SKILLING/DORGAN
00:00:00:00 [Ex-Enron CEO says he believes most Enron investors sold stock over time]--SOT Under questioning from Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-ND), Jeffrey Skilling says he still had most of the $66 million raised by sale of Enron stock over 2 & -year period./ SOT Sen. Dorgan asked about a North Dakotan who had "his entire life savings in Enron stock, "worked many years for your company. That family has lost their life savings. How do we reconcile that? How is it the people at the top got wealthy & the people at the bottom got broke?"/ SOT Jeffrey Skilling, fmr Enron CEO & president: "I had a program for many, many years of selling a modest portion of my stock. Over many years, that's added up to that number you've talk about, senator. I think most employees also sold stock options & stock as they became due & matured... Most people, did in fact over the years, if they were diversifying & prudent in managing sell some of their Enron Stock." (0:00)/
PORSCHES GIVEN AWAY
company gives employees Porsches
Political issues: broadcast of 05 February 2023
Young business people having stock trading and investing course
Young business people having stock trading and investing course
SOLUTIONS: BENEFITS TO PART TIME WORKERS
CS VO BOB JAMIESON ABOUT STARBUCK'S COFFEE BAR OFFERING STOCK OPTIONS TO ALL EMPLOYEES
87814 "OPPORTUNITY UNLIMITED" ESSO STANDARD OIL SERVICE STATION MANAGEMENT TRAINING FILM
This color ESSO training film "Opportunity Unlimited" is about how to improve business at an Esso service station. It also shows some of the ESSO and ATLAS branded point of sale signage and advertising campaigns. Produced circa the mid 1950s, probably 1957. It was directed by Edward Seward and produced by John Bransby. Note: the film may have been shot at the Jackson Esso Service Station located at 328 Henderson Drive, Jacksonville, North Carolina. <p><p>The plot of the film consists of an "A" and "B" story, with Esso station owner Bill Jackson taking a long overdue cruise to Mexico with his wife, while his employees mind the station in his absence -- while getting coached by a visiting corporate sales manager.<p><p>Opening titles: Esso Standard Oil Company presents Opportunity Unlimited (:06-:36).The owner of Jackson's Esso Service Center, Bill Jackson, talks to a judge. He's driving a 1957 Buick Roadmaster. At home, Mrs. Jackson receives a phone call from a travel agent to pick up tickets for their cruise aboard a steamship. Bill checks the oil and works under the hood on the Belair. Mrs. Jackson calls the service station and leaves a message for her husband (:37-2:51). The judge and Bill discuss. Esso salesman discusses what is needed (2:52-4:35). The men discuss. Cars drive slowly down a suburban street past the Monroe Auto Mart used car lot in Monroe, North Carolina (5:36). City streets and the promise that more cars will soon be on the road. Bill talks with the salesman. Esso service station sign. Car at an Esso station (4:36-6:42). Bill closes his station at night. His station sits quiet when closed. Texaco station is open. Bill talks with a salesman about how to increase business (6:43-7:59). Bill gets home, talks with his wife. Bill didn't have time to grab the tickets, he's home for lunch (8:00-9:29). Cruise ship horn blows. People wave. Ship sails at sea. Bill and his wife on the beach. An Esso sales manager talks to the other workers at the service station, a truck is unloaded. The salesman goes through a binder to explain how to expand and improve business. Bill and his wife walk around a boat dock. They have the option to board a fishing boat and decide to go for $15 a person (9:30-12:23). Sales manager talks to the other workers at the service station about selling opportunities. An interesting looking coupe pulls up to an island at the service station. A man cleans the windows while someone checks under the hood. The oil stick is shown to the customer. Esso Salesman talks to the other worker at the service station (12:24-15:29). Car in service station lot vanishes. A man checks how much gas is still underground in the tank. Oil change. Tires being changed. Sales manager talks to the other worker at the service station. BIll gets a picture taken by his wife with a giant fish on vacation. Car pulls out of the station at night. Worker goes into the station and makes a call (15:30-17:57). Bill's wife seeks Bill as he sits on the beach. The coworker sent him a letter on vacation. His wife reads it to him. She pulls out an ad from the envelope. The two discuss, Bill stands up (17:58-21:25). Inside the Esso station, the coworker types another letter. Three workers look at a picture the boss sent of himself with a fish. The workers paint, fix up the station, put up an oil display. Esso handouts. Workers discuss their plan for better business<p><p>(21:26-23:17). Workers are nice to customers, clean windshields, and offer new services. A worker cleans the inside floor mats. Coworker types. A worker hands a woman a flyer that show what they offer (23:18-25:21). A board has all of the appointments listed. A new man was hired for the station as well. Bill and his wife read a letter at a table near the beach, they discuss what it says (25:22-27:40). Radiogram / telegram. Car is worked on at night at the service station. The worker talks to the Judge. Another worker talks to the judge after doing work on the car (27:41-29:24). A picture of Bill with his fish in the newspaper. Bill talks with his employees and they show him a clipboard that has the figures. Salesman comes in and talks with Bill. Bill takes off his jacket and heads for the judge. He holds a newspaper. He shakes the judge's hand and then<p><p>shows off the picture of him and the fish. The employees come and help out on the judge's car. Bill waves as the judge leaves (29:25-33:05). No end credits.<p><p>This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD and 2k. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com
Young business people having stock trading and investing course
Young business people having stock trading and investing course
CORONAVIRUS IMPACT ON STOCKS AND BUSINESS
***FOR SCRIPT, PLEASE SEE BU-118WE***\n\n --SUPERS--\nWednesday\nNew York\n\nFebruary 26, 2020\n\nClare Sebastian\nCNN Correspondent\n\n --REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS--\nClare Sebastian, CNN Correspondent: "Well, this was a very volatile day for stocks as they struggled to hold on to an early recovery from the dramatic falls of the week so far. Investors digesting the spread of the virus to Latin America with the first case in Brazil and more warnings from health officials. And there was some pretty bleak announcements from companies, too. European airlines Lufthansa and KLM, which HAS suspended China flights in line with the rest of the industry. They announced cost cutting measures, both of them reducing hiring and nonessential spending. Lufthansa even saying it will be offering employees unpaid leave and looking into part-time work options saying it was too early to estimate the impact on earnings. On the letters to staff, the CFO of KLM said even with these measures, the impact on revenue would be quote 'very significant.' Also in Europe, Drinks giant Diageo and food and drink company Danone announcing their sales would take a hit because of a drop off in demand from China. And Moody said Wednesday it expects global auto sales will fall 2.5 percent this year, as coronavirus disrupts supply and demand. The previous expectation was for 0.9% drop. And market experts say, until we get more clarity on when and how this will be contained, the volatility is set to continue. Clare Sebastian, New York."\n\n -----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----\n\n --KEYWORD TAGS--\nCORONAVIRUS BUSINESS INTERNATIONAL NYSE\n\n
TN - Budget - Talks
TENNESSEE LAWMAKERS WRANGLE OVER BUDGETS.
SOLUTIONS: BENEFITS TO PART TIME WORKERS
CS VO BOB JAMIESON ABOUT STARBUCK'S COFFEE BAR OFFERING STOCK OPTIONS TO ALL EMPLOYEES
UPS UNION DEAL AND YOUR BACK-TO-SCHOOL LIST (3pmET)
&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--SUPERS&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>:32-:37&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Katherine Cullen&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>National Retail Federation&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>:51-1:02&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Katherine Cullen&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>National Retail Federation&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>1:16-1:24&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Abe Eshkenazi&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Association for Supply Chain Management CEO&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>01:24-01:31&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>UPS&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--LEAD IN&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>UPS and the Teamsters Union have reached a tentative deal that could avoid a devastating strike at a crucial time for U-S consumer spending. Karin Caifa (KAY-fuh) is in Washington with a look at what's next -- and what's at stake. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>U-P-S AND THE TEAMSTERS UNION SAID THEY'VE REACHED A TENTATIVE DEAL ON A NEW CONTRACT FOR ABOUT 330 THOUSAND U-P-S EMPLOYEES -- WHO PREPARED TO WALK OUT NEXT WEEK. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Carl Morton/Full-time UPS worker: "This is good. This is a start."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>THOSE WORKERS NEED TO RATIFY THE DEAL TO AVOID A WORK STOPPAGE THAT WOULD HIT&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>IN THE MIDDLE OF THE BACK-TO-SCHOOL SHOPPING SEASON -- WHICH THE NATIONAL RETAIL FEDERATION ESTIMATES WILL GENERATE 41-POINT-5 BILLION DOLLARS IN SPENDING.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>N-R-F SAYS SUPPLY CHAIN CRISES SPARKED BY THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC PROMPTED RETAILERS TO BETTER ANTICIPATE DISRUPTIONS.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Katherine Cullen/National Retail Federation: "We're obviously in the middle of back to school, that product is on shelves and stocks. Already heading into holiday, we know retailers are already in a good place with inventory and thinking ahead."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>AND CONSUMERS ADAPTED TOO -- STARTING SHOPPING EARLY TO FIND DEALS TO COUNTER INFLATION -- AND TO GET, WHAT THEY WANT. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Katherine Cullen/National Retail Federation: "There's a lot of tools out there. We know consumers have become adept at using them and retailers have certainly built in their own systems for communicating with their shoppers about what is available and when and how long it might take to get to them."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>UPS HANDLED AN AVERAGE OF 20-POINT-8 MILLION DOMESTIC PACKAGES A DAY LAST YEAR.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>ANDERSON ECONOMIC GROUP ESTIMATED A 10-DAY U-P-S STRIKE WOULD COST THE U-S ECONOMY 7-POINT-ONE BILLION DOLLARS. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Abe Eshkenazi/Association for Supply Chain Management CEO: "While the Postal Service and Fedex and some other delivery channels may pick up some of the slack, there aren't enough options available to the businesses and consumers alike today to replace the volume that UPS handles."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>IN WASHINGTON, I'M KARIN CAIFA&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>-----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----&lt;/b>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--KEYWORD TAGS--&lt;/b>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--MUSIC INFO---&lt;/b>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>
Perry Enron
TEXAS GOVERNOR RICK PERRY TALKS ABOUT STATE AID FOR WORKERS LAID OFF IN THE WAKE OF ENRON'S BANKRUPTCY
TAX BURDEN, PEOPLE UPSET ABOUT GOVERNMENT TAXING PAPER GAIN IN TECH STOCKS BECAUSE OF ALTERNATIVE MINIMUM TAX
ANDY SERWER CS VO ON MANY AMERICANS BEING UPSET AT THE WAY THE GOVERNMENT USES THE ALTERNATIVE MINIMUM TAX WHICH PENALIZES THOSE EMPLOYEES OF CASH POOR INTERNET COMPANIES WHO HAVE ACCEPTED STOCK OPTIONS IN LIEU OF SALARY
32694 " THE PALM SPRINGS SCENE " 1960s TRAVELOGUE w/ PRESIDENT EISENHOWER TENNIS & GOLF RESORTS
This gorgeous 1960s travelogue film covers the varied attractions in Palm Springs, California, which was experiencing a sort of "golden era" of growth and prosperity at the time it was filmed. President Dwight D. Eisenhower, who famously retired to the resort community after leaving office, is shown in the film playing golf.(At the time Eisenhower was one of the world's most famous golfers, since estimates indicated he played about 800 rounds of golf during his two terms in office!) The film covers many aspects of the city's location and geography, with shots of nature and a particular focus on the contrast between the lush, green grass of the city and the harsh dryness of the desert. There are many shots of well-known entertainment venues, including restaurants and clubs, as well as the different accommodation options including hotels and resorts. <p><p>0:15 Model of Spanish explorers and Native American tribes, 0:25 Slide show of historical pictures of Palm Springs, 0:45 Title “The Palm Springs Scene”, 0:57 a building under palms and other greenery, 1:13 several shots of hot springs at The Desert Spa, 1:41 Street views of Palm Springs including the main road and shops, 2:03 Inside shots of a historical house “Miss Cornelia’s House”, aka Cornelia White House, an historic 1893 wooden residential structure located in downtown. 2:27 Mid-century modern, elegant house overlooking the city with shots of several rooms with East Asian furniture and decorations, 3:39 several shots of greenery in Palm Springs contrasted with shots of the Coachella Valley desert, 4:12 Shots of the outside of different hotels in the city including Ray Ryan's El Mirador, Gene Autry's Melody Ranch, Desi Arnaz' Indian Wells Hotel, the Palm Springs Spa, 5:00 Shots of Blue Skies Village trailer park with fancy and elaborate trailer homes, and sign denoting that it is co-owned by singer Bing Crosby. 6:04 Several shots of the Racquet Club, a fancy tennis club including the courts, a pool, and playing chess on a large chess board, 6:36 Couple driving by bike down a street, 6:56 a private plane landing at the Palm Springs Municipal airport, 7:10 Interview with an older female pilot, Zaddie Bunker, who got her pilot's license at age 65 8:19 Shots of El Finko restaurant in the city center, 8:29 city employee trimming a palm tree, 8:51 a US military band plays, 8:59 Dwight D. Eisenhower and his wife show up at a golf course, 9:39 Eisenhower playing golf, 9:57 several shots of golf courses in the city including the El Dorado Country Club, 10:38 different shots of the Ranch Club, a Wild West themed resort with horses and men dressed as Cowboys, 11:36 men and women painting and sketching in a painting club known as the Palette Club, 12:30 Sunset and nightfall in Palm Springs, 12:51 Different neon signs of nightlife places in the city including the Swiss Chalet, Pearl Bailey in concert, Farrell House, 13:12 People watching a Tennis match at night, 13:29 Interview with Charles Farrell, who along with actor Ralph Bellamy founded the Racquet Club. The Club was destroyed in a fire in 2014. 14:43 Desert shots of Palm Springs with people riding horses through it while wearing cowboy hats, 15:27 Men and women have lunch in the desert, 15:50 Shots of nature in a Native American Reservation, 16:56 several sculptures of biblical figures in the desert at the Desert Christ Park, 17:35 Camels being held by men wearing Middle Eastern clothes with Middle Eastern buildings in the background, 17:52 several shots of date palms on a farm and signage for the Date Festival, 18:48 Women buying colorful date gift packages, 19:12 Cowboys rounding up cattle, 19:58 Interview with the owner of Bob Balzer's Tirol Restaurant in Pine Cove, which opened in 1962 and closed in 1966 20:47 shots of the inside of the fancy restaurant, 20:57 owner and customer have a conversation, 21:36 several shots of the very modern Palm Springs City Hall and a statute of John F. Kennedy in front of it, 22:02 different shots of white sand dunes, 22:27 Green campus of the “College of the Desert”, 22:51 Palm Springs Aerial Tramway carrying passengers to the top of a mountain, 23:19 View of Palm Springs from the top of the mountain. The End.<p><p>This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com
Group of young business people celebrating their profit on stock exchange market.
Group of young business people celebrating their profit on stock exchange market.
Group of young business people celebrating their profit on stock exchange market.
Group of young business people celebrating their profit on stock exchange market.
AK: BEHIND-THE-SCENES LOOK AT RECYCLING
&lt;p>&lt;b>--SUPERS&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Friday&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>North Pole, AK &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>:00-:07&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Bernie Karl&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>President of Chena Power&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--LEAD IN&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>FROM WASHING MACHINES, JUNKED-OUT CARS... AND EVEN JET ENGINES... A RECYCLING BUSINESS IN NORTH POLE, ALASKA IS ON A MISSION TO REPURPOSE AS MANY KINDS OF MATERIALS AS POSSIBLE.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>ALEX BENGEL REPORTS.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Bernie Karl/ President of Chena Power:&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>"I plan on proving to the world that there is zero waste. Nature has zero waste. Why should we have waste?"&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>A WALL OF CARS LINES PATHWAYS AT K&amp;K RECYCLING ON THE OLD RICHARDSON HIGHWAY IN NORTH POLE.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>THE FACILITY IS RUN BY CHENA POWER, WHICH, ALONG WITH CHENA HOT SPRINGS RESORT AND KODIAK NARROW CAPE LODGE, REPRESENTS AN EMPLOYEE STOCK OWNERSHIP PLAN.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Bernie Karl/ President of Chena Power:&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>"They get stock option, and when they retire, they get their retirement."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>OPENED IN 1984, THE 100-ACRE FACILITY ACCEPTS A WIDE RANGE OF ITEMS, INCLUDING VEHICLES, WASHING MACHINES, DRYERS, REFRIGERATORS, BARBECUE GRILLS.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Bernie Karl/ President of Chena Power:&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>"We take everything from lightbulbs to jet engines, the whole gamut."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>HOWEVER, LIQUIDS LIKE OIL, ANTIFREEZE, AND FREON MUST BE DRAINED BEFORE APPLIANCES ARE BROUGHT TO THE FACILITY.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Bernie Karl/ President of Chena Power:&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>"We don't try to ship anything with tires on them. We take the tires off. I have a large stack of tires here that I'm just getting ready to build a retaining wall out of them, so they make a great retaining wall."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>K&amp;K DOESN'T CHARGE PEOPLE FOR DROPPING THINGS OFF, AND WILL PAY FOR NON-FERROUS METALS.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Bernie Karl/ President of Chena Power:&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>"All the coppers, the zincs, the aluminum, the tin, we'll buy it from you."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>WHILE IT HAS THE CAPACITY TO ACCEPT CARDBOARD AND PAPER TO MAKE FUEL PELLETS, KARL SAYS CHENA POWER IS LOOKING FOR A LOCAL MARKET FOR THAT PRODUCT.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Bernie Karl/ President of Chena Power:&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>"And then we'll be back into the cardboard and paper recycling, once we figure out a market for the stuff. You can't ship it outside and make any money. You have to turn it into something here."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>K&amp;K ACCEPTS MATERIAL SIX DAYS A WEEK, MAKING USE OF WHATEVER THEY CAN.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>ONCE GATHERED, MANY OF THESE MATERIALS ARE BALED INTO DENSE CUBES, WHICH CAN THEN BE SHIPPED WHERE THEY CAN BE FURTHER PROCESSED.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Bernie Karl/ President of Chena Power:&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>"We prepare the steel. That way you get top dollar out of it. If you didn't prepare it, you wouldn't get enough to even ship it."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>ALL MATERIALS GO TO SEATTLE.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>FROM THERE, THE PREPARED METALS END UP IN A VARIETY OF PLACES.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Bernie Karl/ President of Chena Power:&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>"It goes to either refineries in America, or sometimes they export it overseas. Sometimes it goes to Taiwan. Sometimes it goes to Korea. Sometimes it goes to China. It depends on where the market's at."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>IN A YEAR, THE FACILITY SHIPS 10 THOUSAND TONS OF MATERIAL, WITH SOME YEARS SEEING AS MUCH AS 50 THOUSAND TONS.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Bernie Karl/ President of Chena Power:&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>"We have figured out how to make this business work, and we do it year-round."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>-----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----&lt;/b>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--KEYWORD TAGS--&lt;/b>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>ALASKA PLANT PROCESS REUSE ENVIRONMENT VEHICLES &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>
NURSES STRIKE UPDATE / DFL CAUCUS MEMBERS JOING (1984)
REPORTER PACKAGE CUTS OFF EARLY.
SOLUTIONS: BENEFITS TO PART TIME WORKERS
COVERAGE IN TRUMBULL, CONNECTICUT FOR A BOB JAMIESON CS VO FOR SOLUTIONS ABOUT STARBUCKS COFFEE GIVING THEIR PART TIME EMPLOYEES BENEFITS INCLUDING HEALTH INSURANCE, PENSIONS AND STOCK OPTIONS TO AVOID WORKER TURNOVER. 02:01:00 INT FTG IN STARBUCKS COFFEE STORE. SETUP. 02:01:18 INTV W/ 21 YEAR OLD STARBUCKS PART TIME COUNTER WORKER & COLLEGE DROPOUT, TANYA ANDRASKO, ABOUT HAVING DIFFICULTY FINDING A JOB OFFERING BENEFITS UNTIL SHE WAS HIRED BY STARBUCKS. 02:11:22 TWO SHOTS BEHIND TANYA. 02:13:06 INTV W/ ASSISTANT MANAGER, KAREN LANG, ABOUT WORKING AT EIGHT DIFFERENT JOBS IN THREE DIFFERENT STATES UNTIL RETURNING TO STARBUCKS AND THE ATTRACTION OF THE BENEFITS PACKAGE THIS COMPANY OFFERS. 02:20:57 TWO SHOTS BEHIND KAREN. 02:21:31 SETUP. 02:21:41 INTV W/ FORMER DANCER AND STARBUCKS MANAGER, MARISA BALDWIN, ABOUT THE COMPANY'S STOCK OPTION PLAN AND THE LOW LEVEL OF EMPLOYEE TURNOVER. 02:25:55 SETUP. TWO SHOTS JAMIESON AND BALDWIN SITTING AT TABLE TALKING. 02:27:40 SOT W/ BALDWIN ABOUT STABILITY OFFERED THROUGH THE COMPANY'S BENEFITS PACKAGE.
MN CEO Salaries
A LOOK AT THE SALARIES OF CEOs OF MINNESOTA COMPANIES AND ONE CEO WHO LIMITS HIS PAY TO 60,000.
Young business people having stock trading and investing course
Young business people having stock trading and investing course
SOLUTIONS: BENEFITS TO PART TIME WORKERS
COVERAGE IN TRUMBULL, CONNECTICUT FOR A BOB JAMIESON CS VO FOR SOLUTIONS ABOUT STARBUCKS COFFEE GIVING THEIR PART TIME EMPLOYEES BENEFITS INCLUDING HEALTH INSURANCE, PENSIONS AND STOCK OPTIONS TO AVOID WORKER TURNOVER. 02:01:00 INT FTG IN STARBUCKS COFFEE STORE. SETUP. 02:01:18 INTV W/ 21 YEAR OLD STARBUCKS PART TIME COUNTER WORKER & COLLEGE DROPOUT, TANYA ANDRASKO, ABOUT HAVING DIFFICULTY FINDING A JOB OFFERING BENEFITS UNTIL SHE WAS HIRED BY STARBUCKS. 02:11:22 TWO SHOTS BEHIND TANYA. 02:13:06 INTV W/ ASSISTANT MANAGER, KAREN LANG, ABOUT WORKING AT EIGHT DIFFERENT JOBS IN THREE DIFFERENT STATES UNTIL RETURNING TO STARBUCKS AND THE ATTRACTION OF THE BENEFITS PACKAGE THIS COMPANY OFFERS. 02:20:57 TWO SHOTS BEHIND KAREN. 02:21:31 SETUP. 02:21:41 INTV W/ FORMER DANCER AND STARBUCKS MANAGER, MARISA BALDWIN, ABOUT THE COMPANY'S STOCK OPTION PLAN AND THE LOW LEVEL OF EMPLOYEE TURNOVER. 02:25:55 SETUP. TWO SHOTS JAMIESON AND BALDWIN SITTING AT TABLE TALKING. 02:27:40 SOT W/ BALDWIN ABOUT STABILITY OFFERED THROUGH THE COMPANY'S BENEFITS PACKAGE.