12/31/2020 Mayor Durkan Announces $5.65 Million to Community Organizations Through the Equitable Development Initiative
https://dailyplanit.seattle.gov/mayor-durkan-announces-5-65-million-to-community-organizations-through-the-equitable-development-initiative/ 1/4
Mayor Durkan Announces $5.65
Million to Community
Organizations Through the
Equitable Development Initiative
November 10, 2020 by Seattle OPCD
EDI organizations have secured more than $105 million in City-funded dollars since 2017
– Mayor signs property transfer to community ownership for Central Area Senior Center,
99-year lease for Fire Station 6
Mayor Jenny A. Durkan announced nearly $6 million in awards through the Equitable
Development Initiative (EDI), part of the City’s effort to support Seattle’s existing
residents and businesses in high displacement risk neighborhoods. The City awarded $4.4
million to community organizations for site acquisition and major capital projects and
another $1.25 million is intended to provide capacity-building support to existing EDI
partners providing services during the current pandemic and economic crisis. The
awards to organizations led by and serving people of color will be used for organizational
capacity building, property acquisition, and capital expenses. In addition to
the $36 million in EDI funds awarded, these community-based organizations leveraged
that amount to more than $105 million in City-funded dollars since 2017.
“To tackle the challenges of displacement, our City is investing in community-based
organizations who are leading the way to empower
and strengthen underserved communities and create economic vitality. The Economic
Development Initiative has a strong record of creating the newest homes for our City’s
residents, non-profits, and local small businesses through leveraging other city
programs,“ said Mayor Durkan. “One of my most important priorities in this budget was
to transform how the City invests in communities of color by centering the experiences of
Black and Indigenous communities. Even in this difficult year, my budget set aside
historic resources to meet the challenges of this moment and move us toward being the
city we want to be when we come out of this crisis: stronger, more just, and more
equitable.”
The EDI fund, administered by the Office of Planning and Community
Development (OPCD), was created to respond to the needs of marginalized populations,
reduce disparities, and support access to opportunity in healthy, vibrant communities. The
initiative is championed by community organizations concerned about displacement
pressures and historical lack of investment that has occurred in communities of color in
Seattle. Mayor Durkan proposed a sustained funding source for the program in 2019.
“By hosting this important event we honor the priorities of our community members and
the hard work they are doing to create the kinds of neighborhoods they want,”
said Councilmember Tammy Morales, District 2. “In t ...
Problem 1
Problem 2 (two screen shots)
Problem 3 (two screen shots)
Problem 4 (three screen shots)
Problem 5 (one screen shot)
Problem 6 (six screenshots plus a data table)
.
Problem 20-1A Production cost flow and measurement; journal entrie.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 20-1A Production cost flow and measurement; journal entries L.O. P1, P2, P3, P4
[The following information applies to the questions displayed below.]
Edison Company manufactures wool blankets and accounts for product costs using process costing. The following information is available regarding its May inventories.
Beginning
Inventory
Ending
Inventory
Raw materials inventory
$
60,000
$
41,000
Goods in process inventory
449,000
521,500
Finished goods inventory
610,000
342,001
The following additional information describes the company's production activities for May.
Raw materials purchases (on credit)
$
250,000
Factory payroll cost (paid in cash)
1,850,300
Other overhead cost (Other Accounts credited)
82,000
Materials used
Direct
$
200,500
Indirect
50,000
Labor used
Direct
$
1,060,300
Indirect
790,000
Overhead rate as a percent of direct labor
115
%
Sales (on credit)
$
3,000,000
The predetermined overhead rate was computed at the beginning of the year as 115% of direct labor cost.
\\\\\
rev: 11_02_2011
references
1.
value:
2.00 points
Problem 20-1A Part 1
Required:
1(a)
Compute the cost of products transferred from production to finished goods. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Cost of products transferred
$
1(b)
Compute the cost of goods sold. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Cost of goods sold
$
rev: 10_31_2011
check my workeBook Links (4)references
2.
value:
5.00 points
Problem 20-1A Part 2
2(a)
Prepare journal entry dated May 31 to record the raw materials purchases. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
May 31
2(b)
Prepare journal entry dated May 31 to record the direct materials usage. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
May 31
2(c)
Prepare journal entry dated May 31 to record the indirect materials usage. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
May 31
2(d)
Prepare journal entry dated May 31 to record the payroll costs. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
May 31
2(e)
Prepare journal entry dated May 31 to record the direct labor costs. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
May 31
2(f)
Prepare journal entry dated May 31 to record the indirect labor costs. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
May 31
2(g)
Prepare journal entry dated May 31 to record the other overhead costs. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
May 31
2(h)
Prepare journal entry dated May 31 to record the overhead applied. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
May 31
2(i)
Prepare journal entry dated May 31 to record the goods transferred from production to finished goods.(Omit the "$" sign in yo.
Problem 2 Obtain Io.Let x be the current through j2, ..docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 2: Obtain Io.
Let x be the current through j2, .
Let .
.
.
.
………..1.
…………2.
.
.
…………3.
……………….4.
Solving these 4 equations we can get .
.
Problem 1:Find currents I1, I2, and I3
Problem 2: Obtain Io
Problem 3:Obtain io
.
Problem 1On April 1, 20X4, Rojas purchased land by giving $100,000.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1On April 1, 20X4, Rojas purchased land by giving $100,000 in cash and executing a $400,000 note payable to the former owner. The note bears interest at 10% per annum, with interest being payable annually on March 31 of each year. Rojas is also required to make a $100,000 payment toward the note's principal on every March 31.(a)Prepare the appropriate journal entry to record the land purchase on April 1, 20X4.(b)Prepare the appropriate journal entry to record the year-end interest accrual on December 31, 20X4.(c)Prepare the appropriate journal entry to record the payment of interest and principal on March 31, 20X5.(d)Prepare the appropriate journal entry to record the year-end interest accrual on December 31, 20X5.(e)Prepare the appropriate journal entry to record the payment of interest and principal on March 31, 20X6.
&R&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&20B-13.01
B-13.01
Worksheet 1(a), (b), (c), (d), (e)GENERAL JOURNALDateAccountsDebitCredit04-01-X412-31-X403-31-X512-31-X503-31-X6
&L&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&12Name:
Date: Section: &R&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&20B-13.01
B-13.01
Problem 2Ace Brick company issued $100,000 of 5-year bonds. The bonds were issued at par on January 1, 20X1, and bear interest at a rate of 8% per annum, payable semiannually.(a)Prepare the journal entry to record the bond issue on January, 20X1.(b)Prepare the journal entry that Ace would record on each interest date.(c)Prepare the journal entry that Ace would record at maturity of the bonds.
&R&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&20B-13.06
B-13.06
Worksheet 2(a)(b)(c)GENERAL JOURNAL DateAccountsDebitCreditIssueInterestMaturity
&L&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&12Name:
Date: Section: &R&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&20B-13.06
B-13.06
Problem 3Erik Food Supply Company issued $100,000 of face amount of 4-year bonds on January 1, 20X1. The bonds were issued at 98, and bear interest at a stated rate of 8% per annum, payable semiannually. The discount is amortized by the straight-line method.(a)Prepare the journal entry to record the initial issuance on January, 20X1.(b)Prepare the journal entry that Erik would record on each interest date.(c)Prepare the journal entry that Erik would record at maturity of the bonds.
&R&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&20B-13.08
B-13.08
Worksheet 3(a)(b)(c)GENERAL JOURNAL DateAccountsDebitCreditIssueInterestMaturity
&L&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&12Name:
Date: Section: &R&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&20B-13.08
B-13.08
Problem 4Horton Micro Chip Company issued $100,000 of face amount of 6-year bonds on January 1, 20X1. The bonds were issed at 103, and bear interest at a stated rate of 8% per annum, payable semiannually. The premium is amortized by the straight-line method.(a)Prepare the journal entry to record the initial issue on January, 20X1.(b)Prepare the journal entry that Horton would record on each interest date.(c)Prepare the journal entry that Horton would record at maturity of the bonds.
&R&"Myriad We.
Problem 17-1 Dividends and Taxes [LO2]Dark Day, Inc., has declar.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 17-1 Dividends and Taxes [LO2]
Dark Day, Inc., has declared a $5.60 per share dividend. Suppose capital gains are not taxed, but dividends are taxed at 15 percent. New IRS regulations require that taxes be withheld at the time the dividend is paid. Dark Day sells for $94.10 per share, and the stock is about to go ex-dividend.
What do you think the ex-dividend price will be? (Round your answer to 2 decimal places. (e.g., 32.16))
Ex-dividend price
$
Problem 17-2 Stock Dividends [LO3]
The owners’ equity accounts for Alexander International are shown here:
Common stock ($0.60 par value)
$
45,000
Capital surplus
340,000
Retained earnings
748,120
Total owners’ equity
$
1,133,120
a-1
If Alexander stock currently sells for $30 per share and a 10 percent stock dividend is declared, how many new shares will be distributed?
New shares issued
a-2
Show how the equity accounts would change.
Common stock
$
Capital surplus
Retained earnings
Total owners’ equity
$
b-1
If instead Alexander declared a 20 percent stock dividend, how many new shares will be distributed?
New shares issued
b-2
Show how the equity accounts would change. (Negative amount should be indicated by a minus sign.)
Common stock
$
Capital surplus
Retained earnings
Total owners’ equity
$
Problem 17-3 Stock Splits [LO3]
The owners' equity accounts for Alexander International are shown here.
Common stock ($0.50 par value)
$
35,000
Capital surplus
320,000
Retained earnings
708,120
Total owners’ equity
$
1,063,120
a-1
If Alexander declares a five-for-one stock split, how many shares are outstanding now?
New shares outstanding
a-2
What is the new par value per share? (Round your answer to 3 decimal places. (e.g., 32.161))
New par value
$ per share
b-1
If Alexander declares a one-for-seven reverse stock split, how many shares are outstanding now?
New shares outstanding
b-2
What is the new par value per share? (Round your answer to 2 decimal places. (e.g., 32.16))
New par value
$ per share
Problem 17-4 Stock Splits and Stock Dividends [LO3]
Red Rocks Corporation (RRC) currently has 485,000 shares of stock outstanding that sell for $40 per share. Assuming no market imperfections or tax effects exist, what will the share price be after:
a.
RRC has a four-for-three stock split? (Round your answer to 2 decimal places. (e.g., 32.16))
New share price
$
b.
RRC has a 15 percent stock dividend? (Round your answer to 2 decimal places. (e.g., 32.16))
New share price
$
c.
RRC has a 54.5 percent stock dividend? (Round your answer to 2 decimal places. (e.g., 32.16))
New share price
$
d.
RRC has a two-for-seven reverse stock split? (Round your answer to 2 decimal places. (e.g., 32.16))
New share price
$
Determine the new number of shares outstanding in parts (a) through (d).
a.
New shares outstanding
b.
New shares o.
Problem 1Problem 1 - Constant-Growth Common StockWhat is the value.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1Problem 1 - Constant-Growth Common StockWhat is the value of a common stock if the firm's earnings and dividends are growing annually at 10%, the current dividend is $1.32,and investors require a 15% return on investment?What is the stock's rate of return if the market price of the stock is $35?
Problem 2Problem 2 - Preferred Stock Price and ReturnA firm has preferred stock outstanding with a $1,000 par value and a $40 annual dividend with no maturity. If the required rate of return is 9%, what is the price of the preferred stock?The market price of a firm's preferred stock is $24 and pays an annual dividend of $2.50. If the stock's par value is $1,000 and it has no maturity, what is the return on the preferred stock?
Problem 3Problem 3 - Bond Valuation and YieldA bond has a par value of $1,000, pays $50 semiannually and has a maturity of 10 years.If the bond earns 12% per year, what is the price of the bond?RateNperPMTFVTypePVWhat is the yield to maturity for the bond?NperPMTPVFVTypeRateWhat would be the bond's price if the rate earned declined to 8% per year?RateNperPMTFVTypePVIf the maturity period is reduced to 5 years and the required rate of return is 8%, what would be the price of the bond?RateNperPMTFVTypePVWhat is the yield to maturity for the bond when the maturity is 5 years and the required rate of return is 8%?NperPMTPVFVTypeRateWhat generalizations about bond prices, interest rates and maturity periods can be made based on the calculations made above?
Problem 4Problem 4 - Callable BondsThe following bonds have a par value of $1,000 and the required rate of return is 10%.Bond XY: 5¼ percent coupon, with interest paid annually for 20 yearsBond AB: 14 percent coupon, with interest paid annually for 20 yearsWhat is each bond's current market price?Bond XYBond ABRateNperPMTFVTypePVIf current interest rates are 9%, which bond would you expect to be called? Explain.
Exercise 10-5
During the month of March, Olinger Company’s employees earned wages of $69,500. Withholdings related to these wages were $5,317 for Social Security (FICA), $8,145 for federal income tax, $3,366 for state income tax, and $434 for union dues. The company incurred no cost related to these earnings for federal unemployment tax but incurred $760 for state unemployment tax.
Prepare the necessary March 31 journal entry to record salaries and wages expense and salaries and wages payable. Assume that wages earned during March will be paid during April. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
Mar. 31
SHOW LIST OF ACCOUNTS
LINK TO TEXT
Prepare the entry to record the company’s payroll tax expense. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
Mar. 31
===========================================
E.
Problem 1Prescott, Inc., manufactures bookcases and uses an activi.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1Prescott, Inc., manufactures bookcases and uses an activity-based costing system. Prescott's activity areas and related data follows:ActivityBudgeted Cost
of ActivityAllocation BaseCost Allocation
RateMaterials handling$230,000Number of parts$0.50Assembly3,200,000Direct labor hours16.00Finishing180,000Number of finished
units4.50Prescott produced two styles of bookcases in October: the standard bookcase and an unfinished bookcase, which has fewer parts and requires no finishing. The totals for quantities, direct
materials costs, and other data follow:ProductTotal Units
ProducedTotal Direct
Materials CostsTotal Direct
Labor CostsTotal Number
of PartsTotal Assembling
Direct Labor HoursStandard bookcase3,000$36,000$45,0009,0004,500Unfinished bookcase3,50035,00035,0007,0003,500Requirements:1. Compute the manufacturing product cost per unit of each type of bookcase.2. Suppose that pre-manufacturing activities, such as product design, were assigned to the standard bookcases at $7 each, and to the unfinished bookcases at $2 each. Similar analyses
were conducted of post-manufacturing activities such as distribution, marketing, and customer service. The post-manufacturing costs were $22 per standard bookcase and $14 per
unfinished bookcase. Compute the full product costs per unit.3. Which product costs are reported in the external financial statements? Which costs are used for management decision making? Explain the difference.4. What price should Prescott's managers set for unfinished bookcases to earn $15 per bookcase?
Problem 2Corbertt Pharmaceuticals manufactures an over-the-counter allergy medication. The company sells both large commercial containers of 1,000 capsules to health-care facilities
and travel packs of 20 capsules to shops in airports, train stations, and hotels. The following information has been developed to determine if an activity-based costing system
would be beneficial:ActivityEstimated Indirect Activity
CostsAllocation BaseEstimated Quantity of
Allocation BaseMaterials handling$95,000Kilos19,000 kilosPackaging219,000Machine hours5,475 hoursQuality assurance124,500Samples2,075 samplesTotal indirect costs$438,500Other production information includes the following:Commercial ContainersTravel PacksUnits produced3,500 containers57,000 packsWeight in kilos14,0005,700Machine hours2,625570Number of samples700855Requirements:1. Compute the cost allocation rate for each activity.2. Use the activity-based cost allocation rates to compute the activity costs per unit of the commercial containers and the travel packs. (Hint: First compute the total activity
cost allocated to each product line, and then compute the cost per unit.)3. Corbertt's original single-allocation-base costing system allocated indirect costs to produce at $157 per machine hour. Compute the total indirect costs allocated to the
commercial containers and to the travel packs under the original system. Then compute the indirect cost per unit for ea.
Problem 1Preston Recliners manufactures leather recliners and uses.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1Preston Recliners manufactures leather recliners and uses flexible budgeting and a standard cost system. Preston allocates overhead based on yards of direct materials. The company's performance report includes the following selected data:Static Budget
(1,000 recliners)Actual Results
(980 recliners)Sales (1,000 recliners X $495)$495,000 (980 recliners X $475)$465,500Variable manufacturing costs: Direct materials (6,000 yds @ $8.80/yard)52,800 (6,150 yds @ $8.60/yard)52,890 Direct labor (10,000 hrs @ $9.20/hour)92,000 (9,600 hrs @ $9.30/hour)89,280Variable overhead (6,000 yds @ $5.00/yard)30,000 (6,510 yds @ $6.40/yard)39,360Fixed manufacturing costs: Fixed overhead60,00062,000Total cost of goods sold$234,800$243,530Gross profit$260,200$221,970Requirements:1. Prepare a flexible budget based on the actual number of recliners sold.2. Compute the price variance and the efficiency variance for direct materials and for direct labor. For manufacturing overhead, compute the variable overhead spending, variable overhead efficiency, fixed overhead spending, and fixed overhead volume variances.3. Have Preston's managers done a good job or a poor job controlling materials, labor, and overhead costs? Why?4. Describe how Preston's managers can benefit from the standard costing system.
Problem 2AllTalk Technologies manufactures capacitors for cellular base stations and other communications applications. The company's January 2012 flexible budget income statement shows output levels of 6,500, 8,000, and 10,000 units. The static budget was based on expected sales of 8,000 units.ALLTALK TECHNOLOGIES
Flexible Budget Income Statement
Month Ended January 31, 2012Per UnitBy Units (Capacitors)6,5008,00010,000Sales revenue$24$156,000$192,000$240,000Variable expenses$1065,00080,000100,000Contribution margin$91,000$112,000$140,000Fixed expenses53,00053,00053,000Operating income$38,000$59,000$87,000The company sold 10,000 units during January, and its actual operating income was as follows:ALLTALK TECHNOLOGIES
Income Statement
Month Ended January 31, 2012Sales revenue$246,000Variable expenses104,500Contribution margin$141,500Fixed expenses54,000Operating income$87,500Requirements:1. Prepare an income statement performance report for January.2. What was the effect on AllTalk's operating income of selling 2,000 units more than the static budget level of sales?3. What is AllTalk's static budget variance? Explain why the income statement performance report provides more useful information to AllTalk's managers than the simple static budget variance. What insights can AllTalk's managers draw from this performance report?
Problem 3Java manufacturers coffee mugs that it sells to other companies for customizing with their own logos. Java prepares flexible budgets and uses a standard cost system to control manufacturing costs. The standard unit.
Problem 1
Problem 2 (two screen shots)
Problem 3 (two screen shots)
Problem 4 (three screen shots)
Problem 5 (one screen shot)
Problem 6 (six screenshots plus a data table)
.
Problem 20-1A Production cost flow and measurement; journal entrie.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 20-1A Production cost flow and measurement; journal entries L.O. P1, P2, P3, P4
[The following information applies to the questions displayed below.]
Edison Company manufactures wool blankets and accounts for product costs using process costing. The following information is available regarding its May inventories.
Beginning
Inventory
Ending
Inventory
Raw materials inventory
$
60,000
$
41,000
Goods in process inventory
449,000
521,500
Finished goods inventory
610,000
342,001
The following additional information describes the company's production activities for May.
Raw materials purchases (on credit)
$
250,000
Factory payroll cost (paid in cash)
1,850,300
Other overhead cost (Other Accounts credited)
82,000
Materials used
Direct
$
200,500
Indirect
50,000
Labor used
Direct
$
1,060,300
Indirect
790,000
Overhead rate as a percent of direct labor
115
%
Sales (on credit)
$
3,000,000
The predetermined overhead rate was computed at the beginning of the year as 115% of direct labor cost.
\\\\\
rev: 11_02_2011
references
1.
value:
2.00 points
Problem 20-1A Part 1
Required:
1(a)
Compute the cost of products transferred from production to finished goods. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Cost of products transferred
$
1(b)
Compute the cost of goods sold. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Cost of goods sold
$
rev: 10_31_2011
check my workeBook Links (4)references
2.
value:
5.00 points
Problem 20-1A Part 2
2(a)
Prepare journal entry dated May 31 to record the raw materials purchases. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
May 31
2(b)
Prepare journal entry dated May 31 to record the direct materials usage. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
May 31
2(c)
Prepare journal entry dated May 31 to record the indirect materials usage. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
May 31
2(d)
Prepare journal entry dated May 31 to record the payroll costs. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
May 31
2(e)
Prepare journal entry dated May 31 to record the direct labor costs. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
May 31
2(f)
Prepare journal entry dated May 31 to record the indirect labor costs. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
May 31
2(g)
Prepare journal entry dated May 31 to record the other overhead costs. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
May 31
2(h)
Prepare journal entry dated May 31 to record the overhead applied. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
May 31
2(i)
Prepare journal entry dated May 31 to record the goods transferred from production to finished goods.(Omit the "$" sign in yo.
Problem 2 Obtain Io.Let x be the current through j2, ..docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 2: Obtain Io.
Let x be the current through j2, .
Let .
.
.
.
………..1.
…………2.
.
.
…………3.
……………….4.
Solving these 4 equations we can get .
.
Problem 1:Find currents I1, I2, and I3
Problem 2: Obtain Io
Problem 3:Obtain io
.
Problem 1On April 1, 20X4, Rojas purchased land by giving $100,000.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1On April 1, 20X4, Rojas purchased land by giving $100,000 in cash and executing a $400,000 note payable to the former owner. The note bears interest at 10% per annum, with interest being payable annually on March 31 of each year. Rojas is also required to make a $100,000 payment toward the note's principal on every March 31.(a)Prepare the appropriate journal entry to record the land purchase on April 1, 20X4.(b)Prepare the appropriate journal entry to record the year-end interest accrual on December 31, 20X4.(c)Prepare the appropriate journal entry to record the payment of interest and principal on March 31, 20X5.(d)Prepare the appropriate journal entry to record the year-end interest accrual on December 31, 20X5.(e)Prepare the appropriate journal entry to record the payment of interest and principal on March 31, 20X6.
&R&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&20B-13.01
B-13.01
Worksheet 1(a), (b), (c), (d), (e)GENERAL JOURNALDateAccountsDebitCredit04-01-X412-31-X403-31-X512-31-X503-31-X6
&L&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&12Name:
Date: Section: &R&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&20B-13.01
B-13.01
Problem 2Ace Brick company issued $100,000 of 5-year bonds. The bonds were issued at par on January 1, 20X1, and bear interest at a rate of 8% per annum, payable semiannually.(a)Prepare the journal entry to record the bond issue on January, 20X1.(b)Prepare the journal entry that Ace would record on each interest date.(c)Prepare the journal entry that Ace would record at maturity of the bonds.
&R&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&20B-13.06
B-13.06
Worksheet 2(a)(b)(c)GENERAL JOURNAL DateAccountsDebitCreditIssueInterestMaturity
&L&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&12Name:
Date: Section: &R&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&20B-13.06
B-13.06
Problem 3Erik Food Supply Company issued $100,000 of face amount of 4-year bonds on January 1, 20X1. The bonds were issued at 98, and bear interest at a stated rate of 8% per annum, payable semiannually. The discount is amortized by the straight-line method.(a)Prepare the journal entry to record the initial issuance on January, 20X1.(b)Prepare the journal entry that Erik would record on each interest date.(c)Prepare the journal entry that Erik would record at maturity of the bonds.
&R&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&20B-13.08
B-13.08
Worksheet 3(a)(b)(c)GENERAL JOURNAL DateAccountsDebitCreditIssueInterestMaturity
&L&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&12Name:
Date: Section: &R&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&20B-13.08
B-13.08
Problem 4Horton Micro Chip Company issued $100,000 of face amount of 6-year bonds on January 1, 20X1. The bonds were issed at 103, and bear interest at a stated rate of 8% per annum, payable semiannually. The premium is amortized by the straight-line method.(a)Prepare the journal entry to record the initial issue on January, 20X1.(b)Prepare the journal entry that Horton would record on each interest date.(c)Prepare the journal entry that Horton would record at maturity of the bonds.
&R&"Myriad We.
Problem 17-1 Dividends and Taxes [LO2]Dark Day, Inc., has declar.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 17-1 Dividends and Taxes [LO2]
Dark Day, Inc., has declared a $5.60 per share dividend. Suppose capital gains are not taxed, but dividends are taxed at 15 percent. New IRS regulations require that taxes be withheld at the time the dividend is paid. Dark Day sells for $94.10 per share, and the stock is about to go ex-dividend.
What do you think the ex-dividend price will be? (Round your answer to 2 decimal places. (e.g., 32.16))
Ex-dividend price
$
Problem 17-2 Stock Dividends [LO3]
The owners’ equity accounts for Alexander International are shown here:
Common stock ($0.60 par value)
$
45,000
Capital surplus
340,000
Retained earnings
748,120
Total owners’ equity
$
1,133,120
a-1
If Alexander stock currently sells for $30 per share and a 10 percent stock dividend is declared, how many new shares will be distributed?
New shares issued
a-2
Show how the equity accounts would change.
Common stock
$
Capital surplus
Retained earnings
Total owners’ equity
$
b-1
If instead Alexander declared a 20 percent stock dividend, how many new shares will be distributed?
New shares issued
b-2
Show how the equity accounts would change. (Negative amount should be indicated by a minus sign.)
Common stock
$
Capital surplus
Retained earnings
Total owners’ equity
$
Problem 17-3 Stock Splits [LO3]
The owners' equity accounts for Alexander International are shown here.
Common stock ($0.50 par value)
$
35,000
Capital surplus
320,000
Retained earnings
708,120
Total owners’ equity
$
1,063,120
a-1
If Alexander declares a five-for-one stock split, how many shares are outstanding now?
New shares outstanding
a-2
What is the new par value per share? (Round your answer to 3 decimal places. (e.g., 32.161))
New par value
$ per share
b-1
If Alexander declares a one-for-seven reverse stock split, how many shares are outstanding now?
New shares outstanding
b-2
What is the new par value per share? (Round your answer to 2 decimal places. (e.g., 32.16))
New par value
$ per share
Problem 17-4 Stock Splits and Stock Dividends [LO3]
Red Rocks Corporation (RRC) currently has 485,000 shares of stock outstanding that sell for $40 per share. Assuming no market imperfections or tax effects exist, what will the share price be after:
a.
RRC has a four-for-three stock split? (Round your answer to 2 decimal places. (e.g., 32.16))
New share price
$
b.
RRC has a 15 percent stock dividend? (Round your answer to 2 decimal places. (e.g., 32.16))
New share price
$
c.
RRC has a 54.5 percent stock dividend? (Round your answer to 2 decimal places. (e.g., 32.16))
New share price
$
d.
RRC has a two-for-seven reverse stock split? (Round your answer to 2 decimal places. (e.g., 32.16))
New share price
$
Determine the new number of shares outstanding in parts (a) through (d).
a.
New shares outstanding
b.
New shares o.
Problem 1Problem 1 - Constant-Growth Common StockWhat is the value.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1Problem 1 - Constant-Growth Common StockWhat is the value of a common stock if the firm's earnings and dividends are growing annually at 10%, the current dividend is $1.32,and investors require a 15% return on investment?What is the stock's rate of return if the market price of the stock is $35?
Problem 2Problem 2 - Preferred Stock Price and ReturnA firm has preferred stock outstanding with a $1,000 par value and a $40 annual dividend with no maturity. If the required rate of return is 9%, what is the price of the preferred stock?The market price of a firm's preferred stock is $24 and pays an annual dividend of $2.50. If the stock's par value is $1,000 and it has no maturity, what is the return on the preferred stock?
Problem 3Problem 3 - Bond Valuation and YieldA bond has a par value of $1,000, pays $50 semiannually and has a maturity of 10 years.If the bond earns 12% per year, what is the price of the bond?RateNperPMTFVTypePVWhat is the yield to maturity for the bond?NperPMTPVFVTypeRateWhat would be the bond's price if the rate earned declined to 8% per year?RateNperPMTFVTypePVIf the maturity period is reduced to 5 years and the required rate of return is 8%, what would be the price of the bond?RateNperPMTFVTypePVWhat is the yield to maturity for the bond when the maturity is 5 years and the required rate of return is 8%?NperPMTPVFVTypeRateWhat generalizations about bond prices, interest rates and maturity periods can be made based on the calculations made above?
Problem 4Problem 4 - Callable BondsThe following bonds have a par value of $1,000 and the required rate of return is 10%.Bond XY: 5¼ percent coupon, with interest paid annually for 20 yearsBond AB: 14 percent coupon, with interest paid annually for 20 yearsWhat is each bond's current market price?Bond XYBond ABRateNperPMTFVTypePVIf current interest rates are 9%, which bond would you expect to be called? Explain.
Exercise 10-5
During the month of March, Olinger Company’s employees earned wages of $69,500. Withholdings related to these wages were $5,317 for Social Security (FICA), $8,145 for federal income tax, $3,366 for state income tax, and $434 for union dues. The company incurred no cost related to these earnings for federal unemployment tax but incurred $760 for state unemployment tax.
Prepare the necessary March 31 journal entry to record salaries and wages expense and salaries and wages payable. Assume that wages earned during March will be paid during April. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
Mar. 31
SHOW LIST OF ACCOUNTS
LINK TO TEXT
Prepare the entry to record the company’s payroll tax expense. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
Mar. 31
===========================================
E.
Problem 1Prescott, Inc., manufactures bookcases and uses an activi.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1Prescott, Inc., manufactures bookcases and uses an activity-based costing system. Prescott's activity areas and related data follows:ActivityBudgeted Cost
of ActivityAllocation BaseCost Allocation
RateMaterials handling$230,000Number of parts$0.50Assembly3,200,000Direct labor hours16.00Finishing180,000Number of finished
units4.50Prescott produced two styles of bookcases in October: the standard bookcase and an unfinished bookcase, which has fewer parts and requires no finishing. The totals for quantities, direct
materials costs, and other data follow:ProductTotal Units
ProducedTotal Direct
Materials CostsTotal Direct
Labor CostsTotal Number
of PartsTotal Assembling
Direct Labor HoursStandard bookcase3,000$36,000$45,0009,0004,500Unfinished bookcase3,50035,00035,0007,0003,500Requirements:1. Compute the manufacturing product cost per unit of each type of bookcase.2. Suppose that pre-manufacturing activities, such as product design, were assigned to the standard bookcases at $7 each, and to the unfinished bookcases at $2 each. Similar analyses
were conducted of post-manufacturing activities such as distribution, marketing, and customer service. The post-manufacturing costs were $22 per standard bookcase and $14 per
unfinished bookcase. Compute the full product costs per unit.3. Which product costs are reported in the external financial statements? Which costs are used for management decision making? Explain the difference.4. What price should Prescott's managers set for unfinished bookcases to earn $15 per bookcase?
Problem 2Corbertt Pharmaceuticals manufactures an over-the-counter allergy medication. The company sells both large commercial containers of 1,000 capsules to health-care facilities
and travel packs of 20 capsules to shops in airports, train stations, and hotels. The following information has been developed to determine if an activity-based costing system
would be beneficial:ActivityEstimated Indirect Activity
CostsAllocation BaseEstimated Quantity of
Allocation BaseMaterials handling$95,000Kilos19,000 kilosPackaging219,000Machine hours5,475 hoursQuality assurance124,500Samples2,075 samplesTotal indirect costs$438,500Other production information includes the following:Commercial ContainersTravel PacksUnits produced3,500 containers57,000 packsWeight in kilos14,0005,700Machine hours2,625570Number of samples700855Requirements:1. Compute the cost allocation rate for each activity.2. Use the activity-based cost allocation rates to compute the activity costs per unit of the commercial containers and the travel packs. (Hint: First compute the total activity
cost allocated to each product line, and then compute the cost per unit.)3. Corbertt's original single-allocation-base costing system allocated indirect costs to produce at $157 per machine hour. Compute the total indirect costs allocated to the
commercial containers and to the travel packs under the original system. Then compute the indirect cost per unit for ea.
Problem 1Preston Recliners manufactures leather recliners and uses.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1Preston Recliners manufactures leather recliners and uses flexible budgeting and a standard cost system. Preston allocates overhead based on yards of direct materials. The company's performance report includes the following selected data:Static Budget
(1,000 recliners)Actual Results
(980 recliners)Sales (1,000 recliners X $495)$495,000 (980 recliners X $475)$465,500Variable manufacturing costs: Direct materials (6,000 yds @ $8.80/yard)52,800 (6,150 yds @ $8.60/yard)52,890 Direct labor (10,000 hrs @ $9.20/hour)92,000 (9,600 hrs @ $9.30/hour)89,280Variable overhead (6,000 yds @ $5.00/yard)30,000 (6,510 yds @ $6.40/yard)39,360Fixed manufacturing costs: Fixed overhead60,00062,000Total cost of goods sold$234,800$243,530Gross profit$260,200$221,970Requirements:1. Prepare a flexible budget based on the actual number of recliners sold.2. Compute the price variance and the efficiency variance for direct materials and for direct labor. For manufacturing overhead, compute the variable overhead spending, variable overhead efficiency, fixed overhead spending, and fixed overhead volume variances.3. Have Preston's managers done a good job or a poor job controlling materials, labor, and overhead costs? Why?4. Describe how Preston's managers can benefit from the standard costing system.
Problem 2AllTalk Technologies manufactures capacitors for cellular base stations and other communications applications. The company's January 2012 flexible budget income statement shows output levels of 6,500, 8,000, and 10,000 units. The static budget was based on expected sales of 8,000 units.ALLTALK TECHNOLOGIES
Flexible Budget Income Statement
Month Ended January 31, 2012Per UnitBy Units (Capacitors)6,5008,00010,000Sales revenue$24$156,000$192,000$240,000Variable expenses$1065,00080,000100,000Contribution margin$91,000$112,000$140,000Fixed expenses53,00053,00053,000Operating income$38,000$59,000$87,000The company sold 10,000 units during January, and its actual operating income was as follows:ALLTALK TECHNOLOGIES
Income Statement
Month Ended January 31, 2012Sales revenue$246,000Variable expenses104,500Contribution margin$141,500Fixed expenses54,000Operating income$87,500Requirements:1. Prepare an income statement performance report for January.2. What was the effect on AllTalk's operating income of selling 2,000 units more than the static budget level of sales?3. What is AllTalk's static budget variance? Explain why the income statement performance report provides more useful information to AllTalk's managers than the simple static budget variance. What insights can AllTalk's managers draw from this performance report?
Problem 3Java manufacturers coffee mugs that it sells to other companies for customizing with their own logos. Java prepares flexible budgets and uses a standard cost system to control manufacturing costs. The standard unit.
Problem 1Pro Forma Income Statement and Balance SheetBelow is the .docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1Pro Forma Income Statement and Balance SheetBelow is the income statement and balance sheet for Blue Bill Corporation for 2013. Based on the historical statements and theadditional information provided, construct the firm's pro forma income statement and balance sheet for 2014.Blue Bill CorporationIncome StatementFor the year ended 2013Projected201220132014Revenue$60,000$63,000Cost of goods sold42,00044,100Gross margin18,00018,900SG&A expense6,0006,300Depreciation expense1,8002,000Earnings Before Interest and Taxes (EBIT)10,20010,600Interest expense1,5001,800Taxable income8,7008,800Income Tax Expense3,0453,080Net income5,6555,720Dividends750800To retained earnings$4,905$4,920Additional income statement information:Sales will increase by 5% in 2014 from 2013 levels.COGS and SG&A will be the average percent of sales for the last 2 years.Depreciation expense will increase to $2,200.Interest expense will be $1,900.The tax rate is 35%.Dividend payout will increase to $850.Blue Bill CorporationBalance SheetDecember 31, 2013Projected20132014Current assetsCash$8,000Accounts receivable3,150Inventory9,450Total current assets20,600Property, plant, and equipment (PP&E)28,500Accumulated depreciation16,400Net PP&E12,100Total assets$32,700Current liabilitesAccounts payable$3,780Bank loan (10%)3,200Other current liabilities1,250Total current liabilities8,230Long-term debt (12%)4,800Common stock1,250Retained earnings18,420Total liabilities and equity$32,700Additional balance sheet information:The minimum cash balance is 12% of sales.Working capital accounts (accounts receivable, accounts payable, and inventory) will be the same percent of sales in 2014 as they were in 2013.$8,350 of new PP&E will be purchased in 2014.Other current liabilities will be 3% of sales in 2014.There will be no changes in the common stock or long-term debt accounts.The plug figure (the last number entered that makes the balance sheet balance) is bank loan.
1
Rough Draft
Rough Draft
Rasmussen College
Metro Dental Care is a dental office that provides affordable, convenient, and high quality of care to patients. As a patient at Metro, I personally believe that Metro Dental Care is one of the best dental clinics around, and that’s why I have chosen this company. Metro Dental Care measures their results by recording patient satisfaction.
Managing financial reports, and the quality of service they provide to their customers. Furthermore, the dentists and staff at Metro Dental Care know how important your smile is. Their mission statement states “We pride ourselves in making your smile look great so you not only look good, but feel confident with your smile.”
Metro Dental Care offers convenience for their patients with more than 40 offices throughout the Minneapolis and St. Paul metro area offering flexible hours including early morning, evening and Saturday appointments. Whether you work or live Metro Dental Care has a location near you. Metro Dental .
Problem 2-1PROBLEM 2-1Solution Legend= Value given in problemGiven.docxChantellPantoja184
This document provides a solution to Problem 2-1. It begins by listing the values given in the problem statement. The document then likely shows the step-by-step work and calculations to arrive at the solution for Problem 2-1, ending with the final answer.
PROBLEM 14-6AProblem 14-6A Norwoods Borrowings1. Total amount of .docxChantellPantoja184
PROBLEM 14-6AProblem 14-6A: Norwoods Borrowings1. Total amount of each installment payment.Present value of an ordinary annuity$200,000Interest per period(i)0.08Number of periods(n)5Total amount of each installment payment($50,091.29)Therefore the total amount of each installment payment is $ 50,091.292.Norwoods Amortization TablePeriod Ending DateBeginning balance Interest expenseNotes PayableCash paymentEnding Balance10/31/15$200,000.00$16,000.00$34,091.29$50,091.29$165,908.7110/31/16$165,909.00$13,272.72$36,818.57$50,091.29$129,090.4310/31/17$129,090.43$10,327.23$39,764.06$50,091.29$89,326.3710/31/18$89,326.37$7,146.11$42,945.18$50,091.29$46,381.1910/31/19$46,381.19$3,710.50$46,380.79$50,091.29$0.403.a) Accrued interest as December 31st 2015Accrued interest expense = $200,000*8%*2/12= $2,666.67. Thus the journal entry is as shown below:DescriptionDr($)Cr($)interest expense $2,666.67 Interest payable $2,666.67b) The first annual payment on the note.Ten more months of interest has accrued $200,000*8%*10/12 =$13,333.33 accrued interest .Therefore the journal entry is as shown below:DescriptionDr($)Cr($)Notes payable$34,091.29interest expense$13,333.33interest payable$2,666.67 Cash$50,091.29
PROBLEM 14-7AProblem 14-7AQuestion 1a) Debt to equity ratiosPulaski CompanyScott Company Total liabilities$360,000.00$240,000.00Total Equity$500,000.00$200,000.00Debt-Equity Ratio0.721.2Question 2The debt to equity ratio measures the amount of debt a company uses has to finance its business for every dollar of equity it has. A higher debt to equity ratio implies that a company uses more debt than equity for financing. In this case, the debt to equity ratio for Pulaski Company is 0.72 which is less than 1 implying that the stockholder's equity exceeds the amount of debt borrowed. Thus Pulaski Company may not likely suffer from risks brought about by huge amount of debts in the capital structure. On the other hand, the debt to equity ratio of Scott Company is 1.2 which is greater than 1 implying that the debt exceeds the totalamount stockholders equity. Huge debts is associated with a lot of risks. First, there is the risk of defaulting whereby the company may be unable to repay its debt and therefore leading to bankruptcy. Second, a company may find it difficult to obtain additional funding from creditors.This is because the creditors prefer companies with low debt to equity ratio. Finally, there is the risks of violating the debt covenants. A covenant is an agreement that requires a company to maintain adequate financial ratio levels. Too much borrowings may violate this covenant. Since ScottCompany has a higher debt to equity ratio, it may experience these risks which may eventually lead to the company being declared bankrupt .
PROBLEM 14-6BProblem 14-6B: Gordon Enterprises Borrowings1. Total amount of each installment payment.Present value of an ordi.
Problem 13-3AThe stockholders’ equity accounts of Ashley Corpo.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 13-3A
The stockholders’ equity accounts of Ashley Corporation on January 1, 2012, were as follows.
Preferred Stock (8%, $49 par, cumulative, 10,200 shares authorized)
$ 387,100
Common Stock ($1 stated value, 1,937,100 shares authorized)
1,408,700
Paid-in Capital in Excess of Par—Preferred Stock
123,200
Paid-in Capital in Excess of Stated Value—Common Stock
1,496,800
Retained Earnings
1,814,400
Treasury Stock (10,300 common shares)
51,500
During 2012, the corporation had the following transactions and events pertaining to its stockholders’ equity.
Feb. 1
Issued 24,100 shares of common stock for $123,900.
Apr. 14
Sold 6,000 shares of treasury stock—common for $33,800.
Sept. 3
Issued 5,100 shares of common stock for a patent valued at $35,700.
Nov. 10
Purchased 1,100 shares of common stock for the treasury at a cost of $5,700.
Dec. 31
Determined that net income for the year was $456,600.
No dividends were declared during the year.
(a)
Journalize the transactions and the closing entry for net income. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
Feb. 1
Apr. 14
Sept. 3
Nov. 10
Dec. 31
Click if you would like to Show Work for this question:
Open Show Work
LINK TO TEXT
LINK TO TEXT
LINK TO TEXT
LINK TO TEXT
LINK TO TEXT
.
Problem 12-9AYour answer is partially correct. Try again..docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 12-9A
Your answer is partially correct. Try again.
Condensed financial data of Odgers Inc. follow.
ODGERS INC.Comparative Balance Sheets
December 31
Assets
2014
2013
Cash
$ 131,704
$ 78,892
Accounts receivable
143,114
61,940
Inventory
183,375
167,646
Prepaid expenses
46,292
42,380
Long-term investments
224,940
177,670
Plant assets
464,550
395,275
Accumulated depreciation
(81,500
)
(84,760
)
Total
$1,112,475
$839,043
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity
Accounts payable
$ 166,260
$ 109,699
Accrued expenses payable
26,895
34,230
Bonds payable
179,300
237,980
Common stock
358,600
285,250
Retained earnings
381,420
171,884
Total
$1,112,475
$839,043
ODGERS INC.Income Statement Data
For the Year Ended December 31, 2014
Sales revenue
$633,190
Less:
Cost of goods sold
$220,800
Operating expenses, excluding depreciation
20,228
Depreciation expense
75,795
Income tax expense
44,466
Interest expense
7,710
Loss on disposal of plant assets
12,225
381,224
Net income
$ 251,966
Additional information:
1.
New plant assets costing $163,000 were purchased for cash during the year.
2.
Old plant assets having an original cost of $93,725 and accumulated depreciation of $79,055 were sold for $2,445 cash.
3.
Bonds payable matured and were paid off at face value for cash.
4.
A cash dividend of $42,430 was declared and paid during the year.
Prepare a statement of cash flows using the indirect method. (Show amounts that decrease cash flow with either a - sign e.g. -15,000 or in parenthesis e.g. (15,000).)
ODGERS INC.Statement of Cash Flows
For the Year Ended December 31, 2014
$
Adjustments to reconcile net income to
$
$
Problem 12-10A
Condensed financial data of Odgers Inc. follow.
ODGERS INC.Comparative Balance Sheets
December 31
Assets
2014
2013
Cash
$ 151,904
$ 90,992
Accounts receivable
165,064
71,440
Inventory
211,500
193,358
Prepaid expenses
53,392
48,880
Long-term investments
259,440
204,920
Plant assets
535,800
455,900
Accumulated depreciation
(94,000
)
(97,760
)
Total
$1,283,100
$967,730
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity
Accounts payable
$ 191,760
$ 126,524
Accrued expenses payable
31,020
39,480
Bonds payable
206,800
274,480
Common stock
413,600
329,000
Retained earnings
439,920
198,246
Total
$1,283,100
$967,730
ODGERS INC.Income Statement Data
For the Year Ended December 31, 2014
Sales revenue
$730,305
Less:
Cost of goods sold
$254,665
Operating expenses, excluding depreciation
23,331
Depreciation expense
87,420
Income taxes
51,286
Interest expense
8,892
Loss on disposal of plant assets
14,100
439,694
Net income
$ 290,611
Additional information:
1.
New plant assets costing $188,000 were purchased for c.
Problem 1123456Xf122437455763715813910106Name DateTopic.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1123456Xf122437455763715813910106
Name: Date:
Topic One: Mean, Variance, and Standard Deviation
Please type your answer in the cell beside the question.
5. The following is the heart rate for 10 randomly selected patients on the unit. Find the mean, variance, and standard deviation of the data using the descriptive statistics option in the data analysis toolpak.
75, 80, 62, 97, 107, 59, 76, 83, 84, 69
6. The following is a frequency distribution fo the number of times patience use the call light in a days time. X is the number of times the call light is used and f is the frequency (meaning the number of patients). Create a histogram of the data.
Sheet2
Sheet3
EXERCISE 11 USING STATISTICS TO DESCRIBE A STUDY SAMPLE
STATISTICAL TECHNIQUE IN REVIEW
Most studies describe the subjects that comprise the study sample. This description of the sample is called the sample characteristics which may be presented in a table or the narrative of the article. The sample characteristics are often presented for each of the groups in a study (i.e. experimental and control groups). Descriptive statistics are used to generate sample characteristics, and the type of statistic used depends on the level of measurement of the demographic variables included in a study (Burns & Grove, 2007). For example, measuring gender produces nominal level data that can be described using frequencies, percentages, and mode. Measuring educational level usually produces ordinal data that can be described using frequencies, percentages, mode, median, and range. Obtaining each subject's specific age is an example of ratio data that can be described using mean, range, and standard deviation. Interval and ratio data are analyzed with the same type of statistics and are usually referred to as interval/ratio level data in this text.
RESEARCH ARTICLE
Source: Troy, N. W., & Dalgas-Pelish, P. (2003). The effectiveness of a self-care intervention for the management of postpartum fatigue. Applied Nursing Research, 16 (1), 38–45.
Introduction
Troy and Dalgas-Pelish (2003) conducted a quasi-experimental study to determine the effectiveness of a self-care intervention (Tiredness Management Guide [TMG]) on postpartum fatigue. The study subjects included 68 primiparous mothers, who were randomly assigned to either the experimental group (32 subjects) or the control group (36 subjects) using a computer program. The results of the study indicated that the TMG was effective in reducing levels of morning postpartum fatigue from the 2nd to 4th weeks postpartum. These researchers recommend that “mothers need to be informed that they will probably experience postpartum fatigue and be taught to assess and manage this phenomenon” (Troy & Dalgas-Pelish, 2003, pp. 44-5).
Relevant Study Results
“A total of 80 women were initially enrolled [in the study] … twelve of these women dropped out of the study resulting in a final sample of 68.” (Troy & Dalgas-Pelish, 2003, p. 39). The researchers presen.
Problem 1. For the truss and loading shown below, calculate th.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1. For the truss and loading shown below, calculate the horizontal
displacement of point "D" using the method of virtual work. Show ALL your work!
HW No. 8 - Part 1
Solution
HW FA15 2 Page 1
Problem 1 Continued
Member L (in.) N (lb) N (in) NnL
HW No. 8 - Part 1
.
Problem 1 (30 marks)Review enough information about .docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1 (30 marks)
Review enough information about Trinidad Drilling Ltd. to propose a vision and strategic objectives for the company. Develop a balanced scorecard that will help the company achieve this vision and monitor how well it is accomplishing its strategic objectives. Include a strategy map in table format that shows objectives and performance measures, with arrows illustrating hypothesized cause-and -effect relationships. Provide rationale for your strategy map. The body of your report should not exceed 1,000 words. Cite material you used to prepare the response and provide references in an appendix.
Problem 2 (20 marks)
Ajax Auto Upholstery Ltd. manufactures upholstered products for automobiles, vans, and trucks. Among the various Ajax plants around Canada is the Owlseye plant located in rural Alberta.
The chief financial officer has just received a report indicating that Ajax could purchase the entire annual output of the Owlseye plant from a foreign supplier for $37 million per year.
The budgeted operating costs (in thousands) for the Owlseye plant’s for the coming year is as follows:
Materials $15,000
Labor
Direct $12,000
Supervision 4,000
Indirect plant 5,000 19,000
Overhead
Depreciation – plant 6,000
Utilities, property tax, maintenance 2,000
Pension expense 4,500
Plant manager and staff 2,500
Corporate headquarters overhead allocation 3,000 18,000
Total budgeted costs $52,000
If material purchase orders are cancelled as a consequence of the plant closing, termination charges would amount to 10 percent of the annual cost of direct materials in the first year (zero thereafter).
A clause in the Ajax union contract requires the company to provide employment assistance to its former employees for 12 months after a plant closes. The estimated cost to administer this service if the Owlseye plant closes would be $2 million. $3.6 million of next year’s pension expense would continue indefinitely whether or not the plant remains open. About $900,000 of labour would still be required in the first year after closure to decommission the plant. After that, the plant would be sold for an estimated $1 million. Utilities, property taxes, and maintenance costs would remain unchanged in the first year after closure, but disappear when the plant is sold.
The plant manager and her staff would be somewhat affected by the closing of the Owlseye plant. Some managers would still be responsible for managing three other plants. As a result, total management salaries would be about 50% of the current level, starting at closure and remaining into the future.
Required:
Assume you are the company’s chief financial officer. Perform a five-year financial analysis and make a recommendation whether to close the Owlseye plant on this basis. Provide support for and cautions about your recommendation with organized, clearly-labeled data. Use bullet points where appropriate.
Problem 3 (16 marks)
Br.
Problem 1 (10 points) Note that an eigenvector cannot be zero.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1 (10 points): Note that an eigenvector cannot be zero, but an eigenvalue can
be 0. Suppose that 0 is an eigenvalue of A. What does it say about A? (Hint: One of the
most important properties of a matrix is whether or not it is invertible. Think about the
Invertible Matrix Theorem and all the ‘good things’ of dealing with invertible matrices)
Problem 5: (20 points): The figure below shows a network of one-way streets with
traffic flowing in the directions indicated. The flow rate along the streets are measured
as the average number of vehicles per hour.
a) Set up a mathematical model whose solution provides the unknown flow rates
b) Solve the model for the unknown flow rates
c) If the flow rates along the road A to B must be reduced for construction, what is
the minimum flow that is required to keep traffic flowing on all roads?
Problem 6 (20 points): Problem 7 (9 points): Prove that if A and B are matrices of the same
size, then tr(A+B)=tr(A)+tr(B)
Given:
Goal:
Proof:
Problem 7 (20 points)*: In the 1990, the northern spotted owl became the center of a
nationwide controversy over the use and misuse of the majestic forests in the Pacific
Northwest. Environmentalists convinced the federal government that the owl was
threatened with extinction if logging continued in the old-growth forests (with trees over
200 years old), where the owls prefer to live. The timber industry, anticipating the loss of
30,000 to 100,000 jobs as a result of new government restrictions on logging, argued that
the owl should not be classified as a “threatened species” and cited a number of published
scientific reports to support its case.
Caught in the crossfire of the two lobbying groups, mathematical ecologists
intensified their drive to understand the population dynamics of the spotted owl. The life
cycle of a spotted owl divides naturally into three stages: juvenile (up to 1 year old),
subadult (1 to 2 years), and adult (over 2 years). The owls mate for life during the subadult
and adult stages, begin to breed as adults, and live for up to 20 years. Each owl pair
requires about 1,000 hectares (4 square miles) for its own home territory. A critical time in
the life cycle is when the juveniles leave the nest. To survive and become a subadult, a
juvenile must successfully find a new home range (and usually a mate).
A first step in studying the population dynamics is to model the population at yearly
intervals, at times denoted by 𝑘𝑘 = 0,1,2, …. Usually, one assumes that there is a 1:1 ratio of
males to females in each life stage and counts only the females. The population at year 𝑘𝑘
can be described by a vector 𝒙𝒙𝒌𝒌 = (𝑗𝑗𝑘𝑘 , 𝑠𝑠𝑘𝑘 , 𝑎𝑎𝑘𝑘 ), where 𝑗𝑗𝑘𝑘 , 𝑠𝑠𝑘𝑘 , and 𝑎𝑎𝑘𝑘 are the numbers of
females in the juvenile, subadult, and adult stages, respectively. Using actual field data from
demographic studies, a rese
Probation and Parole 3Running head Probation and Parole.docxChantellPantoja184
Probation and Parole 3
Running head: Probation and Parole
Probation and Parole
Student Name
Allied American University
Author Note
This paper was prepared for Probation and Parole, Module 8 Check Your Understanding taught by [INSERT INSTRUCTOR’S NAME].
Directions: Respond to the following questions using complete sentences. Your answer should be at least 1 paragraph in length, which must be composed of three to five sentences.
1. What is meant by intermediate punishments and what programs are included in this category?
2. How do intermediate punishments serve to keep down prison populations?
3. Why has electronic monitoring proven so popular?
4. What is meant by shock probation/parole?
5. What are the essential features of the boot camp program?
6. Why has intensive supervision been a public relations success?
7. What are the criticisms of boot camp programs?
8. What has research revealed with respect to intensive supervision?
9. What are the criticisms of electronic monitoring in probation and parole?
10. What are the criticisms leveled at intensive supervision?
11. What are the purposes of and services offered by a day reporting center?
12. Why would heroin addicts who have no intention of giving up drug use voluntarily enter a drug treatment program? What are the advantages of using methadone to treat heroin addicts?
13. Why is behavior modification difficult to use in treating drug abusers?
14. What are the characteristics of chemical dependency (CD) programs?
15. What are the primary characteristics of the therapeutic community (TC) approach for treating drug abusers?
16. What are criticisms of the Alcoholics Anonymous approach?
17. What are the problems inherent in drug testing?
18. What are the typical characteristics of sex offenders? How have sex offender laws affected P/P supervision?
19. What are the pros and cons of restitution and charging offenders fees in probation or parole?
20. What are the problems encountered in using the interstate compact?
.
Problem 1(a) Complete the following ANOVA table based on 20 obs.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1:
(a) Complete the following ANOVA table based on 20 observations for the regression equation
(a) Is the overall regression significant? Fill in the missing values in the table.
Source DF SS MS F
Regression ___ 350 ____ ____
Error ___ _____
Total 500
(b) Suppose that you have computed the following sequential sums of squares due to regression:
Regressor Variables in Model SS Regression
………………………………………. 300
……………………………………… 250
…………………………………….. 340
……………………………………. 325
Fill in the missing values in the following “computer output”:
Source DF Partial SS F-value Pr>F
……………………………………………………………………………………….. 0.1245
………………………………………………………………………………………. 0.3841
………………………………………………………………………………………. 0.0042
………………………………………………………………………………………. 0.0401
Problem 2:
The time required for a merchandise to stock a grocery store shelf with a soft drink product as well as the number of cases of product stocked are given below. Consider a linear regression of delivery time against number of cases.
X=number of cases
Y=delivery time
Delivery time number of cases Hat diagonals
1.41 4 0.5077
2.96 6 0.3907
6.04 14 0.2013
7.57 19 0.3092
9.38 24 0.5912
Observations used L.S. Model
4,6,14,19,24
6,14,19,24
4,14,19,24
4,14,19,24
4,6,14,24
4,6,14,19
(a)
Calculate the PRESS statistic for the model .
(b) Calculate the regular residual for the model above. Then, compare these residuals with the PRESS residuals for this model.
Exercises from the Text
Use SAS whenever possible to do these exercises:
# 3.4 on p 122
# 3.5
# 3.8
# 3.15
# 3.21
# 3.27
# 3.28
# 3.31
# 3.38
# 3.39
Example with SAS on Sequential and Partial Sum of Squares
Data Weather;
Title 'Lows and Highs from N&O Jan 28,29,30 1992';
Title2 'using actual numbers (yesterday values)';
input city $ hi2 lo2 yhi ylo thi tlo;
* Mon Tues Wed ;
cards;
seattle 51 44 52 44 59 47
.
.
.
;
proc reg; model thi = yhi hi2 tlo ylo lo2/ss1 ss2;
test tlo=0, ylo=0, lo2=0;
/*-----------------------------------------------
| Showing sequential and partial sums of squares|
| Note t**2 = F relationship for partial F. By |
| hand, construct F to leave out .
Probe 140 SPrecipitation in inchesTemperature in F.docxChantellPantoja184
Probe 1
40 S
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 26.8
Precip 27.1
MAT(F) 59.8
Probe 2
6 S
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 69.2
Precip 124.6
MAT(F) 77.9
Probe 3
57 S
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 21.5
Precip 38.7
MAT(F) 43.5
Probe 4
38 N
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 30.3
Precip 16.5
MAT(F) 53.6
Probe 5
55 N
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 21.3
Precip 28.1
MAT(F) 40.6
Probe 6
43 N
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 25.4
Precip 14.4
MAT(F) 47.2
Probe 7
42 N
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 17.3
Precip 31.2
MAT(F) 26.0
Probe 8
42 N
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 29.6
Precip 38.8
MAT(F) 51.6
Probe 9
18 S
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 66.1
Precip 74.8
MAT(F) 77.7
Probe 10
58 N
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 16.5
Precip 24.8
MAT(F) 36.9
Probe 11
26 N
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 47.6
Precip 3.8
MAT(F) 70.1
Probe 12
29 N
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 44.0
Precip 47.3
MAT(F) 63.2
Probe 4
Probe 2
Probe 10
Probe 5
Probe 6
Probe 7
Probe 11
Probe 12
Probe 8
Probe 9
Probe 3
Probe 1
Map 1
20 N
40 N
60 N
80 N
0
20 S
40 S
60 S
0
1000
miles
Geography 204
Koppen Climate Classification Guidelines
If POTET exceeds Precip then B
BW = POTET more than 2x Precip
(desert)
h = mean annual temp > 18 C (64.4 F)
k = mean annual temp < 18 C (64.4 F)
BS = POTET less than 2x Precip
(steppe)
h = mean annual t.
Problem #1 JET Copies Case ProblemRead the JET Copies C.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem #1:
JET Copies Case Problem
Read the "JET Copies" Case Problem on pages 678-679 of the text. Using simulation estimate the loss of revenue due to copier breakdown for one year, as follows:
1. In Excel, use a suitable method for generating the number of days needed to repair the copier, when it is out of service, according to the discrete distribution shown.
2. In Excel, use a suitable method for simulating the interval between successive breakdowns, according to the continuous distribution shown.
3. In Excel, use a suitable method for simulating the lost revenue for each day the copier is out of service.
4. Put all of this together to simulate the lost revenue due to copier breakdowns over 1 year to answer the question asked in the case study.
5. In a word processing program, write a brief description/explanation of how you implemented each component of the model. Write 1-2 paragraphs for each component of the model (days-to-repair; interval between breakdowns; lost revenue; putting it together).
6. Answer the question posed in the case study. How confident are you that this answer is a good one? What are the limits of the study? Write at least one paragraph.
There are two deliverables for this Case Problem, the Excel spreadsheet and the written description/explanation.
Outcome Assessed:
· Create statistical analysis of simulation results.
· Communicate issues in management science
Grading Rubric for JET Copies Case Problem
There are 12 possible points in each of the five criteria for a total of 60 points possible.
Criteria
0Unacceptable(0 points)
1Developing(6 points)
2Competent(9 points)
3Exemplary(12 points)
1. Model number of days to repair
Did not submit or did not model this component in an appropriate manner
This component was modeled, but the method and/or implementation had mistakes that affected the validity of the model
Used a method that is recognizably appropriate, but the implementation had minor mistakes
Used an appropriate method and correctly implemented it
2. Model number of weeks between breakdowns
Did not submit or did not model this component in an appropriate manner
This component was modeled, but the method and/or implementation had mistakes that affected the validity of the model
Used a method that is recognizably appropriate, but the implementation had minor mistakes
Used an appropriate method and correctly implemented it
3. Model lost revenue due to breakdowns
Did not submit or did not model this component in an appropriate manner
This component was modeled, but the method and/or implementation had mistakes that affected the validity of the model
Used a method that is recognizably appropriate, but the implementation had minor mistakes
Used an appropriate method and correctly implemented it
4. Provide written description and explanation of the simulation
Did not submit or described insufficiently. Omitted key points.
Provided partially developed written description that matches the method 70 - 79% accur.
PROBLEM 1 Lovin’ the Fast Food The following article was writt.docxChantellPantoja184
PROBLEM 1: Lovin’ the Fast Food
The following article was written for an ag-econ journal several years ago. The demand function is written in table format on the next page. This page has the averages for the different variables and the second page has the regression output.
1. Calculate the fast food price elasticity for fast food for 1982 and 1992. What does it mean? How could Chic-Fil-A use this information? Is it changing?
PEoD = (% Change in Quantity Demanded)/(% Change in Price)
2. Calculate the grocery cross-price elasticity for fast food for 1982 and 1992. What does it mean? How could Chic-Fil-A use this information? Calculate the ‘inexpensive’ and ‘expensive’ restaurant price cross-price elasticity. What do these mean and how useful is this information?
3. Calculate the income elasticity of fast food in 1982 and 1992. Again, explain the trend and meaning.
4. Identify at least four ‘take-aways’ from this demand function. Identify the relationship that is shown (or not shown), what information can be drawn from the information and how a fast-food restaurant can use this. Only one of your ‘take-aways’ here can relate specifically to cross-price elasticities.
Problem 2 Jones Has A Student . . .
Several years ago I had a student who approached me about leaving school. This student had, what he thought, was an amazing idea. Doug’s idea (I’ve changed the name to protect the innocent) was this: move to a medium sized city (Charleston, SC) and open up a jewelry business. His reasoning was that when jewelers resize gold rings (wedding bands), they get to keep the little pieces of scrap gold. As gold was approaching record prices, Doug would make a ton of profit.
a. Draw a graph/figure of the type of market Doug is entering—assume that he makes profits out of the gate.
b. Explain how the market moves given that Doug makes a profit. That is, tell me what is likely to happen. Show a graph (or graphs) that explain this phenomena.
c. How is it possible that firms can operate with zero economic profit? Tell me a story why it must be that the last firm entering the market experiences zero economic profit (i.e. What if the last firm in the market experienced positive economic profit? Is there anything wrong with that?)
Problem 3 Economics is a Curious Thing
Please choose three of the following economic phenomena and give me your reasons why we see these events occur in the market. The more you think like an economist the more you see economics in the market. (Don’t waltz through these as they are all examples of economics.)
a. Why do brides buy their wedding dresses for thousands of dollars while bride-grooms (yes, I’m from Middle-England) rent their tuxedos for a hundred dollars?
b. Why is the internet free at Motel 6 but costs $9.99 per day at the Ritz?
c. Why do ATM machines in the drive-through have brail number pads?
d. Why do airlines give frequent flyers two free checked bags but charge for checked bags for non-frequent flyer.
Problem 1 (ch 23)Victoria Falls Flour Mill Company started many ye.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1 (ch 23)Victoria Falls Flour Mill Company started many years ago producing a single product. It has grown to produce many diverse consumer products ranging from foods to paper goods. Currently, the corporation is barely making a profit, and the price of its stock has languished. Division managers have traditionally been incentivized with stock options and awards. However, management is evaluating a new bonus plan based on segment profits within each division. Below are 20X4 facts about the Sugar Products Division, which generates 10% of overall corporate revenue. The Sugar Products Division has two key products - raw sugar and candy.Total sales of raw sugar and candy$ 45,750,000Traceable, controllable, sugar division fixed costs10,250,000Traceable, uncontrollable, sugar division fixed costs3,600,000Non-traceable, controllable, sugar division fixed costs1,500,000Non-traceable, uncontrollable, sugar division fixed costs1,750,000Variable selling, general, & administrative costs9,050,000Variable product costs21,700,000General corporate expenses for all divisions8,000,000Prepare a contribution income statement for the aggregated Sugar Division (one column). If the division manager is to be evaluated on controllable contribution margin, would the Sugar Division manager appear to be entitled to a bonus?
&L&"Arial,Bold"&20 &R&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&20B-23.05
B-23.05
Worksheet 1 (ch 23)20X4 Divisional Report for Sugar ProductsContribution Income StatementSales$ 45,750,000Less:
&L&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&12Name:
Date: Section: &R&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&20B-23.05
B-23.05
Problem 2 (ch 23)Downhill Manufacturing produces snow skis in a two-step production process - cutting and laminating. The manufacturing center is supported by two service centers - a health clinic and a janitorial service. The following table reveals certain facts about each activity:Health clinicJanitorial serviceCutting departmentLaminating departmentEmployees241015Square footage1,20060012,0008,000Cost incurred$ 180,000$ 125,000$ 700,000$ 800,000(a)Using the direct method, allocate the service department costs to production. The clinic costs are to be allocated based on employees, and the janitorial costs are to be allocated based on the square footage.(b)Using the step method, allocate the service department costs to production. The clinic costs are to be allocated based on employees, and the janitorial costs are to be allocated based on the square footage. The first step will be to allocate clinic costs. The clinic employees maintain their space and do not rely upon the janitorial service. However, janitorial employees occasionally sustain an injury and utilize the clinic.
B-23.08
Worksheet 2 (ch 23)(a)Health clinicJanitorial serviceCutting departmentLaminating departmentCost incurred$ 180,000$ 125,000$ 700,000$ 800,000Clinic allocation----Janitorial allocation----Total cost$ -$ -$ -$ -Clinic allocations:Jani.
/***********************************************************
Program Name: Simple Math Calculator
Program Author: Kyle NoCompile
Date Created: 9/28/14
Program Description:
This program performs simple arithmetic calculations.
The user enters numbers and the math operation to
perform on those numbers. The program will then display
the result of the operation. The program allows the
user to continue entering a math operation and an
integer to calculate off of the previous calculation
result.
Modified Date:
Modified Description:
***********************************************************/
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
// Function prototypes:
void showWelcome(void);
int getUserIntegerInput();
char getMathChoice()
int getInteger(bool);
bool validateMathChoice(char choice)
int doAddition(int int1, int int2);
int doSubtraction(int, int);
int doMath(int firstInt, int secondInt, char mathFunc);
void showResult(int)
float keepCalculating();
// This is the main function (where the program begins)
int main(void)
{
// Variables to hold local data
int runningTotal; nextValue;
int mathChoice();
bool keepGoing;
// Call the showWelcome() function
showWelcome(void);
// Call the getInteger() function (for the first integer)
// and store the result in the "runningTotal" variable
runningTotal = GetInteger(true);
// Loop after each calculation to see if the user wants to keep going
do
{
// Call the getMathChoice() function and store result in "mathChoice" variable
mathChoice = getMathChoice(42);
// Call validateMathChoice() function, passing it the user's math choice
// and using the return value to decide what to do next
if (validateMathChoice())
{
// Call the getInteger() function (for the second and subsequent integers)
// and store the result in the "nextValue" variable
nextValue = getInteger(false);
// Call the doMath() function and pass it all of the user input
// and store the return value in the "runningTotal" variable (overwrite
// previous "runningTotal" variable value. This will allow for us to
// update the running total of all calculations up to this point.
runningTotal = doMath(runningTotal nextValue mathChoice);
// Call the showResult() function to show the result
showResult(runningTotal);
}
else
{
// If the user chose an invalid math function...
cout<<Not a valid math choice. Try again<<endl;
}
}
// Call the keepCalculating() function and use the return value
// to decide whether to continue looping
while (keepCalculating);
return 0;
}
// This function shows a nice welcome message
void showWelcome()
{
cout<<"******************************************"<<endl;
cout<<"Welcome to the simple calculator program!"<<endl;
cout<<"This program will do simple addition and"<<endl
cout<<"subtraction. Math is fun, so enjoy!"<<endl;
cout<<"**.
Probability Analysis 1
Probability Analysis
Chatae M Falls
Argosy University
April 26, 2015
Problem Statement: A General Manger of Harley-Davidson has to decide on the size of a new facility. The GM has narrowed the choices to two: large facility or small facility. The company has collected information on the payoffs. It now has to decide which option is the best using probability analysis. The decision tree model is made and accurately labeled showing all possible scenarios and corresponding payoffs.
Methodology that is adopted: By the help of probability analysis, a person will be able to find the required value of monetary for both the choices that is of having a large facility or a small facility. After the analysis is over, that choice having higher monetary value will be chosen.
Probability Analysis:
Option 1: Build Small Facility: If the GM decides on going for the large facilities, the chances of having low demand becomes 0.4 and the chances of having high demand becomes 0.6. Now if the demand is low then $40 will be required for doing payoff. But if the demand is high then $40 will fetch nothing, whereas $50 will be fetched by doing overtime and the option of expansion will fetch a payoff $55. So one will think of going for expansion is such a case where the demand is high. The anticipated value of monetary for building a facility that is small is equal to the sum of the products of the demand probabilities with their corresponding payoff.
So the anticipated monetary value of building a small facility is=
The Probability of having a High Demand*The Payoff of High Demand+ The Probability of having a Low Demand*The Payoff of Low Demand
=0.6*$55+0.4*$40=$33+$16=$49
Option 2: Build Large Facility: Now if the GM thinks of building small facilities, The chances of having low demand becomes 0.4 and of having high demand becomes 0.6. So in cases when there is a very low demand then around $10 will be fetched by doing nothing but at the same time there will be a payoff of around $50 when there is reduction in the overall prices. Thus it is assumed that in a situation when the demand is low, a person will think of reducing the overall prices. In case when there is high demand, a payoff of $70 is seen. The anticipated value of monetary for building a facility that is large is equal to the total sum of the products of the probabilities of demand with their corresponding payoff.
So the anticipated monetary value of building a large facility is=
The Probability of having a High Demand*The Payoff of High Demand + The Probability having a Low Demand*The Payoff of Low Demand
=0.6*$70+0.4*$50=$42+$20=$62
Result/Conclusion: Thus we see that the expected monetary value for building a large facility is $62 and that for building a small facility is $49, so Harley Davidson’s GM should certainly go for building a facility that is large.
.
PrizeExample/.DS_Store
__MACOSX/PrizeExample/._.DS_Store
PrizeExample/.git/COMMIT_EDITMSG
Initial Commit
PrizeExample/.git/config
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = false
logallrefupdates = true
ignorecase = true
PrizeExample/.git/description
Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
PrizeExample/.git/HEAD
ref: refs/heads/master
PrizeExample/.git/hooks/applypatch-msg.sample
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message taken by
# applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit. The hook is
# allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "applypatch-msg".
. git-sh-setup
test -x "$GIT_DIR/hooks/commit-msg" &&
exec "$GIT_DIR/hooks/commit-msg" ${1+"[email protected]"}
:
PrizeExample/.git/hooks/commit-msg.sample
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with one argument, the name of the file
# that has the commit message. The hook should exit with non-zero
# status after issuing an appropriate message if it wants to stop the
# commit. The hook is allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "commit-msg".
# Uncomment the below to add a Signed-off-by line to the message.
# Doing this in a hook is a bad idea in general, but the prepare-commit-msg
# hook is more suited to it.
#
# SOB=$(git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# grep -qs "^$SOB" "$1" || echo "$SOB" >> "$1"
# This example catches duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
test "" = "$(grep '^Signed-off-by: ' "$1" |
sort | uniq -c | sed -e '/^[ ]*1[ ]/d')" || {
echo >&2 Duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
exit 1
}
PrizeExample/.git/hooks/post-update.sample
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare a packed repository for use over
# dumb transports.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "post-update".
exec git update-server-info
PrizeExample/.git/hooks/pre-applypatch.sample
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed
# by applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-applypatch".
. git-sh-setup
test -x "$GIT_DIR/hooks/pre-commit" &&
exec "$GIT_DIR/hooks/pre-commit" ${1+"[email protected]"}
:
PrizeExample/.git/hooks/pre-commit.sample
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed.
# Called by "git commit" with no arguments. The hook should
# exit with non-zero status after issuing an appropriate message if
# it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-commit".
if git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null 2>&1
then
against=HEAD
else
# Initial commit: diff against an .
Privacy and security of information Consider this scenario.docxChantellPantoja184
Privacy and security of information
Consider this scenario:
1) Pat, a billing associate at a local hospital, was issued a laptop for work purposes. Her friend, however, has asked to borrow it for school to complete an online assignment. Her friend said she would be careful, and she would return it promptly. Pat knows you are taking a HIM course, and asks for your advice. How will your respond?
2) If you were part of an organization considering the implementation of biometric authentication, what factors, aside from costs, would you analyze to determine if this is the most favorable solution?
Notes from class
The two terms, privacy and security of information, have similar meanings and at times are used interchangeably, but in essence they are different entities.
Privacy implies the patient’s right to control disclosure of his/her health information and safety of protected health information (PHI—name, address, phone, e-mail, Social Security number, etc.) during storage, transit, and use. It also gives patients the rights to examine, obtain a copy of medical records, and request corrections in their health information.
Security ensures physical, logical, and technical protection of patients’ health information against natural and human-made disasters, hackers, and malicious attacks that may damage the system, steal information, or render it unusable. It establishes national standards to protect individual’s ePHI (electronic PHI) created, received, maintained, and transmitted by the healthcare providers to ensure confidentiality, integrity, and security of ePHI.
Both privacy and security of health information are the subjects of Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, 1996 (HIPAA) which has been in effect since 2003. The HIPAA provisions have been made more stringent and expanded to cover “business associates” under the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act, 2009 (HITECH) as a component of American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, 2009 (ARRA). This to health organizations means:
· Expansion of HIPAA coverage to include “business associates” (any individual or organization that works with or on behalf of healthcare reorganization).
· Adding greater and stringent penalties to HIPAA, especially with the adoption of electronic health records (EHR).
HIPAA security rules are organized into three categories: Administrative, Physical, and Technical safeguards and apply to all media types: paper, electronic, and hybrid.
.
PRlNTED BY [email protected] Printing is for personal. privat.docxChantellPantoja184
PRlNTED BY: [email protected] Printing is for personal. private use only. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted without publisher's prior permission. Violators will be
prosecuted.
524 ACC201
L07
L03
C E RG ES
c.feb~S194.1lD
March: S/J3,400
L04.1
CHECXRG ES
a. Ma'(.$7I,ooo
c. Jene: $16,760
Exen:ise 14-15 PrePRring pro forma income sttdemeJrts with different flSnlmptWru
. 'orman Jelen, the contreller of Wing Corporation, is trying to prepare a sales budget for the
corning year, The income statements for tbe last four quarters foUow.
First Second Third fouJtll
Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Tatll
Sales revenue S170.0Jl 5200.000 S210.tm 5260.000 S640.000
Cost of gooos sold 102.000 120.000 126.tm ~ ~
Gross profit 68.tm 110,000 84,D00 104.000 336.000
Seling & admin. expense 17,llXl ~ 21,D00 26.000 ~
Net Income S 51.,000 560.000 S 63.tm S 18.000 S252.00D
Historically. cost of goods sold is about 60 percent of sales revenue. Selling and administra-
tive expenses are about 10 percent of sales revenue.
Sam Wing. the chief executive officer. told Mr. Jelen that he expected sales next year to be
10 percent for each respective quarter above last )-ear'$ level, However; Glenda Sullivan, the vice
president of sales, IOId Mr. Jelen that she believed sales grov.'tb would be only 5 percent,
1Ie~.iRd
•.. Prepar-e a pro forma income statement including quarterly budgets for the coming year using
Mr. Wing's estimate.
b. P~ a pro forma income statement including quarterly budgets for the coming year using
M$. Sullivan's estimate.
e, £splain \>oily two exe..-uti"" officers in the same company could have different estimates of
future growth.
PRlBLEMS
AUapplicable ProbletallFlt IIvailable with McGrawMill's
ComIfICt AccDllllfi",.
P 14-1& Prepgring /I sales lNuiget and 5cheda1e of ClUh receipts
~yl't!inla'S lee, txpec!510 begin operatioos onJaooary 1.2012; it willoperate as a specialty
sal<s~' that sdh Wet poinI.en O\-etthe In=nK McCarty e:<p<ClS sales in January 2012 to
total S2OO,ooo and 10 i!Icrea5e 10 pe1a!l'It per month in February and Man:h. All sales are on ae-
count. p.1cCarty expectS 10 eoIIect 70 percent of accounts reccivabIe in the month of sate, 20 percent
in the month following the and 10 peroen! in the seeond month foD.owingthe saJe.
Relllin:d
II, Prepare a sales budget for the fltSt quarter of 20 12.
b. Determine the amount of sales menue )I1cCatty will repon on the first 2012 quarterly pro
rerma income statement.
c. Prepare a easb receipu schedule for the first quarte •. of 2012.
d. o.:termine the amount of accounts receh'3ble as of Macdt 31. 2012.
IUI inventory purclrtues budget and scluuhde of Cluh
paoy's marketing director developed the follcwing cost of
and JuI)·.
Bu~geted cost of goods sold
May
S70,000
Jane July
$86.noo58lJ.noo
Spratt bad a begillJling inventory balance of
accoums payable of SI4,800. The company de .
,600 on April I and a beginning balance in
o maintain an ending inventory balance
.
Problem 1Pro Forma Income Statement and Balance SheetBelow is the .docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1Pro Forma Income Statement and Balance SheetBelow is the income statement and balance sheet for Blue Bill Corporation for 2013. Based on the historical statements and theadditional information provided, construct the firm's pro forma income statement and balance sheet for 2014.Blue Bill CorporationIncome StatementFor the year ended 2013Projected201220132014Revenue$60,000$63,000Cost of goods sold42,00044,100Gross margin18,00018,900SG&A expense6,0006,300Depreciation expense1,8002,000Earnings Before Interest and Taxes (EBIT)10,20010,600Interest expense1,5001,800Taxable income8,7008,800Income Tax Expense3,0453,080Net income5,6555,720Dividends750800To retained earnings$4,905$4,920Additional income statement information:Sales will increase by 5% in 2014 from 2013 levels.COGS and SG&A will be the average percent of sales for the last 2 years.Depreciation expense will increase to $2,200.Interest expense will be $1,900.The tax rate is 35%.Dividend payout will increase to $850.Blue Bill CorporationBalance SheetDecember 31, 2013Projected20132014Current assetsCash$8,000Accounts receivable3,150Inventory9,450Total current assets20,600Property, plant, and equipment (PP&E)28,500Accumulated depreciation16,400Net PP&E12,100Total assets$32,700Current liabilitesAccounts payable$3,780Bank loan (10%)3,200Other current liabilities1,250Total current liabilities8,230Long-term debt (12%)4,800Common stock1,250Retained earnings18,420Total liabilities and equity$32,700Additional balance sheet information:The minimum cash balance is 12% of sales.Working capital accounts (accounts receivable, accounts payable, and inventory) will be the same percent of sales in 2014 as they were in 2013.$8,350 of new PP&E will be purchased in 2014.Other current liabilities will be 3% of sales in 2014.There will be no changes in the common stock or long-term debt accounts.The plug figure (the last number entered that makes the balance sheet balance) is bank loan.
1
Rough Draft
Rough Draft
Rasmussen College
Metro Dental Care is a dental office that provides affordable, convenient, and high quality of care to patients. As a patient at Metro, I personally believe that Metro Dental Care is one of the best dental clinics around, and that’s why I have chosen this company. Metro Dental Care measures their results by recording patient satisfaction.
Managing financial reports, and the quality of service they provide to their customers. Furthermore, the dentists and staff at Metro Dental Care know how important your smile is. Their mission statement states “We pride ourselves in making your smile look great so you not only look good, but feel confident with your smile.”
Metro Dental Care offers convenience for their patients with more than 40 offices throughout the Minneapolis and St. Paul metro area offering flexible hours including early morning, evening and Saturday appointments. Whether you work or live Metro Dental Care has a location near you. Metro Dental .
Problem 2-1PROBLEM 2-1Solution Legend= Value given in problemGiven.docxChantellPantoja184
This document provides a solution to Problem 2-1. It begins by listing the values given in the problem statement. The document then likely shows the step-by-step work and calculations to arrive at the solution for Problem 2-1, ending with the final answer.
PROBLEM 14-6AProblem 14-6A Norwoods Borrowings1. Total amount of .docxChantellPantoja184
PROBLEM 14-6AProblem 14-6A: Norwoods Borrowings1. Total amount of each installment payment.Present value of an ordinary annuity$200,000Interest per period(i)0.08Number of periods(n)5Total amount of each installment payment($50,091.29)Therefore the total amount of each installment payment is $ 50,091.292.Norwoods Amortization TablePeriod Ending DateBeginning balance Interest expenseNotes PayableCash paymentEnding Balance10/31/15$200,000.00$16,000.00$34,091.29$50,091.29$165,908.7110/31/16$165,909.00$13,272.72$36,818.57$50,091.29$129,090.4310/31/17$129,090.43$10,327.23$39,764.06$50,091.29$89,326.3710/31/18$89,326.37$7,146.11$42,945.18$50,091.29$46,381.1910/31/19$46,381.19$3,710.50$46,380.79$50,091.29$0.403.a) Accrued interest as December 31st 2015Accrued interest expense = $200,000*8%*2/12= $2,666.67. Thus the journal entry is as shown below:DescriptionDr($)Cr($)interest expense $2,666.67 Interest payable $2,666.67b) The first annual payment on the note.Ten more months of interest has accrued $200,000*8%*10/12 =$13,333.33 accrued interest .Therefore the journal entry is as shown below:DescriptionDr($)Cr($)Notes payable$34,091.29interest expense$13,333.33interest payable$2,666.67 Cash$50,091.29
PROBLEM 14-7AProblem 14-7AQuestion 1a) Debt to equity ratiosPulaski CompanyScott Company Total liabilities$360,000.00$240,000.00Total Equity$500,000.00$200,000.00Debt-Equity Ratio0.721.2Question 2The debt to equity ratio measures the amount of debt a company uses has to finance its business for every dollar of equity it has. A higher debt to equity ratio implies that a company uses more debt than equity for financing. In this case, the debt to equity ratio for Pulaski Company is 0.72 which is less than 1 implying that the stockholder's equity exceeds the amount of debt borrowed. Thus Pulaski Company may not likely suffer from risks brought about by huge amount of debts in the capital structure. On the other hand, the debt to equity ratio of Scott Company is 1.2 which is greater than 1 implying that the debt exceeds the totalamount stockholders equity. Huge debts is associated with a lot of risks. First, there is the risk of defaulting whereby the company may be unable to repay its debt and therefore leading to bankruptcy. Second, a company may find it difficult to obtain additional funding from creditors.This is because the creditors prefer companies with low debt to equity ratio. Finally, there is the risks of violating the debt covenants. A covenant is an agreement that requires a company to maintain adequate financial ratio levels. Too much borrowings may violate this covenant. Since ScottCompany has a higher debt to equity ratio, it may experience these risks which may eventually lead to the company being declared bankrupt .
PROBLEM 14-6BProblem 14-6B: Gordon Enterprises Borrowings1. Total amount of each installment payment.Present value of an ordi.
Problem 13-3AThe stockholders’ equity accounts of Ashley Corpo.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 13-3A
The stockholders’ equity accounts of Ashley Corporation on January 1, 2012, were as follows.
Preferred Stock (8%, $49 par, cumulative, 10,200 shares authorized)
$ 387,100
Common Stock ($1 stated value, 1,937,100 shares authorized)
1,408,700
Paid-in Capital in Excess of Par—Preferred Stock
123,200
Paid-in Capital in Excess of Stated Value—Common Stock
1,496,800
Retained Earnings
1,814,400
Treasury Stock (10,300 common shares)
51,500
During 2012, the corporation had the following transactions and events pertaining to its stockholders’ equity.
Feb. 1
Issued 24,100 shares of common stock for $123,900.
Apr. 14
Sold 6,000 shares of treasury stock—common for $33,800.
Sept. 3
Issued 5,100 shares of common stock for a patent valued at $35,700.
Nov. 10
Purchased 1,100 shares of common stock for the treasury at a cost of $5,700.
Dec. 31
Determined that net income for the year was $456,600.
No dividends were declared during the year.
(a)
Journalize the transactions and the closing entry for net income. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
Feb. 1
Apr. 14
Sept. 3
Nov. 10
Dec. 31
Click if you would like to Show Work for this question:
Open Show Work
LINK TO TEXT
LINK TO TEXT
LINK TO TEXT
LINK TO TEXT
LINK TO TEXT
.
Problem 12-9AYour answer is partially correct. Try again..docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 12-9A
Your answer is partially correct. Try again.
Condensed financial data of Odgers Inc. follow.
ODGERS INC.Comparative Balance Sheets
December 31
Assets
2014
2013
Cash
$ 131,704
$ 78,892
Accounts receivable
143,114
61,940
Inventory
183,375
167,646
Prepaid expenses
46,292
42,380
Long-term investments
224,940
177,670
Plant assets
464,550
395,275
Accumulated depreciation
(81,500
)
(84,760
)
Total
$1,112,475
$839,043
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity
Accounts payable
$ 166,260
$ 109,699
Accrued expenses payable
26,895
34,230
Bonds payable
179,300
237,980
Common stock
358,600
285,250
Retained earnings
381,420
171,884
Total
$1,112,475
$839,043
ODGERS INC.Income Statement Data
For the Year Ended December 31, 2014
Sales revenue
$633,190
Less:
Cost of goods sold
$220,800
Operating expenses, excluding depreciation
20,228
Depreciation expense
75,795
Income tax expense
44,466
Interest expense
7,710
Loss on disposal of plant assets
12,225
381,224
Net income
$ 251,966
Additional information:
1.
New plant assets costing $163,000 were purchased for cash during the year.
2.
Old plant assets having an original cost of $93,725 and accumulated depreciation of $79,055 were sold for $2,445 cash.
3.
Bonds payable matured and were paid off at face value for cash.
4.
A cash dividend of $42,430 was declared and paid during the year.
Prepare a statement of cash flows using the indirect method. (Show amounts that decrease cash flow with either a - sign e.g. -15,000 or in parenthesis e.g. (15,000).)
ODGERS INC.Statement of Cash Flows
For the Year Ended December 31, 2014
$
Adjustments to reconcile net income to
$
$
Problem 12-10A
Condensed financial data of Odgers Inc. follow.
ODGERS INC.Comparative Balance Sheets
December 31
Assets
2014
2013
Cash
$ 151,904
$ 90,992
Accounts receivable
165,064
71,440
Inventory
211,500
193,358
Prepaid expenses
53,392
48,880
Long-term investments
259,440
204,920
Plant assets
535,800
455,900
Accumulated depreciation
(94,000
)
(97,760
)
Total
$1,283,100
$967,730
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity
Accounts payable
$ 191,760
$ 126,524
Accrued expenses payable
31,020
39,480
Bonds payable
206,800
274,480
Common stock
413,600
329,000
Retained earnings
439,920
198,246
Total
$1,283,100
$967,730
ODGERS INC.Income Statement Data
For the Year Ended December 31, 2014
Sales revenue
$730,305
Less:
Cost of goods sold
$254,665
Operating expenses, excluding depreciation
23,331
Depreciation expense
87,420
Income taxes
51,286
Interest expense
8,892
Loss on disposal of plant assets
14,100
439,694
Net income
$ 290,611
Additional information:
1.
New plant assets costing $188,000 were purchased for c.
Problem 1123456Xf122437455763715813910106Name DateTopic.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1123456Xf122437455763715813910106
Name: Date:
Topic One: Mean, Variance, and Standard Deviation
Please type your answer in the cell beside the question.
5. The following is the heart rate for 10 randomly selected patients on the unit. Find the mean, variance, and standard deviation of the data using the descriptive statistics option in the data analysis toolpak.
75, 80, 62, 97, 107, 59, 76, 83, 84, 69
6. The following is a frequency distribution fo the number of times patience use the call light in a days time. X is the number of times the call light is used and f is the frequency (meaning the number of patients). Create a histogram of the data.
Sheet2
Sheet3
EXERCISE 11 USING STATISTICS TO DESCRIBE A STUDY SAMPLE
STATISTICAL TECHNIQUE IN REVIEW
Most studies describe the subjects that comprise the study sample. This description of the sample is called the sample characteristics which may be presented in a table or the narrative of the article. The sample characteristics are often presented for each of the groups in a study (i.e. experimental and control groups). Descriptive statistics are used to generate sample characteristics, and the type of statistic used depends on the level of measurement of the demographic variables included in a study (Burns & Grove, 2007). For example, measuring gender produces nominal level data that can be described using frequencies, percentages, and mode. Measuring educational level usually produces ordinal data that can be described using frequencies, percentages, mode, median, and range. Obtaining each subject's specific age is an example of ratio data that can be described using mean, range, and standard deviation. Interval and ratio data are analyzed with the same type of statistics and are usually referred to as interval/ratio level data in this text.
RESEARCH ARTICLE
Source: Troy, N. W., & Dalgas-Pelish, P. (2003). The effectiveness of a self-care intervention for the management of postpartum fatigue. Applied Nursing Research, 16 (1), 38–45.
Introduction
Troy and Dalgas-Pelish (2003) conducted a quasi-experimental study to determine the effectiveness of a self-care intervention (Tiredness Management Guide [TMG]) on postpartum fatigue. The study subjects included 68 primiparous mothers, who were randomly assigned to either the experimental group (32 subjects) or the control group (36 subjects) using a computer program. The results of the study indicated that the TMG was effective in reducing levels of morning postpartum fatigue from the 2nd to 4th weeks postpartum. These researchers recommend that “mothers need to be informed that they will probably experience postpartum fatigue and be taught to assess and manage this phenomenon” (Troy & Dalgas-Pelish, 2003, pp. 44-5).
Relevant Study Results
“A total of 80 women were initially enrolled [in the study] … twelve of these women dropped out of the study resulting in a final sample of 68.” (Troy & Dalgas-Pelish, 2003, p. 39). The researchers presen.
Problem 1. For the truss and loading shown below, calculate th.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1. For the truss and loading shown below, calculate the horizontal
displacement of point "D" using the method of virtual work. Show ALL your work!
HW No. 8 - Part 1
Solution
HW FA15 2 Page 1
Problem 1 Continued
Member L (in.) N (lb) N (in) NnL
HW No. 8 - Part 1
.
Problem 1 (30 marks)Review enough information about .docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1 (30 marks)
Review enough information about Trinidad Drilling Ltd. to propose a vision and strategic objectives for the company. Develop a balanced scorecard that will help the company achieve this vision and monitor how well it is accomplishing its strategic objectives. Include a strategy map in table format that shows objectives and performance measures, with arrows illustrating hypothesized cause-and -effect relationships. Provide rationale for your strategy map. The body of your report should not exceed 1,000 words. Cite material you used to prepare the response and provide references in an appendix.
Problem 2 (20 marks)
Ajax Auto Upholstery Ltd. manufactures upholstered products for automobiles, vans, and trucks. Among the various Ajax plants around Canada is the Owlseye plant located in rural Alberta.
The chief financial officer has just received a report indicating that Ajax could purchase the entire annual output of the Owlseye plant from a foreign supplier for $37 million per year.
The budgeted operating costs (in thousands) for the Owlseye plant’s for the coming year is as follows:
Materials $15,000
Labor
Direct $12,000
Supervision 4,000
Indirect plant 5,000 19,000
Overhead
Depreciation – plant 6,000
Utilities, property tax, maintenance 2,000
Pension expense 4,500
Plant manager and staff 2,500
Corporate headquarters overhead allocation 3,000 18,000
Total budgeted costs $52,000
If material purchase orders are cancelled as a consequence of the plant closing, termination charges would amount to 10 percent of the annual cost of direct materials in the first year (zero thereafter).
A clause in the Ajax union contract requires the company to provide employment assistance to its former employees for 12 months after a plant closes. The estimated cost to administer this service if the Owlseye plant closes would be $2 million. $3.6 million of next year’s pension expense would continue indefinitely whether or not the plant remains open. About $900,000 of labour would still be required in the first year after closure to decommission the plant. After that, the plant would be sold for an estimated $1 million. Utilities, property taxes, and maintenance costs would remain unchanged in the first year after closure, but disappear when the plant is sold.
The plant manager and her staff would be somewhat affected by the closing of the Owlseye plant. Some managers would still be responsible for managing three other plants. As a result, total management salaries would be about 50% of the current level, starting at closure and remaining into the future.
Required:
Assume you are the company’s chief financial officer. Perform a five-year financial analysis and make a recommendation whether to close the Owlseye plant on this basis. Provide support for and cautions about your recommendation with organized, clearly-labeled data. Use bullet points where appropriate.
Problem 3 (16 marks)
Br.
Problem 1 (10 points) Note that an eigenvector cannot be zero.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1 (10 points): Note that an eigenvector cannot be zero, but an eigenvalue can
be 0. Suppose that 0 is an eigenvalue of A. What does it say about A? (Hint: One of the
most important properties of a matrix is whether or not it is invertible. Think about the
Invertible Matrix Theorem and all the ‘good things’ of dealing with invertible matrices)
Problem 5: (20 points): The figure below shows a network of one-way streets with
traffic flowing in the directions indicated. The flow rate along the streets are measured
as the average number of vehicles per hour.
a) Set up a mathematical model whose solution provides the unknown flow rates
b) Solve the model for the unknown flow rates
c) If the flow rates along the road A to B must be reduced for construction, what is
the minimum flow that is required to keep traffic flowing on all roads?
Problem 6 (20 points): Problem 7 (9 points): Prove that if A and B are matrices of the same
size, then tr(A+B)=tr(A)+tr(B)
Given:
Goal:
Proof:
Problem 7 (20 points)*: In the 1990, the northern spotted owl became the center of a
nationwide controversy over the use and misuse of the majestic forests in the Pacific
Northwest. Environmentalists convinced the federal government that the owl was
threatened with extinction if logging continued in the old-growth forests (with trees over
200 years old), where the owls prefer to live. The timber industry, anticipating the loss of
30,000 to 100,000 jobs as a result of new government restrictions on logging, argued that
the owl should not be classified as a “threatened species” and cited a number of published
scientific reports to support its case.
Caught in the crossfire of the two lobbying groups, mathematical ecologists
intensified their drive to understand the population dynamics of the spotted owl. The life
cycle of a spotted owl divides naturally into three stages: juvenile (up to 1 year old),
subadult (1 to 2 years), and adult (over 2 years). The owls mate for life during the subadult
and adult stages, begin to breed as adults, and live for up to 20 years. Each owl pair
requires about 1,000 hectares (4 square miles) for its own home territory. A critical time in
the life cycle is when the juveniles leave the nest. To survive and become a subadult, a
juvenile must successfully find a new home range (and usually a mate).
A first step in studying the population dynamics is to model the population at yearly
intervals, at times denoted by 𝑘𝑘 = 0,1,2, …. Usually, one assumes that there is a 1:1 ratio of
males to females in each life stage and counts only the females. The population at year 𝑘𝑘
can be described by a vector 𝒙𝒙𝒌𝒌 = (𝑗𝑗𝑘𝑘 , 𝑠𝑠𝑘𝑘 , 𝑎𝑎𝑘𝑘 ), where 𝑗𝑗𝑘𝑘 , 𝑠𝑠𝑘𝑘 , and 𝑎𝑎𝑘𝑘 are the numbers of
females in the juvenile, subadult, and adult stages, respectively. Using actual field data from
demographic studies, a rese
Probation and Parole 3Running head Probation and Parole.docxChantellPantoja184
Probation and Parole 3
Running head: Probation and Parole
Probation and Parole
Student Name
Allied American University
Author Note
This paper was prepared for Probation and Parole, Module 8 Check Your Understanding taught by [INSERT INSTRUCTOR’S NAME].
Directions: Respond to the following questions using complete sentences. Your answer should be at least 1 paragraph in length, which must be composed of three to five sentences.
1. What is meant by intermediate punishments and what programs are included in this category?
2. How do intermediate punishments serve to keep down prison populations?
3. Why has electronic monitoring proven so popular?
4. What is meant by shock probation/parole?
5. What are the essential features of the boot camp program?
6. Why has intensive supervision been a public relations success?
7. What are the criticisms of boot camp programs?
8. What has research revealed with respect to intensive supervision?
9. What are the criticisms of electronic monitoring in probation and parole?
10. What are the criticisms leveled at intensive supervision?
11. What are the purposes of and services offered by a day reporting center?
12. Why would heroin addicts who have no intention of giving up drug use voluntarily enter a drug treatment program? What are the advantages of using methadone to treat heroin addicts?
13. Why is behavior modification difficult to use in treating drug abusers?
14. What are the characteristics of chemical dependency (CD) programs?
15. What are the primary characteristics of the therapeutic community (TC) approach for treating drug abusers?
16. What are criticisms of the Alcoholics Anonymous approach?
17. What are the problems inherent in drug testing?
18. What are the typical characteristics of sex offenders? How have sex offender laws affected P/P supervision?
19. What are the pros and cons of restitution and charging offenders fees in probation or parole?
20. What are the problems encountered in using the interstate compact?
.
Problem 1(a) Complete the following ANOVA table based on 20 obs.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1:
(a) Complete the following ANOVA table based on 20 observations for the regression equation
(a) Is the overall regression significant? Fill in the missing values in the table.
Source DF SS MS F
Regression ___ 350 ____ ____
Error ___ _____
Total 500
(b) Suppose that you have computed the following sequential sums of squares due to regression:
Regressor Variables in Model SS Regression
………………………………………. 300
……………………………………… 250
…………………………………….. 340
……………………………………. 325
Fill in the missing values in the following “computer output”:
Source DF Partial SS F-value Pr>F
……………………………………………………………………………………….. 0.1245
………………………………………………………………………………………. 0.3841
………………………………………………………………………………………. 0.0042
………………………………………………………………………………………. 0.0401
Problem 2:
The time required for a merchandise to stock a grocery store shelf with a soft drink product as well as the number of cases of product stocked are given below. Consider a linear regression of delivery time against number of cases.
X=number of cases
Y=delivery time
Delivery time number of cases Hat diagonals
1.41 4 0.5077
2.96 6 0.3907
6.04 14 0.2013
7.57 19 0.3092
9.38 24 0.5912
Observations used L.S. Model
4,6,14,19,24
6,14,19,24
4,14,19,24
4,14,19,24
4,6,14,24
4,6,14,19
(a)
Calculate the PRESS statistic for the model .
(b) Calculate the regular residual for the model above. Then, compare these residuals with the PRESS residuals for this model.
Exercises from the Text
Use SAS whenever possible to do these exercises:
# 3.4 on p 122
# 3.5
# 3.8
# 3.15
# 3.21
# 3.27
# 3.28
# 3.31
# 3.38
# 3.39
Example with SAS on Sequential and Partial Sum of Squares
Data Weather;
Title 'Lows and Highs from N&O Jan 28,29,30 1992';
Title2 'using actual numbers (yesterday values)';
input city $ hi2 lo2 yhi ylo thi tlo;
* Mon Tues Wed ;
cards;
seattle 51 44 52 44 59 47
.
.
.
;
proc reg; model thi = yhi hi2 tlo ylo lo2/ss1 ss2;
test tlo=0, ylo=0, lo2=0;
/*-----------------------------------------------
| Showing sequential and partial sums of squares|
| Note t**2 = F relationship for partial F. By |
| hand, construct F to leave out .
Probe 140 SPrecipitation in inchesTemperature in F.docxChantellPantoja184
Probe 1
40 S
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 26.8
Precip 27.1
MAT(F) 59.8
Probe 2
6 S
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 69.2
Precip 124.6
MAT(F) 77.9
Probe 3
57 S
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 21.5
Precip 38.7
MAT(F) 43.5
Probe 4
38 N
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 30.3
Precip 16.5
MAT(F) 53.6
Probe 5
55 N
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 21.3
Precip 28.1
MAT(F) 40.6
Probe 6
43 N
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 25.4
Precip 14.4
MAT(F) 47.2
Probe 7
42 N
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 17.3
Precip 31.2
MAT(F) 26.0
Probe 8
42 N
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 29.6
Precip 38.8
MAT(F) 51.6
Probe 9
18 S
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 66.1
Precip 74.8
MAT(F) 77.7
Probe 10
58 N
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 16.5
Precip 24.8
MAT(F) 36.9
Probe 11
26 N
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 47.6
Precip 3.8
MAT(F) 70.1
Probe 12
29 N
Precipitation in inches
Temperature in F
J F M A M J J A S O N D
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
POTET 44.0
Precip 47.3
MAT(F) 63.2
Probe 4
Probe 2
Probe 10
Probe 5
Probe 6
Probe 7
Probe 11
Probe 12
Probe 8
Probe 9
Probe 3
Probe 1
Map 1
20 N
40 N
60 N
80 N
0
20 S
40 S
60 S
0
1000
miles
Geography 204
Koppen Climate Classification Guidelines
If POTET exceeds Precip then B
BW = POTET more than 2x Precip
(desert)
h = mean annual temp > 18 C (64.4 F)
k = mean annual temp < 18 C (64.4 F)
BS = POTET less than 2x Precip
(steppe)
h = mean annual t.
Problem #1 JET Copies Case ProblemRead the JET Copies C.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem #1:
JET Copies Case Problem
Read the "JET Copies" Case Problem on pages 678-679 of the text. Using simulation estimate the loss of revenue due to copier breakdown for one year, as follows:
1. In Excel, use a suitable method for generating the number of days needed to repair the copier, when it is out of service, according to the discrete distribution shown.
2. In Excel, use a suitable method for simulating the interval between successive breakdowns, according to the continuous distribution shown.
3. In Excel, use a suitable method for simulating the lost revenue for each day the copier is out of service.
4. Put all of this together to simulate the lost revenue due to copier breakdowns over 1 year to answer the question asked in the case study.
5. In a word processing program, write a brief description/explanation of how you implemented each component of the model. Write 1-2 paragraphs for each component of the model (days-to-repair; interval between breakdowns; lost revenue; putting it together).
6. Answer the question posed in the case study. How confident are you that this answer is a good one? What are the limits of the study? Write at least one paragraph.
There are two deliverables for this Case Problem, the Excel spreadsheet and the written description/explanation.
Outcome Assessed:
· Create statistical analysis of simulation results.
· Communicate issues in management science
Grading Rubric for JET Copies Case Problem
There are 12 possible points in each of the five criteria for a total of 60 points possible.
Criteria
0Unacceptable(0 points)
1Developing(6 points)
2Competent(9 points)
3Exemplary(12 points)
1. Model number of days to repair
Did not submit or did not model this component in an appropriate manner
This component was modeled, but the method and/or implementation had mistakes that affected the validity of the model
Used a method that is recognizably appropriate, but the implementation had minor mistakes
Used an appropriate method and correctly implemented it
2. Model number of weeks between breakdowns
Did not submit or did not model this component in an appropriate manner
This component was modeled, but the method and/or implementation had mistakes that affected the validity of the model
Used a method that is recognizably appropriate, but the implementation had minor mistakes
Used an appropriate method and correctly implemented it
3. Model lost revenue due to breakdowns
Did not submit or did not model this component in an appropriate manner
This component was modeled, but the method and/or implementation had mistakes that affected the validity of the model
Used a method that is recognizably appropriate, but the implementation had minor mistakes
Used an appropriate method and correctly implemented it
4. Provide written description and explanation of the simulation
Did not submit or described insufficiently. Omitted key points.
Provided partially developed written description that matches the method 70 - 79% accur.
PROBLEM 1 Lovin’ the Fast Food The following article was writt.docxChantellPantoja184
PROBLEM 1: Lovin’ the Fast Food
The following article was written for an ag-econ journal several years ago. The demand function is written in table format on the next page. This page has the averages for the different variables and the second page has the regression output.
1. Calculate the fast food price elasticity for fast food for 1982 and 1992. What does it mean? How could Chic-Fil-A use this information? Is it changing?
PEoD = (% Change in Quantity Demanded)/(% Change in Price)
2. Calculate the grocery cross-price elasticity for fast food for 1982 and 1992. What does it mean? How could Chic-Fil-A use this information? Calculate the ‘inexpensive’ and ‘expensive’ restaurant price cross-price elasticity. What do these mean and how useful is this information?
3. Calculate the income elasticity of fast food in 1982 and 1992. Again, explain the trend and meaning.
4. Identify at least four ‘take-aways’ from this demand function. Identify the relationship that is shown (or not shown), what information can be drawn from the information and how a fast-food restaurant can use this. Only one of your ‘take-aways’ here can relate specifically to cross-price elasticities.
Problem 2 Jones Has A Student . . .
Several years ago I had a student who approached me about leaving school. This student had, what he thought, was an amazing idea. Doug’s idea (I’ve changed the name to protect the innocent) was this: move to a medium sized city (Charleston, SC) and open up a jewelry business. His reasoning was that when jewelers resize gold rings (wedding bands), they get to keep the little pieces of scrap gold. As gold was approaching record prices, Doug would make a ton of profit.
a. Draw a graph/figure of the type of market Doug is entering—assume that he makes profits out of the gate.
b. Explain how the market moves given that Doug makes a profit. That is, tell me what is likely to happen. Show a graph (or graphs) that explain this phenomena.
c. How is it possible that firms can operate with zero economic profit? Tell me a story why it must be that the last firm entering the market experiences zero economic profit (i.e. What if the last firm in the market experienced positive economic profit? Is there anything wrong with that?)
Problem 3 Economics is a Curious Thing
Please choose three of the following economic phenomena and give me your reasons why we see these events occur in the market. The more you think like an economist the more you see economics in the market. (Don’t waltz through these as they are all examples of economics.)
a. Why do brides buy their wedding dresses for thousands of dollars while bride-grooms (yes, I’m from Middle-England) rent their tuxedos for a hundred dollars?
b. Why is the internet free at Motel 6 but costs $9.99 per day at the Ritz?
c. Why do ATM machines in the drive-through have brail number pads?
d. Why do airlines give frequent flyers two free checked bags but charge for checked bags for non-frequent flyer.
Problem 1 (ch 23)Victoria Falls Flour Mill Company started many ye.docxChantellPantoja184
Problem 1 (ch 23)Victoria Falls Flour Mill Company started many years ago producing a single product. It has grown to produce many diverse consumer products ranging from foods to paper goods. Currently, the corporation is barely making a profit, and the price of its stock has languished. Division managers have traditionally been incentivized with stock options and awards. However, management is evaluating a new bonus plan based on segment profits within each division. Below are 20X4 facts about the Sugar Products Division, which generates 10% of overall corporate revenue. The Sugar Products Division has two key products - raw sugar and candy.Total sales of raw sugar and candy$ 45,750,000Traceable, controllable, sugar division fixed costs10,250,000Traceable, uncontrollable, sugar division fixed costs3,600,000Non-traceable, controllable, sugar division fixed costs1,500,000Non-traceable, uncontrollable, sugar division fixed costs1,750,000Variable selling, general, & administrative costs9,050,000Variable product costs21,700,000General corporate expenses for all divisions8,000,000Prepare a contribution income statement for the aggregated Sugar Division (one column). If the division manager is to be evaluated on controllable contribution margin, would the Sugar Division manager appear to be entitled to a bonus?
&L&"Arial,Bold"&20 &R&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&20B-23.05
B-23.05
Worksheet 1 (ch 23)20X4 Divisional Report for Sugar ProductsContribution Income StatementSales$ 45,750,000Less:
&L&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&12Name:
Date: Section: &R&"Myriad Web Pro,Bold"&20B-23.05
B-23.05
Problem 2 (ch 23)Downhill Manufacturing produces snow skis in a two-step production process - cutting and laminating. The manufacturing center is supported by two service centers - a health clinic and a janitorial service. The following table reveals certain facts about each activity:Health clinicJanitorial serviceCutting departmentLaminating departmentEmployees241015Square footage1,20060012,0008,000Cost incurred$ 180,000$ 125,000$ 700,000$ 800,000(a)Using the direct method, allocate the service department costs to production. The clinic costs are to be allocated based on employees, and the janitorial costs are to be allocated based on the square footage.(b)Using the step method, allocate the service department costs to production. The clinic costs are to be allocated based on employees, and the janitorial costs are to be allocated based on the square footage. The first step will be to allocate clinic costs. The clinic employees maintain their space and do not rely upon the janitorial service. However, janitorial employees occasionally sustain an injury and utilize the clinic.
B-23.08
Worksheet 2 (ch 23)(a)Health clinicJanitorial serviceCutting departmentLaminating departmentCost incurred$ 180,000$ 125,000$ 700,000$ 800,000Clinic allocation----Janitorial allocation----Total cost$ -$ -$ -$ -Clinic allocations:Jani.
/***********************************************************
Program Name: Simple Math Calculator
Program Author: Kyle NoCompile
Date Created: 9/28/14
Program Description:
This program performs simple arithmetic calculations.
The user enters numbers and the math operation to
perform on those numbers. The program will then display
the result of the operation. The program allows the
user to continue entering a math operation and an
integer to calculate off of the previous calculation
result.
Modified Date:
Modified Description:
***********************************************************/
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
// Function prototypes:
void showWelcome(void);
int getUserIntegerInput();
char getMathChoice()
int getInteger(bool);
bool validateMathChoice(char choice)
int doAddition(int int1, int int2);
int doSubtraction(int, int);
int doMath(int firstInt, int secondInt, char mathFunc);
void showResult(int)
float keepCalculating();
// This is the main function (where the program begins)
int main(void)
{
// Variables to hold local data
int runningTotal; nextValue;
int mathChoice();
bool keepGoing;
// Call the showWelcome() function
showWelcome(void);
// Call the getInteger() function (for the first integer)
// and store the result in the "runningTotal" variable
runningTotal = GetInteger(true);
// Loop after each calculation to see if the user wants to keep going
do
{
// Call the getMathChoice() function and store result in "mathChoice" variable
mathChoice = getMathChoice(42);
// Call validateMathChoice() function, passing it the user's math choice
// and using the return value to decide what to do next
if (validateMathChoice())
{
// Call the getInteger() function (for the second and subsequent integers)
// and store the result in the "nextValue" variable
nextValue = getInteger(false);
// Call the doMath() function and pass it all of the user input
// and store the return value in the "runningTotal" variable (overwrite
// previous "runningTotal" variable value. This will allow for us to
// update the running total of all calculations up to this point.
runningTotal = doMath(runningTotal nextValue mathChoice);
// Call the showResult() function to show the result
showResult(runningTotal);
}
else
{
// If the user chose an invalid math function...
cout<<Not a valid math choice. Try again<<endl;
}
}
// Call the keepCalculating() function and use the return value
// to decide whether to continue looping
while (keepCalculating);
return 0;
}
// This function shows a nice welcome message
void showWelcome()
{
cout<<"******************************************"<<endl;
cout<<"Welcome to the simple calculator program!"<<endl;
cout<<"This program will do simple addition and"<<endl
cout<<"subtraction. Math is fun, so enjoy!"<<endl;
cout<<"**.
Probability Analysis 1
Probability Analysis
Chatae M Falls
Argosy University
April 26, 2015
Problem Statement: A General Manger of Harley-Davidson has to decide on the size of a new facility. The GM has narrowed the choices to two: large facility or small facility. The company has collected information on the payoffs. It now has to decide which option is the best using probability analysis. The decision tree model is made and accurately labeled showing all possible scenarios and corresponding payoffs.
Methodology that is adopted: By the help of probability analysis, a person will be able to find the required value of monetary for both the choices that is of having a large facility or a small facility. After the analysis is over, that choice having higher monetary value will be chosen.
Probability Analysis:
Option 1: Build Small Facility: If the GM decides on going for the large facilities, the chances of having low demand becomes 0.4 and the chances of having high demand becomes 0.6. Now if the demand is low then $40 will be required for doing payoff. But if the demand is high then $40 will fetch nothing, whereas $50 will be fetched by doing overtime and the option of expansion will fetch a payoff $55. So one will think of going for expansion is such a case where the demand is high. The anticipated value of monetary for building a facility that is small is equal to the sum of the products of the demand probabilities with their corresponding payoff.
So the anticipated monetary value of building a small facility is=
The Probability of having a High Demand*The Payoff of High Demand+ The Probability of having a Low Demand*The Payoff of Low Demand
=0.6*$55+0.4*$40=$33+$16=$49
Option 2: Build Large Facility: Now if the GM thinks of building small facilities, The chances of having low demand becomes 0.4 and of having high demand becomes 0.6. So in cases when there is a very low demand then around $10 will be fetched by doing nothing but at the same time there will be a payoff of around $50 when there is reduction in the overall prices. Thus it is assumed that in a situation when the demand is low, a person will think of reducing the overall prices. In case when there is high demand, a payoff of $70 is seen. The anticipated value of monetary for building a facility that is large is equal to the total sum of the products of the probabilities of demand with their corresponding payoff.
So the anticipated monetary value of building a large facility is=
The Probability of having a High Demand*The Payoff of High Demand + The Probability having a Low Demand*The Payoff of Low Demand
=0.6*$70+0.4*$50=$42+$20=$62
Result/Conclusion: Thus we see that the expected monetary value for building a large facility is $62 and that for building a small facility is $49, so Harley Davidson’s GM should certainly go for building a facility that is large.
.
PrizeExample/.DS_Store
__MACOSX/PrizeExample/._.DS_Store
PrizeExample/.git/COMMIT_EDITMSG
Initial Commit
PrizeExample/.git/config
[core]
repositoryformatversion = 0
filemode = true
bare = false
logallrefupdates = true
ignorecase = true
PrizeExample/.git/description
Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
PrizeExample/.git/HEAD
ref: refs/heads/master
PrizeExample/.git/hooks/applypatch-msg.sample
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message taken by
# applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit. The hook is
# allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "applypatch-msg".
. git-sh-setup
test -x "$GIT_DIR/hooks/commit-msg" &&
exec "$GIT_DIR/hooks/commit-msg" ${1+"[email protected]"}
:
PrizeExample/.git/hooks/commit-msg.sample
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to check the commit log message.
# Called by "git commit" with one argument, the name of the file
# that has the commit message. The hook should exit with non-zero
# status after issuing an appropriate message if it wants to stop the
# commit. The hook is allowed to edit the commit message file.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "commit-msg".
# Uncomment the below to add a Signed-off-by line to the message.
# Doing this in a hook is a bad idea in general, but the prepare-commit-msg
# hook is more suited to it.
#
# SOB=$(git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT | sed -n 's/^\(.*>\).*$/Signed-off-by: \1/p')
# grep -qs "^$SOB" "$1" || echo "$SOB" >> "$1"
# This example catches duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
test "" = "$(grep '^Signed-off-by: ' "$1" |
sort | uniq -c | sed -e '/^[ ]*1[ ]/d')" || {
echo >&2 Duplicate Signed-off-by lines.
exit 1
}
PrizeExample/.git/hooks/post-update.sample
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to prepare a packed repository for use over
# dumb transports.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "post-update".
exec git update-server-info
PrizeExample/.git/hooks/pre-applypatch.sample
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed
# by applypatch from an e-mail message.
#
# The hook should exit with non-zero status after issuing an
# appropriate message if it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-applypatch".
. git-sh-setup
test -x "$GIT_DIR/hooks/pre-commit" &&
exec "$GIT_DIR/hooks/pre-commit" ${1+"[email protected]"}
:
PrizeExample/.git/hooks/pre-commit.sample
#!/bin/sh
#
# An example hook script to verify what is about to be committed.
# Called by "git commit" with no arguments. The hook should
# exit with non-zero status after issuing an appropriate message if
# it wants to stop the commit.
#
# To enable this hook, rename this file to "pre-commit".
if git rev-parse --verify HEAD >/dev/null 2>&1
then
against=HEAD
else
# Initial commit: diff against an .
Privacy and security of information Consider this scenario.docxChantellPantoja184
Privacy and security of information
Consider this scenario:
1) Pat, a billing associate at a local hospital, was issued a laptop for work purposes. Her friend, however, has asked to borrow it for school to complete an online assignment. Her friend said she would be careful, and she would return it promptly. Pat knows you are taking a HIM course, and asks for your advice. How will your respond?
2) If you were part of an organization considering the implementation of biometric authentication, what factors, aside from costs, would you analyze to determine if this is the most favorable solution?
Notes from class
The two terms, privacy and security of information, have similar meanings and at times are used interchangeably, but in essence they are different entities.
Privacy implies the patient’s right to control disclosure of his/her health information and safety of protected health information (PHI—name, address, phone, e-mail, Social Security number, etc.) during storage, transit, and use. It also gives patients the rights to examine, obtain a copy of medical records, and request corrections in their health information.
Security ensures physical, logical, and technical protection of patients’ health information against natural and human-made disasters, hackers, and malicious attacks that may damage the system, steal information, or render it unusable. It establishes national standards to protect individual’s ePHI (electronic PHI) created, received, maintained, and transmitted by the healthcare providers to ensure confidentiality, integrity, and security of ePHI.
Both privacy and security of health information are the subjects of Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, 1996 (HIPAA) which has been in effect since 2003. The HIPAA provisions have been made more stringent and expanded to cover “business associates” under the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act, 2009 (HITECH) as a component of American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, 2009 (ARRA). This to health organizations means:
· Expansion of HIPAA coverage to include “business associates” (any individual or organization that works with or on behalf of healthcare reorganization).
· Adding greater and stringent penalties to HIPAA, especially with the adoption of electronic health records (EHR).
HIPAA security rules are organized into three categories: Administrative, Physical, and Technical safeguards and apply to all media types: paper, electronic, and hybrid.
.
PRlNTED BY [email protected] Printing is for personal. privat.docxChantellPantoja184
PRlNTED BY: [email protected] Printing is for personal. private use only. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted without publisher's prior permission. Violators will be
prosecuted.
524 ACC201
L07
L03
C E RG ES
c.feb~S194.1lD
March: S/J3,400
L04.1
CHECXRG ES
a. Ma'(.$7I,ooo
c. Jene: $16,760
Exen:ise 14-15 PrePRring pro forma income sttdemeJrts with different flSnlmptWru
. 'orman Jelen, the contreller of Wing Corporation, is trying to prepare a sales budget for the
corning year, The income statements for tbe last four quarters foUow.
First Second Third fouJtll
Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Tatll
Sales revenue S170.0Jl 5200.000 S210.tm 5260.000 S640.000
Cost of gooos sold 102.000 120.000 126.tm ~ ~
Gross profit 68.tm 110,000 84,D00 104.000 336.000
Seling & admin. expense 17,llXl ~ 21,D00 26.000 ~
Net Income S 51.,000 560.000 S 63.tm S 18.000 S252.00D
Historically. cost of goods sold is about 60 percent of sales revenue. Selling and administra-
tive expenses are about 10 percent of sales revenue.
Sam Wing. the chief executive officer. told Mr. Jelen that he expected sales next year to be
10 percent for each respective quarter above last )-ear'$ level, However; Glenda Sullivan, the vice
president of sales, IOId Mr. Jelen that she believed sales grov.'tb would be only 5 percent,
1Ie~.iRd
•.. Prepar-e a pro forma income statement including quarterly budgets for the coming year using
Mr. Wing's estimate.
b. P~ a pro forma income statement including quarterly budgets for the coming year using
M$. Sullivan's estimate.
e, £splain \>oily two exe..-uti"" officers in the same company could have different estimates of
future growth.
PRlBLEMS
AUapplicable ProbletallFlt IIvailable with McGrawMill's
ComIfICt AccDllllfi",.
P 14-1& Prepgring /I sales lNuiget and 5cheda1e of ClUh receipts
~yl't!inla'S lee, txpec!510 begin operatioos onJaooary 1.2012; it willoperate as a specialty
sal<s~' that sdh Wet poinI.en O\-etthe In=nK McCarty e:<p<ClS sales in January 2012 to
total S2OO,ooo and 10 i!Icrea5e 10 pe1a!l'It per month in February and Man:h. All sales are on ae-
count. p.1cCarty expectS 10 eoIIect 70 percent of accounts reccivabIe in the month of sate, 20 percent
in the month following the and 10 peroen! in the seeond month foD.owingthe saJe.
Relllin:d
II, Prepare a sales budget for the fltSt quarter of 20 12.
b. Determine the amount of sales menue )I1cCatty will repon on the first 2012 quarterly pro
rerma income statement.
c. Prepare a easb receipu schedule for the first quarte •. of 2012.
d. o.:termine the amount of accounts receh'3ble as of Macdt 31. 2012.
IUI inventory purclrtues budget and scluuhde of Cluh
paoy's marketing director developed the follcwing cost of
and JuI)·.
Bu~geted cost of goods sold
May
S70,000
Jane July
$86.noo58lJ.noo
Spratt bad a begillJling inventory balance of
accoums payable of SI4,800. The company de .
,600 on April I and a beginning balance in
o maintain an ending inventory balance
.
PRlNTED BY [email protected] Printing is for personal. privat.docx
12312020 Mayor Durkan Announces $5.65 Million to Community O
1. 12/31/2020 Mayor Durkan Announces $5.65 Million to
Community Organizations Through the Equitable Development
Initiative
https://dailyplanit.seattle.gov/mayor-durkan-announces-5-65-
million-to-community-organizations-through-the-equitable-
development-initiative/ 1/4
Mayor Durkan Announces $5.65
Million to Community
Organizations Through the
Equitable Development Initiative
November 10, 2020 by Seattle OPCD
EDI organizations have secured more than $105 million in City-
funded dollars since 2017
– Mayor signs property transfer to community ownership for
Central Area Senior Center,
99-year lease for Fire Station 6
Mayor Jenny A. Durkan announced nearly $6 million in awards
through the Equitable
Development Initiative (EDI), part of the City’s effort to
support Seattle’s existing
residents and businesses in high displacement risk
neighborhoods. The City awarded $4.4
million to community organizations for site acquisition and
major capital projects and
another $1.25 million is intended to provide capacity-building
support to existing EDI
partners providing services during the current pandemic and
economic crisis. The
2. awards to organizations led by and serving people of color will
be used for organizational
capacity building, property acquisition, and capital expenses. In
addition to
the $36 million in EDI funds awarded, these community-
based organizations leveraged
that amount to more than $105 million in City-funded dollars
since 2017.
“To tackle the challenges of displacement, our City is investing
in community-based
organizations who are leading the way to empower
and strengthen underserved communities and create economic
vitality. The Economic
Development Initiative has a strong record of creating the
newest homes for our City’s
residents, non-profits, and local small businesses through
leveraging other city
programs,“ said Mayor Durkan. “One of my most important
priorities in this budget was
to transform how the City invests in communities of color by
centering the experiences of
Black and Indigenous communities. Even in this difficult year,
my budget set aside
historic resources to meet the challenges of this moment and
move us toward being the
city we want to be when we come out of this crisis: stronger,
more just, and more
equitable.”
The EDI fund, administered by the Office of Planning and
Community
Development (OPCD), was created to respond to the needs of
marginalized populations,
reduce disparities, and support access to opportunity in healthy,
vibrant communities. The
3. initiative is championed by community organizations concerned
about displacement
pressures and historical lack of investment that has occurred in
communities of color in
Seattle. Mayor Durkan proposed a sustained funding source for
the program in 2019.
“By hosting this important event we honor the priorities of our
community members and
the hard work they are doing to create the kinds of
neighborhoods they want,”
said Councilmember Tammy Morales, District 2. “In this
environment especially, when
Seattle is working on anti-displacement strategies and
responding to the economic impacts
of COVID-19, the nearly $6 million being awarded today will
launch the kind of changes
sought by organizations led by and for Black and Brown
communities in neighborhoods
like mine that are at high risk of displacement. I am proud of all
the recipients today. I am
especially grateful for the work of the Rainier Valley Midwives
providing culturally
relevant, holistic pregnancy care to a community with high
infant mortality rates. Our
community deserves medical care that centers their life
experiences and celebrates their
humanity. I’m excited that the Central Area Senior Center
finally has control of their
building so they can make the facility and grounds
improvements they’ve been planning
Search this website … Search
Visit our Website
4. Categories
Select Category
Archives
Select Month
Calendar
January 2021
1/7 Design Commission Meeting
1/14 Seattle Planning Commission
Meeting
1/21 Design Commission Meeting
1/28 Seattle Planning Commission
Meeting
February 2021
2/4 Design Commission Meeting
See other meetings & events
Seattle.gov
Daily Plan It
Office of Planning & Community Development
https://dailyplanit.seattle.gov/author/iand/
http://www.seattle.gov/opcd/ongoing-initiatives/equitable-
development-initiative
http://www.seattle.gov/opcd
https://www.seattle.gov/dpd/cityplanning/
6. development-initiative/ 2/4
for so long. And I’m especially thrilled that a worn out building
can be repurposed to
make way for the development of the Food Innovation Center,
which will create a
healthy food industry in Rainier Beach, create job opportunities,
and serve as a catalyst in
a neighborhood that needs it most.”
“We are so grateful to receive $1 million from the Equitable
Development Initiative,” said
Tara Lawal of Rainier Valley Midwives. “It is giving us the
momentum to build a
community Birth Center of our dreams. Thank you for believing
in us and supporting our
vision to provide equitable healthcare in South Seattle.”
EDI fosters community leadership and supports organizations to
promote equitable access
to jobs, education and childcare, outdoor space and recreation,
cultural expression, healthy
food, and other community needs and amenities. These
partnerships are designed to
support leadership and build capacity building among the most
historically marginalized
groups in Seattle, sharing in decision-making and power, and
working towards racial
equity outcomes that allows all communities to thrive.
An interim board of community members provided
recommendations to the City on the
funding decisions announced today. The City is seeking
representatives for a new
permanent EDI Advisory Board grounded in
community to provide ongoing guidance
7. for the initiative and provide input on future funding
decisions. Applications are currently
being accepted through Nov. 30, 2020.
“When community members advocated for the creation of EDI,
it was with the intention
of creating collaboration between community-initiated projects
and the City to respond to
historical injustices and increase community-ownership,”
said Ubax Gardheere, EDI
division manager. “The transfer of these properties and EDI
investments are all important
contributions towards creating a more equitable City.”
Along with today’s award announcement, Mayor Durkan signed
her ordinances, approved
unanimously be the Seattle City Council, that transfers City
property to Black-led
community organizations in the Central District. The two
ordinances permanently transfer
the Central Area Senior Center (CASC) to community
ownership and establish a 99-year
lease with Africatown Community Land Trust (ACLT) for Fire
Station 6, an EDI award
recipient. These property transfers build on the September
transfer to Byrd Barr Place,
another Black-led advocacy organization.
“In recent months, the City has proposed and passed the transfer
of Black-led
organizations including Byrd Barr Place, the Central Area
Senior Center, and Fire Station
6 back to community. In recent weeks, the Sound
Transit Board moved forward on transferring ten surplus
properties in Rainier Valley to
the City of Seattle at no cost, for 150 new affordable
8. homes. Our City must make real on
the promise of bold investments in the Black community and
increasing community
ownership of land. These places and organizations will uplift
and support the Black
community for decades to come,” concluded Mayor Durkan.
Fire Station 6 will be the future home of the William Grose
Center for Cultural
Innovation (WGC), where ACLT will provide small business
assistance, skills training and
celebrate Black/African American culture and history in the
Central Area. The City
has committed $1 million from the EDI fund for tenant
improvements to Fire Station 6. As
a valued community partner, Africatown Community Land
Trust has received $15.5 million in city funding, since 2017.
“The proposed lease and reuse of Fire Station 6 as the WGC
would directly carry and
contribute to the EDI Wealth Building strategies and the
accompanying EDI are critical to
showing us a path forward, that our communities have solutions
and that a more equitable
Seattle is possible,” said Wyking Garrett, president and CEO of
Africatown Community
Land Trust.
CASC has served Central Area seniors since 1972, when it was
founded as a nonprofit
volunteer-supported organization. In 1975, the City purchased a
facility in the Central Area
where CASC continues to provide health and wellness,
counseling, transportation, and meal
services.
9. “CASC is ready, and eager to accept the transfer of the property
to the community. The
gentrification of the Central District and the movement of Black
people out of Seattle has
been quite evident within the City limits. However, there
remains a core of institutions
https://protect2.fireeye.com/v1/url?k=1bc9f8a0-45799aa7-
1bc9d010-867c6b071c6f-ace53f63dc7cbe59&q=1&e=aa8194b8-
f0dd-453a-8038-
a19f78108edf&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.rbcoalition.org%2Fcat
egory%2Faction-areas%2Fgrowing-food-to-develop-healthy-
industry%2Ffood-innovation-district%2F
http://www.seattle.gov/Documents/Departments/Clerk/BoardsCo
mmissionsOpenings/EDI-Advisory-Board-Recruitment-
Announcement10.30.20pt.pdf
https://dailyplanit.seattle.gov/Users/KellyJ4/OneDrive%20-
%20City%20of%20Seattle/EDI/casrcenter.org
https://protect2.fireeye.com/v1/url?k=49826dcb-1619553d-
4982457b-8681010e5614-
70a91c2f6243967e&q=1&e=415a86c2-78b2-4a61-b77f-
077b3dc8a458&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.africatownlandtrust.o
rg%2F
12/31/2020 Mayor Durkan Announces $5.65 Million to
Community Organizations Through the Equitable Development
Initiative
https://dailyplanit.seattle.gov/mayor-durkan-announces-5-65-
million-to-community-organizations-through-the-equitable-
development-initiative/ 3/4
that Black people and those who are now seniors, travel far and
wide to reach. CASC is
one of these locations. It is a place of historical importance,”
10. said Dian Ferguson,
Executive Director of CASC. “We applaud Mayor Durkan for
setting the stage for the
transfer of this property to its rightful 50-year community-based
partner. It advances a
collective mission to move from business as usual to achieving
real outcomes focused on
equity with no strings attached to the seniors of our community
and its African American
founders.”
The following community-based
organizations currently working with EDI on anti-
displacement strategies and economic development
opportunities will
receive awards from the $4.4 million for site acquisition and
major capital projects in
2020:
Africatown Midtown Plaza — $640,000
Africatown will create between 5,000 and 8000 sq ft
of affordable commercial space for
Black-owned businesses in Midtown Plaza. The project also
includes 130 affordable
homes and art that reflects the African-American heritage of the
neighborhood.
Byrd Barr Place — $500,000
Byrd Barr Place has been operating out of the City’s surplus
Fire Station 23. The
City transferred ownership of the property to the organization in
September and
the additional funds will support improvements to the building.
Completion of this project
would renovate the 100+ year old building to meet
11. contemporary ADA and environmental
standards, allowing BBP to expand the services it provides.
Chief Seattle Club — $500,000
The Chief Seattle Club is renovating the Monterey Lofts above
their current facility
and adjacent to the site of their new facility. It is designed to
support the physical, cultural,
and spiritual needs of the American Indian and Alaska Native
community, with
indigenous designs, 80 affordable homes, services, health clinic,
and a café/art gallery
space in Pioneer Square.
Ethiopian Community in Seattle —$750,000
The Ethiopian Community in Seattle is redeveloping its existing
community center to
include 100 affordable homes, childcare, and commercial
space. The awarded funds will
be used to to finance construction expected to break ground
next year.
Multicultural Community Coalition — $842,000
The Multicultural Community Coalition (MCC) will anchor
several community
organizations serving Seattle’s growing immigrant, refugee and
people of color
communities by creating a community-owned and operated co-
working space and an
essential Cultural Innovation Center (CIC). The CIC is
envisioned as a vital heritage and
cultural arts venue which will house year-round, cultural events
and activities as well as
serving as a Creative Economy space in which artists, cultural
12. nonprofits, and creative
small businesses will produce and distribute cultural goods and
services that generate
jobs, revenue, and quality of life.
Rainier Valley Midwives — $1 million
Rainier Valley Midwives has been operating out of a temporary
location in the Rainier
Valley Community Clinic that is becoming untenable due to
escalating rents. The
organization is working to acquire and build a permanent Birth
Center in the Rainier
Valley that will provide wrap-around services before, during,
and after the birth process to
people of color.
Wing Luke Museum — $168,000
The Wing is seeking to preserve the Homestead Home one block
south of the Museum
and to activate and develop its adjacent parking lot. This home
is the most intact
remaining single-family home in the Chinatown-International
District, constructed in
1937 despite the Chinese Exclusion Act and discriminatory
barriers to single family
homes in the neighborhood. On the lot, the Wing intends to
build 60 affordable
apartments above a street-level community gathering space.
The following existing EDI partners will receive new capacity-
building awards of up to
$75,000 in 2020: Black & Tan Hall, Byrd Barr Place, Central
Area Youth Association,
Cham Refugees Communities, Chief Seattle Club, Duwamish
Tribal Services, Duwamish
14. Valley Affordable Housing Coalition, Lake City Collective,
Friends of Little Saigon,
Queer the Land, Rainier Valley Midwives, Rainier Beach
Action Coalition, HomeSight,
United Indians of All Tribes Foundation, Urban Black LLC,
West African Community
Council, and Wing Luke Museum.
Additional awards to new EDI partners will be announced later
this fall, including
organizations that are supporting communities of color and
small businesses responding to
the devastating economic dislocation caused by the COVID-19
global pandemic.
Since November 2016, OPCD and partner departments,
including Office of Economic
Development (OED), Office of Housing (OH), Department of
Neighborhoods (DON), Office of Arts & Culture (ARTS), and
Office for Civil
Rights (OCR), have coordinated the administration of the EDI
Fund.
Projects were evaluated on their ability to positively impact
several equity drivers, that
lead to racial equity outcomes including:
Promoting economic opportunity through education, job
training, and enhancing
community cultural anchors.
Helping marginalized populations, businesses, and community
organizations stay in
their neighborhoods.
Enhancing health outcomes, access to healthy, culturally
relevant food, and
17. recommendations
from a working group revising the policies controlling when
officers can use force. The department rejected 150 other
recommendations
from the group. Manuel Martinez / WBEZ
•
https://www.wbez.org/
https://donate.wbez.org/?affordance_placement=header
https://www.wbez.org/topics/criminal-justice/ffa74088-0ab8-
406a-b1f9-b15dd6d39880
https://www.wbez.org/staff/280/patrick-smith
12/31/2020 Chicago Police Reject Recommendations On Use Of
Force | WBEZ Chicago
https://www.wbez.org/amp/stories/cpd-largely-ignores-
community-recommendations-on-when-officers-can-shoot-taze-
or-use-other-force/ae115240-8fbf-4da0-8ced-7… 2/6
Chicago Police patrolling a protest this past summer. On
Wednesday the department announced it would accept five
recommendations from a working group
revising the policies controlling when officers can use force.
The department rejected 150 other recommendations from the
group. Manuel Martinez / WBEZ
Criminal Justice
CPD Largely Ignores Community Recommendations On When
Officers Can
Shoot, Taze Or Use Other Force
18. By Patrick Smith
Oct. 14, 8 p.m. CT Updated 9:10 p.m. CT
The Chicago Police Department is accepting five proposed
changes to its use of
force policies, out of a total of 155 changes recommended by a
community
working group that met weekly for months to help update the
department’s rules
on when and how officers can shoot their guns, deploy tasers or
use their batons.
The use of force working group consisted of 34 members,
including activists, civil
rights leaders and politicians. They met for three hours every
week since June. It
was part of an effort by the department to increase community
participation in
policymaking, as required by the court-enforced police reform
plan known as a
consent decree.
Now, members of the working group are calling the entire
process a “sham.”
Working group member Amika Tendaji, who is an organizer
with Black Lives
Matter Chicago, called the department’s adoption of just five
recommendations,
“ridiculous.”
“I am in no way satisfied,” Tendaji said. “The spirit of what the
working group
tried to come up with is that police should have a stronger duty
than the average
Chicagoan to not hurt people, to not shoot people and to not
19. beat people.”
Tendaji said the five recommendations that were accepted do
not “at all” live up
to that spirit.
•
https://www.wbez.org/topics/criminal-justice/ffa74088-0ab8-
406a-b1f9-b15dd6d39880
https://www.wbez.org/staff/280/patrick-smith
https://www.chicago.gov/city/en/depts/mayor/press_room/press
_releases/2020/june/WorkingGroupUseOfForce.html
12/31/2020 Chicago Police Reject Recommendations On Use Of
Force | WBEZ Chicago
https://www.wbez.org/amp/stories/cpd-largely-ignores-
community-recommendations-on-when-officers-can-shoot-taze-
or-use-other-force/ae115240-8fbf-4da0-8ced-7… 3/6
The changes accepted by CPD’s “executive steering committee”
which is made up
of the most senior leadership at the Police Department, are
largely technical in
nature, and focus on the language used in the policy, like adding
a definition for
the “sanctity of life,” a term that was already included in the
existing force policy.
The steering committee also agreed to change the word
“subject” to “person” in
the use of force policy.
20. Chicago Police Department Deputy Chief Ernest Cato said these
changes to the
language were important, and would send clear messages to
officers.
“You’re taking the word subject out and you’re making it a
person. We’re now
humanizing that individual, who you’re encountering … so I
think that’s huge,”
Cato, co-chair of the working group, said. “Now, when every
police officer has to
write a report, they’re going to say that person, not … that
subject, but that
person, that human being.”
As an example of the kind of changes that were rejected,
Tendaji said there were
some that focused on not allowing officers to carry weapons in
certain situations
or restricting when officers were allowed to draw their guns.
University of Chicago Law Professor Craig Futterman, also a
member of the
working group, said the department also rejected
recommendations that the city
ban chokeholds, limit when tasers can be used and require that
all force be used
only as a tactic of last resort.
“This working group was formed, and the mayor announced it to
great acclaim, …
and it was a sham from the start,” Futterman said.
Futterman said he had spoken with 25 members of the working
group, and that
21. “sham” was the word most often used to describe the process,
and CPD’s decision
to accept only five technical changes.
“It was designed to use us, to use a group of folks with
credibility with the
community … to allow [the city] to check the community
engagement box,”
Futterman said. “I can’t describe the anger and disenchantment
of the folks who
really put themselves into this.”
SUPPORT FOR WBEZ COMES FROM
AND YOUR MEMBERSHIP
https://googleads.g.doubleclick.net/pcs/click?xai=AKAOjsvmm
1bMEfGIw6GYF1k2SeaxksDdtwlWsa0W0sDYzgwPa-
znMshxtsHUueS07q5ytlSbiq6mTutmNDstFXF7MVw_LnUal_w
UqBnE1Noja_sxOUd_dIWPXnq7PY9jmRQAftiZSQfFHLy9zWt
1p12gkDFbBuyACnXTH7JYG4P7bWZ1Ce5SZoNj5ckIXfQqqw
vE8n5dDdZYgGCZE0TwTdXyVn4hzvZ81fdgEtiZX0ri43-
j_2EEUpBGibPFEFUrYyw&sai=AMfl-
YQb1Rakf2GV7dtFFSZha-w0SiCL_NzRJE-
Cvt0CtMktEpVXJLntu-RV4jWSXXh3JAYgRE-
MYnsW11av7tDH8JUl_C7Irn2lW9IAeNP3SCMC&sig=Cg0ArK
JSzEXY6NLIFABj&adurl=https://wbezsponsor.org/&nx=CLICK
_X&ny=CLICK_Y
12/31/2020 Chicago Police Reject Recommendations On Use Of
Force | WBEZ Chicago
https://www.wbez.org/amp/stories/cpd-largely-ignores-
community-recommendations-on-when-officers-can-shoot-taze-
or-use-other-force/ae115240-8fbf-4da0-8ced-7… 4/6
22. Throughout the working group process, Tendaji said, it felt as if
the city was just
going through the motions, and was not actually interested in
changing the
Chicago Police Department.
“The response to the working groups is more of the same,” she
said. “It’s a
determination to brutalize citizens, particularly those fighting
for their humanity,
their dignity and their right to exist.”
Cato said he understands that accepting five proposals may
“appear to be such a
small number.”
“But you got to remember, these are five changes folks from
within our
community came up with,” Cato said. “So let’s not just say five
is a small number.
Five is a very strong number.”
Department officials said some recommendations were rejected
because they
would run afoul of state law or collective bargaining
agreements, or because they
were deemed “not operationally feasible.”
Futterman mocked the idea that CPD made any attempt to
seriously consider the
suggestions of the working group.
“CPD said we’re not going to change a damn thing about how
we instruct our
officers,” Futterman said. “Instead we will do something that
23. doesn’t change
anything.”
One example of a rejected recommendation was the proposal
that CPD prohibit
the use of force against peaceful protestors.
“[Pepper] spray, long range acoustic devices and batons must
not be used against
passively resisting protestors or to disperse crowds at prote sts,”
reads the rejected
proposal.
Police actions at protests have been under a microscope during
the recent months
of unrest, and are the subject of an investigation by the
independent monitor
overseeing the consent decree process.
But department spokesman Luis Agostini said that change was
rejected because it
was already covered in the existing policy.
The department policy says “force used in response to a
person’s lawful exercise
of First Amendment rights (e.g., protected speech, lawful
demonstrations,
observing or filming police activity, or criticizing a Department
member or
conduct) is prohibited.”
“So if the demonstration is a peaceful, lawful expression of
First Amendment
rights, the use of force is prohibited,” Agostini said.
That policy does not address protests that are peaceful but not
24. lawful, like
protesters shutting down a freeway. The proposed change would
have barred
12/31/2020 Chicago Police Reject Recommendations On Use Of
Force | WBEZ Chicago
https://www.wbez.org/amp/stories/cpd-largely-ignores-
community-recommendations-on-when-officers-can-shoot-taze-
or-use-other-force/ae115240-8fbf-4da0-8ced-7… 5/6
officers from using force to disperse peaceful, but unlawful
demonstrations.
Agostini acknowledged the existing policy would still allow
officers to use pepper
spray or batons in those situations
“CPD would still need options to enforce the law under these
circumstances and
some could rise to a use of force,” Agostini said.
Tendaji said it was “horrific” that CPD would not agree to
protect peaceful
protesters, especially considering the allegations of brutality at
demonstrations
this year.
Of the five suggestions that were accepted, Mike Milstein, the
deputy director of
community policing said it likely won’t be until “early 2021”
that the policies are
officially changed because they still need to go through a
lengthy review process
that includes the parties involved in the consent decree.
25. Patrick Smith is a reporter on WBEZ’s Criminal Justice Desk.
Follow him
@pksmid. Email him at [email protected]
READ MORE CHICAGO NEWS →
Top stories
U.S. Likely Will Miss Goal Of Vaccinating 20 Million By The
New Year
Plan On Getting In Shape In 2021? We Asked 7 Experts
What’s The One Thing To Focus On
Here Are The Winners Of Curious City’s 2020 Haiku Contest
Reopened CPS Classrooms Will Range From Empty To
Nearly Full, Often Based On Income And Race
https://twitter.com/pksmid
mailto:[email protected]
https://www.wbez.org/
https://www.wbez.org/stories/us-likely-will-miss-goal-of-
vaccinating-20-million-by-the-new-year/27c92a20-3550-45eb-
b108-4c367eea8532
https://www.wbez.org/stories/plan-on-getting-in-shape-in-2021-
we-asked-7-experts-whats-the-one-thing-to-focus-on/033d679a-
8cbf-4e59-9d35-ecfdf5e71a99
https://www.wbez.org/stories/here-are-the-winners-of-the-2020-
haiku-contest/43d5b3b5-f94c-4fd3-b7fc-7761163e53a4
https://www.wbez.org/stories/reopened-cps-classrooms-will-
range-from-empty-to-nearly-full-often-based-on-income-and-
race/49eb8bef-b0ee-4cc9-994a-b10c46b97edd
https://www.wbez.org/
26. 12/31/2020 How Seattle Is Dismantling a NIMBY Power
Structure – Next City
https://nextcity.org/features/view/seattle-nimbys-neighborhood-
planning-decisions 1/7
Quality news about cities is critical to democracy. Can you help
us meet our goal?
How Seattle Is
Dismantling a NIMBY
Power Structure
At a time when rents are soaring and development is
more contentious than ever before, a little-known city
agency is rethinking its role in neighborhood
planning.
STORY BY
Erica C. Barnett
PHOTOGRAPHY BY
Alex Garland
PUBLISHED ON
Apr 3, 2017
For decades, activist homeowners have held virtual veto power
over nearly every decision on Seattle’s
growth and development.
In large and small ways, these homeowners, who tend to be
white, more affluent and older than the
average resident, have shaped neighborhoods in their reflection
27. — building a city that is consistently
rated as one of the nation’s most livable, as well as one of its
most expensive.
Now — in the face of an unprecedented housing crisis and a
dramatic spike in homelessness — that
may be starting to change.
Last July, Mayor Ed Murray and the director of the city’s
Department of Neighborhoods, Kathy Nyland,
announced that Seattle was cutting formal ties with, and funding
for, the 13 volunteer Neighborhood
District Councils that had been the city’s chief sounding boards
on neighborhood planning since the
$43,595 $40,000 GOAL$40,000 GOAL
https://nextcity.org/membership
https://nextcity.org/daily/author/erica-barnett
https://nextcity.org/daily/author/alex-garland
https://nextcity.org/features/view/tent-cities-seattle-housing-
first-transitional-shelter
https://twitter.com/ericacbarnett
12/31/2020 How Seattle Is Dismantling a NIMBY Power
Structure – Next City
https://nextcity.org/features/view/seattle-nimbys-neighborhood-
planning-decisions 2/7
28. Seattle Department of Neighborhoods Director Kathy
Nyland (Credit: The Rose Center for Public Leadership)
1990s. Through this bureaucratic sleight of hand, Murray and
Nyland signaled their intent to seek more
input and feedback from lower-income folks, people of color
and renters — who now make up 54
percent of the city — and away from the white baby boomers
who have long dominated discussions
about Seattle’s future. The message: We appreciate your input,
but we’re going to get a second opinion.
A few months later, the Department of Neighborhoods doubled
down on its commitment to community
engagement, putting out a call for volunteers to serve on a new
16-member Community Involvement
Commission, which will be charged with helping city
departments develop “authentic and thorough”
ways to reach “all” city residents, including underrepresented
communities such as low-income people,
homeless residents and renters. Finally, DON will also oversee
and staff a second new commission, the
Seattle Renters’ Commission, which will advise all city
departments on policies that affect renters and
monitor the enforcement and effectiveness of the city’s renter
protection laws.
29. The shakeup has rattled traditional neighborhood groups, which
have grown accustomed to outsized
influence at City Hall, and invigorated some groups that have
long felt ignored and marginalized by the
city.
The shift toward a more inclusive neighborhoods department,
and neighborhood planning process, is
more than just symbolic; it’s political. The homeowner-
dominated neighborhood councils have typically
argued against land use changes that would allow more density
(in the form of townhouses and
apartment buildings) in and near Seattle’s traditional single-
family neighborhoods, which make up
nearly two-thirds of the city. Including more renters and low -
income people in the mix could dilute, or
even upend, those groups’ agendas.
“Our city has changed dramatically since our district
councils system was created three decades ago, and we
have seen them over time become less and less
representative not only of their neighborhoods but of
Seattle itself,” Murray said last year.
30. His statement echoed a point Nyland made in a memo to
the City Council back in May: “We have heard from
residents active in the system that ‘District Councils work
for us.’ … However, they don’t work for everyone.”
Nyland should know. She came up through the council
system, first getting involved in the Georgetown
Community Council where she questioned the purpose of a
new trash dump in the largely industrial neighborhood
where she lived and owned a boutique called George with
her partner, Holly. She also got involved with the Greater
Duwamish District Council and helped fight
down a proposal that would have turned Georgetown into the
city’s official strip club district. She
eventually became the chair of the citywide Neighborhood
Community Council, and recalls sending
emails “at 1 in the morning in my pajamas sitting in my living
room, because that’s when I had time to
do it.
“We have systems in place that are not easy to navigate,”
Nyland says, and people in established groups
who say that “people are just choosing not to come to the
31. meetings. … What if someone works at night?
What if someone has kids and can’t get a babysitter? What if
someone can’t speak English? What if
someone just didn’t know about the meetings? They’re not
making a choice not to come. They can’t
come!”
REDEFINING THE RELATIONSHIP TO CITY HALL
Mohamud Yusuf came to Seattle as a refugee from Somalia by
way of Nairobi, Kenya, in 1996, when the
Somali community in Seattle was still “very small,” he recalls.
Today, his community is thriving in areas
like southeast Seattle, which is still one of the most affordable
parts of the city, although rising costs are
pushing many immigrants and refugees farther south, outside
Seattle. Yusuf was a writer, activist and
photojournalist in Somalia in the 1980s and 1990s, and 10 years
ago, he started a newspaper called
Runta News; “runta,” in Somali, means “the truth.” Today,
Yusuf also works as a community liaison to
the city, earning $50 an hour to connect community members to
city programs and services.
The changes at City Hall excite Yusuf. “I’ve been involved in
the community since I was here but I’ve
never seen this kind of involvement,” he says. “What we needed
32. was to be included, to be at the table
and have a voice.”
https://www.seattle.gov/neighborhoods/community-
involvement-commission
https://nextcity.org/daily/entry/seattle-renters-get-stronger-
voice-at-city-hall
https://nextcity.org/daily/entry/seattle-public-outreach-
community-liaisons
12/31/2020 How Seattle Is Dismantling a NIMBY Power
Structure – Next City
https://nextcity.org/features/view/seattle-nimbys-neighborhood-
planning-decisions 3/7
Mohamud Yusuf came to Seattle as a refugee from Somalia in
the 1990s and now works as
a community liaison to the city.
Yusuf recounts a recent effort to get the Somali community
involved in a long-range plan for Seattle
Public Utilities, which provides the city’s trash service and
drinking water. Instead of just making
materials available in Somali and other languages upon request,
the city sent outreach workers to meet
with community members where they already were — in
neighborhood community centers, in libraries
and during English-language classes at the local Goodwill —
and talked with them, in their own
33. language, about what forthcoming changes will mean. They
taught the immigrants how the city’s
sanitation system works too, equipping residents with
knowledge they will be able to use next time
there is a question about trash collection or clean water in their
community.
“The people I talked to were so happy to know more about
where the water goes,” Yusuf says. “They
would say, ‘We all know our garbage goes away, but we didn’t
know where it was going. We are drinking
clean water now at home, but we didn’t know who was doing
it.”
Nyland’s reform can be traced back to a 2009 audit of the
district councils that found an obsolete
system that did not reflect the city’s true demographics. “The
system is dominated by the presence of
longtime members whose point of view is overly dominant at
both the district council and city
neighborhood council levels and potentially not representative
of their communities,” the city audit
found. “The district councils in general are not sufficiently
representative of the communities they
nominally represent,” it concluded.
34. The disconnect was even deeper in 2016, when a report by the
neighborhoods department found that
while the population of Seattle was becoming younger, more
diverse and more evenly split between
homeowners and renters, “residents attending district council
meetings tend to be 40 years of age or
older, Caucasian and homeowners.”
“If you’ve ever gone to some of these community meetings,
they’re just deadly dull, and the same 25
people have been there for 100 years,” City Council Member
Sally Bagshaw says.
At a meeting of the Ballard District Council in northwest
Seattle immediately after the announcement,
district council members seemed shell-shocked by the city’s
decision to cut them off. Sitting around a
horseshoe of tables at the area’s branch library in northwest
Seattle, they took turns grousing about the
change. One member argued that the mostly white, mostly
middle-aged council should be considered
diverse, because “this group represents homeowners,
environmental groups, businesses and other
organizations.” “We have people here from every state,” he
added. Another suggested that the city had
made the move in haste, without a plan to replace the councils.
35. “If you’re going to get rid of the current
plan, you need to have a new plan in place before you get rid of
the old one,” he said.
“Right now, we’re just planting seeds. We might not see the
results
for a long time.”
At another recent meeting of the group formerly known as the
Magnolia/Queen Anne District Council,
which represents a wealthy enclave just south of Ballard, one
member asked plaintively, “Why do we
have to encourage certain groups to come? Why can’t it just be
an open forum?”
https://www.seattle.gov/neighborhoodcouncil/documents/20090
622_DistrictCouncilPublishedReport.pdf
http://clerk.seattle.gov/~CFs/CF_319764.pdf
12/31/2020 How Seattle Is Dismantling a NIMBY Power
Structure – Next City
https://nextcity.org/features/view/seattle-nimbys-neighborhood-
planning-decisions 4/7
In a sense, traditional neighborhood groups are right to feel
threatened. Nyland’s announcement,
coupled with her department’s new emphasis on outreach to
communities that have rarely had a say in
city decisions, represents a fundamental shift in the very
36. definition of the “neighborhoods” department.
By emphasizing outreach to underserved groups such as renters,
immigrants and refugees, Nyland is
shaking up traditional notions of community engagement and
redefining community as something
based not on geographic proximity, but on personal and cultural
affinity.
“It’s kind of taking off in a way that I can’t keep up with,” says
Sahar Fathi, a member of Nyland’s team.
“We get a lot of emails from people who are like, ‘We want this
to come to our community. We’re
starting to go into places where people have never heard of us,
and they don’t even know what
government services are” — including, she says, “communities
we didn’t even know existed.” In Seattle,
a city of about 650,000, one in five residents were born in
another country; of the 120 languages spoken
there, the city’s liaisons collectively speak at least 65.
Fathi is one of Seattle’s relative newcomers. The Boston-born
Iranian-American moved to the Emerald
City a decade ago, when she was in her early 20s. After a stint
as a legislative aide to City Council
Member Mike O’Brien and an unsuccessful run for the State
House of Representatives, she put her
37. background as a lawyer and immigrant rights advocate to work
as a policy analyst for the city’s Office of
Immigrant and Refugee Affairs. These days, Fathi oversees
DON’s Public Outreach and Engagement
Liaison program, which recruits and pays community members
like Yusuf to serve as links between the
city and marginalized groups. The liaisons’ job duties include
everything from driving people to
resource fairs where they can sign up for city assistance
programs, to facilitating meetings at
community gathering places and interpreting for city staffers, to
engaging people in their first language
in larger community discussions over neighborhood spending,
parks programs, and planning debates.
“Before, the city would say, ‘We have a pedestrian master plan
meeting, and we want people to come
and give us feedback,’” Fathi says. “With all due respect to the
pedestrian master plan, there are a lot of
people who can barely afford to pay rent. So how do we meet
people’s needs first and then build their
capacity” to come to meetings about city policies that affect
their neighborhoods.
GOING BEYOND “A SEAT AT THE TABLE”
Seattle’s modern neighborhood movement dates back to at least
38. the late 1980s, when then-Mayor
Charles Royer appointed neighborhood activist Jim Diers to
head up the new Department of
Neighborhoods and create the 13 neighborhood district councils
and a citywide council made up of
representatives from all the councils. Ever since, the district
councils have enjoyed outsized influence at
City Hall, staking out and defining “neighborhood” positions on
issues and channeling city grant dollars
toward their own pet projects, such as National Night Out
events, neighborhood welcome signs and
security lighting.
For decades, the councils advised the neighborhoods department
on what “the neighborhoods” wanted,
and if that advice happened to coincide precisely with the
interests of the comfortable, white
homeowners who dominated the council, nobody at the city
seemed to mind. The councils frequently
advocated against zoning changes to allow more development in
or near the city’s single-family
neighborhoods, including Murray’s Housing Affordability and
Livability Agenda, which would upzone
much of the city and require developers to build affordable
rental housing. Neighborhood activists have
39. shown up in force at council meetings and community briefings
by city staff to oppose the HALA
recommendations, and one neighborhood group has successfully
sued to block an approved HALA rule
change that would make it easier for homeowners to build
backyard cottages.
In recent years, though, groups that have traditionally been left
out of the process have started
demanding seats at the table, including advocates for transit-
oriented development and immigrants and
refugees, and renters. At a recent City Council briefing on the
new renters’ commission, Erin House, a
renter, told the council, “I see conversations at both City Hall
and in neighborhoods dominated by
homeowners, often at the expense of renters’ best interests. As a
city, we need to find ways to correct
this trend and give renters a seat at the table on conversations
about Seattle’s future.”
https://www.seattle.gov/neighborhoods/programs-and-
services/outreach-and-engagement
https://data.seattle.gov/Community/City-Of-Seattle-
Neighborhood-Matching-Funds/pr2n-4pn6
https://nextcity.org/features/view/seattle-affordable-housing-
plan-hala-recommendations-high-rent
https://nextcity.org/features/view/baby-boomers-city-living
40. 12/31/2020 How Seattle Is Dismantling a NIMBY Power
Structure – Next City
https://nextcity.org/features/view/seattle-nimbys-neighborhood-
planning-decisions 5/7
(Credit: City of Seattle)
Last year’s announcement severing ties with the neighborhood
councils was a first step in that
direction. For the first time since its inception in the late ’80s,
the city’s neighborhoods department
would spend as much time engaging with underrepresented
communities as it did listening to the
concerns of white property owners.
“DON has great programs,” Nyland says, “but the department
has not evolved with the changing
demographics of the city.”
Nyland’s department is small relative to other city agencies, but
it has found ways to connect with
residents without a huge infrastructure. Ice cream giveaways at
summer events. Crowd canvassing at
the West Seattle Farmers Market. Plopping down in a temporary
parklet on the annual (PARK)ing day.
And partnering with organizations like the local Goodwill
training center once a quarter, to offer
41. services and information about opportunities to get involved
with city initiatives. Some of the
department’s efforts have had mixed success. A recent push to
engage people of color and low-income
residents in the HALA planning process fizzled after the city
failed to adequately prepare new
participants and follow up when they stopped showing up. But
others have been effective at getting
new people connected to City Hall.
Nyland notes that many people bemoan the loss of
neighborhood service centers, the “little city halls”
where residents could talk to city staffers face-to-face. Most of
those closed down years ago, the victims
of city budget cuts and a population that increasingly does
business with government online. Today,
Nyland says, what people need more than storefronts is
opportunities to engage with the city on their
own time. That means telephone town halls instead of in-person
presentations by city staffers; online
surveys instead of public comment cards; and Skype calls
instead of nighttime meetings in library
activity rooms and church basements.
“My mantra is, people should be able to participate on their own
42. timeline, from their own location,”
Nyland says. “DON has been in existence for 30 years, and it
has a lot of really important programs, but
I think its mission and its purpose has gotten lost. We haven’t
kept up with change. We haven’t
refreshed. … I mean, I can’t force people to participate, but we
can create opportunities to make it
easier.”
At the most recent Goodwill event, Fathi says, the public
outreach liaisons came in and took over the
second hour of a group of immigrants’ English as a Second
Language class. First, they talked briefly —
in 17 different languages — about the mayor’s upcoming
education summit, which aimed to find
solutions to address racial disparities in Seattle schools. Then,
they signed the residents up for “all the
services the city had to offer” — utility discounts, low-income
transit passes and summer programs for
kids. This may seem superficially unrelated to the kind of
community building and neighborhood
planning that is DON’s primary mission, but Fathi says it isn’t.
“There are a lot of people who can barely
afford to pay rent, so we ask ourselves, how do we meet
people’s needs first and then build that
43. capacity, and we think being a good government neighbor is the
first step.”
But what the next step holds is a question that some critics say
hasn’t yet been substantively answered.
Dustin Washington is an experienced community organizer in
Seattle and the director of the American
Friends Service Committee’s local community justice program.
He used to be a member of a race and
social justice roundtable created by Murray and is no stranger to
City Council. To him, DON’s
community outreach efforts are little more than meaningless lip
service to cover for the mayor’s pro-
gentrification, developer-friendly agenda. “When the mayor and
the City Council want to engage with
https://nextcity.org/daily/entry/seattles-community-planning-
experiment-fell-short
12/31/2020 How Seattle Is Dismantling a NIMBY Power
Structure – Next City
https://nextcity.org/features/view/seattle-nimbys-neighborhood-
planning-decisions 6/7
developers — the folks who really hold the power in the city —
they don’t have to create any of these
mechanisms,” Washington says. “You can set up any mechanism
44. that you want, but I don’t think this
mayor is truly interested in engaging with voices that have been
left out of the process.”
In many ways, community activists who question the mayor’s
sincerity and neighborhood activists who
think the mayor is trying to shut them out are coming from the
same place — a profound skepticism
that the city is interested in hearing what they have to say.
Nyland says she understands those
concerns. “Right now, we’re just planting seeds,” she says. “We
might not see the results for a long
time.” Nyland urges skeptics on both sides to be patient and
give her a chance to earn their trust.
Over in Magnolia, at the meeting of the group formerly known
as the Magnolia/Queen Anne District
Council (they’re still searching for a new name), members spent
more than an hour crafting a new
vision statement to reflect their new mission as an organization.
On the second pass, they came up with
this: “This group is a catalyst for enhancing quality of life and
community building by being a forum for
all voices, leading to effective influence on government and in
our communities through innovation,
education and advocacy.” Hardly a full-throated endorsement of
45. Nyland’s agenda, but it’s a start.
Editor’s Note: This article has been corrected to note that one in
five Seattle residents are foreign-
born.
This article is part of a Next City series focused on community-
engaged design made possible with the
support of the Surdna Foundation.
Erica C. Barnett is a Seattle-based writer who covers city
politics and policy in Seattle and beyond for various online and
print publications and her blog, The C Is for Crank. She
cofounded PubliCola, a state and local politics blog. Previously,
she was a staff writer and news editor at The Stranger, a
reporter for Seattle Weekly, and news editor at the Austin
Chronicle.
FOLLOW ERICA C.
Alex Garland is a freelance photographer and reporter in the
Seattle metro
area. His focus is society and environment but covers any and
all stories
concerning his adopted home in the Pacific Northwest. If he's
not tracking