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Showing content with the highest reputation on 04/21/20 in all areas

  1. Got out and skied today finally! Broke my ski on the first run. Also did some climbing. Yes I am bored. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
    6 points
  2. Yeah, hopefully at least a credit. It’s a much nicer hotel then my friend and I would normally stay at. Lol. @GrilledSteezeSandwich this is the Covid thread and my trip was derailed by Covid.
    5 points
  3. 3 points
  4. My neighbor plays fart noises via a LOUD Bluetooth speaker (starting to think it’s six cord to a guitar amp) during this time and it cracks me up every single time I hear it
    3 points
  5. Bethlum Historic Society posted this today. 1958 freight derailment in front of Jersey Central station (now Wooden Match restaurant) along the canal.
    2 points
  6. Kick turn on the long board!
    2 points
  7. Like where your head is at for Telluride! My friend and I had been talking about hiking in Switzerland fall of 2021. So, if all works out, we will go and do our hiking, then Gary can meet us there and I can do the motorcycle part of the trip with him.
    2 points
  8. "The nicest nipple jewelry. Truly the best. Cant even begin to say how shiny they are. Amazing. You know China makes the best jewelry. I've seen it. Trust me. Been there. Going back soon to make even more deals."
    2 points
  9. I will be happy when the whole “Go outside and scream at 8pm” thing his over. I just asked my husband if he thought that if I went outside and yelled STFU, would other people yell STFU back to me? (If you have kids and are doing this, you get a pass, otherwise StFU)
    2 points
  10. No walk today was at work to long and then ate a bunch of edibles.
    2 points
  11. My son sends me almost daily pics and video of his surf sessions. I think I may have to get my ass out to Hawaii again when travel is allowed. From my couch right now this scene looks pretty good to me. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
    2 points
  12. OK. All of you people who are still collecting a paycheck. Where are you spending your relief money? I was thinking about that this weekend and am looking for the best way to help local people and businesses. The whole idea of the money is to spur the economy. So i think the right thing to do is use it for people who are out of work. I would like to keep it local as well. So I'm not planning on using it for online purchases. I like eating in restaurants but I'm not much of a take-out guy. I drop off groceries a couple times a year at a local food bank. Instead of groceries I think I'll just give them some money. They know better than me what they need. Any other ideas?
    1 point
  13. That is some funny quarantine shit right there. Hilarious.
    1 point
  14. Yeah he wasn't thrilled about taking her to the emergency room at a time like this but what are you going to do. He's got a mild case so far and he's just hoping he didn't spread it in the mean time or that she doesn't test positive.
    1 point
  15. @saltyant will love this! Something he would do.
    1 point
  16. Yeah generally I would always shell size for the smaller foot and tweak the other boot to fit the bigger foot. Way easier to make a boot bigger than smaller, within reason. Some high density foam rubber pads can probably take up some of the space. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
    1 point
  17. @AtomicSkier knows a good one.
    1 point
  18. Ugh. I know you were looking forward to that trip. Sorry Barb.
    1 point
  19. So this one has more non-ski history, even though it hosted a small ski area for about 30 years. Tamiment Resort started back in the 20s as a retreat for the Rand School of Social Science in NY. They needed to raise money after the state of NY accused them of "subversive activity" during the first Red Scare in 1919, and the subsequent court battles damaged them financially. The Rand School had ties to the early labor and socialist political movements. Ironically they ended up founding one of the most commercially successful vacation resorts in the Poconos, and one that had a strong reputation for attracting famous live performance acts. Almost the entirety of the resort was demolished around 2005, save for the ski lift (which caught on fire in 2012) and the clubhouse for the golf course which doubled as the lodge in the winter. Take a look:
    1 point
  20. 1 point
  21. That is such a bummer. Hopefully they are flexible with refunds. We just cancelled all of our trips/plans for the year. We are hoping for at least some long weekends away at this point but who really knows. I guess we will just save the money for trips next year and I'll get ready to rage in Telluride for a winter ski trip.
    1 point
  22. Some person who wrote an article about Andrew Cuomo called him a meatball..is that racist. They call his brother Chris Fredo I just wonder if Cuomo is taking the Amtrak accela to DC
    1 point
  23. That is so awesome the howling thing in Colorado but glad it’s not a thing here. You’d probably get kicked out of Boulder and have to move to one of its less desirable suburbs if you did the STFU thing.
    1 point
  24. Would love to be a fly on the wall for that meeting!
    1 point
  25. Should be a lot cheaper than when oil was $60. a barrel.... Just sayin
    1 point
  26. The Easter bunny drove around on a firetruck for 3 hours with a constant siren the other day. 3 hours. Constant siren.
    1 point
  27. Andrew Cuomo is gonna travel to DC tomorrow and meet Trump. Very cool!!
    1 point
  28. Dr Fauci is so a-political it’s awesome. He is like Dr Spock. When asked about anti-lockdown protests; ."Clearly, this is something that is hurting from the standpoint of economics and the standpoint of things that have nothing to do with the virus," Fauci asserted. "But unless we get the virus under control, the real recovery economically is not going to happen."
    1 point
  29. @tarponhead is not gonna agree
    1 point
  30. Awesome, we need a before and after pic. My wife blew a small gasket and screamed and dyed her hair. It was ok. I have plenty of beer
    1 point
  31. That's pretty shitty about Ruth's Chris jumping on this program, I for one think it's an extremely overrated place. I think this is to be expected though, leave an opportunity and a business is going to go after it. I'm sure when it was written the idea was to keep the staff at TGI Friday's or whatever paid. I'm sure there are plenty of chain restaurant employees who are out of work now.
    1 point
  32. Glad the president got rid of oversight folks. Working out great!
    1 point
  33. GSS also did the official WH estimate on the inauguration attendance
    1 point
  34. Great times! Fishin’ for sunnies that you pretty much can always catch and throwing rocks into the pond/stream/creek/canal.
    1 point
  35. Taught my son to fish today finally! He was pumped to catch one!!
    1 point
  36. Germany officially cancelled Oktoberfest this year. Gonna cancel our Europe trip, so bummed. One of the hotels in Switzerland says no refunds, hopefully they will make an exception.
    0 points
  37. Here"s just another example of how small business that should be benefiting from the bailout are getting fucked by large companies. Glad to see these places getting funds instead of the actual small businesses 🙄 Picture for attention. The pandemic has been devastating for small businesses, particularly independent restaurants that rely on foot traffic. Congress created a $350 billion lifeline called the Paycheck Protection Program. The Paycheck Protection Program allowed small businesses with 500 or fewer employees to receive a loan equal to 2.5 times their monthly payroll costs, up to a cap of $10 million. If the business uses at least 75% of the loan to cover payroll costs, it will be forgiven by the government. The purpose of this money was to keep people employed. But by April 16, less than two weeks after the program launched, it ran out of money. Many thousands of small businesses, some of the brink of permanent closure, were not able to secure loans. Some of these companies shared their stories with Popular Information. Divalicious Custom Cakes in Lake Worth, Florida, which employs four people, applied for funds on April 5. But the cake makers were shut out and were forced to close their business permanently. Holy Grail Pub in Plano, Texas, which has 26 employees, applied for the program as soon as it launched. But the pub received no money, and the owners have been forced to take out a second mortgage on their home and draw down on their retirement savings. But, before the money ran out, Ruth's Hospitality Group, the parent company of Ruth’s Chris Steak House, was able to secure a $20 million loan. How did a company with thousands of employees and over $441 million in revenue last year — and $86 million cash reserves — benefit from this fund while thousands of real small businesses received nothing? The law contained an exception for restaurant chains as long as the chain didn’t have more than 500 employees at any single location. Ruth’s Hospitality Group exploited that exception by applying through two corporate subsidiaries, obtaining twice the limit for a single company on April 7. Ruth’s Hospitality Group was able to get to the front of the line because JP Morgan Chase, like many banks, gave preference to companies that had a preexisting banking relationship. Ruth’s Hospitality Group has extensive banking relationships and, before getting taxpayer money, was able to borrow money from other sources. On March 16, Ruth’s Hospitality Group drew down $56 million from an existing credit line. On March 26, the company tapped $30 million more in cash. What happened to last year’s surplus? The company spent some of it on stock buybacks. According to Ruth’s Hospitality Group’s latest SEC filing, it spent $5.2 million buying its own stock in 2019. This all might be defensible if Ruth’s Hospitality Group was using the money to keep its hourly restaurant workers, like servers and bartenders, on its payroll until it can reopen. But Popular Information has learned that this is not the case. Massive furloughs at Ruth’s Chris The cash infusion has not been used to save the jobs of rank-and-file workers, according to the company’s own statements and furloughed employees who spoke to Popular Information. According to the company, it closed “23 restaurants locations where take-out and delivery is not viable” and furloughed “a significant number of field and home office team members.” Ruth’s Hospitality Group did not respond to an inquiry about how many of its 5,195 hourly restaurant staffers have been furloughed. But it appears that virtually all of them are out of a job. Ruth’s Chris is only operating take-out and delivery where “sales are sufficient to cover the costs of management staffing those locations.” This suggests that only managers remain employed by the company. Even then, these jobs are not being supported by money from the Payroll Protection Program because Ruth’s Chris is only operating take-out and delivery where sales are robust enough to cover the cost of management at those locations. This is consistent with what a furloughed employee told Popular Information. At restaurants in Alabama, Tennessee, and Georgia, “the only people remaining on payroll are managers,” according to the employee. The rest of the staff at these restaurants, with the possible exception of a few chefs, were let go on March 16. “We work really hard to uphold the ideals of Ms. Ruth. We work very hard to give you a great experience. It would just be nice to get something in recognition,” the employee said. Another furloughed Ruth’s Chris employee in Indianapolis said that three managers and a few chefs were still working delivery, but approximately 50 hourly employees in the restaurant were out of work. The employee received a check for less than $150 on March 27, which was supposedly equivalent to their average weekly pay from January to March. The $20 million forgivable loan, financed by taxpayers, would be enough to pay all 5,195 hourly restaurant workers $3,850 each. Taxpayer subsidies for millionaires Cheryl J. Henry, the CEO of Ruth’s Hospitality Group, was paid $6.1 million in total compensation in fiscal year 2018. Her base pay is $650,000, with the rest comprised of stock and bonuses. Ruth’s Hospitality Group also continues to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars to its former CEO, Michael O’Donnell (base pay $500,000), its Chief Administrative Officer, Susan L. Mirdamadi (base pay $340,000), and its Chief Financial Officer, Arne G. Haak (base pay $300,000). All of these executives are eligible for large bonuses and an “automobile allowance” of $700 to $1000 per month. This is how Ruth’s Hospitality Group can spend most of the $20 million on “payroll” while furloughing nearly all of its staff. Under the Payroll Protection Program, salary up to $100,000 counts toward the requirement that 75% of the forgivable loan is used to support payroll. But for a company like Ruth’s Hospitality Group, they could meet that threshold, for example, with just 150 employees that make $100,000 and up. The company said that “Ms. Henry and the other members of the executive team have elected to reduce their 2020 base salaries effective March 30, 2020.” It did not specify the amount of the reduction, but it is safe to say that Henry and her colleagues will be making in excess of $100,000. Also not mentioned were other forms of compensation for Henry and her executive team, which often significantly exceed their base salary. Not an exception The government is not releasing the names of the companies that obtained Paycheck Protection Program loans. Ruth’s Hospitality Group is a public company and, therefore, was required to report the loan to the SEC. But it is not the only company that received a “small business” loan with large revenues. According to summary data released by the Small Business Administration, banks approved 67,216‬ loans of $1 million or more. Assuming the rules were followed, that means these companies have a monthly payroll of at least $400,000. Funds distributed to these companies accounted for more than 40% of the available money. Congress and the administration are reportedly nearing a deal on a package that would add an additional $300 billion to the program.
    0 points
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