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When the food-delivery apps like DoorDash, UberEats, and Grubhub came out, he signed up, like many restauranteurs. Food delivery apps have also come under scrutiny for charging customers high fees and underpaying drivers. He said one issue was quality control, adding that the food-delivery apps don't always do enough to vet drivers. AdvertisementMarciante uses Owner.com, a startup that has raised millions in funding to help restaurants ditch the food-delivery apps. The other food-delivery apps did not respond to requests for comments from BI.
Persons: , Tony Marciante, Grubhub, BI's Alex Bitter, Marciante, There's, he'd, Uber, DoorDash, Tony's Organizations: Service, Business, BI Locations: Bethesda , Maryland, Rockville , Maryland
“It would be about 25 years before all the PFAS leave your body.”Testing your waterWhat can consumers do right now to limit the levels of PFAS in their drinking water? Filtering your waterIf PFAS levels are concerning, consumers can purchase an under-the-counter water filter for their tap. “The water filters that are most effective for PFAS are reverse osmosis filters, which are more expensive, about in the $200 range,” Andrews said. Reverse osmosis filters can remove a wide range of contaminants, including dissolved solids, by forcing water through various filters. PFAS in food and your homeDrinking water is not the only way PFAS enters the bloodstream.
Persons: Melanie Benesh, , ” Jane Hoppin, , Andrews, PFAS, ” Andrews Organizations: CNN, Environmental Protection Agency, Geological Survey, Environmental, , National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, Medicine, Center for Human Health, Environment, North Carolina State University, NSF, National Sanitation Foundation, EWG, US Food and Drug Administration, FDA, Research, Education, Community Health, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Locations: United States, polluters, Raleigh, Texas
Signage is seen at the headquarters of the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 10, 2021. The Environmental Protection Agency, EPA, released long-awaited regulations Wednesday on some toxic "forever chemicals" found in drinking water. The bonds are incredibly strong and take a very long time to break down, earning them the nickname "forever chemicals." The EPA's new final rule sets limits on 5 individual PFAS: PFOA, PFOS, PFNA, PFHxS, and HFPO-DA (also known as GenX Chemicals.) The EPA also set a Hazard Index level for PFAS when two or more of four are mixed: PFNA, PFHxS, HFPO-DA, and PFBS.
Persons: Tom Neltner Organizations: United States Environmental Protection Agency, Washington , D.C, Environmental Protection Agency, EPA, CNBC, Environmental Defense, Safer Chemicals, . Geological Survey, GenX Chemicals Locations: Washington ,
US consumers are struggling with soaring credit card debt and rising interest rates. Credit card debt is now at record levels, and interest rates on those cards have soared. AdvertisementOf that total debt, credit card balances are growing the fastest. While this could create a parallel between today's credit card crisis and the mortgage crisis of 15 years ago, there are a few important differences today. AdvertisementStill, the rise in credit card debt and delinquencies could point to cracks in the strength of Americans' spending power.
Persons: Thomas Nitzsche, Gen Z, millennials, Nitzsche, Ginger Chambless, Chambless Organizations: Business, Money Management, MMI, Federal Reserve Bank of New, Federal, JPMorgan Chase, Federal Reserve, Adobe Locations: Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Wells Fargo
What I got wrong about loyalty at work
  + stars: | 2024-02-12 | by ( Aki Ito | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +8 min
In the story, I wrote that people seem to divide into two groups when it comes to the decline of workplace loyalty . To my surprise, a lot of older readers took issue with getting lumped into the pro-loyalty camp. Someone else wrote, more gently, "While I feel you're spot on with most of your facts you've got gen x all wrong." They added: "My generation leads in workplace dissatisfaction and realized 2 decades ago that there was no more corporate loyalty." There isn't a generational divide over workplace loyalty, these readers were telling me.
Persons: Gen Xers, Gen Zers, I'd, Readers, X, Gabriel, he'd, I'm, they've, I've, , Gen, isn't, Aki Ito Organizations: Business Locations: American, America, TikTok
Everyone's talking about boomers, millennials, and Gen Zers, but Gen X is often left out of the conversation. Many Gen Xers say they like it this way, and they just want to be left alone. Lee questioned why Gen X hadn't been criticized for "not saving the planet," and for failing to fulfill their promises. Gen X viewers immediately began weighing in, and some jumped to defend themselves. It's been viewed more than 300,000 times and has reignited discussion around why Gen X is seemingly ignored in conversations about generational strife.
Persons: Gen Zers, They're, , X's, TikToker Bryan Lee, Gen Xers —, Lee, Gen X hadn't, Gen, GenX, TikToker @heatherlynntx, It's, Jon Wellington, Xer, they've, Wellington, Xers, they're, TikToker @stygian_strategies, X, Cassandra Carr, Gen Xers, Millennials, — Cassandra Carr 🥄♿ Organizations: Service, Wellington
Now, especially after the sturdy June jobs report as week ago and the reassuringly cool CPI print on Wednesday, this is something closer to the prevailing view. The market all year has been acting as if inflation and the Fed's aggressive war against it were mostly 2022 problems. The wobble in early July after a blockbuster ADP employment report sent Treasury yields flying was over in a day. Passing these tests, and now having seen market strength broaden significantly since the end of May, belief is replacing doubt. And last quarter, the S & P went choppily sideways for the first month of reporting season.
Persons: it's, what's Organizations: Federal, Treasury, Investment, National Association of Active Investment, Deutsche, Nasdaq, Bulls, Wall, & $ Locations: what's
June 23 (Reuters) - Carnival (CCL.N) is expected to post robust second-quarter revenue growth as new and younger customers, undeterred by high inflation, spend on novel experiences such as cruising. While Americans have cut back on purchasing big-ticket non-essential goods due to soaring costs, protracted confinement to their homes during the pandemic has whet their appetite for outdoor experiences. Millennials (born between 1981 and 1996) and GenX (born between 1965 and 1981) have reached peak earnings years and are feeding multi-generational travel as they spend on cruises and bring their families along, according to J.P. Morgan analysts, who lifted rating on Carnival stock to "overweight" last week. A younger customer base is helping fuel this demand, with 88% of millennial and 86% of GenX travelers that have past cruising experience intending to sail again, according to a report from Cruise Lines International Association. "Given (cruise) is a vastly under-penetrated travel product ... more marketing instead of price cuts drives growth in new-to-cruise, which has a reasonably high conversion rate to repeat-cruisers," Barclays analyst Brandt Montour said.
Persons: Morgan, Millennials, GenX, Brandt Montour, Granth, Vinay Dwivedi Organizations: Reuters Graphics Reuters, Morgan, Bank of America, Cruise Lines International Association, Barclays, Refinitiv, Thomson Locations: J.P, Bengaluru
Nike is the largest sportswear company in the world, and currently employs over 79,000 people. Analytics firm Numerator found that the typical Nike customer is a Gen X Caucasian person earning over $80,000 annually. Footwear sales made up $29.1 billion, or more than half, of the company's total revenue last year. Nike finished its fiscal 2022 year with 344 company stores, including 209 factory stores and 87 Converse stores. In its latest annual report, Nike said footwear revenues grew 9%, driven by both Jordan Brand and men's sales last year.
The Environmental Protection Agency on Tuesday proposed the first nationwide restrictions on so-called "forever chemicals" in drinking water after discovering the compounds are more dangerous than previously known — even at undetectable levels. The chemicals, known as perfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, have been voluntarily phased out by U.S. manufacturers. The EPA's proposed standards cover six PFAS that have polluted drinking national water supplies. The proposal would regulate PFOA and PFOS as individual contaminants, and would regulate four other PFAS — PFNA, PFHxS, PFBS, and GenX Chemicals — as a mixture. For PFOA and PFOS, the agency proposed a binding drinking water limit of four parts per trillion per chemical.
The US Environmental Protection Agency just released a proposal for enforceable standards for six PFAS compounds in drinking water. The new EPA proposal would set the threshold for those two substances at 4 nanograms per liter of drinking water. It also proposes a "hazard index" to set a limit on the combined quantity of four other PFAS in drinking water: PFNA, GenX, PFBS, and PFHxS. Communities across the US have especially high PFAS contamination in their drinking water, often due to a nearby industrial or military facility. "You can't just regulate in drinking water, without addressing the other side," Sunderland said, adding that you have to "turn off the source."
GOP Insider readers: Dump Trump!
  + stars: | 2022-11-11 | by ( Kayla Gallagher | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +26 min
Insider asked its Republican readers to send in their thoughts on Donald Trump following the GOP's dismal midterm performance. Subscribers to Insider's newsletter were asked two questions: Do you agree with the GOP insiders who blame Trump? Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Image— Joe S.I don't blame Trump per se. Olivier Douliery/AFP via Getty Images— Julia T.I think Trump, DeSantis AND the GOP are EXTREMELY dangerous for our Democracy. The Republican Party needs to get away from the extremists in the party or the Republican Party will no longer exist.
A British radio host died during an on-air broadcast on Monday, according to the radio station. Host Tim Gough, 55, died while broadcasting his breakfast show on GenX Radio Suffolk from his Lackford, Suffolk home at 7:50 a.m., according to the radio station, which said in a news release that Gough died of a suspected heart attack. The entire GenX Radio family are shocked and devastated beyond words." According to Gough's biography on the GenX Radio website, his return to radio marked his first time back on air in over a decade. Tributes poured in on the station's Facebook page, where one commenter called Gough a "local radio legend."
Tim Gough suffered a fatal heart attack while presenting his daily radio segment for GenX Radio Suffolk. The 55-year-old spent over three decades in the radio industry, according to a news release from GenX Radio Suffolk. GenX Radio Suffolk host Tim Gough, 55, died "doing what he loved," according to a news release from the station. The local radio station announced the incident in a Monday tweet. We are heart broken by the news," said James Hazell, owner and managing director of GenX Radio Suffolk.
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