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	<title>Comments on: Carbon Dioxide Emissions Accelerating Rapidly</title>
	<atom:link href="http://www.populationmedia.org/2008/06/30/carbon-dioxide-emissions-accelerating-rapidly/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://www.populationmedia.org/2008/06/30/carbon-dioxide-emissions-accelerating-rapidly/</link>
	<description>Acting for Change</description>
	<pubDate>Fri, 05 Dec 2008 07:47:54 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>By: Steve Salmony</title>
		<link>http://www.populationmedia.org/2008/06/30/carbon-dioxide-emissions-accelerating-rapidly/#comment-402</link>
		<dc:creator>Steve Salmony</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Jul 2008 15:48:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.populationmedia.org/2008/06/30/carbon-dioxide-emissions-accelerating-rapidly/#comment-402</guid>
		<description>On living without regard to "hard truths," matters of scale or limits to growth.........


How do rich and famous people, who live large and have huge ecological footprints, as well as corporate ‘citizens’ that cast giant shadows over the Earth today, so easily get away with socially irresponsible behavior which could soon precipitate an ecological catastrophe?

As everyone knows but few openly discuss, wealth and power buy freedom. What is all too obvious but often cloaked in silence is this: A small minority of individuals in the human family with great fortunes and virtually all large corporations exercise their great wealth and power in ways that allow all of these self-proclaimed masters of the universe to live lavishly as well as to willfully refuse assumption of the responsibilities which necessarily come with freedom.

Steven Earl Salmony
AWAREness Campaign on The Human Population, established 2001
http://sustainabilitysoutheast.org/index.php</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On living without regard to &#8220;hard truths,&#8221; matters of scale or limits to growth&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;</p>
<p>How do rich and famous people, who live large and have huge ecological footprints, as well as corporate ‘citizens’ that cast giant shadows over the Earth today, so easily get away with socially irresponsible behavior which could soon precipitate an ecological catastrophe?</p>
<p>As everyone knows but few openly discuss, wealth and power buy freedom. What is all too obvious but often cloaked in silence is this: A small minority of individuals in the human family with great fortunes and virtually all large corporations exercise their great wealth and power in ways that allow all of these self-proclaimed masters of the universe to live lavishly as well as to willfully refuse assumption of the responsibilities which necessarily come with freedom.</p>
<p>Steven Earl Salmony<br />
AWAREness Campaign on The Human Population, established 2001<br />
<a href="http://sustainabilitysoutheast.org/index.php" rel="nofollow">http://sustainabilitysoutheast.org/index.php</a></p>
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		<title>By: Steve Salmony</title>
		<link>http://www.populationmedia.org/2008/06/30/carbon-dioxide-emissions-accelerating-rapidly/#comment-400</link>
		<dc:creator>Steve Salmony</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 30 Jun 2008 19:11:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.populationmedia.org/2008/06/30/carbon-dioxide-emissions-accelerating-rapidly/#comment-400</guid>
		<description>There is plenty of evidence to indicate that we had better pay attention here and now to BIG COAL, BIG OIL and BIG TRAVEL

At the Height of an Energy Crisis, Fat-Cat CEOs Still Litter the Skies with Private Jets

By Chuck Collins and Sarah Anderson, AlterNet. Posted June 28, 2008.

If shareholders, corporate watchdogs and consumer groups would like to know just how weak the oversight of corporate management is in America, they need to check out the abuse of corporate jets.

The private jet industry has more than doubled its sales in the past five years, and corporate executives form the backbone of its clientele. In addition to legitimate business trips, many executives and their families have access to the company jet for personal use, an expense picked up by their companies’ other stakeholders, including shareholders and employees. And the rest of us pay a price in diminished air quality as a result of these heavily polluting jets.

Private jet owners probably have noticed that wholesale fuel prices have increased 418 percent over the past five years, adding $5,000 to a Gulfstream jet flight between New York and Los Angeles. But this is small potatoes for a high-flier who shelled out 10,000 times that amount or more to buy the plane in the first place. At a time when both major-party presidential candidates are vowing to give shareholders greater influence over executive compensation, the private-jet perk deserves special attention.

Stakeholders now can get a better look at jet usage among corporate titans, because new rules require the disclosure of all perks valued at more than $10,000. Personal use of corporate jets was the most common perk among 386 of the largest companies on Standard &#38; Poor’s 500. A Corporate Library study found that more than half of the 215 companies surveyed allowed or required executives to use company aircraft on personal trips, with a median cost to shareholders of $182,929.

The companies with the highest fliers include Abercrombie &#38; Fitch, which gave CEO Mike Jeffries $1.4 million worth of corporate jet time over the past two years, and Starwood Hotels, which spent $866,178 in 2006 flying CEO Steven Heyer back and forth between his Atlanta home and corporate headquarters in New York.

Sometimes it’s the CEOs’ relatives who benefit. Tyson Foods Chairman John Tyson is allotted 120 hours per year of corporate jet time, which he can parcel out to friends and family whether or not he accompanies them on the trip. In 2007, Qwest Communications ponied up several hundred thousand dollars so that new CEO Edward Mueller’s wife and stepdaughter could use the corporate jet to commute between Qwest’s Denver headquarters and a home in California.

It’s the norm these days for the largest firms to require CEOs to use private jets for all travel, including personal vacations, citing concerns for their executives’ security. New York University School of Business professor David Yermack says this arrangement “is like telling the CEO: ‘We insist that you eat at a five-star restaurant for your own nutrition, and we insist that you drink $800 champagne for your health.’”

When corporate boards are approving such outrageous perks, you have to wonder what else they might be signing off on. Indeed, in virtually every recent case of corporate corruption, private jets have played a role. Countrywide Financial’s Angelo Mozilo, under investigation for his role in the subprime mortgage meltdown, threatened to resign in 2007 unless the company let his wife fly with him and cover his personal taxes for the perk.

The private-jet perk is — literally and figuratively — a high-profile sign of an executive reward system out of control. It’s time for corporate stakeholders, including institutional investors, to intervene to help CEOs break the habit.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There is plenty of evidence to indicate that we had better pay attention here and now to BIG COAL, BIG OIL and BIG TRAVEL</p>
<p>At the Height of an Energy Crisis, Fat-Cat CEOs Still Litter the Skies with Private Jets</p>
<p>By Chuck Collins and Sarah Anderson, AlterNet. Posted June 28, 2008.</p>
<p>If shareholders, corporate watchdogs and consumer groups would like to know just how weak the oversight of corporate management is in America, they need to check out the abuse of corporate jets.</p>
<p>The private jet industry has more than doubled its sales in the past five years, and corporate executives form the backbone of its clientele. In addition to legitimate business trips, many executives and their families have access to the company jet for personal use, an expense picked up by their companies’ other stakeholders, including shareholders and employees. And the rest of us pay a price in diminished air quality as a result of these heavily polluting jets.</p>
<p>Private jet owners probably have noticed that wholesale fuel prices have increased 418 percent over the past five years, adding $5,000 to a Gulfstream jet flight between New York and Los Angeles. But this is small potatoes for a high-flier who shelled out 10,000 times that amount or more to buy the plane in the first place. At a time when both major-party presidential candidates are vowing to give shareholders greater influence over executive compensation, the private-jet perk deserves special attention.</p>
<p>Stakeholders now can get a better look at jet usage among corporate titans, because new rules require the disclosure of all perks valued at more than $10,000. Personal use of corporate jets was the most common perk among 386 of the largest companies on Standard &amp; Poor’s 500. A Corporate Library study found that more than half of the 215 companies surveyed allowed or required executives to use company aircraft on personal trips, with a median cost to shareholders of $182,929.</p>
<p>The companies with the highest fliers include Abercrombie &amp; Fitch, which gave CEO Mike Jeffries $1.4 million worth of corporate jet time over the past two years, and Starwood Hotels, which spent $866,178 in 2006 flying CEO Steven Heyer back and forth between his Atlanta home and corporate headquarters in New York.</p>
<p>Sometimes it’s the CEOs’ relatives who benefit. Tyson Foods Chairman John Tyson is allotted 120 hours per year of corporate jet time, which he can parcel out to friends and family whether or not he accompanies them on the trip. In 2007, Qwest Communications ponied up several hundred thousand dollars so that new CEO Edward Mueller’s wife and stepdaughter could use the corporate jet to commute between Qwest’s Denver headquarters and a home in California.</p>
<p>It’s the norm these days for the largest firms to require CEOs to use private jets for all travel, including personal vacations, citing concerns for their executives’ security. New York University School of Business professor David Yermack says this arrangement “is like telling the CEO: ‘We insist that you eat at a five-star restaurant for your own nutrition, and we insist that you drink $800 champagne for your health.’”</p>
<p>When corporate boards are approving such outrageous perks, you have to wonder what else they might be signing off on. Indeed, in virtually every recent case of corporate corruption, private jets have played a role. Countrywide Financial’s Angelo Mozilo, under investigation for his role in the subprime mortgage meltdown, threatened to resign in 2007 unless the company let his wife fly with him and cover his personal taxes for the perk.</p>
<p>The private-jet perk is — literally and figuratively — a high-profile sign of an executive reward system out of control. It’s time for corporate stakeholders, including institutional investors, to intervene to help CEOs break the habit.</p>
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