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Peak Oil and the Second Great Depression (2010-2030): A Survival Guide for Investors and Savers After Peak Oil

Peak Oil and the Second Great Depression (2010-2030): A Survival Guide for Investors and Savers After Peak Oil

Peak Oil is the point of maximum global oil production after which production begins to decline as the world’s remaining major fields run dry. This book argues that 2005-08 was in fact Peak Oil and discusses the economic implications of Peak Oil for indebted western democracies such as the US.

Our current economy with its 10-15% unemployment rate, as bad as it is, is just the beginning of the Second Great Depression that is coming. This book outlines precisely why this is so.

The

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The Second Great Depression

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The Downwave: Surviving the Second Great Depression, Robert Beckman, Good Book
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Global Capitalist Crisis and the Second Great Depression: Egalitarian Systemic M
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Manic Street Preachers – The Second Great Depression

Live at The Refectory Leeds 9th May 2007.
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The poetry of James K Baxter

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Regional Housing Experts Serve Up Shocking View of the U.S. Housing Market

San Francisco, CA (PRWEB) July 23, 2007

eFinanceDirectory.com (http://efinancedirectory.com), a news hub for real estate and mortgage markets, recently published a series of exclusive interviews conducted with various housing experts around the nation. (http://efinancedirectory.com/article_directory/Housing_Expert_Interviews.html)

Each regional expert candidly answered multiple questions about both local and national real estate markets, foreclosures, home sales, mortgage lending, Fed rate changes, and much more. The existence of a U.S. housing bubble and the pressure it has placed on individual markets was also a common topic, and nearly everyone had a different view.

One thing that almost every interviewee could agree on, however, is that the country is currently in the midst of a market correction that is likely to cause home prices to drop dramatically.

Excerpt from Interview with Schahrzad Berkland (CaliforniaHousingForecast.com):

“Prices will fall in half. We’ll go back to 1999 prices. It could be worse. Don’t be surprised by my statement. Let’s just look at what happened in the 1980s and 1990′s downturns. It’s easy enough to look up at the County Recorder Office, or on the MLS, but neither the County Recorder, nor the realtors, wants to advertise the ugly truth: CA has 15 year housing cycles and prices fall 30 percent to 50 percent in a downturn.” (http://efinancedirectory.com/articles/State_of_the_Housing_Market%3A_Update_from_Schahrzad_Berkland.html)

Excerpt from Interview with Mike Shedlock (Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis):

“It took Japan 18 years to hit bottom. I suspect it will take at least 5 to 7 here and 5 is very optimistic. It could easily take 10 years or more. My best guess is 7 but it all depends on what the Fed does to fight it. Prices will decline most in the bubble areas: California, Florida, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Boston. Some of the rust belt states where masses of jobs were lost will also get hit hard.”

(http://efinancedirectory.com/articles/Housing_Bubble_Analysis%3A_Interview_with_Global_Economic_Trend_Analysis_%28Mish%29.html)

Excerpt from Interview with Patrick Killelea (Patrick.net):

“I think it’s safe to say that asking prices will keep falling until they get back in line with historical norms, probably 5 years or more. I agree with Scharzad Berkland that a 50 percent fall is entirely within reason, but it seems that 40 percent is more likely since inflation will hide some of the loss.” (http://efinancedirectory.com/articles/The_San_Francisco_Bay_Area_Bubble%3A_Interview_with_Patrick_Killelea_%28Patrick.net%29.html)

Excerpt from Interview with Rich Toscano (Professor Piggington’s Econo-Almanac for the Landed Poor):

“Assuming that prices decline slowly, that inflation isn’t too high, and that there’s no government bailout, San Diego prices would have to fall at least 25% to get remotely back in line with fundamentals. They could fall less if inflation raged or the government intervened. They could also fall more if lenders really tightened, rates went up, or the market followed its historical pattern of going from being overpriced to underpriced (not just fairly priced).” (http://efinancedirectory.com/articles/Future_of_the_Southern_California_Housing_Market%3A_Interview_with_Rich_Toscano.html)

Excerpt from Interview with Mark Gregg (Texas Housing Bubble Blog):

“I think a 5 percent decrease across the state [Texas] is quite possible with some areas experiencing a decrease closer to 10 percent. These numbers could go even higher depending on how much migration is derailed due to the crash in other parts of the country.” (http://efinancedirectory.com/articles/Texas_Housing_Market%3A_Interview_with_Texas_Housing_Bubble_Blog.html)

Excerpt from Interview with Warren Brussee (The Second Great Depression):

“Homes would have to drop an additional 25% to be back at the expected value of homes based on their historical 2.3% yearly increase. And, since homes were being built to satisfy the increased demand of the last few years, there are too many homes for the reduced number of qualified buyers that will be standing after the crash. This makes it likely that homes will fall even MORE than 25%.” (http://efinancedirectory.com/articles/The_Second_Great_Depression%3A_Interview_with_Author_Warren_Brussee.html)

Excerpt from Interview with Chicago Bubble Blog:

“In the Chicago area as a whole, I think 10-15% would be a fair adjustment over the next 3-5 years. I think it will be a protracted adjustment with the bottom being sometime early next decade and a period of flat growth for another 3-5 years after that. We might not see any real growth in the area again until 2015-2020.” (http://efinancedirectory.com/articles/Chicago%27s_Housing_Crash%3A_Interview_with_ChicagoBubbleBlog.html)

About eFinanceDirecory.com:

eFinanceDirectory.com is an online news hub dedicated to providing reliable information about real estate, mortgage financing, and property investment. The company currently focuses on publishing unbiased daily news stories that relate to the U.S. housing market.

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Peak Oil and the Second Great Depression (2010-2030): A Survival Guide for Investors and Savers After Peak Oil

Peak Oil and the Second Great Depression (2010-2030): A Survival Guide for Investors and Savers After Peak Oil

Peak Oil is the point of maximum global oil production. In Peak Oil and the Second Great Depression (2010-2030), the author argues that the likely peak in global oil production occurred in the period 2005-2008, due to the peaking of Saudi Arabian oil production during that time. The evidence of a peak in Saudi crude oil production in 2008 is presented and discussed in some detail. The most significant piece of evidence of a Saudi peak in production in 2008 was the inability of Saudi oil minis

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Massive Opportunity Awaits To Start Your Own Home-Based Business

Massive Opportunity Awaits To Start Your Own Home-Based Business

The opportunity for those who have the courage and the wisdom to act now is greater than ever. Start your own online home-based business and start to live beneath your means. Make smart decisions with your money and live the lifestyle that you can afford.

The Second Great Depression is oncoming, nothing can stop it from happening. Global and U.S. leaders are trying to convince the rest of the world that their collective bailout schemes will save us all from economic collapse.

Here’s the truth of the matter. Thousands of people are daily losing their jobs. One by one our largest and once most respected mega-companies are becoming insolvent, and there is absolutely nothing that can be done to stop the process. Bank financing is nearly impossible to obtain. In less than 12 months about trillion in wealth has been destroyed. Over the next 2year period this story will repeat itself over and over again. The money to fund our bankrupt system is gone and won’t return for years to come. In an effort to stop this continuous downhill process our leaders will continue to intervene and just like the 1930’s they will fail. In the process they will indebt a generation for decades to come. Whether were ready for it or not, like it or not, this is the path we are headed down.

This is the time to stand up for your self. Don’t wait until you are at a point that nothing can be done to rid you from poverty and foreclosure. Make a decision to rise above the mentality that someone will resolve the financial problems that we are encountering today. There is no better time than today, now o’clock to make that decision to become independent and the master of your own destiny. Start your own online business.

But if you are seriously considering venturing into the world of legitimate online business, stack the deck in your favour. Understand that you are undertaking a real business, not a part time hobby. Arm yourself with a proven and tested system of success and align yourself with a team of experienced professionals who can lead you around the pitfalls that swallow most. The right online home-based business won’t make your problems go away. But it can help you to start and build your own business quickly and efficiently, and to reap the tremendous rewards that await everyone who is willing to work for them.

If you are ready and have the courage to act now and start your own online home-based business then Hantie Schutte invites you to visit her website at:

http://www.HomeOwnBusiness.com

You can follow her on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/visa777


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manics song and images i found fit. and yeah, screw the gop
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15 of the Nation’s 19 Largest Bank Holding Companies Would Fail Objective Stress Tests

Washington, DC (PRWEB) May 7, 2009

At least 15 of the nation’s 19 banks undergoing federal stress tests this week would fail a stricter test based on more objective economic assumptions and stricter evaluation procedures, according to an analysis released today at the National Press Club by Martin D. Weiss, Ph.D., president of Weiss Research, Inc.

“The stress tests results are akin to ratings,” declared Weiss, formerly the president of a national rating agency. “But no objective rating agency would stand behind them. The exams are too easy; the banks get to take them home with cheat sheets; and if they don’t like their final grade, they can appeal for a better one. If, despite all this, some large institutions still come up short on capital, it will imply far deeper troubles than the Treasury or the Fed dare admit.”

Based on data provided by TheStreet.com Ratings, by the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), and in first quarter financial statements, Weiss offers the following evaluations for the 19 institutions undergoing federal stress tests:

Weiss Evaluation of 19 Institutions Subject to Federal Stress Tests

Institution                             Assets ($ Bil)             Weiss Evaluation

J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.             2,079                         Risk of failure

Citigroup                                    1,823                         Risk of failure

Wells Fargo & Co.             1,286                     Risk of failure

Goldman Sachs Group                 885                     Risk of failure

GMAC LLC                                     189                         Risk of failure

SunTrust Banks Inc.                 179                         Risk of failure

Fifth Third Bancorp                 119                     Risk of failure

Bank of America Corp.             2,322                         Borderline

Morgan Stanley                 659                         Borderline

PNC Financial Services Group         286                     Borderline

US Bancorp                                        264                     Borderline

BB&T Corp.                                        143                     Borderline

Regions Financial Corp.                 142                     Borderline

American Express Co.                 121                     Borderline

Keycorp                                         98                     Borderline

MetLife                                        502                     Adequate capital

Bank of NY Mellon Corp.                 203                         Adequate capital

Capital One Financial Corp                 177                         Adequate capital

State Street Corp.                 142                     Adequate capital

-Seven institutions — JPMorgan Chase & Co., Citigroup, Wells Fargo & Co., Goldman Sachs Group, GMAC LLC, SunTrust Banks, Inc. and Fifth Third Bancorp — are at risk of failure with a continuation of current economic and financial conditions.


Eight institutions — Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, PNC Financial Services Group, US Bankcorp, BB&T Corp., Regions Financial Corp, American Express Co., and Keycorp — are borderline, meaning they could be at risk of failure with worsening economic or financial conditions.

Only four institutions — MetLife, Bank of NY Mellon Corp., Capital One Financial Corp. and State Street Corp. — appear to have adequate capital to withstand worsening conditions.

“Our analysis directly contradicts the overall conclusion by the banking authorities that most bank holding companies are well capitalized,” says Weiss. Moreover, the institutions considered at risk of failure control most of the assets held by the 19 institutions subjected to federal stress tests, as illustrated in the table below.

Assets of 19 Institutions, Grouped by Weiss Evaluation

                         Total Assets

Weiss Evaluation     ($ Bil.)    (%)

Risk of failure    6,560    56.5%

Borderline                          4,035     34.7%

Adequate capital             1,025     8.8%

Total                      11,620    100.0%

Of the .6 trillion in assets held by the 19 institutions, those considered at risk of failure represent .56 trillion, or 56.5 percent, of the assets; while those considered borderline hold trillion, or 34.7 percent. Only trillion, or 8.8 percent, of the assets are held by institutions with adequate capital, according to Weiss’ analysis.

Although the precise metrics of the federal stress tests have not yet been released, a review of the Federal Reserve’s white paper, “The Supervisory Capital Assessment Program Design and Implementation,” indicates three major differences between the federal stress tests and Weiss’ analysis, as follows:

1. The Assumptions: The federal stress tests consider strictly a one-year further decline in GDP, in contrast to prior government stress tests that assumed a 10-year decline. Further, the 2009 baseline assumptions for GDP is a 2 percent decline, or only one-third the pace of the current GDP decline. Most important, instead of a typical worst-case scenario used in most stress tests, the current program uses a milder, “alternative more adverse” set of assumptions. These are only moderately more severe than the baseline scenario, still assuming a 2009 GDP decline of only one-half the current pace of contraction. The Weiss analysis does not include macro-economic projections, but it generally assumes the possibility of a deeper and more prolonged economic decline.

2. Systemic risk: The dangers of systemic risk were highlighted by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) in its landmark 1994 study, “Financial Derivatives: Actions Needed to Protect the Financial System” and were also stressed in AIG’s recent memorandum, “AIG: Is The Risk Systemic?” Although systemic risk is widely discussed by analysts as a major current issue, in the Federal Reserve’s white paper, it is not specifically discussed and does not appear to be a significant consideration in the stress tests. Weiss considers systemic risk by evaluating the OCC’s measures of total credit exposure to derivatives.

3. The process: In its white paper, the Federal Reserve states that the stress tests are based, to a large extent, on each bank’s self-evaluation — not only for loan loss estimates that can be derived from past data, but also for the future performance of trading accounts, which can be far more subjective. Moreover, each institution can appeal the final results, and it has been widely reported that several are strenuously negotiating for more favorable grades. In contrast, Weiss does not permit the institutions to directly or indirectly influence its evaluation process or results.

Weiss concludes: “After ringing the alarm bells of a possible financial meltdown seven months ago, and after two consecutive quarters of severe economic declines since then, the authorities would now have us believe that the nation’s largest bank holding companies can weather continued hard times. This disconnect — combined with their approach to the stress tests — denotes a lack of objectivity that can only cause more damage to the public’s confidence in the banking system.”

About Martin D. Weiss

Martin D. Weiss, Ph.D., founder and president of Weiss Research, Inc., is a nationally recognized expert on financial company solvency and the author of the new New York Times bestseller, The Ultimate Depression Survival Guide. With more than 35 years of experience, Dr. Weiss has helped empower millions of investors to make better financial decisions through his monthly Safe Money Report and daily Money and Markets.

Dr. Weiss, along with Weiss Research analyst Mike Larson, specifically named nearly all of the major institutions that have suffered a financial failure in this crisis. Weiss predicted the demise of Bear Stearns 102 days prior to its failure, Lehman Brothers (182 days prior), Fannie Mae (eight years prior), and Citigroup (110 days prior). Similarly, the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) reported that, in the 1990s, Weiss greatly outperformed Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s, A.M. Best and D&P (now Fitch) in warning of future life insurance company failures. (See the Weiss forecast track at http://blogs.moneyandmarkets.com/martin-weiss/the-only-ones-who-warned-ahead-of-time/ and the GAO report at http://archive.gao.gov/t2pbat2/152669.pdf.)

PREVIOUS WHITE PAPERS BY WEISS RESEARCH, INC:

March 19, 2009. “Dangerous Unintended Consequences: How The Government Understates the Dimension of the Banking Bailouts, Buyouts and Nationalizations Can Only Prolong America’s Second Great Depression and Weaken Any Subsequent Recovery. www.moneyandmarkets.com/dangerous-unintended-consequences-32776

September 25, 2008. Proposed 0 Billion Bailout Is Too Little, Too Late to End the Debt Crisis; Too Much, Too Soon for the U.S. Bond Market. www.weissgroupinc.com/bailout/Bailout-White-Paper-Sept-24-2008(2).pdf

July 19, 2007. How Federal Regulators, Lenders, and Wall Street Created America’s Housing Crisis. Nine Proposals for a Long-Term Recovery.

www.weissgroupinc.com/whitepaper1/

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The FDIC is Running Out of Money – is Your Money Safe?

The FDIC is Running Out of Money – is Your Money Safe?

Due to the quickly increasing number of banking institution failures, the FDIC (Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation) is basically running out of money. People specifically look for banking institutions that are backed by the FDIC in order to ensure the safety of their deposits – but what happens if the FDIC runs out of money? Is there a risk even if your money is held in an FDIC insured bank?

Previously, the FDIC had reported that the funds were running low, due to the number of banks failing, and that they predicted that future bank failures could cost the fund about billion through the year 2013. In an effort to replenish the insurance funds, the FDIC said it would begin charging United States banks a one-time assessment of 20 cents per 0 insured; and increase other fees. The regular fee in 2007 averaged 5.4 cents, and it was increased in April 2008 to 10 to 14 cents; and will be increased again to 12 to 16 cents. Prior to 2007, more than 90% of banks did not pay fees for deposit insurance (because it wasn’t necessary). These additional fees are estimated to generate billion compared to the billion the fees raised in 2008, according to the FDIC board, but will still fall short of the estimated need for funds in light of the number of bank failures.

”We’re taking steps today to ensure that the deposit insurance system remains sound,” FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair said during a board meeting at the agency’s Washington headquarters. “These steps are necessary because banks, and not taxpayers, are expected to fund the system.”

Since the beginning of 2008, there have been 58 bank failures reported. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation fund is used to reimburse customers for their deposits, up to as much as 0,000 currently, whenever the bank fails. Last year, Congress increased the amount of FDIC coverage from 0,000 to 0,000 per depositor, which is also contributing to the depletion of the funds. The fund decreased from .6 billion to .9 billion in the fourth quarter.

A bill introduced in Congress would provide a 0 billion loan from the government to the FDIC, in order to ensure the fund has the necessary money to continue backing individual bank accounts up to 0,000. The bill is labeled the Depositor Protection Act of 2009 and is backed by Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd, D-Conn. And Senator Mike Crapo, R-Idaho.

Is your money safe? During the first great depression, there was a run on the banks. People were scrambling to pull their money out of savings accounts and banking institutions for fear that if/when the banks went under they would lose all of their money. This prompted the founding of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, in order to provide insurance to bankers that their money would be safe, even if their bank failed. The 0 billion loan from the government, combined with the increase of fees the FDIC is charging banks to help re-fund the system, is all meant to keep your money secure and prevent people from withdrawing their money from the banking system (and causing the Second Great Depression!)

Debra Dragon is a freelance writer for DepositAccounts.com. She writes about how to make your money work better for you through various deposit accounts, including savings accounts, interest checking accounts, IRAs, and money market funds.


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Real Estate – Be A Contrarian

Real Estate – Be A Contrarian

The nature of a contrarian is to look at the general consensus and then act in the opposite manner. This can happen in any niche as we’ve just seen with Warren Buffet buying a railroad company, an investment he used to scorn! Well, you probably don’t have 30 billion or so to buy your own railroad company, but a huge contrarian opportunity exists in real estate at the moment.

Location, location, location – these are the three words chanted endlessly by those in the real estate market. While location is critical to a good real estate investment, so is time, time and time. The basic idea of any investment is to buy low and sell high. This is why one of the mandates of real estate buying is to purchase the worst home on the block in a neighborhood. Over time, you’ll be able to fix it up and reap a huge gain in the equity while writing off your improvements once you sell the home.

Well, time is providing us with a contrarian opportunity now. Things in the economy as a whole, and real estate in particular, looked really ugly a year ago. The idea of a second Great Depression was gaining serious traction. It was a scary time and I’ll flat out call you a liar if you don’t admit you weren’t a tad worried as well at one point or another. Well, flash forward a year and things have stabilized for the most part. The rampant fear is gone. Real estate markets haven’t improved much. In fact, many are still dropping in value but the movements are more of a trickle than an avalanche.

So, how does time play into this? Now is the time to buy. There may never have been a better time in the history of the real estate market. Think about it. The market has stabilized, but people are still doom and gloom. This is the perfect opportunity for a contrarian. You can jump in near the bottom of the market and ride that rebound to a huge equity gain.

Still have doubts? Let me ask you a simple question. Where do you think the real estate market will be in five years? The economy is going to return to normal and housing is going to return to its previous values or close to them. That presents a huge potential gain just begging you to come along for the ride. Ah, but what if things don’t recover? What if the national debt goes crazy? What if housing completely crashes? What if we fall into a Great Depression? Well, so what? If these things happen, your money, 401k and so on isn’t going to be worth anything anyways. If the planet is destroyed in 2012 per the Mayans [who must be miffed they are being marketed like this], it really isn’t going to matter what you did, so jump in and make some money today!

Step away from the herd. Look at things with your own eyes. What do you see? An opportunity to make money in real estate like we have not ever seen in this country. Take advantage of it!

Raynor James is with FSBOAmerica.org – where buyers can ask a lender questions about mortgages or refinancing online.


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Surviving the Second Great Depression: How to Take Advantage of the Government That Is Trying to Take Advantage of You

Surviving the Second Great Depression: How to Take Advantage of the Government That Is Trying to Take Advantage of You

Double-digit unemployment. Housing prices plummeting. One of the largest stock market crashes in history. There’s no doubt that we’re in a serious economic crisis, perhaps even the Second Great Depression. Many in the federal government want you to be afraid of economic collapse so that they can take advantage of American workers with more taxes, more debt, and earmarks coming out of their ears. What’s worse, Congress is pushing government solutions to problems that government actually created-a

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Recipe for Perception Police Stew

Wyckoff, NJ (PRWEB) March 5, 2010

Read the blog at www.chefds.blogspot.com

Let’s see if we can stir the pot a little and cook the 800-lb. “Perception Police” in the room. How about we just abbreviate that and call them “PP.”

It’s been a long hard road for many of us since the PP profiled the Meetings and Incentives business and targeted a certain insurance company’s incentive program. Basically chastising them for spending money and keeping the economy going.

Soon to follow was the second great depression and record unemployment levels. Then, to add some extra pepper to the mix, Washington D.C. frowned upon corporate meeting travel. Meetings and Incentive programs almost came to a complete halt. Corporate America spent millions of dollars paying penalties to hotels, airlines, and vendors to cancel events out of fear of the PP and their (the PP) love of bad press.

As a result of the PP, thousands of Meetings and Incentive, hospitality, airline, and support staff became unemployed. To be more “PC,” I will move on to something a bit tastier.

Hakins Meetings and Incentives had the pleasure of managing a 300-person national sales meeting in Charlotte, NC last week for a major healthcare company. This program became the best recipe to date for cooking up a batch of PP.

Here is the recipe…

Ingredients:


10 Hakins Meetings and Incentive staff (on site and planning)
10 coach drivers, hundreds of TSA and airline employees, 75 hotel staff including kitchen, bellmen, housekeeping, service , setup, security and front office staff.
300 roundtrip airport transfers, a photographer, 6 florist and décor staff, as well as a couple hundred behind-the-scenes support staff.
Let’s also include, for a bit of flavor, a score of farmers, ranchers, and fishermen.

Method:

Slowly mix all of the above ingredients (1000+ jobs) together and let stand overnight, allowing the employment rate to rise.

Yield:

Serves 300 directly and thousands indirectly.

Dessert:

300 Healthcare professionals came away from a very intense 4-day conference with new tools for helping patients, a common goal of growing a company that puts patients before dollars, and a powerful message of encouragement from the CEO, President, and COO.

The Gratuity:

As a thank you to the City of Charlotte, on behalf of our client, Hakins Meetings and Incentives organized an afternoon of community service opportunities for the group. Response was astounding and the conferees donated over 750 hours of hands on labor at:

The Urban Ministry – Garden Prep, Food prep

2nd Harvest – Sorting donated paper goods and food

Crisis Assistance Ministry – Sorting and folding donated clothes

James Martin Middle School – Painting indoor murals

Reidy Creek Community Garden – Farming outdoors

Bethlehem Center – Painting, planting

How’s that for a great tasting recipe! Sure sounds good to me.

Lets ALL get back to work!

Chef DS

Since 1990, Hakins Meetings & Incentives has supported the meeting and incentive program objectives of America’s most progressive corporations. With full-service meeting and incentive planning – from site selection to attendee web registration, airline ticketing, and on-site program management through budget reconciliation – Hakins delivers results through:

    Open Book Pricing
    Smart technology focused on cost containment
    Industry experience, relationships, and knowledge
    A Culinary Institute of America Chef ensuring food & beverage value and quality

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