New York (CNN) More than $100 million has been raised for California wildfire victims on GoFundMe so far. But some of those fundraising efforts could actually end up limiting
entrepreneur mindset
THIS is the terrifying moment an influencer couple plunge 150ft to the ground in a horror plane crash that left them with life changing injuries.Wealt
Your revenue goals are only as good as your lead gen. And if you’re doing random marketing, you’re going to get random results (at best). Let’s talk about how to choose which marketing channel best suits your business, how much time & money to put into it, and how to get it cranking motivated sell leads asap. Join us live!
YouTube [Video]
Share your videos with friends, family, and the world
Ajla Tomljanovic has been knocked out of Australian Open 2025 in the second round by Diana Schnaider.
Karen Park sat at a table on Tuesday putting plastic sleeves around bottles of tire sealant at Ideal Industries Incorporated. She loves her job and her fellow employees, most with physical or cognitive disabilities.I’ve been here at Ideal for 6 years, she said. This place is my family. But 67 workers at Ideal Industries Inc., like Park, are paid less than minimum wage to accomplish various work at the Ray County nonprofit.Ideal Industries Inc.s labor practice is legal. But it is now under scrutiny from the U.S. Labor Department along with similar employers across the country.The Biden administration, in December, introduced a rule to abolish subminimum wage certificates for employers like Ideal Industries Inc. over the next three years. The public comment period ends Jan 17, just days before Biden leaves office. Families and employers around the country are now pushing the Trump administration to reverse the proposed rule.The U.S. Labor Departments current plan aims to integrate workers with physical and mental disabilities into the mainstream workforce, calling the practice of paying workers less than minimum wage no longer necessary.The proposed rule has employers, employees, families, and disability rights advocates sparring over the balance of civil rights for disabled workers versus their potential for job losses and extra burdens on families. Park does not mind lesser pay at Ideal Industries Inc.She feels at home at the nonprofit established in 1980, a sheltered workshop granted a certificate under a section of the Fair Labor Standards Act of the U.S. labor department to legally pay employees subminimum wages. The certificates allow employers to pay people with disabilities less money if they are not as productive compared to a person without disabilities. Park says her supervisors do not pressure her to get work done and allow her plenty of support.I don’t want to work outside of the workshop because I love it here, she said.DISABILITY RIGHTS ADVOCATES BELIEVE SHELTERED WORKSHOPS ARE LONG OVERDUE FOR CHANGEDisability rights advocates say workshops like Ideal Industries Inc. are hanging on to a more than 80-year-old employment model for people with disabilities.They call the practice of lower pay exploitative and do not buy into arguments that any higher pay would reduce social security or disability benefits. People with disabilities, when they are paid minimum wage and above, they always come out ahead, said Rocky Nichols, executive director of the Disability Rights Center of Kansas. Nichols has championed workers moving into integrated employment and has seen a drastic decrease in the number of sheltered workshops across the country over the past decade.This is something that’s coming, Nichols said. We’re so glad that the Department of Labor is promulgating this rule, and it’s very doable that it can be done within three years. Ideal Industries Inc. executive director Heather Pugh disagrees, saying she is constantly balancing workers pay against their social security benefits due to income caps. Our individuals have so many complex situations, she said. Its a consistent juggle. Pugh said she has parents that walk in every day, and say, The state just called my child unemployable.They title people unemployable, she said. And here we have hope. Missouri has 76 sheltered workshops with 3,482 workers paid less than minimum wage, according to U.S. labor department numbers. Missouris number is much higher than Kansas, Nichols believes, due to state financial support of the sheltered workshop model. Kansas has only 13 sheltered workshops with just 701 employees making subminimum wage. Kansas has also incentivized employers to integrate workers with mainstream employment. A 2023 federal Government Accountability Office report found about 120,000 workers across the country were employed through subminimum wage certificate holders with half earning less than $3.50 an hour.Nichols points to workers at the Self Advocate Coalition of Kansas (SACK), a social service organization paying workers with disabilities more than minimum wage. Workers at SACK say employers across the country have found success away from the sheltered workshop model. We offer a place where people can come, they can be themselves, more like a family here, said Phillip McGruder, who works at SACK.SACK workers, and Nichols, believe a move away from the sheltered workshop model is long overdue, saying employers are profiting off reduced labor costs. A vast majority of disability service providers have already done away with it, he said. Theyre already like, Well thats a long time ago. DEADLINE APPROACHING FOR RULE CHANGEEmployees, parents, and board members at Ideal Industries Incorporated say a change to U.S. law will disrupt their lives in the coming years.The sheltered workshop in Ray County is making a public push to stop the U.S. Department of Labor from abolishing the certificates, saying the increased pay will make benefit calculation much harder.Our kids will lose benefits, their housing, their medical, then what are they going to do? said Sonja Robinson, whose son is employed at Ideal Industries Inc.Were not hurting anyone, she said. This shop, this workshop is a blessing to our kids, and they want to take it away, for what reason? I dont know. Rosetta Cates, who has worked at Ideal Industries since 2004 believes its not about the money. Its about being able to come to a place every day and be appreciated for who we are. Pugh said she believes her environment provides the ideal situation for dozens of disabled employees in Ray County. She worries about her workers mental and physical health if the new rule goes into place, and some may leave her workshop. Theres nothing about my environment that is segregated, Pugh said. Not when they are given the opportunities they are given.Nichols believes the opposite, saying workers should beand have beenintegrated into the mainstream workforce across the country.Red states, blue states, rural, urban have done away with paying people sub minimum wage, he said. Its about time we do it as a nation. The U.S. Department of Labor public comment period about subminimum wage certificate holders ends January 17th. You can make public comments here about the proposed new rule.
[Opinion column written by the PLP Senator Lindsay Simmons]
Chef, entrepreneur and bestselling author Ayesha Curry expands her empire into publishing with "Sweet July Books," an imprint dedicated to diverse voices. The first novel, "Honeysuckle and Bone" by Trisha Tobias, follows a young woman discovering dark secrets in Jamaica. They join "CBS Mornings."
The City of Homewood is actively working to improve its accounting system following a special review from the State regarding the use of city credit cards as well as the arrest of the city’s former financial director for wire fraud.In April of 2023, 63-year-old Robert Burgett was arrested at his home after officers with the Homewood Police Department were made aware of “irregularities” in the movement of city funds. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, Burgett used his position to embezzle the money from the city’s bank accounts between at least May 2023 and about March 2024.He concealed his crimes by altering bank statements, falsifying journal entries in accounting records and moving the funds into a commercial account before transferring them to his personal account.The city says that while insurance covered $500,000 of what Burgett stole, they are working to recover more. This month, the Alabama Department of Examiners of Public Accounts conducted a special review of the city’s finances which Homewood officials responded to Friday. Just after we initiated our deeper dive and discovered troubling shortcomings in the control of city finances, we started the process of strengthening our policies, said Homewood Mayor Alex Wyatt. We have already met with the state examiners and appreciate their work because their recommendations will help us continue our efforts to make sure our finance department works more securely so that expenditures of public funds are properly tracked in strict adherence to sound business and audit standards.One of the ways the city hopes to strengthen its financial security is by tightening the use of city credit cards.Months after Burgett’s arrest, other possible financial irregularities prompted the city to begin reviewing the use of its credit cards by city employees. Outside of $10,000 in disputed charges from Burgett, an approximately $1,300 outstanding obligation from another employee was discovered.Both credit card cases are being referred by the state auditors to the Alabama attorney general for collection.The city council voted to strengthen policies on the use of city cards soon after, putting the following policies in place:A reduction in the number of cards in use.Cards can only be used for official, pre-authorized, city expenditures and not for any personal expenditures, cash advances, or alcohol purchases.Cards can only be used for eligible travel costs, including conference registration and associated fees, lodging and transportation. Meals are limited to $75 a day with fully itemized receipts.Cards are not intended for purchases that can be made via normal purchasing procedures, except for emergencies or purchases personally authorized by a department head or the mayor.Card purchases will be audited by the finance department on a monthly basis.Infractions of the credit card policy can lead to disciplinary action and recovery of funds through a reduction in employee paychecks.Another move to secure the city’s finances is the hiring of a full-time city manager, a position created when residents narrowly approved a restructuring of their local government last September.A full-time city manager will bring an experienced professional in public administration with budget management skills and significant supervisory experience to the city, said Walter Jones, president of the Homewood City Council. This is a meaningful step as the city council continues to review financial issues to assure that taxpayer dollars are correctly spent in an accountable manner.The application period for that position ended on Monday evening, with the city receiving 12 applications.A committee will meet this Wednesday, Jan. 15, at 5:30pm to review the applications and plan for upcoming interviews.
VICTIMS. TED. HEY, BEN. YOUVE HEARD THE SAYING YOU CAN TAKE THE KID OUT OF SOUTHIE, BUT YOU CANT TAKE SOUTHIE OUT OF THE KID. THAT HOLDS TRUE FOR AN L.A. FIREFIGHTER IN THE MIDDLE OF IT ALL. THATS COMING ACROSS THE HILL AT THE TOP OF THE RIDGE RIGHT NOW. THE KID FROM SOUTH BOSTON IS ON THE FRONT LINES OF THE L.A. FIRES. ALMOST 25 YEARS. NEVER SEEN NOTHING LIKE THIS. DEVASTATING. BECAUSE YOU GOT TO UNDERSTAND, ITS A WIND DRIVEN BRUSH. FIRE IS A REAL DIFFICULT TO FIGHT. MARTIN MULLEN GREW UP ON THE STREETS OF SOUTH BOSTON. WE WENT DOWN TO PALISADES AT THE TIME FOR 25 YEARS. HE AND HIS TWIN BROTHER, MATTHEW, HAVE BEEN ON THE LOS ANGELES FIRE DEPARTMENT. IT WAS OVERWHELMING, SIR. IT WAS CRAZY. AS IM DRIVING DOWN THE PCH, WE GOT RECALLED TO THIS INCIDENT. BOTH SIDES OF THE PCH WERE BOOMING WITH FIRE. IVE NEVER SEEN NOTHING LIKE IT. MULLEN IS A BATTALION CHIEF FOR LAFD AND PATROLLING FOR HOTSPOTS OVER THE PAST SIX DAYS. HIS LIFELONG FRIENDS FROM SOUTHIE ARE WATCHING BACK HOME. THE ONLY WAY YOU CAN REALLY HELP THEM RIGHT NOW IS TO PRAY FOR THEM AND, YOU KNOW, SEND THEM GOOD WISHES AND JUST LET THEM KNOW THAT SOUTH BOSTON AND BOSTON, THE CITY OF BOSTON, ARE BEHIND THEM. AROUND SOUTHIE, THE MULLEN BROTHERS ARE NOW PART OF A FUNDRAISING CAMPAIGN AT LOCAL BARS AND RESTAURANTS, RAISING MONEY FOR L.A. FIRE VICTIMS. A PORTION OF THE PROCEEDS FROM A NEW DRINK CALLED THE SOUTHIE TWINS WILL GO TO L.A. FIRE VICTIMS. WE DECIDED TO PUT THIS COCKTAIL ON TO SHOW THE GUYS OVER IN LA THAT WERE HERE. WE ALL SUPPORT THEM. THIS IS THE COUNTY LINE. WHILE THE MULLINS ARE HELPING BATTLE THE LARGEST FIRE IN L.A. HISTORY, THE WHOLE CITY IS ON STANDBY, ON ALERT TO MAKE SURE THAT THESE WINDS COME. YOU LIGHT ONE LITTLE MATCH, ITLL TAKE OUT A WHOLE CITY. MULLANE TOLD ME THIS AFTERNOON HE KNOWS SIX L.A. FIREFIGHTERS WHO HAVE LOST THEIR HOMES IN THESE FIRES. TONIGHT WERE IN SOUTH BOSTON. YOURE CERTAINLY WELCOME TO COME DOWN FOR A SOUTHIE TWIN. BUT ORGANIZERS JUST ANNOUNCED A MAJOR FUNDRAISER MARCH 1ST AT FLORIAN HALL IN DORCHESTER FOR VICTIMS OF THE L.A. FIRE. WERE LIVE IN SOUTH EASTON. NEEDHAM. TED WAYMAN WCVB NEWSCENTER FIVE. GREAT THAT THEYRE DOING THAT, TED. THANK YOU. IF YOU WANT TO HELP PEOPLE IMPACTED BY THE CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES. WCVB HAS ACTIVATED RELIEF FUND FIVE. IT IS A SAFE WAY TO DONATE TO THE AMERICAN RED CROSS.
Jordyn Woods addressed online criticism about her body in a January 8 TikTok. See how she handles haters, gets personal, and urges kindness.
The app puts mentorship in your pocket and is designed for women to ignite their career potential