| Local business helps seniors change scenery
Matt Nachtrieb/Staff Photo (L to R) CarolAnne Crossan and Jacki Finley, with A Changing Season, move furniture and other belongings for a client from Sterling House in Denton to Lewisville. This photo is available at www.scntx.com. production/flowermound/datedfolder/01-19/front .
Failed Company Pension Plans Hurt Baby Boomers and Elderly Say Recent ...
The company pension plan is dead and the retirement plans that were to replace them, namely IRAs and 401(k) plans, are ailing. Paul Mauro CLU, ChFc says Federal pension reform and Government insurance do little to protect older workers. Babyboomers face uncertainty and must take charge to secure their own income income, urges Mauro. Boston, MA (PRWEB) November 24, 2005 -- The company pension plan that gave our parents and grandparents steady income during their sunset years is nearly dead. That's according to recent press attention by The New York Times Sunday Magazine (10/30 and TIME (10/24). Journalists reporting in these media blame weak public policy, bankruptcies by major corporations and accounting tricks that allow employers to underfund retiree obligations.
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The resulting H5N1 pandemic will cripple the US economy, halting most commerce for a period of 12 to 24 months and bankrupting the federal government and most American citizens. The pandemic will also cause grave panic among the nation's residents, as sources of food, medicine, and the necessities of daily living will ultimately become unavailable. Presently, there is little effective, unified worldwide or national leadership in the arena of discovering real prevention and/or treatment protocols for H5N1. Consequently, it is up to each of us as individuals, to mount our own personal preparedness and protection program. The new book, "Infection Protection: Pandemic" provides an introductory backdrop of information about influenza in-general and bird flu in-specific, and the current -- and potentially fatal future -- ramifications of the H5N1 virus.
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