No There There–Again!

So, respected Japanese money management/investment firm can’t find most the $2.6 billion it’s handling for various pension funds.  Japanese regulators think maybe the rules aren’t strong enough.  Can’t wait to see how U.S. deregulation zealots react to such heresy, once they come up for air after torpedoing any sensible financial regulation here.   http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/25/business/global/japan-orders-aij-investment-advisors-to-suspend-operations.html

Cashing Out on the Turnpike

As this story notes, cashing in accumulated vacation and sick leave at retirement is common in public agencies.  So, given the inertial nature of organizations, and the employees’ sense of entitlement to such benefits where they exist, agencies that end “cash-out” policies will likely experience plague-level sick leaves that put the CDC on high alert. Ohio Turnpike’s director thinks pay policies are too generous at toll road | cleveland.com.

Institutionalized Family Court

An organization whose actions are largely governed by its members’ perceptions of what ought to be done, notwithstanding what laws, rules, stakeholders or even markets require, is suffering from a grave condition–institutionalization.  Now New York’s Family Court won’t die from it, but Kodak might, Olympus will be in the ICU for a while, and IBM almost succumbed to the condition in the 1990s.  In varying degrees at varying times this affliction takes hold of the FBI, and the FAA; and most urban public school systems are just emerging from prolonged institutionalization comas.  http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/18/nyregion/at-new-york-family-courts-rule-for-public-access-isnt-heeded.html