Will You Add?
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Legal > Legal > The Ill And Disabled Employees Are Bearing The Brunt Of Corporate Canada's Restructuring

Tags

  • polices
  • associated
  • problems debilitating
  • after almost
  • their employment

  • Links

  • Building a Community for Your Website
  • Facts About Rock Climbing Rope
  • Should You Buy Text Links?
  • Will You Add? - The Ill And Disabled Employees Are Bearing The Brunt Of Corporate Canada's Restructuring

    Secured Loans- Avail Finance at Low Cost
    In the present scenario most of the people are struggling with shortage of finances. Thus the obvious choose is to go for a loan. If you have some assets to offer as collateral against the loan amount than you should go for secured loans. Secured loans are the loans that keep a security against the loan amount.A secured loan, as the name itself signifies, entails a security. This security can be any valuable asset like property, vehicle, house etc. In secured loans the borrowers can borrow the loan amount up to a limit of ?100,000 with a repayment period ranging from 5 to 30 years. The borrower can use the loan amount for various purposes like for debt consolidation, buying vehicle, wedding purpose, home improvement, education, holidaying etc.The main advantage of the secured loans is that these loans have low interest rates. This is because the risk of the lender is equalized by the presence of the collateral. Another advantage of secured loans is the ability to borrow more for a longer time period. Thus the borrower can easily pay off the loan amount easily in small monthly installments. Secured loans offer greater flexibility to borrowers than any other loan form.Secured loans are available online which makes easily accessible from the comfort of home or office. One can get innumerable choices for secured loan online. All they have to do is fill in a single online application form. The borrower can easily get the quotes by di
    rs usually have a field day with that definition and what ensues is months of endless requests for more conclusive and better medical information from the sponge-like insurance adjuster. Just as some employees feel that they will expire from exhaustion and frustration, as long as proper updated medical reports are available, the insurance companies finally cave in. Benefits eventually follow but like everything else, are limited to the specific policy, usually 60 - 80% of pre-absence salary, less any money received from EIC or supplemental income plans.

    2. That a person must have the legal status of an employee during the material time of the illness or injury. Timing is everything. In most Provinces, all employment benefits must be extended during a period of lay-off or after termination-for a minimum statutory period consistent with "Labour Board" rules.

    Once these conditions are satisfied, an employer who knowingly terminates an employee just before he would otherwise qualify for disability benefits to avoid premium increases might as well go for a car wash with the windows open.

    The Courts have held that in addition to the standard wrongful dismissal notice of termination/

    What if There Were No Sales People?
    What if there were no sales people? What if no one ever tried to sell you anything? Would you have a better life? Would it be better for our country? What about the economy? What about jobs? How about; the service, retail and manufacturing industry, would they do better or would all these things do worse? It has been said that nothing happens until someone sells something. For instance if someone sells a tractor to a farmer then the tractors must be built. That means people have to make it; manufacturing. People have to ship it by train or truck or even barge; thus pilot ship operators, train conductors and truck drivers. Ah, but someone has to make those transportation items right? And they are made of rubber, steal and plastic and what about those industries, which include manufacturing, mining and petroleum? What if no body ever sold a tractor?Well, what if no one ever sold a bushel of wheat? Then the farmer would not need the tractor right? What if the car salesmen did not sell a pick-up to the salesmen to go to visit the farmer to go sell him the tractor? Well then the Auto Dealership would not have needed a building or any cars. So we do not need any construction workers to build the dealership or anyone working in the Automaker business to build the car right? Well what if the hardware store never sold the hammer to build the building so the car salesman could sell the pick up to the salesmen to sell the tractor to the farmer so he could
    Remember those insurance commercials featuring the "Good Hands" people. Those were the days when a cup of coffee was 50 cents, the milkman delivered and people expected to retire from the same company where they had come up from the Mail Room.

    But this is the 21st Century; It costs 50 cents to put air in your tires, your doctor answers by voicemail, and your chances for freedom at 65 seem about equal to winning the provincial lottery. Competition is in, fairness, out; especially for the ill and disabled. It seems that in this age of rapidly developing trends, a dark side has emerged from the corporate obsession with downsizing, restructuring and competitiveness.

    More and more employees who find themselves unable to work due to serious illness, accident or stress find that between their employer and group disability insurer, the race is on to show them the back of the hand, and the door.

    For many of these people, actual termination of employment is only the last stage in a long, stressful period. The most dedicated of employees push themselves to the limit of endurance to satisfy the demands of their financial responsibilities, a sense of teamwork and the ever present furrowed brow of a skeptical supervisor. The more loyal and diligent the employee, the more sleepless nights, tossing and turning with guilt; always the decision whether to "come in" or not, even over the protests of their own medical advisors.

    Like any Toronto employment lawyer practicing in the employment area, after almost 20 years, the development is infuriating and I have had my fair share of horror stories; a 36 year old Production Supervisor with an excellent work record lying on his hospital bed suffering with Lupus, job performance warnings left on his empty desk; a woman with breast cancer returning 3 months early from her chemotherapy, only to be told the next day she was to be the only person "restructured" in a large prosperous company; the 8 year employee of a major bank, home on medical stress leave, being called almost everyday by the Occupational Health Nurse as to when she would return to the team that needed her. Eventually, the bank cut her off from their disability program, citing some unwritten policy that she was not allowed to became pregnant while on disability. These stories - man's inhumanity to man, are not unique.

    Employment law can respond, but in a confused, complex manner. In Ontario, for example, as in many Provinces, whether or not you are injured on the job or smitten with a work- related illness is a key determination as to whether you can claim from the Worker's Compensation Board or from the company-sponsored disability plan. Most of the time, this is akin to experiencing execution by slow strangulation or the firing squad.

    For example, if you are unlucky enough to suffer from an illness such as chronic back problems, debilitating reactive depression or repetitive strain injury, which ate job related, but associated with an individual's genetic makeup, the employer, Workers Compensation Board and the insurance company often engage in a sad game of legal "hot potato". If and when the illness is determined to be work related, an employer is bound by the fearsome Section 54 of the Worker's Compensation Act. This is good news for the employee; while it is no picnic to deal with the Workers Compensation Board and its faceless mail system during the disability period, when the individual is deemed to be medically fit to return to the pre-injury position on light duties or a modified work plan, the employer cannot terminate the employee for up to 2 years in the absence of willful misconduct. There are few exceptions and the Worker's Compensation Tribunal polices its rules with a special enforcement office which can levy a $20,000.00 penalty and a 12 months salary compensation order against the un-cooperative employer. After all, if most employers could refuse to take an injured employee back or fire them soon after, the Workers Compensation Board would have to extend financial support much longer. Is it any wonder that Section 54 is so tough?

    Unfortunately, the legal status of an employee who falls ill from a non-work related injury or illness is far more uncertain.

    Most disability insurers set up their first obstacle by ensuring that the Group Policy, which most employees never see, excludes a claim for a work- related illness or injury under the policy. Then, In order to qualify for disability benefits the person must apply within a stipulated time from the injury. Lastly, group policies always stipulate 2 conditions:

    1. That an individual is so totally disabled as to be unable to perform all the ordinary functions of their employment for the first 24 months. After that time the rules get even tighter. Medical advisors usually have a field day with that definition and what ensues is months of endless requests for more conclusive and better medical information from the sponge-like insurance adjuster. Just as some employees feel that they will expire from exhaustion and frustration, as long as proper updated medical reports are available, the insurance companies finally cave in. Benefits eventually follow but like everything else, are limited to the specific policy, usually 60 - 80% of pre-absence salary, less any money received from EIC or supplemental income plans.

    2. That a person must have the legal status of an employee during the material time of the illness or injury. Timing is everything. In most Provinces, all employment benefits must be extended during a period of lay-off or after termination-for a minimum statutory period consistent with "Labour Board" rules.

    Once these conditions are satisfied, an employer who knowingly terminates an employee just before he would otherwise qualify for disability benefits to avoid premium increases might as well go for a car wash with the windows open.

    The Courts have held that in addition to the standard wrongful dismissal notice of termination/c

    Preparing to Invest: How to get started
    Investments can be a source of great potential earnings. The two most common reasons that a person does not invest are either they do not have the money or they do not know how to get started. These are some ways to prepare for investing and some things to consider before investing.Saving Money to Invest* Lower debtEveryone has debt and most will always have some debt, however if you have outstanding credit card debt, then this may not be a good time to invest. Credit card debt can be consuming and the best way to become financially stable and to create and atmosphere in which you are able to save money, you must pay off high interest rate credit cards. If you have more than two credit cards or your cards have reached the maximum limit and you are making minimum payments then you should invest all extra money into paying off these debts before investing in other ways.* Create Emergency FundsEveryone should have an emergency fund for unexpected debts or accidents. Financial advisors will recommend that you have at least three months of funds or 15% of annual income to fall back on in the event that you lose your job or incur unexpected expenses.* Maximize Employment BenefitsIf your employer offers a 401 K plan, be sure that you are taking full advantage of this plan. Strive to put in the maximum amount allowed each month. You may not think of this as an "investment" however, 401 K and similar plans
    brow of a skeptical supervisor. The more loyal and diligent the employee, the more sleepless nights, tossing and turning with guilt; always the decision whether to "come in" or not, even over the protests of their own medical advisors.

    Like any Toronto employment lawyer practicing in the employment area, after almost 20 years, the development is infuriating and I have had my fair share of horror stories; a 36 year old Production Supervisor with an excellent work record lying on his hospital bed suffering with Lupus, job performance warnings left on his empty desk; a woman with breast cancer returning 3 months early from her chemotherapy, only to be told the next day she was to be the only person "restructured" in a large prosperous company; the 8 year employee of a major bank, home on medical stress leave, being called almost everyday by the Occupational Health Nurse as to when she would return to the team that needed her. Eventually, the bank cut her off from their disability program, citing some unwritten policy that she was not allowed to became pregnant while on disability. These stories - man's inhumanity to man, are not unique.

    Employment law can respond, but in a confused, complex manner. In Ontario, for example, as in many Provinces, whether or not you are injured on the job or smitten with a work- related illness is a key determination as to whether you can claim from the Worker's Compensation Board or from the company-sponsored disability plan. Most of the time, this is akin to experiencing execution by slow strangulation or the firing squad.

    For example, if you are unlucky enough to suffer from an illness such as chronic back problems, debilitating reactive depression or repetitive strain injury, which ate job related, but associated with an individual's genetic makeup, the employer, Workers Compensation Board and the insurance company often engage in a sad game of legal "hot potato". If and when the illness is determined to be work related, an employer is bound by the fearsome Section 54 of the Worker's Compensation Act. This is good news for the employee; while it is no picnic to deal with the Workers Compensation Board and its faceless mail system during the disability period, when the individual is deemed to be medically fit to return to the pre-injury position on light duties or a modified work plan, the employer cannot terminate the employee for up to 2 years in the absence of willful misconduct. There are few exceptions and the Worker's Compensation Tribunal polices its rules with a special enforcement office which can levy a $20,000.00 penalty and a 12 months salary compensation order against the un-cooperative employer. After all, if most employers could refuse to take an injured employee back or fire them soon after, the Workers Compensation Board would have to extend financial support much longer. Is it any wonder that Section 54 is so tough?

    Unfortunately, the legal status of an employee who falls ill from a non-work related injury or illness is far more uncertain.

    Most disability insurers set up their first obstacle by ensuring that the Group Policy, which most employees never see, excludes a claim for a work- related illness or injury under the policy. Then, In order to qualify for disability benefits the person must apply within a stipulated time from the injury. Lastly, group policies always stipulate 2 conditions:

    1. That an individual is so totally disabled as to be unable to perform all the ordinary functions of their employment for the first 24 months. After that time the rules get even tighter. Medical advisors usually have a field day with that definition and what ensues is months of endless requests for more conclusive and better medical information from the sponge-like insurance adjuster. Just as some employees feel that they will expire from exhaustion and frustration, as long as proper updated medical reports are available, the insurance companies finally cave in. Benefits eventually follow but like everything else, are limited to the specific policy, usually 60 - 80% of pre-absence salary, less any money received from EIC or supplemental income plans.

    2. That a person must have the legal status of an employee during the material time of the illness or injury. Timing is everything. In most Provinces, all employment benefits must be extended during a period of lay-off or after termination-for a minimum statutory period consistent with "Labour Board" rules.

    Once these conditions are satisfied, an employer who knowingly terminates an employee just before he would otherwise qualify for disability benefits to avoid premium increases might as well go for a car wash with the windows open.

    The Courts have held that in addition to the standard wrongful dismissal notice of termination/

    Small Business Networking For Professionals
    Business networking groups are a collection of professionals that help eachother gain an edge in commercial relationships. Large corporations have the means and ability to pay for anything that they need, like marketing for example, whereas small businesses normally have a tighter budget and cannot afford to spend as much as big business can.As such, business networking is suited for small business professionals and can be referred to as "small business networking." Bringing like-minded professionals together for a common cause, normally to market their business or business services, can be a highly effective tactic when it comes to marketing their respective businesses. Not only that, but it also can be a cost-effective marketing method.Think of small business networking as a "you scratch my back, I'll scratch your back" situation. Business professionals from various industries can provide business introductions and form mutually beneficial relationships to help each other market their products and services. They can do this by introducing each other to the decision-makers in their respective companies. It's a win-win situation for all parties.Aside from the obvious business aspect of networking, it also provides for social interaction in a relaxed non-business setting. There's nothing like loosening up after a hard day's work to socialize and mingle with people that you normally only interact with in an office setting.Wit
    plex manner. In Ontario, for example, as in many Provinces, whether or not you are injured on the job or smitten with a work- related illness is a key determination as to whether you can claim from the Worker's Compensation Board or from the company-sponsored disability plan. Most of the time, this is akin to experiencing execution by slow strangulation or the firing squad.

    For example, if you are unlucky enough to suffer from an illness such as chronic back problems, debilitating reactive depression or repetitive strain injury, which ate job related, but associated with an individual's genetic makeup, the employer, Workers Compensation Board and the insurance company often engage in a sad game of legal "hot potato". If and when the illness is determined to be work related, an employer is bound by the fearsome Section 54 of the Worker's Compensation Act. This is good news for the employee; while it is no picnic to deal with the Workers Compensation Board and its faceless mail system during the disability period, when the individual is deemed to be medically fit to return to the pre-injury position on light duties or a modified work plan, the employer cannot terminate the employee for up to 2 years in the absence of willful misconduct. There are few exceptions and the Worker's Compensation Tribunal polices its rules with a special enforcement office which can levy a $20,000.00 penalty and a 12 months salary compensation order against the un-cooperative employer. After all, if most employers could refuse to take an injured employee back or fire them soon after, the Workers Compensation Board would have to extend financial support much longer. Is it any wonder that Section 54 is so tough?

    Unfortunately, the legal status of an employee who falls ill from a non-work related injury or illness is far more uncertain.

    Most disability insurers set up their first obstacle by ensuring that the Group Policy, which most employees never see, excludes a claim for a work- related illness or injury under the policy. Then, In order to qualify for disability benefits the person must apply within a stipulated time from the injury. Lastly, group policies always stipulate 2 conditions:

    1. That an individual is so totally disabled as to be unable to perform all the ordinary functions of their employment for the first 24 months. After that time the rules get even tighter. Medical advisors usually have a field day with that definition and what ensues is months of endless requests for more conclusive and better medical information from the sponge-like insurance adjuster. Just as some employees feel that they will expire from exhaustion and frustration, as long as proper updated medical reports are available, the insurance companies finally cave in. Benefits eventually follow but like everything else, are limited to the specific policy, usually 60 - 80% of pre-absence salary, less any money received from EIC or supplemental income plans.

    2. That a person must have the legal status of an employee during the material time of the illness or injury. Timing is everything. In most Provinces, all employment benefits must be extended during a period of lay-off or after termination-for a minimum statutory period consistent with "Labour Board" rules.

    Once these conditions are satisfied, an employer who knowingly terminates an employee just before he would otherwise qualify for disability benefits to avoid premium increases might as well go for a car wash with the windows open.

    The Courts have held that in addition to the standard wrongful dismissal notice of termination/

    The Playful Policy Review
    This bizarre report arrived from a perturbed customer in Asia:I wanted to play golf at a prestigious course in town, so I went to the Pro-Shop to book a time.The attendant at the counter said she could not take my booking in person as she was only allowed to accept golf reservations by telephone.I explained that I wanted to make a booking right away. And since I was already there, wouldn’t she please make the reservation?The attendant refused once again, repeating that she only took bookings by telephone.A public telephone stood in the corner nearby. I walked over to it and promptly called the Pro-Shop. The attendant answered the telephone and proceeded to make my booking. The entire time I could see her at the counter while we were speaking on the phone. And she could see me, too.This makes me wonder: If the customer had used his mobile phone to call the reservations clerk while he was standing directly in front of her, then would she have seen the absurdity of her ways? And if she did, would she have told her managers about it? Or made a suggestion to change it?Most likely, not.Key LearningPoint Frontline staff are taught to follow policies and procedures. Often they are hesitant to `break the rules'. Yet some rules should be broken, or changed, or at least seriously bent from time to time. Are your staff bound by rules they cannot change? If those rules
    2 years in the absence of willful misconduct. There are few exceptions and the Worker's Compensation Tribunal polices its rules with a special enforcement office which can levy a $20,000.00 penalty and a 12 months salary compensation order against the un-cooperative employer. After all, if most employers could refuse to take an injured employee back or fire them soon after, the Workers Compensation Board would have to extend financial support much longer. Is it any wonder that Section 54 is so tough?

    Unfortunately, the legal status of an employee who falls ill from a non-work related injury or illness is far more uncertain.

    Most disability insurers set up their first obstacle by ensuring that the Group Policy, which most employees never see, excludes a claim for a work- related illness or injury under the policy. Then, In order to qualify for disability benefits the person must apply within a stipulated time from the injury. Lastly, group policies always stipulate 2 conditions:

    1. That an individual is so totally disabled as to be unable to perform all the ordinary functions of their employment for the first 24 months. After that time the rules get even tighter. Medical advisors usually have a field day with that definition and what ensues is months of endless requests for more conclusive and better medical information from the sponge-like insurance adjuster. Just as some employees feel that they will expire from exhaustion and frustration, as long as proper updated medical reports are available, the insurance companies finally cave in. Benefits eventually follow but like everything else, are limited to the specific policy, usually 60 - 80% of pre-absence salary, less any money received from EIC or supplemental income plans.

    2. That a person must have the legal status of an employee during the material time of the illness or injury. Timing is everything. In most Provinces, all employment benefits must be extended during a period of lay-off or after termination-for a minimum statutory period consistent with "Labour Board" rules.

    Once these conditions are satisfied, an employer who knowingly terminates an employee just before he would otherwise qualify for disability benefits to avoid premium increases might as well go for a car wash with the windows open.

    The Courts have held that in addition to the standard wrongful dismissal notice of termination/

    What To Do When A Cop Pulls You Over?
    Regardless of how good your efforts are in trying to avoid a ticket, one of these days the boys in blue are going to get you. You’re going to look in your rearview mirror, you’re going to see the flashing lights, and what you do in the next very few minutes may be a tremendous determining factor in whether or not you beat the ticket. Pull off to the side of the road as far as is possible to allow the officer to approach your vehicle after he pulls up behind you. Try not to do anything that might be out of the ordinary, or to make your appearance before the officer, memorable. You don’t want him to remember you. That way, if any specific details are asked in court later, he’ll have no idea and it may blow his credibility in front of the Judge. Once your car is safely pulled off the side of the road shut the engine off, roll your window down, and keep both hands on the wheel. DO NOT remove your seat belt at this time. If you’re not wearing your belt, it’s too late to put it on. Don’t bother.If it’s during the evening or darkness hours, make sure that you have your flashing lights on. Relax, calm yourself, and wait for the officer to approach your vehicle. If you get upset now, you’ll cause undue attention to yourself, and you certainly do not want to do that. Generally, an officer will ask you one of two questions. It’s either, “Do you know how fast you were going?”, and your response should be, “No, I’m not really sure.” Or, “I think I w
    rs usually have a field day with that definition and what ensues is months of endless requests for more conclusive and better medical information from the sponge-like insurance adjuster. Just as some employees feel that they will expire from exhaustion and frustration, as long as proper updated medical reports are available, the insurance companies finally cave in. Benefits eventually follow but like everything else, are limited to the specific policy, usually 60 - 80% of pre-absence salary, less any money received from EIC or supplemental income plans.

    2. That a person must have the legal status of an employee during the material time of the illness or injury. Timing is everything. In most Provinces, all employment benefits must be extended during a period of lay-off or after termination-for a minimum statutory period consistent with "Labour Board" rules.

    Once these conditions are satisfied, an employer who knowingly terminates an employee just before he would otherwise qualify for disability benefits to avoid premium increases might as well go for a car wash with the windows open.

    The Courts have held that in addition to the standard wrongful dismissal notice of termination/compensation entitlements based on the employee's age, seniority and type of position (approximately one month per year or more), the employer may be obligated to pay all the insurance benefits an employee would have received during the entire time of the disability. This cold dish would be served up with a sour dollop of punitive and aggravated damages.

    While such "bull in the china shop" employers still exist, the Courts have made this callous conduct rare since the potential risk of pain greatly outweighs the nominal gain. In many situations, it is possible to make a viable claim for disability benefits at any time during the entire notice period - Unless, of course, the insurance policy specifically limits the claim period in writing and the restriction was brought to the employee's attention.

    However, in the dirty 90's, many employers appear willing to be engaged in a more insidious practice of terminating an employee while on disability benefits or having just returned from short term/long term disability leave. To some, the rationale is clear - in an age of economic restructuring someone has to get thrown from the lifeboat. Why not the rehabilitated employee who may still require an extended period of light duties or moderated pressure that the employer cannot tolerate or afford. The problem is that this trend has infested the grey clouds that are normally situated in legal netherworlds and employees do not yet have the clear tools to respond.

    In the now famous case of McKay v. Carrico, the Ontario Court of Appeal stated that employees could claim both disability benefits and severance if they are terminated while disabled. This potential for a double indemnity claim should have made it an effective deterrent. However, like any good mousetrap, employers have been consistently and successfully finding ways of skating around the rules by two common methods: (a) They allege that by virtue of a long absence and permanent inability to perform the job, whether on long term disability benefits or not, the employee has frustrated their employment due to factors outside of either party's control. (b) Many employees who fail to constantly keep their employers informed about their medical status during the absence and the probability of recovery, in writing, are deemed to have abandoned or resigned their employment.

    While the resignation argument beggars common sense, and is dealt with accordingly, the Doctrine of frustration is both perverse and dangerous - most of all because some Courts have accepted it in certain circumstances. The notion that an employee can forfeit rights of severance accrued over long years of service by reason of a legitimate absence due to illness or injury seems arbitrary, to say the least. After all, having been approved by the company disability insurer, would not common sense dictate that an employee's job must be held open without pre-condition or question until the Doctor reports him ready and able to return to work.

    Accordingly, like many aspects of employment law, knowledge of one's rights is the best preventative medicine. The Courts have consistently said that it is a question of fact in every case of whether or not the employee is permanently and substantially unable to perform the pre-injury functions and responsibilities. Fortunately, the onus is on the employer to prove this point. An employee who makes diligent efforts to keep in contact with their employer, in writing, prevents assumptions being made by the employer that the injury is permanent and that the job has been abandoned. Medical reports must be submitted that address the issue of the timing for return to work as -opposed to leaving it indefinite. These reports must be submitted, with proof of delivery, so that the employer is not given the opportunity to plead that the termination occurred because they were unaware of the person's whereabouts and medical status;

    Furthermore, as often happens when the employee notifies the employer of his intentions to return to work - and gets that old rejected feeling - the employee must document the request by either registered letter or fax confirmation. This leaves no room for suggestion that the job was held open but the returning employee failed to co-operate.

    Finally and most importantly, the readiness to return to work, only after medical approval, must be coordinated with the disability insurance company, who are more than willing to "shut off the tap" in the hopes of foisting the responsibility onto the employer at the earliest opportunity. Too many employees disregard medical advice and attempt to go back to work before they are ready, only to have the door slammed in their faces by the employer, their long term disability benefits already having been discontinued and their E.I. sick

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.atriclecheck.com/article/127785/atriclecheck-The-Ill-And-Disabled-Employees-Are-Bearing-The-Brunt-Of-Corporate-Canadas-Restructuring.html">The Ill And Disabled Employees Are Bearing The Brunt Of Corporate Canada's Restructuring</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.atriclecheck.com/article/127785/atriclecheck-The-Ill-And-Disabled-Employees-Are-Bearing-The-Brunt-Of-Corporate-Canadas-Restructuring.html]The Ill And Disabled Employees Are Bearing The Brunt Of Corporate Canada's Restructuring[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Stepping Stones To The Ultimate Pay Off

    Discover How Anyone With Absolutely No Money Can Make A Fortune Online Without a Website

    Bad Credit Home Equity Line of Credit - 3 Benefits of an Equity Line of Credit

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com