Defense Systems facility in Wichita, Kan., next year.

Boeing said the cuts were due to the delay in the U.S. Air Force tanker-replacement program.

The layoffs will impact managers, salaried and hourly workers.

Boeing will deliver 60-day layoff notices to approximately 76 employees Friday. Their last day of work is scheduled for mid-January. The company will deliver the rest of the layoff notices throughout 2009, with most occurring in the first half of the year.

Boeing Wichita today employs 3,000 people.

A unit of The Boeing Co. [NYSE: BA], Integrated Defense Systems is one of the world's largest space and defense businesses. Headquartered in St. Louis, Boeing Integrated Defense Systems is a $32.1 billion business with 71,000 employees worldwide.

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REGION: JLG experiences more layoffs



JLG Industries was hit by its third round of layoffs in five months.

The company said last week the latest round of downsizing will affect 500 employees worldwide.

"With financial instability and credit issues, our end markets, construction markets, are largely impacted. That's persisted on a global basis," said Kirsten Skyba, JLG's vice president, global marketing. "It's been a very challenging year."

The aerial access equipment manufacturer previously announced layoffs in July and again in August. Skyba said the three rounds affect a total of 1,400 employees, or about 31 percent of the global work force of 4,500 people.

The latest round of layoffs, which began Friday and continues through January, affects both production and administrative positions. 

"Economic conditions have continued to their unprecedented deterioration since mid-September, leading construction markets to intensify their slide over the past two months. We've seen a particularly strong downturn in Europe, which has now followed the slowdown in North America," said Craig Paylor, JLG president and executive vice president of Oshkosh Corp.

JLG has facilities in McConnellsburg, Shippensburg and Bedford, as well as North Dakota; Ohio; Maasmechelen, Belgium; Tonneins, France; and Medias, Romania. Skyba said the number of affected employees at each facility is not available, but the majority of downsizing affects North American operations.

There's no question these are tougher economic times and the national and state unemployment pictures are looking worse.

The U.S. Labor Department said this week that new claims for unemployment hit a 16-week high as President Bush signed an extension of jobless benefits into law on Friday.

Also this week, the state Department of Labor and Industry said job levels hit a 20-month low in October. The job losses came primarily from manufacturing and the trade, transportation and utilities sector.

While Pennsylvania's economy has fared better than much of the country, unemployment tied a five-year high in October. Unemployment in Franklin and Fulton counties also recently hit a five-year high. Unemployment claims have been significantly higher this year in both counties.

Amid announcements of swelling unemployment and layoffs this week, there was a bright spot for JLG. The company broke ground Tuesday for a new facility in Tianjin, China.

"Long-term, the more you can balance your geographic opportunities and market segments, the better it positions you to weather this downturn, which has hit many companies," Skyba said.

Skyba said JLG currently does very little business in China and the company saw "a very significant growth opportunity." She said the decision to build in China was not based on outsourcing or lesser labor rates.

"The reality is for us to sell more products, we're at a disadvantage because of shipping rates. It puts us at a price disadvantage. The intent is to have a better competitive position to grow in Asia," she said. "If you look at JLG's history, our production is typically linked to areas where we build business. As Europe's grown, we've built facilities there. This is the next step JLG is taking."

While the North American and European construction markets have seen a significant slowdown, China is seeing growth.

"Look at the amount of construction that is taking place in terms of transforming a country and society that is the largest population on the planet. It's remarkable the amount of money being spent. It just makes sense to be there," said L. Michael Ross, president of the Franklin County Area Development Corp.

The Tianjin facility is scheduled for completion in early 2010.

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Marcus Rauhut can be reached at mrauhut@publicopinionnews.com or 262-4752.


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1.5 million Californians out of work


County's jobless figure is highest since 1995

UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER

November 22, 2008

With thousands of jobs disappearing in retail, finance and construction, unemployment in California and San Diego County last month rose to its highest point since the recession of the early 1990s.


Statewide, the unemployment rate hit 8.2 percent in October, according to data released yesterday by the state's Employment Development Department and the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. That's up from 7.7 percent in September and 5.7 percent in October 2007.

That was the third-highest rate in the nation after Michigan and Rhode Island, which were tied at 9.3 percent. The national average was 6.5 percent.

More than 1.5 million Californians are now unemployed, putting strains on the state's unemployment insurance fund, which was created during the Great Depression.

The state government projects that if current trends continue, the unemployment fund will be $2.4 billion in the red by the end of 2009, which would force it to borrow from the federal government for the second time in its history.

“We've known for years that changes must be made to the fund to keep it solvent, and it is unfortunate that now, when we need it most, it is racing toward the red,” Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said yesterday.

In the coming days, lawmakers will consider a proposal Schwarzenegger introduced this month that would require employers to pay more money into the unemployment fund while reducing the amount workers can receive.

In the meantime, President Bush signed a bill extending unemployment benefits nationwide to help jobless workers make it through the holidays.

“It's good news that President Bush is willing to extend the benefits,” said Murtaza Baxamusa, economist at San Diego's Center for Policy Initiatives. “But the idea of cutting back benefits would not just impact the folks who lose their jobs, but would also impact the economy, since there would be less money for them to spread around.”

In San Diego County, the jobless rate hit 6.8 percent – the highest point since summer 1995, when military contractors were closing their doors after the end of the Cold War. The unemployment rate was 6.1 percent in September 2008 and 4.8 percent in October 2007.

Between October 2007 and October 2008, the state lost 101,300 jobs, including 24,600 in the past month alone. San Diego County lost 12,200 jobs during the year, representing a decrease of nearly 1 percent.

Kelly Cunningham, economist at the San Diego Institute for Policy Research, said the number of people unemployed now tops the records set during the recession of the 1990s. He predicted the local jobless rate could eventually match or top its 1990s peak of 8.7 percent.

“It will only climb higher,” Cunningham said. “There doesn't seem to be an end to it right now. There has to be a pickup in the economy before businesses start adding jobs.”

Alan Gin, economist at the University of San Diego, said declining gas prices, a recent rise in home sales and the likelihood of a massive economic stimulus package once the Obama administration takes over in Washington could keep the economy from hitting the depths of the 1990s. But he said it's possible unemployment could top 8 percent.

Nigel Gault, economist with IHT Global Insight, an economic forecasting firm in Massachusetts, predicted that layoffs will accelerate as the economy deteriorates.

“Firms had previously been cutting back employment only gradually, being cautious on hiring but not aggressive on firing,” he said. “They have now decided that the recession will be deeper than feared and are acting more aggressively on firing, as they see demand for their products falling rapidly.”

According to yesterday's employment report, San Diego County added 400 workers last month, with most of the job growth coming from seasonal hiring at schools. After adjusting for those seasonal hiring fluctuations, the picture looks much gloomier.

Beacon Economics, a firm in Los Angeles that analyzes economic data, said that on a seasonally adjusted basis, San Diego lost 2,200 workers during the month, pushing the adjusted unemployment rate to 6.9 percent.

Because of the sluggish housing market, construction workers have taken the hardest hits. Over the past year, 5,800 such workers in San Diego County lost their jobs, including 500 in the past month, according to the Employment Development Department. Two hundred finance and real estate workers lost their jobs last month, bringing the yearly loss to 3,600.

The effects of the credit crunch have spread into retail sales, prompting layoffs at stores in the region. Over the past year, retailers have shed 4,600 jobs. Car dealerships cut 1,100; building supply and garden outlets, 800; department stores, 600; furniture dealers, 500; health and personal care boutiques, 500; and clothing shops, 400.

“This is a time of year when retailers are usually adding jobs for the Christmas holiday season, not cutting existing jobs,” Cunningham said. “That's very unusual. Even during the 1990s recession, hiring at retailers usually picked up at this time of year.”

Unemployment is increasing in other areas as well, including manufacturing, government and professional services. Employment for temporary workers dropped by 400 jobs last month, for a yearly loss of 2,500.

The employment firm Manpower is an exception. Phil Blair, a co-owner of the firm's regional operations, said business is strong.

“There are still some jobs out there – especially in places like computer programming, high tech, biomedical, telecom and medical device manufacturing,” he said. “It's just that people have to look longer, harder and deeper and in less predictable places.”


Dean Calbreath: (619) 293-1891; dean.calbreath@uniontrib.com 

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Job Losses Surge as U.S. Downturn Accelerates


Rising unemployment across the nation reveals a pervasive downturn that is spreading at an accelerating pace.

In data released Friday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 12 states, including Florida, Idaho, North Carolina and Illinois, reported a rise of at least two percentage points in unemployment rates over the past year.

For many states, the pace of decline is more severe than during the 2001 recession. Job losses have spread beyond construction and manufacturing to service sectors such as tourism, hospitality and professional and business services.

"It's remarkable how fast the unemployment rate is increasing" in several states, said Luke Tilley, a senior economist at IHS Global Insight. "We are now seeing the full ripple effects."

In October, month-over-month unemployment rates increased in 38 states and the District of Columbia. Unemployment rates held steady in seven states and fell in five. Many economists forecast the national unemployment rate, currently at 6.5%, will top 8% in the next few months.

The weakest states are those with concentrations of construction and manufacturing jobs. Michigan and Rhode Island, both heavily dependent on manufacturing, posted October unemployment rates of 9.3%, highest in the nation. Ohio's rate rose to 7.3% from 7.2% in September.

Unemployment generally was higher in Western states, which have been hit particularly hard by the housing bust, and the Midwest, which continues to bleed manufacturing jobs. But joblessness affected the entire country, even touching energy-producing states that had been resilient up to this point.

Florida has lost 156,000 jobs over the past 12 months, but the weakness has spread beyond the state's housing industry. About half the losses were in the construction sector, but the state also lost 47,000 jobs in the professional and business service sector, 38,000 in trade, transportation and utilities, and 20,000 in manufacturing.

Unemployment rose throughout the Sunbelt, as falling home prices and surging foreclosures continued to weigh on employers. Florida and Georgia both posted unemployment rates of 7%, while Nevada's rose to 7.6% and California to 8.2%.

While Sunbelt states have been buffeted by the housing bust and subsequent falloff in consumer spending, they may have further to fall. In Florida, Arizona and Nevada, construction jobs account for between 6.5% and 9.4% of employment, compared with 5.3% nationally, according to economists at Goldman Sachs. An exception is California, where construction employment is now in line with the national average.

Energy states remain the lone bright spot, but not necessarily for long. Wyoming and South Dakota had the lowest unemployment rates in the nation, at 3.3%. North Dakota's unemployment rate fell to 3.4%. Falling energy prices have removed an economic buffer from many of those states. Unemployment rose 0.5 percentage point to 5.6% in Texas; in Oklahoma, the rate rose to 4.3% from 3.8% last month.

Write to Conor Dougherty at conor.dougherty@wsj.com

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ABX Announces Layoffs


Thomas L. Gallagher
Web Editor

ABX Air is cutting jobs all over the country.

In addition to the 8,000 workers at a package-sorting hub operated for DHL in Wilmington, Ohio, as many as 3,500 employees may be affected at 16 regional hubs in the United States as the cargo airline responds to the loss of business from its primary customer, DHL Express.

DHL Express announced Nov. 10 that it will end its domestic shipping operations in the United States by the end of January, and close its U.S. hubs. As many as 9,500 DHL employees will likely lose their jobs as the company ceases operations in the United States.

ABX layoffs in Ohio began Nov. 14. ABX Air said in a filing with the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services it will cut 158 jobs there by mid-January. The layoffs will include 33 pilots, two of whom are captains, and other hourly and salaried personnel. The state agency will administer a $3.9 million National Emergency Grant from the U.S. Department of Labor targeted at 386 workers affected by layoffs in the Wilmington Air Park area.

ABX will also close its Tom Andrews Road facility in Roanoke, Va., eliminating 73 jobs, effective Jan. 13. The company submitted a notice Nov. 14 to the Governor's Office for Workforce Development.

The company notified the Washington Employment Security Department's Dislocated Worker Unit on Nov. 14 that the ABX Air distribution center in the Port of Chehalis, Wash., halfway between Portland and Seattle, is scheduled to close permanently Jan. 13, eliminating 52 jobs.

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Mass layoffs spike in Kansas


The economy has taken a toll on Kansas businesses.

The state saw its mass layoff events spike dramatically, jumping from six in September to 18 in October, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. The jump also means unemployment claims are also on the rise.

In September 478 unemployment claims were filed, but that number climbed to 2,543 in October.

The numbers are sure to increase in future labor department studies as well. Three of Wichita’s largest aircraft manufacturers recently announced mass layoffs. They include:

Hawker Beechcraft Corp. — 490.

Cessna Aircraft Co. — 500.

The Boeing Co. (Integrated Defense Systems-Wichita) — 800

The department of labor defines a mass layoff as eliminating 50 or more jobs from the same company.

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Ohio second in nation for mass layoffs


Ohio ranked second in the nation for the number of workers in line for unemployment benefits from large-scale job cuts in October, according to a federal report released Friday.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported 118 layoffs of 50 or more workers in the state last month, up from 53 a year ago, seasonally unadjusted. Resulting first-time unemployment insurance claims hit 17,764, up 63 percent from 18,896 in October 2007.

The increase came as the state’s unemployment rate ticked up to 7.3 percent from 7.2 percent in September, according to figures released Friday by the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services.

California had the largest number of first-time claims from mass layoffs at 51,286, but Michigan – the epicenter of unprecedented troubles for the automobile industry – logged about 900 fewer claims than second-ranked Ohio.

The Midwest had the highest share of unemployment insurance filings among the nation’s four geographic regions, the bureau said. Around the nation, seasonally adjusted mass job cuts jumped to 2,140 events from 1,347 a year ago as total insurance claims shot up more than 70 percent to 232,468 from 136,124 a year ago.

About a third of all companies that initiated mass job cuts last month were in the manufacturing sector, while about 45 percent of all unemployment insurance filings were from the industry, the bureau said.

The bureau plans to release November statistics on Dec. 19.

BizPulse Survey: Should the government bail out the auto industry? Vote here.


E-mail dayton@bizjournals.com. Call (937) 528-4400.

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Illinois unemployment rate hits 7.3%


Unemployment in Illinois jumped higher last month -- and continued to track significantly above the nationwide rate -- as the state's construction sector lost jobs at an accelerating pace, according to statewide data released Thursday afternoon.

The state's jobless rate surged to 7.3 percent in October from September's 6.9 percent reading, the Illinois Department of Employment Security said.

Because the state's population is growing, Illinois must typically generate thousands of new jobs monthly just to absorbe the growing labor pool and keep the unemployment fromrising. But October marked the fifth consecutive month in which the number of jobholders fell.

Employment dropped by a substantial 11,700 from September, to 5,958,400, IDES said.

Nationwide, unemployment surged to a 14-year high of 6.5 percent in October, according to Labor Department data released earlier this month. And with the U.S. economy now sinking deeper into what is widely expected to be the worst recession in 25 years, many experts think the national jobless rate will exceed 8 percent during 2009.

With its large manufacturing, commercial and financial bases, Illinois's economy feels the impact of the negative factors that have been battering the national job market: slowing demand for manufactured goods, a punishing drop in residential construction, disruptions linked to the tight credit markets, slowing export activity and weakening retail sales.

The state's construction sector showed the most painful drop, shedding 4,100 jobs and reducting construction employment to 254,500. Over the past twelve months, construction has lost a total of 15,200 jobs in the state -- and 7,400 of those jobs disappeared in the past two months.

Government employment also declined, with the sector losing 2,700 jobs to a new total of 850,200. Financial employment dropped 2,200 jobs, to 394,000, as banking, insurance and securities workers felt the impact of the credit market's ongoing woes.

"Although Illinois has a diverse economy, the national economic slowdown has had a negative effect on Illinois unemployent and thus we need federal government assistance with an investment in infrastructure and additional stimulus to help create jobs," said IDES director Maureen O'Donnell.

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NY releases employment data amid cuts across state


An associated Press Story says that New York State only lost 14000 jobs in October, 2008.

(PERSONAL COMMENT) I wish tyhe reporter used some discretion to call into question these numbers.

Heck, from what I see as a headhunter, Lehman and some of the other houses cut more jobs than that!


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Jobless claims jump to 16-year high


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Unemployment at 6.5 percent, 14-year high


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DHL Workers Not Shocked By Layoffs, Employee Says


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GM Announces Layoffs At Lordstown, Ohio Plant


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El Dorado County Facing Worker Cuts


Will American Express layoffs hurt Utah?


Friday, November 28, 2008

The Job Market: December 2008


In case you haven't noticed, finding a job has become more complicated. If you're trying to find a job in financial services, you probably have little confidence in the health of your potential employer.

If you have even done a cursory scan of this blog, you'll see that the number of layoff notices has increased quite a bit over the past 18 months. Managerial layoffs have skyrocketed.

We've seen the US government rescue any number of financial institutions recently (most recently Citigroup and no one believes that we are through the worst of times yet.

It kind of reminds me of my first apartment when I was married the first time (I am married to my third wife who is definitely "a keeper"). We would come home at night and turn on the lights and find cockroaches crawling around the sink. The problem was that even if we got rid of those bugs, even if we sprayed our apartment regularly, there would always be more.

The problem with this economy is that there are lots of coackroaches and, frankly, more will keep showing up.  And, it seems, many large firms in numerous industries have their tin cup out asking for money.

Today, we are reading about the automakers; when will the credit card companies start reporting on the increase in defaults and ask for their share?

From a labor market perspective, we are now at the beginning of the downward cycle. Can you afford to ride through a hurrican that could easily last a year and more likely two or more?

When you interview, beyond the ususal questions about the job and your future reponsibilities, you need to ask a new question toward the end of the interview during the part when they ask you whether you have any questions.

The new question to ask is, "I don't have to tell you that we are all reading about a very complicated time in the US economy. How has the economic calamity affected your firm and what would you say are the prospects for its' future?"

Fist of all, you are looking for honesty-- Honesty is measured by whether their answer is consistent with what you research online using Google. The second thing you are looking for is the appearance of sincereity and reflection. You want to work for someone who was sincere with you when you asked a difficult question. After all, don't they expect the same of you during the interview?

Jeff Altman

The Big Game Hunter
 Concepts in Staffing
 TheBigGameHunter@cisny.com
 
 © 2008 all rights reserved.
 
Jeff Altman, The Big  Game Hunter, is Managing Director with Concepts in Staffing, a New York search firm, He has successfully assisted many corporations identify management leaders and staff in many disciplines since 1971. He is a retired certified leader of the ManKind Project, a not for profit organization that assists men with life issues, and a practicing psychotherapist.

 

He is the author of “Get Yourself Hired NOW! The Big Game Hunter’s Guide to Head Hunting Your Next Job and Every Job After That” (in ebook and audio formats) and “Get Your Job Search Organized NOW!” (ebook) Both are available at www.GetYourselfHiredNOW.com
 
To receive a daily digest of positions emailed to you, search for openings that The Big Game Hunter is working on, to use Jeff’s free job lead search engine, JobSearchUniverse.com, to subscribe to Jeff’s free job hunting ezine, “No B.S. Job Search Advice, or his staffing ezine, “No B.S. Hiring Advice”, or to learn about his VIP program,  go to www.JeffAltman.com.

Explore some of The Big Game Hunter's employment related products

 

 


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Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Google's Stealth Layoffs


Brian Caulfield11.26.08, 04:53 PM EST

When is a layoff not a layoff? When it involves contract workers.

Denizens of Silicon Valley had gotten accustomed to seeing people on bikes with videocams, gathering footage of local streets for Google maps.

But the streets are going to be a bit emptier now.

Google (nasdaq: GOOG - news -people ) has begun cutting back its workforce by peeling off the thick layer of part-time and full-time contractors who had become the worker ants for some of Google's most high profile projects. Among them: people who had provided the video footage for Google maps and people scanning page after page of books for Google's book search project.

Don't expect to see any headlines about these cutbacks, however. Although companies are required to report layoffs of full-time workers, they can take the size of their contract worker pool up and down with impunity. Workers who get their jobs through temporary employment agencies are often asked to sign contracts that prohibit them from disclosing when an employer has let them go. Together that means Google--and other Silicon Valley companies--can quietly trim their expenses and head count with hardily a ripple of media attention.

When asked about reports that Google was reducing the size of its workforce, a Google spokesperson pointed toward an interview with the Mercury News in October, where co-founder Sergey Brin said Google would try to trim its pool of contract workers, which at the time numbered 10,000.

Global Equities Research analyst Trip Chowdhry says his contacts are telling him Google has let go 3,000 contract employees. He also figures 300 full-time employees have left as Google closes regional offices and employees opt not to move to Google's headquarters in Mountain View, Calif.

These moves, however, may not be enough. Until housing prices drop to 2001 levels and oil hits $25 a barrel again--or incomes go up dramatically--there won't be enough discretionary income to keep Google's advertising-driven business growing, Chowdhry figures. "Because Google is the leader for the consumer Internet, their success is their curse," Chowdhry says.

The search engine itself can't be faulted, to be sure. Google owned 63.1% of U.S. searches in October, up from 62.9% during September, according to a report released this week by online traffic tracker comScore.

Google, however, may be too big not to suffer as the economy chills. Chowdhry figures Google's current quarter sales will grow 15% over the year-ago period, and next quarter Google could actually see sales drop by 3% compared with the year-ago period. Unless the situation for U.S. consumers improves in a hurry, Chowdhry sees Google cutting 10% to 15% of its full-time workforce next year.

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Silicon Valley starts to feel the sting of layoffs


By Gabriel Madway

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The economic slowdown has finally begun to hit home in Silicon Valley, with tech companies large and small shedding jobs in advance of what is widely expected to be a difficult year.

The scene may remind some of 2001 and 2002, when the Internet bubble exploded and dumped hundreds of thousands of engineers in the area onto the unemployment rolls.

But the situation is far different this time, with the financial and housing sectors to blame, not tech. And few, at least at this point, see the layoffs having a long-term impact on the Valley's fabled reputation as a cradle of innovation and risk-taking.

"In 2001, we were the epicenter, we were the cause," said Stephen Levy, director of the Center for Continuing Study of the California Economy. "Now it's a world-wide recession event."

Although layoffs have just begun in the Valley -- with more expected -- many say employment will hold up better than it did after the dot-com bust, even as the world suffers through the most paralyzing financial meltdown in a generation.

Even so, that provides little comfort for the growing ranks of unemployed IT professionals struggling to get by.

Vivek Sharma, a business systems analyst from India who is in the U.S. on an H-1B work visa, said he was working as an independent contractor on a project for Macys.com before the company abruptly cut the cord in October.

"The job market is completely dead," Sharma said.

UNEMPLOYMENT RATE CREEPS UP

The unemployment rate in Santa Clara county, home to Silicon Valley, rose to 6.9 percent in October from 6.5 percent in September. That's above the national level of 6.5 percent but below California's jobless rate of 8.2 percent.

The numbers will likely get worse. The past few weeks have seen near daily job cut announcements from Valley companies including Sun Microsystems Inc (JAVA.O: QuoteProfileResearchStock Buzz), Applied Materials Inc (AMAT.O: QuoteProfileResearchStock Buzz), KLA-Tencor Corp (KLAC.O: QuoteProfileResearchStock Buzz), National Semiconductor Corp (NSM.N: QuoteProfileResearchStock Buzz) and Lam Research Corp (LRCX.O: QuoteProfileResearchStock Buzz).

Smaller private companies are also wielding the ax, with high-profile names such as electric car start-up Tesla Motors and social-networking site LinkedIn shedding workers.

Employment consulting firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas has tallied 140,422 job cuts overall by technology firms through October 31, up 31 percent from all of 2007. More than two-thirds of this year's layoffs have come since July.

Still, that is a far cry from 2001, when the technology industry slashed 695,581 jobs.

After the tech bubble burst, Santa Clara County alone lost more than 200,000 jobs, 20 percent of its job base. The county's annual unemployment rate hit 8.4 percent in 2002.

But the tech sector has matured a great deal since then, some say, perhaps leaving it less vulnerable to such a shock.

"Technology is really not the center of the storm this time," said Challenger Chief Executive John Challenger. He said IT has become more embedded into most companies' DNA and less discretionary, making technology spending less less volatile.

UNCERTAINTY FOR 2009

Next year is shaping up to be a difficult one for Silicon Valley, with more layoffs expected.

A recent survey of more than 500 top executives in the San Francisco Bay Area by the Bay Area Council revealed that 40 percent plan to cut their workforce in the next six months.

"Companies just aren't sure what the next six months are going to look like, so we're seeing companies cancel searches, withdrawing offers," said Jeff Hocking, managing director of the San Francisco office for executive recruitment firm Korn/Ferry International (KFY.N: Quote,ProfileResearchStock Buzz).

In addition, he said people who already have jobs are now more difficult to poach. "The cost of change has gone up."

However, there are still bright spots in the gloom. Hocking said the firm continues to have success in recruiting executives to clean-technology firms.

Levy sees the same scenario. "Venture capital is holding even and probably in the intermediate term poised to grow with all the alternative energy (investment)," he said.

A Dow Jones VentureSource study released last month showed that VC investment in renewable energy leaped 71 percent from the previous quarter, even as investment in information technology fell 10 percent.

(Editing by Brian Moss)

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Monday, November 24, 2008

With Sun's job cuts, tech sector layoff toll in '08 hits 140,000


November 14, 2008 (Computerworld) The economic downturn that has resulted in tens of thousands of layoffs in the housing and financial services sectors is now bearing down on the tech industry. The job cuts announced by Sun Microsystems Inc. on Friday are only the latest in the growing toll.
Sun plans to cut as many 6,000 jobs, or about 18% of its workforce, a move that raises the total number of technology-related job cuts announced so far this year to more than 140,000, according to Challenger, Gray & Christmas Inc., a Chicago-based outplacement consulting firm that tracks layoff announcements by sector.
Most of the job cuts have taken place in the past few months, with nearly two-third of them, or 89,500, occurring since July.

At the current rate, Challenger is forecasting tech-sector job cuts totaling 180,000 by the end of the year.
The rapid increase in job losses follows an increasingly pessimistic spending forecast. Research firm IDC said this week that IT spending growth in the U.S. will be less than 1% in 2009, a sharp drop from an August forecast that projected a 4.2% increase next year.
In 2007, the number of job-cut announcements in the tech sector totaled 107,300; in 2006, it was 131,200; and in 2005, it hit 174,744.
The worst year was 2001, the year the dot-com bubble burst, when nearly 700,000 tech jobs took place, according to Challenger.
Companies that announced layoffs this month include Santa Clara, Calif.-based Applied Materials Inc., which this week unveiled plans to reduce its global workforce by about 12%, or 1,800 workers. National Semiconductor Corp., said it is cutting 330 jobs.
John Challenger, CEO of Challenger, Gray & Christmas, said in a statement that by the end of 2008, "we may also see cuts from Cisco Systems, Qualcomm and Nokia, all of whom are reporting falling sales amid the weakening economy."
One of the largest cuts announced so far this year came in September after the merger of Hewlett-Packard Co. and Electronic Data Systems Corp. HP said in September that it planned to cut as many as 25,000 employees as a result of the merger.

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With Sun's job cuts, tech sector layoff toll in '08 hits 140,000


The bulk of job losses at tech firms have occurred since July

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

LAYOFFS AT TV GUIDE, FORBES


Forbes and TV Guide separately unveiled sweeping cutbacks yesterday, while The New York Times Co. shut down its critically acclaimed sports magazine Play.

Three-year-old Play, which was an insert into its Sunday paper, published 13 issues since its inception. Mark Bryant, the one-time editor of Outside who was Play's editor-in-chief, blamed the closure on the deteriorating ad picture.

"It comes down to the same thing that seems to be happening on an almost daily basis around the media business," he said.

He said the few editorial staffers at the magazine are being absorbed into other parts of the Times.

TV Guide staff cuts involve 33 people in New York and Radnor, Pa. Deputy Editor Leslie van Buskirk was the highest ranking editorial person ousted in the cutbacks.

Meanwhile, Forbes laid off 43 people, most of whom were on the business side.

As part of the Forbes shakeup, the business and marketing staff of the flagship Forbes magazine and forbes.com Web site will now be under one management team. A similar arrangement might be in the offing for the editorial side, though such moves might be put off until next year.

As part of the changes, Web site forbesautos.com is being discontinued. Matthew De Paula, its editor, was among those let go Friday. Forbestraveler.com will lose three people as part of a scaling back of that Web site.

The combined print and Web site business operation will be split among three groups: Brand intelligence, led by Kevin Gentzel, the former top ad sales executive at forbes.com, who will now carry the title president and group publisher of Forbes Media; the integrated solutions group, led by Mike Woods; and the Forbes media sales and service group, led by Avery Stirratt and Robert Pietsch, who will serve as co-presidents and chief advertising officers.

keith.kelly@nypost.com

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THE CITI SLASHER CUTTING 53K JOBS


By DAN MANGAN and PETER HOLLEY

Posted: 4:37 am
November 18, 2008

Citigroup will slash a staggering 53,000 jobs - the second-largest cut ever by a US company - because of punishing losses and a reeling economy, the financial giant announced yesterday.

The massive job cuts, which will shrink New York-based Citigroup's workforce by about 15 percent, comes just two months after the banking behemoth finished trimming 23,000 positions.

About half of the new cuts will come through layoffs and attrition. The other half will come from the sale of units.

There was no indication how many Citigroup jobs in the New York area will be eliminated. The worldwide cuts, which will leave the company with about 300,000 workers, are expected to begin in early 2009.

Citigroup has lost $20.3 billion over the past year.

To compensate, Citigroup said it will cut expenses by as much as 20 percent in 2009, when it expects to spend about $50 billion, as opposed to the nearly $62 billion it spent over the past year. The firm has tapped into $25 billion in capital offered by the US government's financial rescue.

CEO Vikram Pandit yesterday told employees that 2009 will be "difficult" for customers, but said Citigroup has been "getting fit" to deal with more austere times.

New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo criticized Citigroup for not committing to eliminating year-end bonuses for top executives, as the Goldman Sachs firm announced Sunday.

Citigroup chairman Win Bischoff did not rule out eliminating bonuses.

dan.mangan@nypost.com

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