An agreement was not reached on a bill that would resolve the differences between the Senate (S. 662) and House (H.R. 22) postal reform bills before the end of the Congressional session, though legislators and mailers worked past midnight on Saturday night.
The cause of the delay, this time, was the National Association of Letters Carriers, according to Jerry Cerasale, senior vp for government affairs for the Direct Marketing Association, writes Multichannel Merchant. The Letter Carriers Association was at odds over language that dealt with workers compensation.
Until the lame duck session of Congress convenes, Cerasale says he will spend his time with legislators to build consensus on specific language, so that when Congress reconvenes on Nov. 13, “we’ll be ready to go,” he is quoted as saying.
All sectors of the media business will suffer from the weakened economy in 2008 and 2009, with a slump in local advertising particularly hurting newspapers and local TV, according to a new projection from Goldman Sachs.
Broadcast nets will experience…
The New York Times is shuttering its International Herald Tribune site; NYTimes.com will soon host the international news normally reserved for its sister website.
The move is not about cost savings, but rather about growth, NYTimes.com general manager Vivian Schiller…
Unilever’s Vaseline set forth on an unusual research project in a small town in Alaska. Setting up a storefront, the company began giving away free bottles of lotion and asking recipients to name the person who had recommended they come…
Meet the Press, the show hosted by Tim Russert for 17 years before his death last June, is beginning to slip in ratings.
Last month, CBS’s Face the Nation pulled ahead of Meet the Press for the first time in two…
Bloggers collectively create nearly one million blog posts each day, and half of bloggers believe blogs will be a primary source of news and entertainment in the next five years, according to Technorati’s 2008 State of the Blogosphere Report, MarketingCharts writes.…
Wal-Mart and Costco reported same-store gains in September, with sales rising 2.4% and 9% respectively. Sales at Target stores open at least a year fell 3%, writes Retailer Daily.
Below, fiscal results from the discount retail giants:
Sales of food and…