Tuesday, November 18, 2008

If you had a job, we'd tell you where to buy your holiday gifts

These two stories are from the Colorado Springs Gazette.

Focus on the Family eliminating 202 jobs

BILL REED
THE GAZETTE


Because of a weak economy and cash-strapped donors, Focus on the Family said it is eliminating 202 jobs, the deepest cuts in the 32-year history of the Colorado Springs-based Christian nonprofit.

Focus expects this holiday season - normally the most lucrative time of the year for nonprofits - to be even more painful to the bottom line.
But for those who still have a job and will be buying holiday presents, the Dobson gang is going to tell you where to spend your money.

Focus puts retailers on a naughty and nice list for Christmas

MARK BARNA
THE GAZETTE

Focus on the Family wants shoppers to know which retailers are naughty and which ones are nice - at least when it comes to holiday lingo.

On Thursday the Colorado Springs-based ministry's political action arm launched its second-annual holiday campaign by posting an online shoppers guide with three categories: "Christmas-friendly" retailers, "Christmas-negligent" retailers and "Christmas-offensive" retailers.

The "friendly" retailers are so designated because they prominently use "Merry Christmas" and other Christmas-specific references in their catalogs and in-store promotions. Those on the Christmas-offensive list use secular phrases such as "happy holidays" and have "apparently abandoned" the use of the word "Christmas," Focus said. Christmas-negligent companies "marginalize" their message by using "Christmas" in some cases and "holidays" in others.

The Focus shopping guide is another weapon in the growing battle against what social conservatives several years ago labeled the "War on Christmas" - the notion that Christmas is being secularized, in part by retailers trying not to offend non-Christians by using terms like "holiday season," "winter season," "shopping season" and "holiday trees."

A group that considers the holiday season "the most lucrative time of the year" would, of course, assume that retailers define Christmas.

Some of the tactics have paid off.

In 2005, Sears, Kmart, Walmart and Target received threats of a boycott from Christian groups for their "holiday season" advertising. The companies soon adopted the Christmas-friendly language.

Governor's small-biz initiative questioned

By Tim Hoover
The Denver Post

Gov. Bill Ritter on Thursday announced initiatives intended to help Colorado businesses weather hard times, but one proposal left lawmakers scratching their heads.

Addressing the legislature's Joint Budget Committee, Ritter said he wanted to spend $12 million on economic-development proposals, though $7 million of that would not be available until July 2010 — and only if the governor's revenue projections are accurate.

Ritter said the recession has taken a toll on states across the country, with 24 reporting budget shortfalls in the current fiscal year. Colorado is facing a $100 million shortfall in the current budget year, which ends in June.

"States are cutting their budgets, laying off employees and reducing public services," Ritter said. "Fortunately, Colorado seems to be weathering the storm better than many other states."

Ritter's proposed budget, while not giving state employees performance increases, still requests $42.9 million for cost-of-living pay increases, representing a 2.5 percent average pay hike. It also calls for hiring 900 new employees, the bulk of whom are needed for growth in prisons and social services, according to Ritter's staff.

Of the nearly $5 million available for economic development before 2010, Ritter proposed using about $2.5 million for an "access to capital" program for small businesses. He said the money might be put into a loan program.

That explanation brought questions from skeptical members of the Joint Budget Committee.

Sen. Abel Tapia, D-Pueblo, said the money would not be of much help to businesses and questioned whether it could be better spent elsewhere.

"For $2.5 million, that's like one company, possibly," said Tapia, who owns an engineering business. "We have bridges that are falling apart, we have roads that need to be repaired, people on the disability waiting lists.

"There's a lot of things we need in our state that we're not getting to."

Rep. Jack Pommer, D-Boulder, agreed, saying, "I just find it incredulous that $2.5 million is going to solve anything."

"Incredulous" is a little harsh, but I really can't see how $2.5 million is going to guarantee a significant number of bank loans or otherwise free up credit. I wouldn't care, except that the state government has an important role in maintaining the state's economy -- by doing things like supporting education and building and maintaining the infrastructure -- and proposals like this district us from what we should be doing.


Don Elliman, executive director of the Colorado Office of Economic Development, admitted officials didn't have specific details
on how the money might be spent. He said administration officials needed several weeks to come up with more information but were looking at a program to educate small businesses on how to access more capital, such as via government programs.

Despite Ritter's remarks, Elliman said the money would not be going "to a loan pool somewhere."

"We're not talking about trying to bail out a bunch of banks," Elliman said. "If we can't touch a far greater universe than 150 or 200 companies, then we shouldn't spend a dime of that money in that behalf."

Tony Gagliardi, Colorado director of the National Federation of Independent Business, said the organization welcomed the Ritter plan.

"Our feeling is the governor is recognizing that small business is the economic engine (of the state)," he said.

But House Republicans said the state would be better served by Ritter easing regulations on the oil and gas industry. House Minority Leader Mike May, R-Parker, mocked Ritter's small-business proposal.

"I think they (Ritter's office) are just trying to make it look like they're doing something," he said. "It's $2.5 million in PR for the governor. It's not going to do a single thing to create a new job."