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...March.Although food-handling violations attract the most attention, there is more to sanitation than just clean dishes. The inspection process is intricate and thorough, involving hands-and-knees investigation and sometimes lasting for hours.‘CRITICAL VIOLATIONS’ On a warm but blustery Friday, a baseball-cap-clad inspector, Lauren Sullivan, with flashlight in hand, began her inspection of Redline restaurant on JFK Street. Although Fallon does not usually tag along, the gray-haired assistant commissioner ventured out of the office on this particular afternoon.Sullivan inspects the “rubbish area,” where...
...federal action on climate change “certainly in the next three to four years,” but that this will only happen once businesses support regulations. She said that this was likely to end up happening because many states and cities are enacting their own caps on greenhouse gas emissions, and that as a result, many different regulatory systems are being created. “It is out of a need for harmonized standards across the country that business actually begins to demand regulation,” Browner said. The largest state effort to regulate carbon emissions...
Payouts to top HMC managers hit a peak in 2003 when Mittelman earned $36.8 million and Samuels garnered $35.6 million. Meyer announced in early 2004 that the company would cap payouts to managers—and Mittelman and Samuels both earned about half as much in their last year here as they did in 2003. Meyer earned $6 million in the fiscal year ending last June...
Wolfe set out to solve the paradox of the modern Ivy League overachiever: Why do the country’s top performers cap weekdays of hard work with nights of binge drinking and commitment-free physical intimacy? But he failed to do much more than solidify the term “hook-up” in pop parlance. Viswanathan actually offers an answer: the college generation’s reckless profligacy, she suggests, is the result of the same goal-directed purposefulness that has produced its academic success...
...middle of an election year, both parties are approaching health care mostly as way to, what else, score political points. Next month, the Senate will likely debate a GOP-backed provision to cap damages from malpractice lawsuits. While studies suggest malpractice reform does little to reduce health care costs, trial lawyers (who back Democrats) and insurance companies (who favor Republicans) are pushing senators toward a fight. And while Democrats will roll out a health care plan later this year, their main theme will be attacking the prescription drug bill that has now gone into effect. All of which shows that...