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-- One of the Country's Largest State Departments is Poised to Cut Annual eDiscovery Costs in Half Based on Projected Savings with CommVault Software ...
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I like the position I'm in," [Paula Kay Drummer] begins. "I like being able to get out in the field, get out in the community to know what is upcoming, what's going on so that we, EDD, can keep up and know what's going on in society. Because if we are not in the field, we don't know what's going on. That helps our job seekers, our community, people who are looking for schools to get training or education, or just need a job whether it's entry level or skilled.
"Things do get stressful at times," Drummer admits, "but what picks me up is when someone calls me on the phone or comes back in to say, Thank you. I got the job and I've been working.' Then you feel relieved."
"I am raising men," says Drummer. "I tell them that employers are looking from someone young and someone they can train...
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Richard W. Bakke, Deputy Attorney General, Los Angeles, CA, for appellants.
Jeffry A. Davis, Gray, Cary, Ware & Freidenrich, San Diego, CA, for appel...
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ELEPHONE INTERCONNECT COMPANIES @ Ranked by number of 2002 local full-time employees based on Employment Development Department forms @@ Telephone Com...
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Jeffrey M. Vesely, Los Angeles, Cal., for Employment Development Dept. and Franchise Tax Bd.
David Epstein, Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., for ...
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Back in the early 2000s, with the debate already heating up over how much of the unemployment problem in California and the nation was caused by illegal immigrant workers and their willingness to be exploited by skinflint employers, Dianne Feinstein tried an experiment.
The veteran Democratic U.S. senator arranged for every office of the state Employment Development Department to list menial, farm- related jobs like strawberry picking that were actually available at the time.
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John William Cumming, Eureka, Cal., and Richard M. Pearl, Oakland, Cal., for plaintiff-appellee.
Charlene V. McIntyre, U.S. Dept. of Justice, Washing...
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More than 100 California CPAs arrived at the state Capitol May 10 to increase the profession's visibility and share concerns with legislators on issues important to the profession and the state. The California Society of CPA-sponsored AB 1868, which would ease interstate commerce by clarifying conditions under which CPAs from other states can provide services to California taxpayers. CalCPA is opposing SB 1550, which would require CPAs who act as trustees for estates or exercise control over the financial affairs of clients to become licensed as a "professional fiduciary." CalCPA also is opposing AB 2344, which would enact a tax amnesty period for the Franchise Tax Board and Employment Development Department.
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John William Cumming, Eureka, Cal., and Richard M. Pearl, Oakland, Cal., for plaintiff-appellee.
Charlene V. McIntyre, U.S. Dept. of Justice, Washing...
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Los Angeles County's unemployment rate inched up to 12 percent in June from a revised 11.9 percent the previous month, and every city in the San Gabriel Valley and Whittier area posted an uptick.
Figures released Friday by the state Employment Development Department also show that civilian employment decreased by 18,000 to 4,287,000, while unemployment ramped up by 4,000 to 587,000.