SHAREHOLDER ALERT: Pomerantz Law Firm Investigates Claims On Behalf of Investors of FedEx Corporation – FDX

NEW YORK, July 18, 2017 /PRNewswire/ — Pomerantz LLP is investigating claims on behalf of investors of FedEx Corporation (“FedEx” or the “Company”)

FDX, -2.06%

   Such investors are advised to contact Robert S. Willoughby at rswilloughby@pomlaw.com or 888-476-6529, ext. 9980.

The investigation concerns whether FedEx and certain of its officers and/or directors have engaged in securities fraud or other unlawful business practices. 

[Click here to join a class action]

On June 28, 2017, FedEx announced that the worldwide operations of the Company’s TNT Express unit were significantly affected by a cyber attack known as Petya.  On July 17, 2017, FedEx filed an annual report on Form 10-K with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.  In its annual report, FedEx advised investors that the disruption in services caused by the Petya attack would have a material financial impact on the Company’s full-year results. 

The Company further advised investors that FedEx “do[es] not have cyber or other insurance in place that covers this attack.”  On this news, FedEx’s share price fell $2.96, or 1.35%, to close at $216.10 on July 17, 2017.

The Pomerantz Firm, with offices in New York, Chicago, Florida, and Los Angeles, is acknowledged as one of the premier firms in the areas of corporate, securities, and antitrust class litigation. Founded by the late Abraham L. Pomerantz, known as the dean of the class action bar, the Pomerantz Firm pioneered the field of securities class actions. Today, more than 80 years later, the Pomerantz Firm continues in the tradition he established, fighting for the rights of the victims of securities fraud, breaches of fiduciary duty, and corporate misconduct. The Firm has recovered numerous multimillion-dollar damages awards on behalf of class members. See www.pomerantzlaw.com

CONTACT: Robert S. Willoughby
Pomerantz LLP
rswilloughby@pomlaw.com

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SOURCE Pomerantz LLP

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3 California Communities Sue 37 Big Oil Firms For Climate Change Damages

The last time that a community tried to sue a bunch of oil and gas companies for environmental destruction due to climate change, it didn’t turn out so well. In 2008, the tiny village of Kivalina launched a suit against a host of energy companies, including oil and gas giants Exxon, Shell, BP and Chevron. Kivalina’s argument was simple: climate change was destroying their village through melting ice caps and rising seas, phenomenon that were linked scientifically to the large-scale carbon emissions being produced by oil, gas and energy companies. The companies therefore (the town reasoned), should pay for the relocation of the Native American Indian village.

But in 2012 the 9th Circuit Court ruled that “the solution to Kivalina’s dire circumstance must rest in the hands of the legislative and executive branches of our government, not the federal common law.” If the village wanted relief, the court argued, it would need to look to the federal government for help, not to the public court system.

The issue of whether one can attribute responsibility for climate change to a single party continues to be debated. But the revelation in 2015 that Exxon Corp had figured out nearly 40 years earlier that its fossil-fuel-based industry was actually precipitating climate change has helped give weight to the idea that large emitters bear responsibility to increased global warming.

Yesterday, three communities in California decided to take up that debate again with three independent suits. Marin and San Mateo Counties in Northern California and the City of Imperial Beach in San Diego County allege that the companies had foreknowledge that fossil fuel industries precipitated climate change and are responsible for covering the costs of adaptation and mitigation.

Each of these three communities includes a substantial Pacific coastline that will be at risk of flooding in the years to come.

There have been other attempts in recent years to hold oil and gas companies accountable for the impact of fossil fuel emissions, including small communities in both Louisiana and Alaska that say they are losing their towns to rising sea levels. But what is different about yesterday’s suits is the comprehensive scope of the effort, which is being compared at this point to the early effort by health activists to hold tobacco companies responsible for smoking-related deaths. By 1998, when a master agreement was drawn up to address and stem the flood of lawsuits against embattled tobacco companies, more than 800 private lawsuits had been launched. Some 40 states also headed to court for everything from financial recovery due to mounting health costs to charges for fraudulent behavior.

Could we be looking at a similar challenge to the fossil fuel industry? It’s too early to tell, but environmental researchers do have one thing to work with that towns like Kivalina didn’t have at its fingertips in 2008: data.

According to research that came out in 2013 (and is growing), scientists and lawyers now have a better means for divvying up the responsibility. There’s a formula for that.

“Courts need no longer fear that it would be impossible to untangle the private sector’s historical contributions to climate change …” wrote American University Law Professor David Hunter in his blog post for Progressive Reform. “A clear formula now exists for allocating at least a significant percentage of the costs of climate change to those companies that benefited most from the public nuisance created by their emissions.”

Fiickr image: secretivemarshbird


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Independent Proxy Advisory Firms Glass Lewis and ISS Recommend That Osisko Shareholders Vote for the Proposed Acquisition of the Orion Mine Finance Royalty Portfolio

/EINPresswire.com/ — MONTREAL, QUEBEC–(Marketwired – Jul 18, 2017) – Osisko Gold Royalties Ltd (TSX:OR)(NYSE:OR) (“Osisko” or the “Company”) is pleased to announce that Glass Lewis and Co. (“Glass Lewis”) and Institutional Shareholder Services Inc. (“ISS”), two leading independent proxy advisory firms that provide voting recommendations to institutional investors, have recommended that shareholders of Osisko vote IN FAVOUR of the proposed acquisition of the Orion Mine Finance royalty portfolio dated June 5, 2017 (“Transaction”).

Sean Roosen, Chair of the Board and Chief Executive Office of Osisko noted “We are pleased to receive the positive endorsement for our transformational transaction to acquire the 74 royalty, metals stream, and offtake agreement assets from Orion Mine Finance. We believe this transaction complements our current portfolio extremely well and provides our shareholders with increasing near-term cash flows.”

Glass Lewis stated the Transaction to be “based on sound rationale”. In reaching its conclusion, Glass Lewis commented that the Transaction “would provide the Company with significantly greater size, scale and mineral diversification, which in turn could enhance the Company’s competitive position and access to capital” and as such recommended that Osisko shareholders vote FOR the share issuance resolution associated with the Transaction.1

ISS has also recommended that Osisko shareholders vote FOR the share issuance resolution associated with the Transaction for a number of reasons, including the fact “the proposed transaction makes strategic sense as shareholders might benefit from upside potential of the large royalty package with different advancement levels that maintains the Company’s precious metals focus and diversifies the Company’s portfolio while keeping low geopolitical risk. Moreover, the proposed transaction is expected to be immediately accretive to the Company’s cash flow per share and to double the Company’s near-term cash flow.”1

We encourage all Osisko shareholders to read the management information circular with respect to the Transaction, which was filed on Osisko’s issuer profiles on SEDAR and EDGAR on June 30, 2017. The management information circular is available on SEDAR at www.sedar.com and on EDGAR at www.sec.gov and contains a detailed description of the Transaction.

Osisko’s Board of Directors and Management UNANIMOUSLY recommend that Shareholders vote FOR the share issuance resolution associated with of the Transaction.

HOW TO VOTE

Due to essence of time, shareholders are encouraged to vote today using the internet, telephone or facsimile.

Registered shareholders of Osisko

Registered shareholders may vote by:

  • Internet: www.cstvotemyproxy.com
  • Telephone: 1-888-489-7352 (North American Toll Free)
  • Facsimile: 1-866-781-3111 (North American Toll Free) or 416-368-2502 (outside North America)
  • Mail: CST Trust Company, P.O. Box 721, Agincourt, ON M1S 0A1
  • Attending the meeting in person: 1 Place Ville Marie, Suite 4000, Montréal, Québec

Non-registered shareholders of Osisko

Shareholders who hold shares of Osisko through a bank or other intermediary will have different voting instructions. In most cases, non-registered shareholders will receive a voting instruction form as part of the meeting materials. Non-registered shareholders are encouraged to carefully follow the instructions found therein, on how to submit their votes.

SHAREHOLDERS QUESTIONS

Shareholders of Osisko who have questions regarding the Transaction or require assistance with voting may contact Laurel Hill Advisory Group, the proxy solicitation agent, by telephone or email as set forth below.

Laurel Hill Advisory Group

By telephone (North American Toll Free) at: 1-877-452-7184

By telephone (Collect Outside North America) at: +1-416-304-0211

By email at: assistance@laurelhill.com

About Osisko

Osisko Gold Royalties Ltd is an intermediate precious metal royalty company focused on the Americas that commenced activities in June 2014. Prior to the Transaction announced on June 5, 2017, it held over 50 royalties and one stream, including a 5% NSR royalty on the Canadian Malartic Mine (Canada), a 2.0% to 3.5% sliding scale NSR royalty on the Éléonore Mine (Canada) and a silver stream on the Gibraltar mine (Canada). It maintains a strong financial position with cash resources of C$423.6 million at March 31, 2017 and has distributed C$39.4 million in dividends to its shareholders during the past eleven consecutive quarters. Osisko also owns a portfolio of publicly held resource companies, including a 15.3% interest in Osisko Mining Inc., 13.3% in Falco Resources Ltd. and 33.4% in Barkerville Gold Mines Ltd.

Osisko’s head office is located at 1100 Avenue des Canadiens-de-Montréal, Suite 300, Montréal, Québec, H3B 2S2. For more information, visit www.osiskogr.com.

Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Information

Certain statements contained in this press release may be considered “forward-looking statements” or “forward-looking information” within the meaning of applicable Canadian and U.S. securities laws. Any statement that involves discussions with respect to predictions, expectations, interpretations, beliefs, plans, projections, objectives, assumptions, future events or performance (often but not always using phrases such as “expects”, or “does not expect”, “is expected”, “interpreted”, “management’s view”, “anticipates” or “does not anticipate”, “plans”, “budget”, “scheduled”, “forecasts”, “estimates”, “believes” or “intends” or variations of such words and phrases or stating that certain actions, events or results “may” or “could”, “would”, “might” or “will” be taken to occur or be achieved) are not statements of historical fact and may be forward-looking information and are intended to identify forward-looking information. This forward-looking information is based on reasonable assumptions and estimates of management of the Company, at the time it was made, involves known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of Osisko to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking information. Although the forward-looking information contained in this news release is based upon what management believes, or believed at the time, to be reasonable assumptions, Osisko cannot assure shareholders and prospective purchasers of securities of the Company that actual results will be consistent with such forward-looking information, as there may be other factors that cause results not to be as anticipated, estimated or intended, and neither Osisko nor any other person assumes responsibility for the accuracy and completeness of any such forward-looking information. Osisko does not undertake, and assumes no obligation, to update or revise any such forward-looking statements or forward-looking information contained herein to reflect new events or circumstances, except as may be required by law.”

1 Permission to quote from the ISS’ and Glass Lewis’ reports was neither sought nor obtained.

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Delhi High Court to continue hearing over GST on legal firms

[India], July 18 (ANI): The Delhi High Court on Tuesday will continue to hear the plea seeking clarification on whether lawyers and legal firms are required to comply with the Central Goods and Services Tax (CGST) Act.

In its earlier hearing, the court had directed that no coercive action should be taken against any lawyer or law firm for non-compliance with any legal requirement under the Central Goods and Services Tax (CGST) Act, Integrated Goods and Services Tax (IGST) Act or the Delhi Goods and Services Tax (DGST) Act, till a clarification is issued by the appropriate governments.

In a statement directed towards the Central Government, the High Court has directed that no forcible actions be taken against any lawyer or law firm for non-compliance with any legal requirement under these Acts.

The Delhi High Court said, “As of date there is no clarity on whether all legal services (not restricted to representational services) provided by legal practitioners and firms would be governed by the reverse charge mechanism.”

The High Court further said that if all legal services are to be governed by the reverse charge mechanism, then there would be no purpose in requiring legal practitioners and law firms to compulsorily get registered under the CGST, IGST and DGST Acts.

It also said, “Those seeking voluntary registration would anyway avail of the facility under Section 25 (3) of the CGST Act (and the corresponding provision of the other two statutes).”

It added that there is prima facie merit in the contention of Mittal that the legal practitioners are under a genuine doubt whether they require to register themselves.

“In the circumstances, the Court directs that no coercive action be taken against any lawyer or law firms for non-compliance with any legal requirement under the CGST Act, the IGST Act or the DGST Act till a clarification is issued by the Central Government and the GNCTD, till orders in that regard by this Court also clarifies that any lawyer or law firm that has been registered under the CGST Act, or the IGST Act or the DGST Act from 1″ July, 2017 onwards will not be denied the benefit of such clarification as and when it is issued,” said the Delhi HC.(ANI)

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Florida Mesothelioma Victims Center Now Suggests the Nation’s Top Three Law Firms When It Comes to A Navy Veteran with Mesothelioma in Florida Getting the Best Possible Compensation

The fulltime mesothelioma attorneys we have listed are considered to be among the leading mesothelioma attorneys in the nation for Navy Veterans with this rare cancer-call them”

— Florida Mesothelioma Victims Center

NEW YORK, NEW YORK, USA, July 17, 2017 /EINPresswire.com/ — The Florida Mesothelioma Victims Center says, “There might be car accident attorneys who proclaim they also do mesothelioma-but doing a mesothelioma compensation claim successfully for a Navy Veteran who has been diagnosed with this rare cancer requires more than a license to practice law. A Navy Veteran in Florida who has recently been diagnosed with mesothelioma deserves to have the very best legal representation in the nation because their financial compensation depends on it-as we would like to discuss anytime at 800-714-0303.” http://Florida.MesotheliomaVictimsCenter.Com

In all likelihood-a mesothelioma compensation claim involving a US Navy Veteran in Florida will involve a US Navy Base or US Navy Shipyard not in Florida. It is for this reason we place such a huge premium on making certain a Navy Veteran in Florida has on the spot access to the nation’s top mesothelioma attorneys whose law firms are the gold standard for mesothelioma compensation settlements. We know the news of a mesothelioma diagnosis can be devastating for an individual or their family. What we do not want to see happen is a diagnosed Navy Veteran in Florida or their family to act impulsively when it comes to hiring a lawyer or law firm as they would like to explain in detail at 800-714-0303. http://Florida.MesotheliomaVictimsCenter.Com

Note from the Florida Mesothelioma Victims Center, “If you have been diagnosed with mesothelioma and your asbestos exposure occurred while you were serving in the US Navy or a US Navy Shipyard the the fulltime mesothelioma attorneys we have listed are considered to be among the leading mesothelioma attorneys in the nation when it comes to mesothelioma compensation. We are certain they will personally want to talk to you directly if you have this rare form of cancer because of asbestos exposure on a US Navy ship, or while your ship was at a US Navy Shipyard.” http://Florida.MesotheliomaVictimsCenter.Com

Vital Tip related to a US Navy Veteran hiring some of the nation’s top mesothelioma attorneys from the Florida Mesothelioma Victims Center: The Center’s number one tip for a Navy Veteran in Florida would be contacting one of the three attorneys listed.

* Steven Kazan-Oakland, California-877-995-6372
* Joseph Belluck-New York-877-637-6843
* Peter Kraus-Dallas/Los Angeles-800-226-9880

The Florida Mesothelioma Victims Center wants to emphasize there is a statewide initiative available to a diagnosed victim anywhere in Florida including communities such as Miami, Jacksonville, Tampa, Saint Petersburg, Orlando, Hialeah, Fort Lauderdale, Tallahassee, Port Saint Lucie, or Cape Coral. http://Florida.MesotheliomaVictimsCenter.Com

Aside from their focus on the best possible compensation the Center is also very passionate about treatment options for mesothelioma. For the best possible mesothelioma treatment options in Florida the Florida Mesothelioma Victims Center strongly recommends the following heath care facility with the offer to help a diagnosed victim, or their family get to the right physicians at this hospital: The H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, Florida: http://moffitt.org/

High-risk work groups for exposure to asbestos now living in Florida include US Navy Veterans, power plant workers, shipyard workers, oil refinery workers, steel mill workers, miners, manufacturing workers, plumbers, electricians, auto mechanics, machinists or construction workers. Typically, the exposure to asbestos occurred in the 1950’s, 1960’s, 1970’s, or 1980’s. In most instances, the diagnosed person was not exposed to asbestos in Florida but rather in the Northeast or Midwest.

The Florida Mesothelioma Victims Center says, “If you have been diagnosed with mesothelioma and you live in Florida please call us at 800-714-0303, and compare the qualifications of who we consider to be the nation’s most skilled mesothelioma attorneys to any other lawyer, or law firm.”
http://Florida.MesotheliomaVictimsCenter.Com

For more information about mesothelioma please refer to the National Institutes of Health’s web site related to this rare form of cancer: http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/mesothelioma.html

Michael Thomas
Florida Mesothelioma Victims Center
800-714-0303
email us here


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FIRS shuts four firms over N630m tax debt

The Federal Inland Revenue Service on Monday sealed off four companies in Lagos and Port Harcourt over their alleged failure to meet their tax obligations totalling N630m.

The affected firms include Charcoal and Spices Restaurant Limited, GRA, Port Harcourt, and Cioscon Nigerian Limited, Aba Road, Port Harcourt.

The leader of the FIRS enforcement team, Mrs. Anita Erinne, sealed both companies after showing warrants to officials of the firms.

Charcoal and Spices Restaurant Limited allegedly owed N12,388,979.50, while Cioscon was said to have a tax liability amounting to N479,203,464.43 from 2014 to 2016, which the firm had allegedly failed to remit.

Erinne told the defaulting firms that their premises would be unsealed when they clear their outstanding tax bills.

She warned the workers not to tamper with the FIRS seal until the debts were cleared, stating that any attempt to remove the seals would be a contravention of the law.

Erinne, however, noted that the firms had been officially notified of their indebtedness to the FIRS, stating that all the taxes should be paid before their premises could be reopened.

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All rights reserved. This material, and other digital content on this website, may not be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or in part without prior express written permission from PUNCH.

Contact: [email protected]

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8 out of 10 firms say UK must stay in EU

12 September 2013

| CBI Press Team

News

If a referendum on the future membership of the European Union was held tomorrow, a substantial majority of CBI members would support staying in, fearing an exit would affect access to trading markets and business investment, leaving the UK less competitive. That’s according to a new snapshot CBI/YouGov survey .

Firms also identify several priorities for reform

The survey of more than 400 businesses employing more than 1.5 million direct employees, shows 78% of firms favour staying in the EU, including 77% of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). Just 10% think it is in their interests for the UK to leave the EU (11% of SMEs). Despite frustrations over the current relationship, and the burden of some regulations, particularly employment law, the survey shows most businesses feel the positives more than outweigh the negatives.

But firms do want to see the relationship reformed. Businesses are calling for a reduction in unnecessary regulations, rules to be implemented evenly across all member states and an end to the ‘gold-plating’ of EU legislation.

John Cridland, CBI Director-General, said:

‘This sends a clear message that most CBI members, big and small, support UK membership of the EU.

‘Firms want what is best for jobs and growth, and there is genuine concern that an exit would hit business investment and access to the world’s largest trading bloc.

‘The UK should take the lead on the push for reform and make sure rules are evenly applied across the EU. Businesses are also concerned about the UK gold-plating legislation from Brussels.

‘Businesses do have some serious concerns about the EU, but ultimately they want the UK inside the tent winning the argument for reform.’

Among the survey’s key findings:

  • 71% said the UK’s membership has had a positive or very positive impact on their businesses, with 16% stating it had no impact and 13% that the impact was negative
  • Among the SMEs surveyed, 67% think membership of the EU has had a positive impact (16% no impact, 16% negative)
  • When asked to rank their priorities for reform, 46% wanted an end to ‘gold-plating’ of EU legislation and 39% wanted to see EU rules applied evenly across all member states. Other priorities for reform include reducing regulation (39%) and making structural reforms for a more competitive EU (36%)
  • 75% think leaving the EU would have a negative impact on the overall level of foreign direct investment in the UK – 9% thought it would increase investment. 35% warned they would be likely to reduce their own business investment in the event of an EU exit, compared to 51% saying there would be no impact and only 6% who stated they would boost investment
  • 86% believe that leaving the EU would have a negative impact on UK firms’ access to EU markets (11% thought it would have no impact and only 1% a positive impact)
  • 59% thought that an EU exit would reduce the international competitiveness of the UK as a whole, with 15% believing the UK would be unaffected and 23% that there would be a positive impact.

The survey shows a majority of companies see the EU as having a positive impact on their businesses, in terms of their ability to buy and sell products inside and outside EU markets without prohibitive taxes or tariffs, and to recruit staff from across the EU.

However, firms are concerned by the potential impact an EU exit would have on their businesses and the UK as a whole. Some benefits to leaving were identified, such as a reduced regulatory burden. A significant minority of firms felt that an EU exit would have no impact on them, but very few pointed to positive benefits. A bigger proportion said that the UK leaving would have a negative impact judged against most criteria, including the UK’s international competitiveness, its ability to participate in EU supply chains and access to EU markets.

On the impact to business of our current EU membership, the survey found:

Significant numbers of firms believe the current relationship has a positive impact on their own businesses which includes:

  • The ability to buy and sell products without taxes and tariffs on trade flows in EU markets (76% positive, 17% no impact, 1% negative) and outside EU markets as a result of trade deals (58% positive, 30% no impact, 2% negative)
  • To recruit and transfer staff from across the EU (63% positive, 28% no impact, 1% negative), although large firms (73%) were stronger advocates than SMEs (48%)
  • Common product standards across the EU (52% positive, 27% no impact, 15% negative)

But there have been some areas where there has been a negative impact on their own businesses, including:

  • Attempts to create similar employment law across the EU, in areas such as working hours, was the one aspect where a higher proportion felt there had been a negative impact (49% negative, 25% no impact, 22% positive).

On major concerns about the negative impact of an EU exit on their own businesses:

  • On employment levels (42% negative, 49% no impact, 5% positive)
  • Access to trade in EU markets (67% negative, 25% no impact, 3% positive)
  • Overall business competitiveness (55% negative, 27% no impact, 15% positive)
  • Access to skilled workers (47% negative, 46% no impact, 3% positive)
  • On their ability to attract foreign direct investment from outside the EU (32% negative, 46% no impact, 5% positive) and from the EU itself (42% negative, 40% no impact, 2% positive)
  • But many firms do recognise benefits from an exit reflecting areas of the relationship they would like to reform. 52% said they would expect the overall regulatory burden to lessen (23% saying it would make no difference and 20% saying the position would worsen).

On the UK’s influence in the EU:

  • Businesses believe the UK does currently have influence on EU policies that affect them (72% significant or some influence, 27% not very much or no influence) and expect this to remain the case in the future (74% significant or some influence, 25% not very much or no influence)
  • But if the UK left the EU firms felt there would be a negative impact on its influence (65% negative, 16% no impact, 15% positive).

Read the full survey results here

CBI – Confederation of British Industry published this content on 28 June 2017 and is solely responsible for the information contained herein.
Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 17 July 2017 16:52:19 UTC.


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Only 20% of firms in Davao complied with accessibility law

PERSONS with Disability Affairs Office (PDAO) in Davao City said only 20 percent of all government and non-government firms complied with the Accessibility Ordinance of the City Council, which mandates the creation of barrier-free physical environment for the disabled persons.

PDAO-Davao president Bong Comiling, during Kapehan sa Dabaw media forum at SM City Davao-Annex on Monday, July 17, said this was based on a survey conducted in May by the personnel of the National Council on Disability Affairs, Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD)-Davao, and Department of Public Works and Highways-Davao.

Comiling said 60 percent of the 80 percent establishments that did not comply were government-owned.

Davao City, Comiling said, has an estimated 12,000 persons with disabilities (PWDs) registered under PDAO, of which, 80,000 are unregistered. Thus, he said that it should invoke establishments, especially government-owned, to provide equal access for them.

Comiling said only DSWD-Davao, among other government agencies, passed the Accessibility Law for PWDs in the city as it has parking spaces exclusively reserved for them with functioning PWD express lanes.

The DSWD-Davao, he added, is also the only government agency that has a voice-over activated elevator, aimed to help the blind PWDs safely reach their desired floor.

“They also surveyed hotels and inns in the city and found out that almost 90 percent do not prioritize the accessibility of our PWDs,” Comiling said.

Most of the establishments, he said, do not also have wheelchair ramps making it difficult for those who cannot walk to have an access inside the establishments.

Councilor Victorio Advincula, Comiling said, passed an ordinance on disallowing passengers to sit in the front seats unless they are PWDs. He said PDAO supports and is grateful for the initiative.

“We in the PWD sector hope that we could be seen as a normal citizen of this country without mockery and isolation. I urge my fellow PWDs to fight for our rights and educate others that we have our rights,” Comiling said.

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White House touts ‘Made in America’ while cutting office small firms rely on

As the White House champions a “hire American” agenda, the administration wants to slash funding for a small government office that many U.S. companies say they rely on to stay ahead of foreign rivals, underscoring how competing political interests are complicating President Donald Trump’s pledge to restore the manufacturing industry.

The Trump administration is seeking to nearly gut funding for a Labor Department bureau that monitors the treatment of foreign workers, a program that U.S. businesses and labor groups alike say helps American workers compete fairly in the global economy. The program is unpopular among some conservatives, who criticise its backing for groups that support labour unions.

The behind-the-scenes funding fight comes as the White House seeks to demonstrate its progress on Trump’s campaign promise to stop outsourcing jobs to foreign countries, hosting a series of events this week showcasing “Made in America” goods.

But experts say bringing back manufacturing in a substantial way would require dramatic shifts in trade policy, corporate incentives and international business deals. Those challenges are underscored by the business practices of the apparel brand owned by the president’s daughter, Ivanka Trump. The company relies exclusively on low-wage workers overseas, and executives say it is impossible to bring its production back to the United States on a large scale, as The Washington Post reported last week.

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“There are certain things that we may not have the capacity to do here, in terms of having a plant or a factory that can do it,” White House press secretary Sean Spicer conceded Monday when asked about companies such as the Ivanka Trump brand that say they cannot produce in the United States.

Meanwhile, major U.S. food and apparel companies are warning in letters to Congress that the deep cuts the White House wants to make to the low-profile Bureau of International Labor Affairs would undermine American workers.

Among the corporations urging Congress to restore the bureau’s funding are well-known brands such as the Gap and Hanes, as well as Nestlé and PepsiCo, two of the largest food conglomerates. Many companies see the office’s work as a check on foreign competitors who operate under loose labour rules, and they depend on the bureau’s reports on global labor conditions to inform their compliance efforts.

Without the bureau’s efforts to improve workers’ rights oversees, “you’re saying, basically, that it’s okay for forced labour and child labour to run rampant, which undercuts our own labour force,” said Nate Herman, a senior vice president for the American Apparel and Footwear Association.

On the other side of the debate are many House Republicans and the Heritage Foundation, the conservative think tank, which has objected to spending Labor Department money to promote the welfare of foreign workers.

The proposed cuts have highlighted a central tension in Trump’s administration: that his policies often directly impact the businesses he and his family members continue to own while they are in public office.

Executives at Ivanka Trump’s brand recently told The Post that some of the company’s factories participate in an international program called Better Work that seeks to boost workplace conditions and prod foreign governments to strengthen labor laws. The initiative has received nearly US$23.6 million from the Labor Department since 2010, according to Better Work officials.

Ivanka Trump’s company declined to comment on the administration’s proposed cuts to the labor bureau, which would eliminate grants for Better Work. A spokesman for Ivanka Trump did not respond to requests for comment.

White House officials did not respond to questions about why the administration is proposing to eliminate US$67m of the bureau’s US$86m budget, a nearly 80 per cent reduction.

In its budget proposal, the administration said the move is necessary because many of the grants handed out by the bureau were of “questionable long-term effectiveness.” With fewer resources, the bureau could focus “on ensuring that U.S. trade agreements are fair for American workers,” according to the White House’s Office of Management and Budget.

A Labor Department spokesman declined to comment.

The administration’s budget closely resembles a blueprint developed by the Heritage Foundation, which proposed cutting the labor bureau by 80 percent.

“I think it would make sense to get them out of international grant-giving and focused on stuff that has to do with labor in the U.S.,” said David Kreutzer, a senior research fellow at Heritage focused on labor and trade.

The Bureau of International Labor Affairs monitors labor provisions in international trade agreements and finances projects to reduce child and forced labor in countries such as Bangladesh, Madagascar and Tunisia. It also produces a comprehensive annual report that catalogues foreign goods made with forced or child labor.

“It’s the best tool we have to examine what’s happening in supply chains overseas,” said Reid Maki, director of child-labor issues for the National Consumers League.

Last month, 13 major American clothing brands and manufacturers sent a letter to congressional appropriators urging them to preserve money the bureau gives to Better Work to improve garment factories in countries such as Haiti, Nicaragua, Jordan and Bangladesh. Among the signatories were the Walt Disney Co. and PVH, the parent company of Calvin Klein that once made shirts and neckties for the Donald J. Trump brand.

Objections to the cuts were also raised by five of the country’s biggest food companies –Mars, Nestlé USA, the J.M. Smucker Co., PepsiCo and Kellogg –which wrote a letter in May to congressional appropriators urging them to preserve funds for the bureau.

“Any lowering of such standards would harm American workers by making the global labor market less fair, giving a competitive advantage to countries who do not play by the rules,” the companies wrote.

Labor unions, too, have joined in support, saying the bureau has helped protect American workers from being forced to compete with exploited laborers overseas. The AFL-CIO sent a letter in March to appropriators, co-written with the corporate advocacy group U.S. Council for International Business, saying the bureau’s work helped in “creating markets for U.S. exports, creating good jobs at home and making it more likely that imports consumed by U.S. consumers are made consistent with American values.”

The debate highlights the difficult decisions Trump faces as he tries to fulfill his ambitious pledge to bring back manufacturing to the United States.

The biggest showpiece so far of his “hire America” agenda came in April at the headquarters of toolmaker Snap-on in Kenosha, Wisconsin, when he signed an executive order stating that federal agencies should “maximize, consistent with law . . . the use of goods, products, and materials produced in the United States.”

Administration officials said they intend to boost the agenda further through deregulation and trade renegotiations.

One rule already on the books could help Trump push forward on his pledge.

A federal law signed last year by President Barack Obama allows U.S. customs officials to seize goods made with forced labor at the border. The law was formally implemented last month, allowing anyone to report imported merchandise believed to be made with forced or indentured labor.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment on how it plans to enforce the rule. But the U.S. Customs and Border Protection has urged companies to closely examine their supply chains to ensure that slave labor or child workers are not involved.

Sarah Altschuller, a lawyer at Foley Hoag who specializes in corporate social responsibility compliance, said the law could be used to further Trump’s America-first agenda.

“You could see the administration come down quite hard on this, that it’s a way of saying, ‘We’re protecting the American workforce,’ ” she said.

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