^^ hows this for a kick in the nuts.....I was laid off along with ^. We were basically peers there, but ^ was a team leader in his group so he had a bit of seniority. My last day was December 12, along with about 150 other engineers from our Cary office. Everyone laid off December 12 got 60 days notice (notified in October), full PTO payout, a very generous severance, 3 months COBRA subsidy, and our 2008 bonus, all paid out in full in early January. A few "lucky" people from each department (the best engineers from each dept, and their managers), including Fail Boat, were picked to stay in the office until January 30, to help close down shop. They were supposed to get the entire severance package that I listed that the Dec 12 people got. ..... Their last day was Jan 30, and they didn't get any of it, even after signing termination contracts. Then, 3 "extra lucky" people, again including Fail Boat and my former manager, were offered positions at another site. It was treated as a transfer, so they obviously forewent the severance, since they still had jobs, and were promised transfer packages for the move. Their new jobs started in mid-January at the new site. The site laid them and 500 other people off on Feb 3 and announced the site overall was closing by the end of March. Nobody laid off on Feb 3 received any PTO or severance, and the company was not even in Chapter 11 yet. Then, 3 weeks later, the company announced that 1) finally they were declaring chapter 11, and 2) the people who's last day wasn't on Feb 3 but were continuing to work would not be paid for their work between Feb 3 and the date of Chapter 11. So, yeah - there was plenty of ineptitude to go around back there
3/18/2009 9:27:52 PM
sucks...[Edited on March 18, 2009 at 9:38 PM. Reason : s]
3/18/2009 9:31:59 PM
I did some googling about bankruptcy and talked to a lot of guys at the company in the last days and the sad irony is the most experienced guys or the best guys end up staying to the very end until there is no more money and they don't get any severance.So long as I get paid my PTO and relocation (even if it only covers my actual expenses) I'm at breakeven compared to a Dec 12 stop date. I'm not so hung up on severance like some folks are, I've known since mid October that we were toast and I got paid for all that time and didn't really have to do too much after the first couple weeks.
3/18/2009 9:49:38 PM
3/18/2009 10:01:14 PM
paid time off
3/18/2009 10:03:58 PM
yeah, unused PTO is carried on a company's books as a liability, because it's part of the contract - you get 4 weeks of PTO a year or whatever, and it's included in your annual salary. Therefore, when you quit or get laid off and you have PTO accrued that you haven't used, say 4 weeks, that's just like them not paying you for 4 weeks of work.
3/18/2009 10:15:48 PM
ah, thanks for the lesson fellas.I only get 10 days off a year and my sick days come out of that too. Kinda sucks since ive been with my boss since 2004. But if im not in the office it doesnt generate any money, so I kinda understand.
3/18/2009 10:21:18 PM
yeah, well believe it or not, we had people with upwards of 2 months worth of saved-up PTO that they never got paid for. Contractually, it's just the same as not being paid for 2 months worth of work, because according to their contract, they could have taken 2 months worth of vacation and still gotten paid the same thing in their time at the company.btw, now that we're wrapping up this pity-party and love-fest, I assume we'll be back to full-on arguing about minutiae by tomorrow? [Edited on March 18, 2009 at 10:39 PM. Reason : .]
3/18/2009 10:38:06 PM
I'm trying to fill up my bank of allowable rollover PTO right now... Its like a smaller secondary safety-net, assuming the company doesn't go chapter 11.
3/18/2009 10:39:55 PM
We lent cargo planes full of billions to this company in exchange for a majority ownership share, right?Why on Earth didn't Congress--acting as board of directors--remove the CEO and/or CFO unless they refused the pay the bonuses out?While petty compared to the billions we lost in Iraq (as in, vanished), this abject greed is sickening...
3/18/2009 11:35:47 PM
we're moving ever faster down the slippery slope toward nationalization
3/19/2009 12:42:19 AM
Fail Boatthat sucks. you should burn the place down like milton.
3/19/2009 8:04:19 AM
^^ Nationalization isn't necessarily a bad thing, if it's done right. As Gamecat said, the US Gov't already has a majority share in AIG, and a plurality share in Fannie, Freddie, and Citibank. But we are not doing anything with the shares!. Gamecat's point is that with a majority stake in AIG, it is the governments right, nigh, the governments obligation to fire the entire board of directors, put in a new board, who will then fire all of the top management. Under new management, the company will reorganize, the Financial Products group will be ripped apart into good and bad assets, then the whole company, hopefully healthier by then, will be sold back to private investors. What we're doing now, though, is bullshit - we own these companies already. They are Nationalized already in all-but-name, but we are not reaping any of the benefits of nationalization, only the costs.
3/19/2009 9:40:14 AM
That is because there are only costs to reap. Why do you think a new set of managers of a broken and government owned business is going to do any better? As Liddy said at the hearings, those who received the retention bonuses will most likely turn them back in - along with their resignations. I think this would be a good outcome - as the government would lose its entire investment. "It would be a harsh lesson, but I think a necessary one."
3/19/2009 12:04:59 PM
I can't believe the 90% tax passed, but then again, yes I can
3/19/2009 3:18:52 PM
3/19/2009 4:18:29 PM
3/19/2009 4:54:30 PM
Maybe i'm losing touch with the common man, but I can't get worked up about these bonuses.It's despicable, but it's a drop in the bucket, and stopping or recovering them doesn't do a single thing to the greater underlying problems.The tax is a worthless token gesture. It'll just make the banks be more clever about compensation.
3/19/2009 4:57:43 PM
Yeah, there has been next to zero discussion about the taxpayer dollars funneled via AIG to foreign corporations at 100%. I dunno if French institution was one of those, but I can imagine they could stir up even more hate if that were the case.
3/19/2009 5:00:02 PM
^ they weren't "funneled" to foreign institutions - AIG owed money to banks, many of which happened to be overseas. They paid that money to those banks, trying to continue their business with them. Why are we giving AIG money? To keep their business alive, right? And so they can carry on business-as-usual, as much as possible, no? Or at least, try to avoid systematic risk so the whole house-of-cards that is our current financial system doesn't collapse. Well, a big portion of AIG's business was from CDSs that other banks, sometimes foreign, bought from them. AIG owes money on these CDSs under two circumstances:1) some of the obligations the CDSs hedged against have defaulted, and therefore the CDSs have been exercised and AIG owes on them2) AIGs credit rating has decreased. When AIG sold the CDSs, they had an AA rating, and the banks buying the CDSs did not require an collateral. Now that AIG's rating has fallen, some of the CDS contracts require AIG to cough-up collateral to the banks owning the CDSs. So, we give AIG $170B. What should they do with it? Is there anything they could spend the money on that would make the American people happy? Should just just pad their accounts? In that case, people would complain that they not "doing anything" with the money.
3/19/2009 5:42:32 PM
^ Yeah, I'm still not 100% clear on all the outrage. We gave them money, in theory so they could continue to operate and conduct business as usual. Even better, we specifically write an amendment to the bill that gives them the money that allows them to pay out these bonuses. And then we get all outraged when they take that money and conduct business as usual?Seems to me, if we didn't want them spending tax payer money on their contractual obligations and wanted the company to be restructured and reinvented, we should have saved the billions and let them go bankrupt.
3/19/2009 9:41:26 PM
^Exactly. When Dodd put in the amendment to allow these retention payments (not bonuses), the deal was made. Those employees should get to keep that pay. We're allowing a bad precedent by allowing a country to have a temper tantrum and get the congress to tax/punish specific individuals.
3/19/2009 10:45:43 PM
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/House-passes-bill-taxing-AIG-apf-14693850.html[Edited on March 19, 2009 at 10:55 PM. Reason : nvm, already posted]
3/19/2009 10:54:45 PM
3/19/2009 10:59:55 PM
3/19/2009 11:05:57 PM
3/19/2009 11:19:01 PM
^^ i'm not arguing with or disputing your fundamental point, which I believe can be summed up with "this is all such bullshit." I agree. But the populist anger that keeps arising against foreign banks getting money or big bonuses or whatever is misdirected and ill-informed. But.... i guess what can you do. If that gets people paying attention or riled up, maybe it's worth it.
3/19/2009 11:45:13 PM
3/20/2009 1:07:07 AM
3/20/2009 1:15:41 AM
the goal of government is to make sure it stays in as 'government.'
3/20/2009 7:33:00 AM
3/20/2009 8:18:32 AM
FYI, the latest NPR Planet Money podcast ("#19 Pointing Fingers") discussed exactly the point of "don't we own AIG?" They talk about the Trust that the gov't put in charge of AIG, and what they can and can't do, and why it's not exactly like a normal gov't takeover or nationalization http://www.npr.org/rss/podcast/podcast_detail.php?siteId=94411890
3/20/2009 10:33:07 AM
I wonder what they will rename the company.
3/20/2009 11:03:50 AM
lol
3/20/2009 11:37:50 AM
3/20/2009 12:09:29 PM
3/20/2009 9:53:46 PM
to paraphrase a quote from a guest on the Planet Money podcast I posted earlier:"We (the country, Congress, The President, the media, pretty much everybody) has wasted an entire week doing practically nothing except talking about this bonus bullshit. This was a week when nothing except grandstanding and knee-jerk reactions has gone on, and a week when actual progress could and should have been made towards actions that would actually help the country"
3/21/2009 12:41:28 AM
^ Such as? I always wonder when someone gives the distraction speech, what law did you wanted congress to be paying attention to instead? And what are the odds they would if they could?
3/21/2009 8:27:06 AM
Well, i suppose in a Libertarian Utopia, Congress would always be spending time grandstanding and giving self-congratulatory speeches, instead of getting actual work done, or as a Libertarian would say: "doing damage". But last I checked, Geithner still doesn't have a real proposal for the banking system. Congress hasn't create or introduced any new meaningful regulatory legislation, or investigated or held hearings with people who actually did start this crisis (they should be grilling Christopher Cox, not Ed Liddy, who was put in AIG <6 months ago to fix the mess - he didn't get them into the mess). Obama is wasting breath trying to jump on the populist-outrage bandwagon. The press is foaming at the mouth talking about where $160M went, while ignoring where the other $170,000M has gone. But, in the end, maybe this little episode is worth it. Maybe if this is what it took to get the American people actually engaged and more educated on what's going on, then maybe it was worth the time and energy spent on the topic. (i'm not sure I believe that people are "more educated", however..... the faith I put in normal American's to actually understand or critically view all these problems is incredibly low)
3/21/2009 8:56:57 AM
^ I think over all that's a good thing. The government isn't doing anything, life goes on, the apocalypse continues to be a no show and hopefully more and more people realize that we don't need to "do something right now", that we can take the time to actually measure and consider what we're doing. It's not likely that we will, but in that case, it's better that we not be doing anything than be doing things wrong.
3/21/2009 10:03:25 AM
3/21/2009 12:22:11 PM
3/21/2009 3:07:31 PM
3/21/2009 11:57:16 PM
goodthe patient is a bloated asshole and its kids are self-indulgent pricks[Edited on March 22, 2009 at 12:51 PM. Reason : +]
3/22/2009 12:50:00 PM
i love that you have 5 billion and 50 billion sandwiching 1 trillionWHERES THAT XKCD WHEN YOU NEED IT
3/22/2009 1:03:25 PM
3/23/2009 7:30:50 PM
Acorn?Really?you're bringing Acorn back into this?
3/23/2009 9:45:48 PM
3/24/2009 2:56:26 AM
Obama 3/24:
3/25/2009 11:02:17 AM
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/25/opinion/25desantis.htmlAn interesting letter written by the now resigned executive vice president of the American International Group’s financial products unit, Jake DeSantis. Its interesting to read it from their perspective. If what he claims is true, that most of the people who created the mess have already moved on, then you can't help feel a little sympathy for the guys who were brought in to clean up the mess only to be tarred by the same brush as the former.
3/25/2009 11:10:58 AM