Pasadena’s California Institute of Technology (Caltech) announced today that a team of astronomers led by Caltech scientists have discovered three of the smallest confirmed planets ever detected outside our solar system, increasing the likelihood of the existence of habitable planets. more › Go here to read the rest: Caltech Scientists Discover 3 Smallest Planets Outside Solar System
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Caltech Scientists Discover 3 Smallest Planets Outside Solar System
Tags: coachella, irs, los angeles, news, orange-county, social-security, the-current, the-smallest
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Coachella Releases On Sale Info for 2012 Festival Weekends
You’ve had a couple of days to peruse, analyze, contemplate, debate, and evaluate the current lineup for the 2012 Coachella festival (and, yes, the one we published was legit, mmmkay?!) and now it’s time to figure out if you’re going, and how to get tickets. more › See original here: Coachella Releases On Sale Info for 2012 Festival Weekends
Tags: ca news, coachella, designations, figure-out, financial, irs, los angeles, releases, social, social-security, the-current, the-smallest
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Watch Out for Tax Time Tricks
The Internal Revenue Service receives thousands of reports each year from taxpayers who receive emails, phone calls, faxes or notices claiming to be from the IRS. Many of these scams fraudulently use the IRS name or logo as a lure to make the communication appear more authentic and enticing. The goal of these scams, known as “phishing,” is to trick you into revealing your personal and financial information. The scammers can then use your information—like your Social Security number, bank account or credit card numbers—to commit identity theft or steal your money. Here are five things the IRS wants you to know about phishing scams. The IRS never asks for detailed personal and financial information like PIN numbers, passwords or similar secret access information for credit card, bank or other financial accounts. The IRS does not initiate contact with taxpayers by email to request personal or financial information. If you receive an email from someone claiming to be the IRS or directing you to an IRS site: Do not reply to the message. Do not open any attachments. Attachments may contain malicious code that will infect your computer. Do not click on any links. If you clicked on links in a suspicious email or phishing website and entered confidential information, visit the IRS website and enter the search term ‘identity theft’ for more information and resources to help. The address of the official IRS website is www.irs.gov . Do not be confused or misled by sites claiming to be the IRS but ending in .com, .net, .org or other designations instead of .gov . If you discover a website that claims to be the IRS but you suspect it is bogus, do not provide any personal information on the suspicious site and report it to the IRS. If you receive a phone call, fax or letter in the mail from an individual claiming to be from the IRS but you suspect they are not an IRS employee, contact the IRS at 800-829-1040 to determine if the IRS has a legitimate need to contact you. Report any bogus correspondence. You can forward a suspicious email to phishing@irs.gov. You can help shut down these schemes and prevent others from being victimized. Details on how to report specific types of scams and what to do if you’ve been victimized are available at www.irs.gov . Click on “phishing” on the homepage. This report was compiled with information from the IRS. Be sure to follow Beverly Hills Patch on Twitter and “Like” us on Facebook . Read more: Watch Out for Tax Time Tricks
Tags: beverly hills ca, ca news, credit-card, designations, details-on-how, financial, irs, news, personal, search, social, social-security, theft-or-steal
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Manuel Pastor: By the Numbers: Business, E-Verify and the California Economy
If someone tried to force you to pay $312 million for a faulty product, you’d probably be upset. That is exactly why the business community has joined with labor and civil rights organizations in asking California Governor Jerry Brown to sign a piece of legislation called the “Employment Acceleration Act of 2011″ and better known by its bill number, AB 1236 . AB 1236 protects California’s businesses and workers from the ill-conceived efforts of some local jurisdictions to force a costly, job-killing federal program called “E-Verify” on private employers; in many locations, the bill would overturn E-Verify mandates that cities have enacted. Why the widespread uproar? E-Verify is a web-based system that checks employees’ work authorization against the social security database. Currently, it is a voluntary program, except for federal contractors, and most businesses don’t use it. Those pushing E-Verify say it identifies workers who do not have authorization to work in the US. But because the social security files are error-ridden, E-verify instead kills jobs, slaps burdens on small businesses, and hurts taxpayers. According to government data, E-Verify correctly detects unauthorized workers only about half the time . Meanwhile, false positives abound. Consider the testimony of a U.S. citizen and former U.S. Navy captain (with 34 years of service) at a town hall meeting in Ashtabula, OH, a few years back. E-Verify flagged him as not eligible for employment — and even though his wife is an attorney, it took them two months to clear things up. Indeed, final error rates in a report commissioned by the US Government suggest that up to 90,000 US citizens and authorized immigrants in California could eventually lose their jobs — more than the entire population of Santa Barbara, California. Nationally, the figures add up to 770,000 US workers out of work , hardly the right recipe for our economic problems. Worse yet, small business owners would have to spend hundreds of dollars each in training and certification costs — adding up to a cumulative total of $312 million for all of California’s small businesses. And it could shrink the coffers of an already stressed state budget. In Arizona, which mandated E-Verify for all businesses, the Arizona Republic newspaper reports many workers have continued to work, but simply been shifted off the tax rolls — depriving local governments of needed revenue. The federal government does need to fix our broken immigration system. But mandating E-Verify is just the latest of a series of ideas driven more by emotion than common sense. Comprehensive immigrant reform should involve integrating workers who are already here, rather than driving them further underground. Meanwhile, forcing job-killing red tape on California’s businesses and depriving the state of needed revenue is counterproductive. It’s time for clear thinking and clear action. It’s time for Governor Brown to sign AB 1236. *********************** Manuel Pastor Professor, American Studies & Ethnicity Director, Program for Environmental and Regional Equity Director, Center for the Study of Immigrant Integration Excerpt from: Manuel Pastor: By the Numbers: Business, E-Verify and the California Economy
Tags: arizona, business, financial, governor, local news, los angeles, manuel-pastor, small-business, social-security, study, their-march, twitter-feed, wife
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