Monday, August 5, 2013

DaVita settles in Federal Way office and plans to add jobs

Kidney dialysis company DaVita Healthcare Partners Inc. moved its accounting and payroll operations to Federal Way ? along with 350 jobs and room to grow.

Based in Denver, DaVita is a publicly-traded Fortune 500 company (NYSE:DVA) that claims billionaire investor Warren Buffett as its largest shareholder. Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc. owns 15.6 million shares (about 15 percent) of DaVita stock, according to USA Today. DaVita reported $8.186 billion in revenue in 2012.

DaVita serves 160,000 patients at nearly 2,000 kidney dialysis clinics across the U.S. and in nine other nations. Federal Way is already home to a 24-seat dialysis clinic at 1015 S. 348th St.

Located in a remodeled building on the Weyerhaeuser campus, the Federal Way accounting office plans to add at least 50 more jobs in the near future to help handle the entire company's finances.

The Federal Way office measures about 125,000 square feet. The site was selected because of its proximity to Tacoma, therefore minimizing disruption to employees' commutes.

"We were running out of space in downtown Tacoma," said Lin Whatcott, senior director for corporate accounting, on the move to Federal Way in April. "It was fortunate we found this big building that was sitting empty."

Jim Hilger, DaVita's chief accounting officer, told The Mirror last fall that one perk of moving a portion of employees to Federal Way is the lack of a Business and Occupation (B&O) tax. About 550 employees remain at the downtown Tacoma office.

Employees hail from King and Pierce counties. The Federal Way office presents a vibrant atmosphere filled with reminders of the company's core values for service.

One of those values is reflected in the name of the company itself: DaVita means "giving life" in Italian.

DaVita employees also receive permission to spend up to eight paid hours a year on community service projects. In one local example, a team from the tax department helped package school supplies for Federal Way-based World Vision.

About kidney dialysis

Patients suffering from kidney failure either need a transplant or dialysis to stay alive. With kidney dialysis, a machine removes and filters waste from the blood and body. Patients typically undergo dialysis three days a week for an average of four hours per session. Unless they find a kidney transplant, the patients must endure dialysis for life.

DaVita's Federal Way dialysis center serves 146 patients. Of those patients, about 26 self-administer their treatment at home, according to David Natali, regional operations director. Dialysis patients often have other health complications in addition to kidney failure. Life expectancy for dialysis patients is typically seven to 10 years.

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Contact Federal Way Mirror Editor Andy Hobbs at editor@fedwaymirror.com or 1-253-925-5565 (ext 5050).

Source: http://feeds.soundpublishing.com/~r/fwmbusiness/~3/5f65CfuFAvU/217812571.html

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Phil Davis eats a lot of shots, pulls out controversial decision victory over Lyoto Machida

Judging controversies seem to follow the UFC everywhere it goes, but Saturday's victory by Phil Davis over former light heavyweight champion Lyoto Machida at HSBC Arena in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, raised more than a few eyebrows.

After the second round of the three-round bout, Davis' corner urged him to go hard, believing it would be difficult to beat Machida, a Brazilian, by decision in Brazil.

But though Machida seemed to control the third round, it didn't matter. Davis won by scores of 29-28 on all three judges' cards and won a unanimous decision over the division's No. 1 contender.

Sal D'Amato and Rick Winter each gave Rounds 1 and 2 to Davis and Round 3 to Machida. Chris Watts gave Round 1 to Machida and Rounds 2 and 3 to Davis. Cagewriter had it 30-27 for Machida, giving him all three rounds.

Machida seemed shocked when the call went against him.

"I really don't know what they are judging," Machida said in the cage. "Just listen to the crowd. They're telling you what is happening."

UFC president Dana White was shocked, too.

In a telephone interview with Cagewriter once the show ended, White said he was not pleased with the way Machida fought.

"Machida definitely won that fight, definitely," White told Yahoo! Sports. "But that's his fault. He knows MMA judging sucks. It's terrible, it's [expletive], but he went out there and let him do it. I can't remember whether it was the first or the second, but Machida had that combination where he threw all those punches and ran across the cage and ended with that knee. That's when he's really good. But he wants to stay back and be a counter puncher and wait and fight cautiously.

"He's got the abilities, but he just doesn't bring it. He loves the counter and he got taken down at the end of both rounds."

Davis took Machida down near the end of each of the first two rounds, but Machida seemed to control the pace of the fight and stuffed numerous takedowns. Fight Metric gave Machida a 17-16 edge in significant strikes landed.

Davis, who was ranked seventh by the UFC prior to the fight, was ecstatic.

"The late takedowns help, but that's part of my strategy," Davis said. "I get takedowns and work all the time. It's part of what I do."

Machida said he had an injured foot that hampered him a bit, but he couldn't imagine how he lost.

"I believe Phil was not looking to attack, was not going forward and was trying to score points at the end of rounds," Machida said. "But this is not a wrestling match, this is MMA, and I think that the judges need to be more attentive to details. They need to look for who is going forward the most. By the end of the fight he was hurt and bleeding, I managed to land several strikes. I had strained my foot 10 days ago and I felt it a little bit at some point, but other than that I wasn't thrown by his game plan at all."

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/phil-davis-eats-lot-shots-pulls-unanimous-decision-042610494.html

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Sunday, August 4, 2013

McConnell, Senate challengers share stage in Ky.

(AP) ? Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell largely ignored his challengers at Kentucky's premier political showdown Saturday, aiming his criticism instead at President Barack Obama while touting his GOP leadership role.

His Democratic rival in the 2014 race, Alison Lundergan Grimes, and McConnell's GOP challenger went on the attack as they shared the stage with Kentucky's longest-serving senator at the annual Fancy Farm picnic in western Kentucky. It was the first joint appearance by the three, though they have been trading jabs for weeks in speeches and TV ads.

Grimes, Kentucky's secretary of state, portrayed McConnell as the chief Republican obstructionist and made her case for a change.

"If doctors told Sen. McConnell he has a kidney stone, he'd refuse to pass it," said Grimes, drawing cheers from her supporters and jeers from McConnell's at the raucous event.

Louisville businessman Matt Bevin, trying to capitalize on tea party influence in the GOP, declared that he would defeat McConnell in the primary election next May.

"I don't intend to run to the right of Mitch McConnell," said Bevin, a political newcomer. "I don't intend to run to the left of Mitch McConnell. I intend to run straight over the top of Mitch McConnell."

By the time he made the bold declaration, McConnell had left the stage. Bevin criticized McConnell for leaving the event early, starting a chant with the crowd: "Where's Mitch? Where's Mitch? Where's Mitch?" Then adding: "The people of Kentucky have been wondering that for quite a while now."

The stump speeches drew a large crowd of sign-waving, chanting partisans, signaling the fervor for a race that won't ultimately be decided until November 2014.

McConnell tried to score political points by criticizing Obama, who has never been popular in Kentucky. Republicans are trying to tie Grimes to Obama, and some Republicans in the crowd had signs that showed pictures of Obama on one side and Grimes on the other.

McConnell said the federal health-care law championed by Obama has been a "disaster for America," and he criticized the Democratic president for his administration's policies that he said are hurting Kentucky's coal industry. Kentucky is one of the nation's leading coal producers.

"I fought them every step of the way," said McConnell, who's making a bid for a sixth term.

Turning to a local issue, McConnell said that he ? along with fellow U.S. Sen. Rand Paul and U.S. Rep. Ed Whitfield ? forced the government to reverse its decision to halt fishing below the dam of a popular waterway in the area. Obama recently signed a bill imposing a two-year moratorium on barriers to prevent fishing in the tailwaters near dams along the Cumberland and its tributaries.

"You can't get any of those things done from the back bench," McConnell said, in the only criticism that appeared to be directed at his challengers.

"We're not just deciding who represents Kentucky in the Senate," McConnell added. "We're going to be deciding who runs the Senate."

Grimes said the GOP stands for "gridlock, obstruction and partisan," and said McConnell has been a key player in pursuing the strategy.

"There's a disease of dysfunction in Washington D.C., and after 30 years, Sen. McConnell is at the center of it," she said.

Grimes accused McConnell of voting against the interests of workers, women and retirees.

The Senate race is expected to shatter fund-raising records in Kentucky. It's unclear whether Bevin will have the campaign funds to mount a strong primary challenge to McConnell, who at last count had raised more than $15 million. Bevin refused Saturday to say how much of his own cash he will invest in the race, or how much has put in already. The campaign has been running a TV ad since he announced his candidacy last month.

The setting for Saturday's showdown was the shaded grounds of St. Jerome Catholic Church in the tiny western Kentucky community of Fancy Farm where people started showing up on Friday. It's an annual rite that dates back more than a century. By mid-day Saturday, hundreds of people, many waving placards, had gathered in and around an outdoor pavilion.

The raucous event ? a holdover from the days before television, when politicians had to seek out crowds to solicit votes ? takes on the aura of a sporting event, with spectators shouting themselves hoarse heckling some speakers and cheering others, depending on their philosophies.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-08-03-Kentucky%20Senate/id-36730211117f44baae5b4e8a873fddb2

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Saturday, August 3, 2013

Letters: Duck football facility, faith-based outreach, Springwater support

Print publication: Sunday, Aug. 4

Duck football facility

Submit a letter

Post at My Oregon, the Oregonian's online community opinion hub. As a former University of Oregon spokesperson, I still marvel at how posh the university's athletic facilities were, even in comparison to some of the ooshest Fortune 500 corporate offices I have worked in during my career.

David Sarasohn is correct when he implies that Phil Knight, or any other university donor, can direct their gifts in any way they want ("University of Oregon opens its pigskin palace: 200 wiseguy words," OregonLive.com, Aug. 2). If they want to help build pigskin palaces, fine. If they want to help build libraries and law schools (as Knight has done at UO), that is great too.

And if the people and businesses of Oregon really want all of the non-athletic university facilities and programs at the University of Oregon to compete in the same posh and reputation factor as those of athletics, there are several solutions. One is to start demanding that the state of Oregon fund the university at levels more fitting of world-class universities. Another is to make the private contributions to the university that would help, for instance, the geography department compete in the Rose Bowl of geography.

Because palaces -- pigskin, geographic or otherwise -- have to be paid for by somebody.

MARY STANIK
Minneapolis ?
Stanik was senior director of media and public relations at the University of Oregon from May 2005 to June 2006.


Faith-based outreach

Sara Hottman's article "Expanding outreach to those in need" (Portland Community News section, July 24) provides timely Catholic Church good news.

St. Michael the Archangel Catholic Church's 30-year history of providing safety-net services to the poorest of the poor among us, along with a smiling, personable Pope Francis, shine a positive light on faith-based ministries.

On any given night of the year, many hungry and homeless Oregonians are fed and sheltered by faith-based organizations. According to the Oregon Food Bank, 72 percent of OFB partner organizations that provide emergency food services in Multnomah County are faith-based.

All Oregonians can be proud of this good news.

GORDON and MARY ANN DICKEY
Wilsonville?


Springwater support

It was a beautiful, sunny afternoon. I had just begun my first Springwater Trail ride on my two-week-old bicycle when, a mile and a half from Gresham, I found myself face town on the asphalt.

As I was assessing the damage to my body and freaking out about my new bike, along came a young couple and their little girl. They offered baby wipes to clean my wounds, mechanical support to get my bike back on the road and chocolate to cheer my spirit.

At the time, I might have spent too much time whining about my bike and not enough expressing how appreciative I am. As I try to look at the positive side of this experience, this young couple is at the top of my list.

DONNA WEBER
Estacada?

Source: http://blog.oregonlive.com/myoregon/2013/08/letters_duck_football_facility.html

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Crisis At Apple's Factory Watchdog

WASHINGTON -- The industry-backed nonprofit group that monitors plants for Apple, Nestle and other major brands has run into financial trouble, having notified its staff that their pay would be cut by at least 20 percent for the year and an overseas bureau would be shuttered, according to emails reviewed by HuffPost.

An audit of the Fair Labor Association, which garnered international attention last year for its monitoring of Apple's Foxconn facilities, found that the group spent more than $2 million over its budget last year, according to an email to staffers from Kathryn Higgins, chair of the group's board. Such an overrun would seem massive for the nonprofit; its total revenues were $5.2 million in 2011, the most recent year for which tax data is available.

The world's largest apparel makers and retailers have come to rely upon industry-backed programs like the FLA to monitor working standards in countries where labor abuses are common. The cutbacks now in motion could hurt the group's ability to supervise the corporate supply chains currently on its roster, according to the non-profit's employees.

In an email to HuffPost, an FLA spokeswoman said last year's deficit was offset by reserves. "The budget for this year is now in balance and we are committed to remaining in balance going forward," she said.

FLA leaders attributed much of the cost overruns to the development of a new monitoring system, known as its "Sustainable Compliance" methodology. The group said it has hired more assessors and spent significantly more time and money auditing facilities, interviewing workers and traveling abroad.

"[T]he costs turned out to be greater than we ever anticipated," the spokeswoman said.

In July, FLA took the step of slashing salaries for staff members by 20 percent for the rest of the year and requiring non-salaried workers to take one unpaid furlough day each week through December. Workers deemed members of "the training team" saw their pay cut by a whopping 50 percent, as did the group's president and its executive director. The association's office in Istanbul, one of three overseas, was closed for good.

The group said that the salary cuts would be in place through the end of the year, but they expect to be "back to full strength next year."

"You know the reasons for the difficult financial situation we are in," Auret van Heerden, the group's president, said in an email to staff co-written in July with Jorge Perez-Lopez, the executive director. "The organization grew too fast and tried to do too many things. We made some important and necessary programmatic changes but their financial implications were not fully understood. But the reality is that we failed to achieve the fiscal and managerial discipline and control necessary to avoid the situation we face today.

"We very much regret the disruption to your lives, families and work," they added.

The group announced last week that van Heerden would be stepping down from his post at the end of this year. A South African native, van Heerden has spent the last 12 years at the Fair Labor Association. Before that, he worked for the International Labour Organization, the United Nations' human and labor rights watchdog.

According to the group's tax documents filed for 2011, van Heerden's compensation for the year was $279,500, while Perez-Lopez's was $193,764.

Founded in 1999, the FLA was established partly in response to a series of embarrassing sweatshop scandals in the 1990s. Retail leaders and politicians, particularly President Bill Clinton, hoped an industry-backed group could help improve working standards in growing manufacturing hubs like China and Bangladesh. Participating brands now include Adidas, H&M, Nike, New Balance and Patagonia, among others, according to the group's website.

Last year Nestle became the first food company to join the FLA, and the nonprofit performed an investigation into the company's cocoa supply chain in Africa shortly thereafter. The group carried out an audit of Apple's Foxconn facilities the same year, finding that the factories needed to reduce work hours and improve worker participation in unions.

The group has risen to international prominence under van Heerden, just as criticism has mounted from labor activists about the FLA's model of workplace monitoring. The organization receives much of its funding through the very corporate members whose overseas workplaces it's tasked with investigating.

This corporate self-monitoring serves as some of the only scrutiny of factory labor practices in countries with poor government oversight, but skeptics argue the model is hampered by conflicts of interest and fails to curb labor abuses adequately. Voluntary compliance programs like FLA, critics say, can't substitute for the sort of legally binding safety agreement signed by mostly European retailers in the wake of the Rana Plaza disaster in Bangladesh, which claimed more than 1,120 lives this spring.

The irony of a workplace watchdog suddenly enforcing massive pay cuts on its staff hasn't escaped the notice of FLA employees. In a July 11 letter to board members signed by 30 employees, staffers voiced their frustration at the cuts to their already-modest NGO salaries, calling the reductions a "devastating blow to our livelihoods, as most of us are currently receiving salaries that are below the median cost-of-living for the cities in which we live."

Many of the workers have apparently taken the cutback news as all but a layoff notice. "Most of us may have no choice but to seek employment elsewhere," they wrote.

But the workers also voiced concern that they'd have limited influence on the nonprofit's turnaround plan. Involving employees in such decision-making, they noted, is an "integral pillar" to the very worker-centric philosophy that FLA means to espouse through its monitoring duties.

"As an organization that prides itself on 'protecting workers' rights worldwide,'" they wrote, "we hope that the Board will provide the leadership necessary to ensure that the same protections FLA advocates are offered to its own employees."

The FLA spokeswoman said they had developed an employee committee to give workers a voice during the overhaul. "All members of the Board of Directors and staff have been invited in the effort [to] ensure that FLA comes out of this situation stronger and even more effective than before," she said.

According to a press release last week on van Heerden's stepping down, the FLA's board had planned to begin the process of choosing a successor at its annual meeting this week. As an email to staff indicated, the board meeting was originally slated to happen in China in mid-June. It was later rescheduled for Washington, D.C., in late July, presumably due to budget constraints.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/08/03/fair-labor-association-budget-crisis_n_3690769.html?utm_hp_ref=technology&ir=Technology

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Friday, August 2, 2013

A waterworld of volcanoes

[unable to retrieve full-text content]At Loki?s Castle in the Arctic Ocean, researchers have discovered a so far unknown world of volcanic activity underwater. They hope that this can become Norway?s new national park.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/UJ9PB-p5jiE/130802080240.htm

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