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Atricle Dump - The US Justice Departments Little Lie
Municipality Prefers Vertical File Storage Systems torneys are busy hob knobbing with the government regulators and often get the inside story, yet if a franchisor calls up to criticize or point out flaws with the law they never receive a return phone call and if they are able to get thru they are often ‘hung up on’ during the conversation when they try to explain their points. Why is it that lawyers have complete access to the government regulators, yet entrepreneurs who are responsible for everything in the world cannot get through? One attorney speaking about the FTC stated:When Tom Fujiwara, Assistant Public Works Director for the City of Redlands, California, needs to study plans for street repairs or review a map of his city’s storm drain system, he locates and retrieves large documents more quickly and efficiently than ever before by using the department’s new vertical file storage system.“We chose vertical file storage systems because they work. It’s that simple. The cabinets don’t damage our documents and they are very, very easy to access,” he explained. Before adopting vertical file storage systems, the city’s thousands upon thousands of pages of large drawings, maps and exhibits required by the department were stored mainly in flat files, or “I recall a conversation I had at a breakfast with one of the FTC Commissioners a few years ago in which I asked her if she saw any significant problems with franchising. After a few moments for thought, she replied that she didn’t, other than possible issues related to overlapping regulation by both the states and the feds.” I Achieving the Paperless Office The Federal Trade Commission’s Consumer Division’s Franchising Group is not well known by consumers or the citizenry. Franchising in the United States Accounts for one-third every consumer dollar spent and 400,000 outlets or stores. The Federal Trade Commission over sees the franchising industry. Some franchisors believe the FTC desperately needs turn over at the franchising division. Some attorneys who make money suing franchisors on behalf of franchisees and vendors like things just the way they are and realize any change would tip the balance and they would lose income in a highly litigious and good paying sector of law.The paperless office is a concept that has captured the imagination of many professionals who's desks are covered in clutter. Some years ago, the idea of the paperless office was popularized as an ideal in need of attaining. The concept is one of the newer, less understood methods of drastically increasing office efficiency and reducing costs.Basically, the term "paperless office" describes the process of transferring records from paper to computer. Sometimes the paperless office is referred to simply as "document imaging". Often mistaken as a technology initiative, implementation of the paperless office continues to be in slow motion in many organizations.The paperless o One attorney we interviewed said in an email: “Well, I have to, very respectfully, disagree. Franchising has a good and competent friend in the FTC, and particularly with Steve Toporoff, who has lead responsibility for the FTC in this area.” Yet the franchising community also knows that while at the helm there were no changes to the FTC Franchise Rule for over 10 years and this caused more hardship for franchisors who create jobs, tax base and economic vitality, which are important for a healthy economy. Now that the FTC has totally botched the franchising rules in our country and tilted the field in favor of not franchisor or franchise, not of free markets of free economies, but for attorneys to make more money due to incessant over regulation; these same attorneys wish to export these same ridiculous rules to other countries as well, thus giving our attorneys leverage and opening new markets for them. One attorney stated; “I believe that the FTC, in general, does an excellent job, at least in the franchising area, which is the only field in which I have any meaningful experience. In addition, the proposed new rule is, again in general, a clear step forward toward more rational and effective franchise disclosure, and may well serve as the model for other countries’ attempts at rational regulation in this area.” The current disclosure laws, which are mandatory are a set of 200 plus pages of disclosure documents given to franchise buyers before purchase. Each paragraph in the entire required disclosure is open for interpretation of law and possible lawsuits. The attorneys call this ‘rational regulation,’ I call it a windfall for them. There are few if any franchising complaints in the Industry. Even the complaints, which do come in are usually not real, just someone trying to get something for nothing. Most attorneys believe it is a good system never the less, not perfect they admit, but a good system indeed. Good for who? Good for them of course. Many franchisors have made there feelings known, here is an example of some of their comments; http://www.ftc.gov/os/comments/franrulestaffrpt/OL-100001.pdf The lack of law changes has helped increase franchising lawsuits over the years and instead of reducing regulation and paperwork these new sets of laws are going to increase it. More laws and rules mean more lawsuits of course. One attorney commented on this thought stating; “While, in a perfect world, it might have been nice for the process of re-writing the FTC Franchise Rule to have moved along more quickly, we should be realistic and note that franchising is, frankly, not the FTC’s highest priority, perhaps because of the relatively low number of complaints it receives from Franchisees or others, compared to the large role franchising plays in the U. S. economy.” These attorneys are busy hob knobbing with the government regulators and often get the inside story, yet if a franchisor calls up to criticize or point out flaws with the law they never receive a return phone call and if they are able to get thru they are often ‘hung up on’ during the conversation when they try to explain their points. Why is it that lawyers have complete access to the government regulators, yet entrepreneurs who are responsible for everything in the world cannot get through? One attorney speaking about the FTC stated: “I recall a conversation I had at a breakfast with one of the FTC Commissioners a few years ago in which I asked her if she saw any significant problems with franchising. After a few moments for thought, she replied that she didn’t, other than possible issues related to overlapping regulation by both the states and the feds.” In 4 Essential Steps to Eliminate Database Drama ea.”Back in the day when I was still apart of corporate America, I found myself tasked with the huge job of figuring out what spiffy new company wide software system we needed and what would work best for us.Which computer system would work best? How do I know? Hour after hour of boring computer system presentation, endless trade shows and phone calls and I still didn't have an answer. By the time you figured everything in, each system I looked at was priced somewhere around $170,000.00.With $170,000.00 on the line, you can imagine I was not about to make a snap decision. So I changed my approach a bit. I really dived into why the old software wasn't working and what the team r Yet the franchising community also knows that while at the helm there were no changes to the FTC Franchise Rule for over 10 years and this caused more hardship for franchisors who create jobs, tax base and economic vitality, which are important for a healthy economy. Now that the FTC has totally botched the franchising rules in our country and tilted the field in favor of not franchisor or franchise, not of free markets of free economies, but for attorneys to make more money due to incessant over regulation; these same attorneys wish to export these same ridiculous rules to other countries as well, thus giving our attorneys leverage and opening new markets for them. One attorney stated; “I believe that the FTC, in general, does an excellent job, at least in the franchising area, which is the only field in which I have any meaningful experience. In addition, the proposed new rule is, again in general, a clear step forward toward more rational and effective franchise disclosure, and may well serve as the model for other countries’ attempts at rational regulation in this area.” The current disclosure laws, which are mandatory are a set of 200 plus pages of disclosure documents given to franchise buyers before purchase. Each paragraph in the entire required disclosure is open for interpretation of law and possible lawsuits. The attorneys call this ‘rational regulation,’ I call it a windfall for them. There are few if any franchising complaints in the Industry. Even the complaints, which do come in are usually not real, just someone trying to get something for nothing. Most attorneys believe it is a good system never the less, not perfect they admit, but a good system indeed. Good for who? Good for them of course. Many franchisors have made there feelings known, here is an example of some of their comments; http://www.ftc.gov/os/comments/franrulestaffrpt/OL-100001.pdf The lack of law changes has helped increase franchising lawsuits over the years and instead of reducing regulation and paperwork these new sets of laws are going to increase it. More laws and rules mean more lawsuits of course. One attorney commented on this thought stating; “While, in a perfect world, it might have been nice for the process of re-writing the FTC Franchise Rule to have moved along more quickly, we should be realistic and note that franchising is, frankly, not the FTC’s highest priority, perhaps because of the relatively low number of complaints it receives from Franchisees or others, compared to the large role franchising plays in the U. S. economy.” These attorneys are busy hob knobbing with the government regulators and often get the inside story, yet if a franchisor calls up to criticize or point out flaws with the law they never receive a return phone call and if they are able to get thru they are often ‘hung up on’ during the conversation when they try to explain their points. Why is it that lawyers have complete access to the government regulators, yet entrepreneurs who are responsible for everything in the world cannot get through? One attorney speaking about the FTC stated: “I recall a conversation I had at a breakfast with one of the FTC Commissioners a few years ago in which I asked her if she saw any significant problems with franchising. After a few moments for thought, she replied that she didn’t, other than possible issues related to overlapping regulation by both the states and the feds.” I Answer To Relieving Pain In Business n addition, the proposed new rule is, again in general, a clear step forward toward more rational and effective franchise disclosure, and may well serve as the model for other countries’ attempts at rational regulation in this area.”The previous Sangaraja, the Supreme Patriarch of the monastic order (of Thailand), once went on a tour of China, where someone offered him a very beautiful teacup. It was unlike anything he'd ever seen. He thought, "Oh! The people here have real faith in me, to offer me this beautiful teacup!" And as soon as the teacup was in his hand, immediately he was suffering. Where should I put it? Where is safe to keep it? He couldn't stop worrying it would break.Before he had that teacup, he was fine. Once he had it, he wanted to show it off to the people back home in Thailand. He put it in his bag and kept telling everyone to watch out that the teacup didn't get broken. "Hey! Careful, pleas The current disclosure laws, which are mandatory are a set of 200 plus pages of disclosure documents given to franchise buyers before purchase. Each paragraph in the entire required disclosure is open for interpretation of law and possible lawsuits. The attorneys call this ‘rational regulation,’ I call it a windfall for them. There are few if any franchising complaints in the Industry. Even the complaints, which do come in are usually not real, just someone trying to get something for nothing. Most attorneys believe it is a good system never the less, not perfect they admit, but a good system indeed. Good for who? Good for them of course. Many franchisors have made there feelings known, here is an example of some of their comments; http://www.ftc.gov/os/comments/franrulestaffrpt/OL-100001.pdf The lack of law changes has helped increase franchising lawsuits over the years and instead of reducing regulation and paperwork these new sets of laws are going to increase it. More laws and rules mean more lawsuits of course. One attorney commented on this thought stating; “While, in a perfect world, it might have been nice for the process of re-writing the FTC Franchise Rule to have moved along more quickly, we should be realistic and note that franchising is, frankly, not the FTC’s highest priority, perhaps because of the relatively low number of complaints it receives from Franchisees or others, compared to the large role franchising plays in the U. S. economy.” These attorneys are busy hob knobbing with the government regulators and often get the inside story, yet if a franchisor calls up to criticize or point out flaws with the law they never receive a return phone call and if they are able to get thru they are often ‘hung up on’ during the conversation when they try to explain their points. Why is it that lawyers have complete access to the government regulators, yet entrepreneurs who are responsible for everything in the world cannot get through? One attorney speaking about the FTC stated: “I recall a conversation I had at a breakfast with one of the FTC Commissioners a few years ago in which I asked her if she saw any significant problems with franchising. After a few moments for thought, she replied that she didn’t, other than possible issues related to overlapping regulation by both the states and the feds.” I Free Proxy Surfing - Essential In Our Days of course. Many franchisors have made there feelings known, here is an example of some of their comments;Today more and more people use the Internet, because all we need to know is just a click away. The Internet is a very efficient and quick way of finding information about almost everything. However, there is also a bad side to the Internet and that is that you are exposed to hackers and your every step on the net can be monitored.Because privacy, Internet crime, hacking were becoming more and more of an issue and many people were afraid to use the Internet because of the consequences, free proxy surfing sounded like a dream, something that had to be done. If software was designed to insure the privacy, the anonymity of the people using the Internet, then all of these problems would http://www.ftc.gov/os/comments/franrulestaffrpt/OL-100001.pdf The lack of law changes has helped increase franchising lawsuits over the years and instead of reducing regulation and paperwork these new sets of laws are going to increase it. More laws and rules mean more lawsuits of course. One attorney commented on this thought stating; “While, in a perfect world, it might have been nice for the process of re-writing the FTC Franchise Rule to have moved along more quickly, we should be realistic and note that franchising is, frankly, not the FTC’s highest priority, perhaps because of the relatively low number of complaints it receives from Franchisees or others, compared to the large role franchising plays in the U. S. economy.” These attorneys are busy hob knobbing with the government regulators and often get the inside story, yet if a franchisor calls up to criticize or point out flaws with the law they never receive a return phone call and if they are able to get thru they are often ‘hung up on’ during the conversation when they try to explain their points. Why is it that lawyers have complete access to the government regulators, yet entrepreneurs who are responsible for everything in the world cannot get through? One attorney speaking about the FTC stated: “I recall a conversation I had at a breakfast with one of the FTC Commissioners a few years ago in which I asked her if she saw any significant problems with franchising. After a few moments for thought, she replied that she didn’t, other than possible issues related to overlapping regulation by both the states and the feds.” I 10 Lessons From Don Corleone torneys are busy hob knobbing with the government regulators and often get the inside story, yet if a franchisor calls up to criticize or point out flaws with the law they never receive a return phone call and if they are able to get thru they are often ‘hung up on’ during the conversation when they try to explain their points. Why is it that lawyers have complete access to the government regulators, yet entrepreneurs who are responsible for everything in the world cannot get through? One attorney speaking about the FTC stated:If you’ve ever seen the Godfather, I’m sure you remember the phrase, “Make them an offer they can’t refuse.”In the movie it often meant an offer backed by force. In real life the situation is often more complex. The modern day Godfathers seldom need violence. They know the wants, needs and desires of their target market.There’s a lot we can learn from the modern day Don Corleones.1. There’s more money to be made tapping into a hot target market, than there is trying to create one.2. They’ve often replaced force by giving more at a better price than their competition.3. They understand the value of a consumable product that has to be continually re “I recall a conversation I had at a breakfast with one of the FTC Commissioners a few years ago in which I asked her if she saw any significant problems with franchising. After a few moments for thought, she replied that she didn’t, other than possible issues related to overlapping regulation by both the states and the feds.” Interesting, but if there are no issues in franchising, why are we not having decreased regulations? The same attorney goes on to say: “So, for me, the FTC has done a fine job in promulgating and revising the Franchise Rule over the years, particularly given that there are other areas of much greater concern to them, such as Bus. Opp. fraud, consumer financial privacy, the National Do Not Call Registry, regulation of Truth in Advertising, overseeing corporate mergers, etc.” ”We shouldn’t let our focus on franchising become parochial and forget that our field is just one small part of the big picture, at least from the FTC’s standpoint and probably from that of regulators generally. It’s probably a tribute to the relatively good health of franchising that we don’t get more regulatory attention than we do!” Again the attorney seems to indicate that franchising is a small part of the FTC’s agenda and therefore not to worry, he likes things just the way they are. Of course he does, he is making money on the backs of franchisees and franchisors across America, why would he want anything to change? America, we need a regulatory reality check and we need it now. Think about it.
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