Podcast appearances and mentions of bill hogan

Canadian politician

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Best podcasts about bill hogan

Latest podcast episodes about bill hogan

Information Morning Fredericton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)

Conservatives did not have the results they wanted last night, but some ridings still elected PC MLAs, including the Woodstock-Hartland riding. Jeanne Armstrong spoke to Bill Hogan.

Tech Sales Insights
E179 - Finding the Balance: Trust & Relationships vs. AI featuring Berk Mesta

Tech Sales Insights

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2024 44:10


In this episode of Tech Sales Insights, Randy Seidl is joined by Burke Mesta, founder of Belsa Inc., to discuss the importance of balancing trust and relationships versus the role of AI in sales. Burke shares his extensive career journey, including his experiences in engineering, sales, and management at renowned firms like PTC, Bicis, and Temenos. The conversation delves into the critical role of trust and personal relationships in business, the evolving landscape of revenue intelligence and performance management, and the necessity for effective leadership over mere management. Burke also highlights the value of mentorship, drawing from his own experiences and insights from industry veterans like John McMahon and Tom Mendoza. The episode concludes with a light-hearted anecdote about a skiing adventure, reinforcing the theme of personal connection throughout the conversation.KEY TAKEAWAYSImportance of Relationships: Highlight the importance of building and maintaining relationships in the business for long-term success.AI vs. Relationships: Discuss finding the balance between leveraging AI tools and maintaining personal relationships. Berk emphasizes that AI is a tool and should not replace human interaction.Power of Trust: Trust is fundamental in building successful business relationships. It is difficult to build and easy to destroy.Mentorship: Discussion on the importance of mentorship in personal and professional growth. Berk mentions several mentors who have influenced his career.Leadership vs. Management: Berk's perspective on leadership – leading by example and building personal connections with your team rather than just managing.Revenue Operations: Insight into how revenue operations can bridge the gap between marketing and sales and improve overall efficiency and growth.Performance Feedback: Highlight on the necessity of regular and constructive feedback in improving team performance.QUOTES“We're in the business of profit, but not at the business of, of hurting someone for that profit.”“Feedback isn't even criticism. Is it negative? It's productive for improvement, continuous improvement.”“The power of trust is key.”“I'm going to get personal with my customers. I'm going to get personal with my team, and then we're going to be able to break down these barriers and we can have a more clear and open communication path.”“We know all these old strategies that we learned going back to my McMahon days and PTC days of consultative selling, strategic selling, but relationships are what's key to be able to enable that.”Find out more about Berk Mesta through the link below.LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/berk-mesta/This episode is sponsored by Avnir, the Relationships Excellence sponsor of the Sales Community. Avnir leverages AI and decades of Relationship Economics® insights to help businesses unlock the hidden value in their connections, enhancing human interactions and driving strategic growth through organized, activated, and monetized relationships.

NB Poli Podcast
The Digital Price tag for Democracy & Politics with Dominic Cardy

NB Poli Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2024 63:32


This week we get former PC Cabinet Minister Dominic Cardy on the show to have a conversation about New Brunswick Politics. It's been a long time coming to be sure. We speak on a range of topics from the plight of democracy, the Canadian Future Party, and the New Brunswick political landscape.  Wikipedia Bio Dominic William Cardy[1] MLA (born 25 July 1970) is a Canadian politician and Member of the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick. From the 2018 New Brunswick general election until his expulsion from the caucus in October 2022,[2] Cardy represented the electoral district of Fredericton West-Hanwell for the Progressive Conservative Party of New Brunswick. He now sits as an independent.[3] During his time in government he was the Minister of Education and Early Childhood Development under Blaine Higgs. Since September 2023, Cardy has been the interim leader of the Canadian Future Party, a moderate centrist federal political party which broke away from the Conservative Party of Canada.[4] Prior to being elected to the New Brunswick legislature, Cardy served as chief of staff of the Progressive Conservative Party of New Brunswick caucus and had previously been leader of the New Brunswick New Democratic Party from 2011 to 2017. Early life [edit] Born in the United Kingdom, Cardy moved to Fredericton, New Brunswick with his family when he was a child.[5] He attended Dalhousie University and graduated with a political science degree.[5] Cardy worked for the Department of Foreign Affairs in 2000 on projects to increase public support for the banning of land mines[5] and for the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs (NDI) between 2001 and 2008. He served as a senior staff member and then country director for NDI in Nepal, Bangladesh and Cambodia.[6] Political career [edit] While a student at Dalhousie University in Nova Scotia, Cardy was elected President of the Nova Scotia NDP's youth wing. He then worked as a party campaigner, political assistant to an NDP MP in Cape Breton, and managed several campaigns at the municipal and federal level.[5] In 2000, Cardy co-founded NDProgress, a pressure group within the NDP that advocated the modernisation of the party's governance structures and was sympathetic to the Third Way.[3] In writing about the debate within the NDP prior to its 2001 convention between the New Politics Initiative and those such as NDProgress, Cardy wrote "Some want to see the NDP recreated as a mass party based on the ideas of the traditional left, but infused with the energy of the new social movements and the anti-globalization activists. And there are those pushing from another direction, taking inspiration from the European socialists. If I had my choice I would fall firmly into this camp, those who want the party to follow the path laid by social democrats like Gary Doer, Tony Blair and Gerhard Schröder."[7] He is also an admirer of US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.[8][self-published source] Cardy was campaign director for the NDP in the 2010 provincial election.[9] Provincial politics [edit] NDP leader [edit] Cardy was acclaimed party leader on 2 March 2011 after the only other candidate for the position, Pierre Cyr, was disqualified from the party's 2011 leadership election.[9] At the 2012 New Brunswick New Democratic Party convention, Cardy received an 82 per cent vote of confidence in his leadership from the assembled delegates.[10] During the 2012 federal NDP leadership race, Cardy backed Thomas Mulcair, and was one of the introductory speakers at his campaign launch. Cardy was the NDP's candidate in a 25 June 2012 provincial by-election in Rothesay, coming in third with 27 per cent of the vote. As leader, Cardy recruited a slate of candidates that included several prominent former Conservative and Liberal politicians including former Liberal cabinet minister Kelly Lamrock in Fredericton South; Bev Harrison, a former Conservative and Speaker of the legislature, in Hampton; former Liberal MLA Abel LeBlanc in Saint John-Lancaster and former Liberal candidate John Wilcox in Rothesay.[11] Former party leader Allison Brewer endorsed the Greens due to the policy positions of Cardy's NDP.[12] In the 2014 provincial election, Cardy ran as the party's candidate in Fredericton West-Hanwell.[12] Though it received 12.98 per cent of the vote in the 2014 provincial election, an all-time high for the NB NDP and its predecessor, the CCF, the party won no seats in the provincial legislature. Cardy himself lost to Brian Macdonald in Fredericton-Hanwell, and announced in his concession speech that he would resign as party leader effective at the party's next convention,[12] which has been postponed to January 2015. Cardy faced pressure to rescind his resignation and run in the Saint John East by-election which was called following the surprise resignation of newly elected Liberal MLA Gary Keating on 14 October 2014.[13] Cardy announced on 21 October that he would be standing in the by-election, scheduled for 17 November,[14] and delayed his resignation.[15] Cardy placed third in the by-election with 21.88 per cent of the vote.[16] Cardy agreed to remain as leader after the party's executive rejected his resignation on 10 December 2014 and a letter was signed at the party's provincial council by supporters and former candidates urging him to stay on. The party also offered Cardy a "livable" salary beginning in 2015 due to its improved financial position. Cardy had been working as leader on a volunteer basis since assuming the position in 2011 and had no legislative salary as he was not a member of the provincial legislature.[17] In early 2015, federal NDP MP Yvon Godin (Acadie—Bathurst) criticised Cardy's leadership and its conduct in the election campaign saying that Cardy had moved the provincial party too far to the centre. "The problem, I think, with the provincial party, with Dominic, was that I think he was too much to the right to even be in the centre, and I think people read into that," said Godin who added: "I think it did hurt the party. People were looking for the NDP, they were doing really well, and [voters] wanted change from the existing parties that we have now, who are serving the big corporations and forgetting about the people. I think that's what happened."[18] In the summer of 2016, Cardy expressed his support for the proposed Energy East pipeline and supported Alberta NDP Premier Rachel Notley's position against the Leap Manifesto.[19] He had earlier refused to endorse federal NDP leader Thomas Mulcair's leadership, saying he was troubled by positions taking by the federal party during the 2015 federal election, and skipped the April 2016 federal party convention along with the leadership review that occurred during the meeting.[20] Resignation from the NDP [edit] Cardy resigned as party leader, as well as resigning his membership of both the federal and New Brunswick NDP,[21] on 1 January 2017, complaining of party infighting which he attributed to "destructive forces" colluding with CUPE New Brunswick, the province's largest public-sector union against his leadership.[22] Cardy said that he "cannot lead a party where a tiny minority of well-connected members refuse to accept the democratic will of the membership." He added that "[l]imited time and energy is being wasted on infighting before the election," and that "'Some New Democrats unfortunately believe change and openness have had their time. They want to return to an old NDP of true believers, ideological litmus tests and moral victories."[23] Cardy claimed that what he described as his "progressive" platform had been thwarted by both federal and provincial party members and denounced the federal party's non-interventionist stance on the Syrian Civil War as antithetical to his beliefs.[22] Conservative politics [edit] Cardy's appointment as strategic issues director for the opposition Progressive Conservative Party of New Brunswick was announced by party leader Blaine Higgs on 27 January 2017.[24] Cardy said it is "not my intention" to run for a legislative seat as a Progressive Conservative candidate but that a "great many" of his former colleagues in the NDP would be joining the Progressive Conservatives.[24] In April 2017, Cardy was promoted to the position of chief of staff to the official opposition New Brunswick Progressive Conservative caucus. Later that month he endorsed Maxime Bernier for the leadership of the Conservative Party of Canada.[25] Cardy was elected in the 2018 provincial election as the PC candidate in Fredericton West-Hanwell. He had run unsuccessfully in 2014 in the same riding as a New Democrat.[26] Cardy was re-elected in the 2020 provincial election. Minister of Education and Early Childhood Development [edit] This section needs expansion with: information about the 2021 CUPE strike. You can help by adding to it. (October 2021) Cardy was appointed as Minister of Education and Early Childhood Development on 9 November 2018.[27] During his time as department minister, Cardy signed the original version of Policy 713, which took into effect on August 17, 2020.[28] Removal of Chinese cultural programs from New Brunswick schools [edit] Minister Cardy spearheaded a plan to remove the Confucius Institute from all New Brunswick schools.[29] While the educational programs for elementary and middle schools were removed for the 2019–2020 school year, high school programs will not be removed until 2022.[29] Resignation [edit] Cardy resigned from his position as Minister of Education and Early Childhood Education on October 13, 2022.[30] Announcing his resignation on Twitter, Cardy explained that "At some point, working style and values have to matter." His resignation letter offered a more detailed explanation,[31] citing Premier Higgs' behaviour in a series of incidents. Cardy initially commitment to staying on as a Progressive Conservative but was expelled from caucus a day after resigning as minister.[32][2][3] He was replaced as minister by Bill Hogan.[33] Independent MLA [edit] Cardy remained in the legislature as an independent MLA for the rest of his term, while announcing he would not be running as a candidate in the 2024 New Brunswick general election.[4] Cardy said he would be voting for Susan Holt and the New Brunswick Liberal Party in the upcoming election in June 2024.[34] Federal politics and further activities (2023–present) [edit] On September 20, 2023, Cardy announced that he was in the process of founding a new federal political party, tentatively named the "Canadian Future Party" to occupy the middle ground between the Justin Trudeau-led Liberal Party of Canada and the Pierre Poilievre-led Conservative Party of Canada. Prior to its launch as a party, the group had been known first as "Centre Ice Conservatives" and then as "Centre Ice Canadians."[35][4] On July 22, 2024, Elections Canada recognized the Canadian Future Party as eligible for registration, pending it standing a candidate for election.[36][37] In July 2024, Cardy was arrested in Toronto for disturbing the peace after engaging in a confrontation at a pro-Palestine protest. According to Cardy, he chanted "Free Palestine from Hamas". Authorities stated that Cardy "behaved in a confrontational manner towards other protesters and did not follow police directions" to leave the area. He was released without charges.[38][39]

The Overdrive Podcast: By Christian Brothers Automotive
The Pursuit of Purpose: Finding Meaning and Direction in Life with Bill Hogan

The Overdrive Podcast: By Christian Brothers Automotive

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2024 44:25


In this special Memorial Day episode of 'The Overdrive Podcast,' host Cameron Giddings is joined by Bill Hogan, an Air Force veteran and the Lead Pastor of WordServe Church in Fulshear, Texas. With 21 years of service in the US Air Force and a passion for helping people develop into everything God created them to be, Bill brings a wealth of experience and wisdom to our conversation.We explore the profound topic of finding and sharing the unique gifts we have been blessed with. Bill shares his journey from military service to pastoral leadership, emphasizing the importance of living a purposeful life and the fulfillment it brings. He provides insights into identifying one's unique purpose, embracing life's journey, and nurturing meaningful relationships.Listeners will learn about the significance of resilience, faith, and perseverance in overcoming life's challenges. Bill's stories and practical advice will inspire you to stay aligned with your purpose, even during difficult times, and to understand how our relationships with others influence our pursuit of purpose.Tune in to discover how to navigate your path with intention, find meaning in your experiences, and live a life that impacts those around you. Whether you're seeking direction or looking to deepen your understanding of your life's purpose, this episode offers valuable takeaways for personal and spiritual growth.Brought to you by Christian Brothers Automotive, this episode is a tribute to the enduring spirit of those who serve and the power of living with purpose.

Information Morning Fredericton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)

The province has announced it will spend more than $187 million on schools in the 2024-2025 fiscal year.​ Jeanne Armstrong spoke to Minister of ​education Bill Hogan​ about how the schools were chosen, and when the work will start.

Information Morning Moncton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)
The province is committing to six new major school projects to accommodate soaring enrolment

Information Morning Moncton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2023 6:28


Ernie Steeves is the Finance Minister. Bill Hogan is the Education Minister.

Sound On
Congress Split on Israel, Ukraine Aid

Sound On

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2023 24:19 Transcription Available


Bloomberg Washington Correspondent Joe Mathieu delivers insight and analysis on the latest headlines from the White House and Capitol Hill, including conversations with influential lawmakers and key figures in politics and policy.On this edition, Joe speaks with: Bipartisan Policy Center Senior Vice President Bill Hoagland about Speaker Mike Johnson's plans to cut funds from IRS to pay for a standalone Israel aid bill. Bloomberg Politics Contributors Jeanne Sheehan Zaino and Rick Davis about the role the Republicans in the Senate will play in supplemental spending negotiations.     FULL TRANSCRIPT:     You're listening to the Bloomberg Sound On podcast. Catch us live weekdays at one Eastern on Bloomberg dot com, the iHeartRadio app, and the Bloomberg Business App, or listen on demand wherever you get your podcast. The White House threatens to veto the Republican Israeli Aid bill, as the CBO now says that bill will add to the nation's deficit. Welcome to the fastest show in politics, as we get a first look at the fine print in the Speaker's plan on Israel, even as the President takes his own approach, including money for Ukraine for the border. We'll be joined ahead by Bill Hoagland at the Bipartisan Policy Center with analysis from our signature panel. They're with us on this FED day. Rick Davis and Genie Shanzano weighing in as well on the latest from Washington and Israel. And Welcome to the Wednesday edition of Bloomberg Sound On. I'm Joe Matthew in Washington, where, of course it's going to be all about the FED, certainly here on Bloomberg starting in about a half hour's time, when we'll bring you our special coverage of the FED meeting. The announcement and the news conference. But we have breaking news on Israel that I want to start with today, and I'm glad you're with us here on the radio, on the satellite, and on YouTube. You can always find us on YouTube by searching Bloomberg Global News. The cameras are lit with the headline on the terminal. Biden says some Americans will depart Gaza today. We're just hearing this now from the White House, as the President says American citizens will exit Gaza today and the US expects more departures tomorrow and over the coming days. He also said save passage has been secured for wounded Palestinians and for foreign nationals to exit Gaza. And this is the type of headline that some of his critics in his own Democratic Party have been looking to see, with much more news coming out of Israel and Washington. Here, the Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson, is having lunch today with the Senate Republican Conference. Interesting as we turn to the matter of funding, and this is something we're going to talk about in a moment with Bill Hoagland. We brought this to you yesterday. Speaker of the House wants to split Israel funding from the rest of the supplemental package that the President has put forward, And if you listen to this show, you could probably tell us by now yourself that was going to include Ukraine, the border in Taiwan. Not so, says the speaker who's going to bring that bill to the floor tomorrow. It looks like and it is also expected to fail, so lawmakers are weighing in now. Republicans say this is a way of keeping the governments from spending too much money that we heard from the CBO when we learn it's actually going to add to the deficit. And Senator Ben Cardon of Maryland, who's now chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, says, GOP is playing games with the money. We need to keep this together because it represents the priorities that need to be done. Now, there are supplemental appropriations which were not planned for in the normal appropriation process. There's no need for offsets, and we got to get this dumb without the political parsianship we see in the House. Now that's the chair. The Republican Senator from Wyoming John Barrasso, also on that committee, says, no, this is the way it should be done, and more specifically, pay for it by defunding the IRS. I support defunding the IRS taking that money out of that as a source of payment for the money to Israel. I want to make sure Israel has what they need to fight the war they need to fight. So there you have it from both sides of the aisle. According to the Treasury Department, If that matters to you, those thousands of IRS employees will not be targeting small businesses and regular Americans. In fact, we heard from the IRS Commissionery yesterday said these offsets would end up costing ninety billion dollars in fact, because of less scrutiny on tax evasion at the highest levels of wealth. So much for armed agents knocking down your door. This is where we start with. Bill Hogan, Senior vice president of the Bipartisan Policy Center, spent many years working on Capitol Hill. Knows how the sausage is made and might be helpful here with a reality check. Bill two questions your thought number one on just putting Israel funding alone on the floor, knowing that it likely doesn't have support, but too paying for it with IRS funding, calling it an offset when it's actually going to cost more maybe you can help me rationalize this. Well, thank you for having me, Joe. Again, this is an area where we seems that Republicans like to go to, and that is reducing the IRS budget. We've been here, if you recall back in the spring, when we were dealing with the debt limit, increasing the debt limit, finding offsets. Historically, the scoring on this particular issue has always been that if you have additional money that you provide for the IRS to to carry out their responsibilities, does result in an increase in revenues collected. And so I'm an old CBO or, so I'll be a little biased here, but I think the CBO is right that if you're cutting fourteen billion dollars out of the IRS budget, then you shouldn't expect them the revenues that were anticipated to come in. So I think this is an unfortunate situation. Literally, as we speak here right now, Joe, the Senate is voting on a Center Rand Paul amendment to the Senate Appropriation Bill to reduce the IRS funding and it's going to fail. So I think we'll get over this. And as you mentioned in your comments earlier, I think the House does not have the votes to use the IRS as an offset. This is an emergency. In the past, when we've had emergencies, yes, we don't usually offset let's say disaster spending. And I think this is a critical emergency that I'd like to see it offset, but i'd like to see it offset with real spending reductions as opposed to the IRS budget. Okay, we'll see if that happens. I'm assuming that we won't get that far with this legislation, But does the Senate lead the way here then? Bill they're looking at a combined appropriations bill that would include the money for Ukraine that I know turns off a lot of House Republicans. Well, I think we're probably headed toward a situation Joe here in about two and a half weeks when we're up against another possibility of a government shutdown and the current Continuing Resolution runs out. I think all this is going to get bunched up as it relates to that next Continuing resolution around the middle of November, where we'll probably have a situation where we will have both the funding for Ukraine and I think Israel, but also most importantly, as we keep remembering that the President's request does also include about to a similar amount about fourteen billion dollars, the same amount for Israel for border security here in the United States, for new border patrol agents, new immigration judges and asylum officers and custom officers. So I think where we're headed here is a combination getting up against that deadline in November the seventeenth, when we'll see this coming to a head once again. I think, yes, I think the Senate's going to play a pretty big role here in terms of what they send over the House. I think this is going to be a major test for the new Speaker, and it could lead to here we go again. It could lead to a potential shutdown. But I hope that we can get over this and we can find a solution where we have both the funding that we need here on the domestic side of the equation or our border security, as well as some disaster response. We keep forgetting that the President not only had a request for Israel and Ukraine and border, but he also had something for about a fifty five billion dollars for disaster relief. We still have FEMA problems, we still have such issues, are sorting with the issues around the child Care Stabilization Fund. So we have a we have a lot, they have a lot to do in a very short amount of time. I want you to picture this as we understand. The Speaker of the House is attending the Senate Republican lunch today, CNN reporting, who was flanked by Senators Rick Scott and Ted budd on the way in and did not answer questions. Does this sound like a meet and greet to you or a real conversation about what you and I are talking about? Well, we always have the policy lunches, and I'm not there. I can't say exactly what's going on. But no, I think they have I think the news A lot of senators who do not know the news speaker have not have not met him. This is an opportunity at least to have an initial reaction, But I think they will get down. They'll have to get down to some substant discussions very quickly about where the Senate's headed and where the Speaker wants to go, and what they'll be able to work out between the two two chambers going forward. Once again, I have to believe this is going to come down to no surprise coming from the Bi Parson Policy Center, that you're going to have to find a solution here that includes both Democrats and Republicans. At the end of the day, that may cause again problems for the new Speaker, as it did for mister McCarthy, but this is too important of an issue not to find some quick Biparson solutions providing the aid that Israel needs, that Ukraine needs, and our borders need. We're talking with Bill Hogland at the Bipartisan Policy Center and you mentioned you mentioned the word that I might not have brought up otherwise, and that's shut down. But it's important to note what's not going to make headlines today, Bill, and that is the House Rules Committee taking up Transportation and Housing Bill, an Interior Environment spending bill, along with the supplemental budget request, and I know the Senate is taking up minibus today. There are actually professionals who should be taken seriously who are working behind the scenes to do the real work of the legislature. The question is can they get anything done in time? Do you think this new speaker makes the idea of a shot down more or less likely? Well, I think the Speaker had made it very clear and part of his mode of selection process was to agree that they would the House would pass what we call the twelve regular appropriation bills, and as you say, Joe, they have passed. They still have seven bills to do, the Outstanding and Transportation, Legislative Branch, Financial Securities, Interior, and Agriculture. They still have to do those individual bills. And that's what they're doing in the House, and I think that's what the Speaker said he would do he'd passed those bills individually. Difficulty is going to be that, of course, that's fine, but we have a United States Senate that's also trying to get its twelve bills done and it has not passed any of them yet, and that's why they're bundling their bills into three package, three packages of three, and they'll end up, i think, probably trying to try. They'll have to go to conference and work this out. This is all going to come down once again to another continuing resolution. I don't think there's any question that we're going to have to have a continuing resolution. I think the Senator has made that clear. I think even the House Speaker expects they'll have to have a continuing resolution. And the question will be will be that at as it was back on October, the first, will that be at the current level which caused mister McCarthy some problems. But I see they are working their best just to do the basic funding that they have to do for the current fiscal year that we're in, fiscal year twenty four that began here a month ago. Yeah, it's always great to spend time with you, Bill. Do you think the motion to vacate will be beefed up at all? They're going to raise the threshold on this or is it going to stay the same way it is looming over this speaker? Listen, I'm an oh Senate staffer or not a House staffer. I can't really comment on the rules of the procedures in the House that much. But I have to believe, having spent what twenty one days or so and the chaos over in the House, that they do not want to go through that again. And I think that to the extent that the new Speaker can at least get his twelve individual appropriation bills done and out of the way. He's met at first. He's got over a first hurdle here that allows him to not face the possibility of another emotion to vacate. I just don't believe they want to go through that again. And I could be wrong, but I think that they have a speaker now, they want to work with that new speaker, and we'll continue to work on this. I want of them to remain optimistic that we will get through this difficult time. There are major issues that have to be addressed here, and I hope that we can find a common ground between the House and Senator over the next at least thirty or forty days. Bill Hoaglan, Bipartisan Policy Centers, Senior Vice President, one of our next door neighbors. Almost here in downtown Washington. Great to see you, Bill as we assemble our panel today. Rick Davis and Jeanie Shanzano are back together Bloomberg Politics contributors. Ricky sounds kind of like, you don't ask me about what's going on in that crazy house. I'm a creature of the Senate. But in this case, the Senate's going to loom large over this process. And I wonder if that's why the speaker is at that GOP luncheon today. What do you think they're talking about. Yeah, look, this is a normal courtesy that would be granted to any new speaker. It doesn't have much of a footprint up on the Senate side, and obviously the things that he is doing right now today are having a prety dramatic impact on the Senate agenda. You know, even just bifurcating the supplemental bills with trying to take an independent vote on Israel is upsetting the Republican majority or the minority in the Senate. And so I think it was probably like, hey, we need to get him up here and make sure we set our agendas together. So half introduction, half agenda setting, but frankly, because of the time that we have available, probably later than it should have happened, but obviously an important meeting. When's he going to sit down in the Oval office? Jeni? You hope it is soon. You know, he just hasn't had the opportunity to meet everybody, including the president, even though he is second in line to the presidency. So there should be a meeting and there should be real conversation. You know, he's only been on the job for a week, so it is going to take some time to get up to speed. But those personal introductions are critically important, as is his staffing. You know, the man hasn't even had a chance. He's starting to staff up, but that is a huge challenge. Been a hiring spree in the last twenty four hours. We can talk about that. We just heard from him on the CBO score. That's next. This is Bloomberg. You're listening to the Bloomberg Sound on podcast. Catch the program live weekdays at one Eastern on Bloomberg Radio, the tune in app, Bloomberg dot Com, and the Bloomberg Business App. You can also listen live on Amazon Alexa from our flagship New York station. Just say Alexa, play Bloomberg. Eleven thirty. We just heard from the Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson, for the first time on this new CBO score on the standalone Israel funding bill. This is the one that the CBO said would add almost twenty seven billion dollars to the budget deficit, remembering that it would be paid for by taking money from the IRS. And this is where we're getting some discord here. Fourteen point three billion dollars and cuts to IRS funding that was part of the Inflation Reduction Act. Now, the White House already says that it's going to veto this thing if it reaches the President's desk, which apparently it's not because I don't know the votes in the House. The Senate doesn't like it, and the Speaker says, I guess pay no attention to the fine print. Heerio, you'd be careful, everybody careful. Were you surprised by the CBO's courser, Not surprise at all. Only in Washington, when you cut spending do they call it a are you along in? Only in Washington, when you cut spending do they call it an increase in the deficit. Let's assemble our panel for their take. Genie Schanzano and Rick Davis are with us. The math is difficult to argue with here, Rick, am I missing something? Yeah? I think the political overlay to this right American public here is that the Speaker is trying to cut funding. Maybe a little of that seeps into oh, by the way, it's the irs, and virtually none of that will go to OH. The CBO says that'll increase the deficit. I mean, like CBO doesn't have a mouthpiece like the speaker does. But then there's reality, right, Genie, that's right, And we talked about this yesterday, and so only somebody trying to play political games, and not very effectively, by the way, would try to pull the wool over people's eyes and pretend that they didn't realize that cutting this money to the IRS would actually decrease revenue and increase the deficit. It is a pay for it that doesn't pay for anything. We do need to pay for our spending, but you have to do it in a fiscally responsible and even somebody I don't know, in maybe third grade math, can figure out that when you cut IRS enforcement, you diminish our ability to collect money that the government needs to keep funded. And so Mike Johnson should know that. I am terribly concerned if he doesn't realize that. But I think he realized it, and he's trying to play political games and the politics aside. All thinking people realize this is the reality. It doesn't take a math genius. This has nothing to do with Washington. This is to do with Mike Johnson trying to play political games. Fiscally responsible people don't do this. Just look at Tom Massey, a very conservative guy, who said this is not fiscally responsible. It will add to the deficit. Even Marjorie Taylor Green said the same thing. So you know, he's got to go back to the table on this. Let's find some real cuts for the new speaker so he can move ahead. We know we're in trouble when Genie is quoting Marjorie Taylor Greenrick, I don't know what you want to do with that, but I will point you to the Republican Accountability Project, Rick Davis, what do you think of It's a six figure ad campaign to shame Speaker Johnson over his efforts to overturn the twenty twenty election. This is another part of, of course, the narrative in his first full week on the job, that we're hearing a lot more about the amicus brief that he wrote that would have brought from the state of Texas these results to the Supreme Court. Here's just a taste of this ad. It's gonna be running in primetime on Fox News. Republican Mike Johnson just became Speaker of the House, but he's the last person who should be leading Congress. After Donald Trump lost the elections, Johnson started pushing Trump's big lie, pressuring the Supreme Court to overturn the will of voters in four states and if they go on to call him a danger to our democracy. Rick, I could keep this thing running, but I'm sure we'll all begin and dated by the ad. If we're watching cable news, who's this resonating with? You mentioned the lack of a megaphone at the CBO. Will this get into the right living rooms? Will it make it? Then? I don't get into some I mean they've obviously targeted the right states, you know, Georgia, Arizona, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin. I mean, that's where the fight's going to be for a presidential election. And by the way, all of a sudden, we have a new speaker who nobody's ever heard of, which means they don't hate him yet. You know, voters hated Nancy Pelosi, voters hated you know McCarthy. Voters hate our leaders because they have to go through all this kind of negative campaign advertising. And here's this guy Johnson no one has ever heard of. They haven't learned to hate him yet. So this is step one and teaching people to hate, you know, Speaker Johnson. It's critically critically important that the Democrats are able to demonize Republican leadership, and Mitch McConnell's kind of hard to argue with he's doing a lot of business with Democrats these days, so they're gonna have to find someone to be the target. Johnson's time in the barrel is now his time in the barrel? Genie. How long is it going to last? You know, I think it will, it will last. I have long thought that it's really really tough to demonize the new speaker because his personality doesn't really play with that. You know, it was far easier for the Republicans to demonize Nancy Pelosi than it's going to be to demonize somebody like Mike Johnson. His personality is, quite frankly, a lot more like somebody like our former president, a former vice president, rather Mike Pence. And I think that's going to make it tough now or is he going to go through vetting? Are people going to look back at what he's done? All of that is fair game. All of the things that he has said, he hasn't been vetted as most speakers would be, and so a lot of this is new. But I think unless he changes his tone in a distinct way, that demon demonization is going to be hard. But I do think anybody who plays a role in trying to say the twenty twenty election was stolen. That is fair game to say, look, folks, this is who is leading this party. Do you feel safe putting your trust in this party to run the House? I think that's fair game. He's the one who led the charge quietly as he did. Well. When you go big picture, Rick, and you look at that Bloomberg poll that we've talked a lot about with Morning Consult, looking at these seven swing states that are critical, some of which will have that ad running in them, the economy ends up being the number one issue. And is this why no one seems to be dwelling on twenty twenty. Yeah, I think twenty twenty is well. The only person who's dwelling on twenty twenty is is Donald Trump. And the Democrats couldn't be happier about that. That's what they want point. But everybody else is like moving on and Democrats are using a lot of the issues to their success from twenty twenty. We see it in advertisings everywhere here in Virginia for the legislative elections that are next week. Abortion, abortion, abortion right. I mean it was Republicans are going to take away your rights, and so we know where they're headed, and Republicans are talking about the economy, so you know, money's on the economy, and that's where I think the twenty twenty four election will be prosecuted at. That's why Biden's going to Wisconsin to talk about the economy and bringing jobs to rural America, you know, trying to get some of those blue collar jobs back. So you see it playing out in real time. But I would say, you know, shoot your bullets on you know, Speaker Johnson in a presidential targeted state doesn't make much sense. If they think it's going to be Trump, they ought to be shooting at him. How about that. Rick Davis and Geenie Shan say, No, great conversation on what is truly the fastest show in politics today, because we've got a Federal Reserve announcement coming up here, and I want to thank you both for great insights. As always, our signature panel Bloomberg Politics contributors Rick Davis and Genie Shann say, No, I'm Joe Matthew in Washington, where tomorrow it's going to be inflation, inflation inflation, right. Thanks for listening to the Sound on podcast. Make sure to subscribe if you haven't already at Apple, Spotify, and anywhere else you get your podcasts, and you can find us live every weekday from Washington, DC at one pm Eastern Time at Bloomberg dot com 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Information Morning Moncton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)
New Brunswick's education minister stands by government changes to policy 713

Information Morning Moncton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2023 16:18


Bill Hogan is New Brunswick's minister of education and early childhood development.

Information Morning Moncton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)
New Brunswick's education minister defends government's decision to review policy 713.

Information Morning Moncton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2023 15:04


Bill Hogan is New Brunswick's minister of education and early childhood development.

Maritime Noon from CBC Radio (Highlights)
NB Minister of Education Bill Hogan comments to reporters about a review of Policy 7-13. The co-chair of Pride in Education comments on why a review doesn't make sense. And on the phone-in: Women in politics.

Maritime Noon from CBC Radio (Highlights)

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2023 53:04


Bill Hogan, New Brunswick's Minister of Education, explains to reporters why there will be a review of Policy 7-13 which is aimed at providing a safe space for LGBTQ+ students. Gail Costello, the co-chair of Pride in Education, questions why the minister would need to do a review since it was written by education experts. And on the phone-in: Women in politics with guests Meredith Ralston and Mary Clancy.

Information Morning Moncton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)
The province has released details of the new second-language program to replace French immersion

Information Morning Moncton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2022 18:28


Bill Hogan is New Brunswick's minsiter of education.

Shift (NB)
French Language Learning

Shift (NB)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2022 20:10


Earlier this Fall we learned the government would be phasing out the french immersion program in the anglophone sector. Today education minister Bill Hogan revealed a framework for French language education this coming September. We'll hear from him, and from some of the politicians and parents raising concerns.

Information Morning Fredericton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)

New Brunswickers are becoming desperate to find available daycare spaces. Jeanne Armstrong spoke with education minister Bill Hogan about what options are available.

Information Morning Moncton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)
Changes to French language instruction in NB schools still unclear

Information Morning Moncton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2022 22:39


Education minister Bill Hogan says current immersion program will be phased out beginning in the fall of September 2023.

Information Morning Fredericton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)

Downed trees, fallen power lines, people evacuated from their home. Public safety minister Bill Hogan talks about the destruction caused by Hurricane Fiona and what supports are available to New Brunswickers.

Information Morning Moncton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)
How to prepare as Hurricane Fiona nears Atlantic waters.

Information Morning Moncton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2022 3:39


Bill Hogan is New Brunswick's Minister of public safety.

C103
CorkToday 23 September 2022

C103

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2022 100:11


Catherine Clancy, Chairperson of the Magazine Road residents association on the number of local landlords who are not registered with the R.T.B.Mike Mansfield, Director of Communications with JIGSAW on the effects the lockdown had on young people.Eleanor from Glenville on the lack of school buses in her area.Dermot Twomey, Pharmacist in Cloyne on the serious shortage of staff to cover in pharmacies.Bill Hogan, one of the organisers of the Concert in Schull to remember Sophie Toscan du Plantier.Sean is a landlord who has found it difficult to register his new renter with the R.T.B.Our weekly movie review with Mark Malone Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

TNT Radio
Professor Bill Hogan & Professor Thomas Schulze on Cognitive Dissonance with Misty Winston - 03 July 2022

TNT Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2022 55:58


Cognitive Dissonance with Misty Winston takes a deep dive look at some of our most pressing issues. Go behind the propaganda and find the truth. Misty Winston is an activist and host whose work has been focused on press freedom, free speech, and anti-imperialism.

PT Snacks Podcast: Physical Therapy with Dr. Kasey Hogan
E55 - Father's Day Edition: The Art and Science of Leadership with Bill Hogan

PT Snacks Podcast: Physical Therapy with Dr. Kasey Hogan

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2022 61:40


This week we have a special guest in honor of Father's Day: my dad.  Bill Hogan retired as a Colonel in the United States Air Force and now leads in a different setting: ministry. I get the opportunity to share one of my first life mentors with you today, in a conversation similar to how we may talk nowadays over a shared meal together.In this episode, we answer the following:Who is a leader? How to balance the art and science of being a leaderHow to create a productive team environmentThe balance between approachable and directive in order to move a team towards a missionHow to establish a productive Mastermind groupHow to continue to grow yourself as a leaderThe balance between theory and actionHow to make mistakes as a leaderBusy vs productiveThe purpose of this podcast is to provide useful, condensed information for exhausted, time-crunched Physical Therapists and Student Physical Therapists who looking to build confidence in their foundational knowledge base and still have time to focus on other important aspects of life.  Hit follow to make sure you never miss an episode. Have questions? Want to connect? Contact me at ptsnackspodcast@gmail.com or check out more at ptsnackspodcast.com. On Instagram or TikTok? Check out the unique content on @PT_Snacks! Need CEUs but low on time and resources? Go to https://www.medbridgeeducation.com/pt-snacks-podcast for $175 off a year subscription. Use the promo code PTSNACKSPODCAST. This is an affiliate link, but I wouldn't recommend MedBridge if I didn't think they offered value. Willing to support monetarily? Follow the link below to help me continue to create free content. You can also support the show by sharing the word about this show with someone you think would benefit from it.Support the show

TNT Radio
Bill Hogan on Misty Winston Show - 25 Mar 2022

TNT Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2022 54:55


bill hogan misty winston
Moraine Valley Broadcasting Channel
Episode #32 Glacier Guys: Baseball is back with guest Professor Bill Hogan

Moraine Valley Broadcasting Channel

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2022 41:10


Hosts Joey Fernandez and Omar Shalabi talk soccer and get the breaking news that baseball is back with guest Professor Bill Hogan

New Arrivals: A Socially-Distanced Book Tour
Before her death, Mary Ann Hogan penned a memoir reflecting on her literary editor father

New Arrivals: A Socially-Distanced Book Tour

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2022 2:16


Mill Valley author May Ann Hogan wrote her memoir "Circle Way." It's a daughter's quest to understand her father. In Mary Ann's case, it's Bill Hogan, the long-time literary editor of the San Francisco Chronicle. Her husband Eric newton reads a passage from the book.

Tech Sales Insights
E63 - The First 90 Days with Bill Hogan, Beyond Identity

Tech Sales Insights

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2022 58:35


This episode is sponsored by Outreach, the first and only Engagement AND Intelligence platform, built by Revenue Innovators for Revenue Innovators. Outreach allows you to Commit to accurate sales forecasting, Replace manual processes with real-time guidance, and Unlock actionable customer intelligence that guides you and your team to win more often. Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/salescommunity/message

Top One Percenter Show
Top One Percenter Show With Chief Revenue Officer at Security Scorecard Bill Hogan

Top One Percenter Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2022 47:22


Bill Hogan has over 20+ years of sales experience and currently serves as the Chief Revenue Officer at Security Scorecard. 

No More Excuses: Monday Motivation podcast
Podcast #272: Do You Have the Patience?

No More Excuses: Monday Motivation podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2021 9:58


HAPPY MONDAY MOTIVATION Welcome back to the weekly podcast, No More Excuses. Thank you for being here!  Click here to check out my website, and don't forget to connect with me on social media! Thank you to listeners Susan and Gina for connecting with me on social media and for listening! And if you haven't reached out yet… please do so! Last Monday's podcast was all about thinking DEEPER about your goals and identifying WHO you'll become by achieving a specific goal. I shared that I'm listening to the book "Atomic Habits". In this book, author James Clear, talks about the science behind habits – good and bad. If you haven't listened to last Monday's podcast click here to do so, then come back!  It's important to break down your goals and focus on smaller month-by-month goals vs. being overwhelmed by the BIG yearly goal or even 3-5 years out. Yes, I always ask clients to identify big goals, but not all have been able to. That's why I say, “I meet my clients where they are, and help them get to where they want to go”. I challenge people to think ahead, then break it down. We've all heard the saying “How do you eat an elephant”? “One bite at a time!” That phrase has been given credit to MANY people – including Desmond Tutu and General Creighton Abrams. And a book titled the same by Bill Hogan – which I have NOT read… have you? Well, that concept can be applied to so many things, including your goals! So, no matter if you can see five years into the future or just this month or maybe the year, positive habits will help you get there. You're like DUH Sandi, we all know that, but… Exactly… BUT! Listen in today as I share more about how I hear "but" so many times! And, I share how I got from one mile at a time to running half-marathons! Baby steps. Yes, many times we need the help, our tribe, our buddies, vendors, sub-contractors, collaborators and others we need to help us – remember… LIFE IS A TEAM SPORT! But it starts with the person in the mirror! Yes, YOU! Last Monday I shared a story about a former client who wouldn't take my advice of “baby-stepping” and ended up overwhelmed and quit. She didn't understand how to take ONE BITE of that elephant every day and in-turn quit. What do YOU want? Last week I talked about just your MONTHLY goal. And today, you'll need to listen in as if you want to LEVEL-UP, it's time to DIG DEEPER because... When you talk about your GOALS, I want your stomach to flip! You'll have to listen in to hear what your weekly challenge is! Have a great week and yes, I look forward to hearing from you and you scheduling that 30-minute call to share your homework with me by CLICKING HERE! And, if your goal is to START a Business, CLICK HERE to start my online course "How to Launch a Business in 90-Days" for only $99! Cheers! Sandi

The Bill Cartwright Show
The Bill Cartwright Show EP37 | Bill Hogan

The Bill Cartwright Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2021 41:11


In this episode of The Bill Cartwright Show, Bill sits down with former USF Director of Athletics Bill Hogan. They discuss his upbringing and how he picked up sports from a young age. They also touch on his time as Director of Athletics for USF, where he spent 15 overseeing the school's athletics programs. Hogan recalls his time at USF, including his favorite memories and moments from his tenure as a Don. Hogan now serves at the Director of Athletics for Seattle University in Washington.

Tech Sales Insights
E6 - Love to Build with Bill Hogan, SecurityScorecard

Tech Sales Insights

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2020 39:14


He is a recognized industry leader in the IT and Security Field. As the Chief Revenue Officer of SecurityScorecard, the leader in security ratings, his team serves global clients such as GE, McDonald's, Charter Communications, All State, AIG, and Bank of NY Mellon to name a few. He is a seasoned executive with a proven track record leading high performing teams solving enterprise-class problems. He previously ran Global Financials and Strategic Accounts at Fortinet. Before Fortinet, he served as President and Chief Revenue Officer at Webhouse, Inc. He spent a decade at NetApp as VP of Global Accounts, Financial and America's Enterprise. At HP, he served as its GM of Storage Virtualization Systems Group, after its acquisition of StorageApps where he served as VP of Sales. Earlier in his career, he spent a decade at EMC in various sales and sales leadership roles. He serves on various charitable boards, including Diocese of Brooklyn Futures in Education, Alive and Hope Foundation, Tuck RUSH for Literacy, St Baldrick's Foundation, and St Agnes CYO. Join Randy Seidl and David Nour on this episode of the #TechSalesInsights podcast with Bill Hogan. Don't forget that we turn the show notes from these podcasts into more in-depth articles, so check them out at SalesCommunity.com. Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/salescommunity/message

Partner Up! Your Church-School Partnership Podcast
Episode 19: Repeatable and Relational, Transformational not Transactional (With Bill Hogan and Erika Yelverton) - Audio

Partner Up! Your Church-School Partnership Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2020 37:49


You don't want to miss this episode! It's PACKED with tips, ideas, and inspiration that will be helpful whether you're already in a church-school partnership or thinking about starting one. We love WordServe's foundational philosophy as a church and how they tangibly live out their faith day in and day out. They started their partnership with Huggins Elementary before Loving Houston began, and we have really enjoyed learning from them over the years. Enjoy!! --- Bill Hogan, Senior Pastor Bill and Rona believe that home is where the heart is, and are excited to be a part of the WordServe family. They’ve been married for 35 years and have 3 grown daughters, two sons in law, and two grandsons who all live in Texas. Bill was an Air Force officer and pilot from 1985 to 2006. In 2006, the Hogan family settled in Kentucky while Bill attended Asbury Theological Seminary, graduating in 2011. Bill served on staff 4 years and later as associate pastor of Nicholasville United Methodist Church in Nicholasville KY for one year. Erika Yelverton, Director of Compassion Erika was born in Hobbs, New Mexico, but she spent most of her childhood in South Texas. A graduate of Louisiana State University (Geaux Tigers!), Erika met her husband, Chad, and received a BS in Mechanical Engineering. Erika and Chad have lived in Fulshear with their two boys, Luke and Samuel, since 2009. After becoming a mom, Erika chose to take a break from the corporate world and discovered a new passion for serving. Erika and Chad actively serve in multiple areas of WordServe including compassion, WordServe Kids, and as Community Group leaders.

Loud & Clear
"We Can't Afford Healthcare!" Hospital Workers Fight Back

Loud & Clear

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2020 116:50


On today's episode of Loud & Clear, Brian Becker and John Kiriakou are joined by Carolyn Gomez, a healthcare labor organizer in Southern California.Workers across the country are in ascension. A group of Walmart employees this week marched in New York to the luxury penthouse of Walmart heiress Alice Walton, where they protested the company’s treatment of its workers. Indeed, in 2005, 20 percent of the retail giant’s workers were part-time. Now that number is 50 percent. That has allowed the Walton family to drastically cut costs and add to its $191 billion fortune. Meanwhile, hospital and healthcare workers across the country are launching union drives and organizing protests for better wages and working conditions, saying that they can’t afford their own healthcare. Billionaire Michael Bloomberg will face his opponents in the Democratic primary on the debate stage for the first time tonight. His extreme wealth has helped insulate him from criticism so far. Meanwhile, Bernie Sanders is dominating the polls. Darren Gibson, a host of the radio show and podcast Southpaws, a political analysis show focusing on social & economic issues, on Pacifica and Global Community Radio Mondays at 9:00 pm., joins the show. After a string of pardons and an increasingly public dispute with Attorney General William Barr, where is Trump heading as he battles his own Justice Department? Brian and John speak with Daniel Lazare, a journalist and author of three books--“The Frozen Republic,” “The Velvet Coup,” and “America's Undeclared War.” An open letter signed by 117 physicians and psychologists in the medical journal The Lancet calls for an end to what it describes as “the psychological torture and medical neglect” of Wikileaks co-founder Julian Assange. Assange is being held in London’s maximum-security Belmarsh Prison in advance of the start of a February 24 extradition hearing. He’s been charged in the United States with 18 counts of espionage for publishing information that exposed US war crimes. Dr. Bill Hogan, a medical researcher and educator at the University of Florida and one of the signatories of the letter, joins the show. There is a fascinating new documentary short out on the Iraq War called “Worth the Price? Joe Biden and the Launch of the Iraq War.” The film reviews the role of then-Senator Joe Biden in leading the US into the most devastating foreign policy blunder of the past generation. And it features a half-dozen of the most prominent critics of the war, including our next guest. Matthew Hoh, a veteran and peace activist who in 2009 resigned from the State Department over the American escalation of the war in Afghanistan, whose writings have appeared in a wide variety of publications, and who is a winner of the Ridenhour Prize for Truth Telling, joins Brian and John. Wednesday’s weekly series, In the News, is where the hosts look at the most important ongoing developments of the week and put them into perspective. Sputnik news analyst Walter Smolarek joins the show.Wednesday’s regular segment, Beyond Nuclear, is about nuclear issues, including weapons, energy, waste, and the future of nuclear technology in the United States. Kevin Kamps, the Radioactive Waste Watchdog at the organization Beyond Nuclear, joins the show.

Catholic Sports Radio
CSR 31 Bill Hogan

Catholic Sports Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2019 25:12


Currently at St. Joseph's College in Indiana, his alma mater, he previously was the Director of Athletics for ten years at Seattle University after having held the same position for 15 years at the University of San Francisco, both of which are Jesuit schools. Before all that he was the Athletic Director (and was even the basketball coach) at St. Joseph's, where he had played basketball during his college days. Active with the Knights of Columbus, he also served on the Executive Board in Seattle for the Special Olympics and was part of the decision to host the 2018 Special Olympics USA Games there.

CleanLaw
Episode 18: Ari Peskoe and Bill Hogan Talk PJM Price Reform

CleanLaw

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2019 51:52


Ari Peskoe talks with Bill Hogan, Professor of Global Energy Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School. After laying out fundamental principles of wholesale market design, Bill discusses the recent proposal filed by PJM about reforming price formation in its reserve market. Bill explains why the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission should find that prices in the market are currently unjust and unreasonable and how the proposed market redesign will result in a more efficient market. Bill and his colleague Susan Pope wrote a paper in support of PJM’s proposal - https://sites.hks.harvard.edu/fs/whogan/Hogan_Pope_PJM_Report_032119.pdf. Visit our website here https://eelp.law.harvard.edu/ Full transcript available here http://eelp.law.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/CleanLaw-18-Ari-Hogan-PJM.pdf

Perspective on Athletics
PoA122 | Rewind: Bill Hogan, Seattle University

Perspective on Athletics

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2018 34:23


In this episode, we rewind back to 2014 for this interview with Bill Hogan, then Director of Athletics at Seattle University. Bill helped Seattle U transition back to NCAA Division 1 during his tenure and talks about his career leading up to Seattle. Bill also talks about his “Coaching Dynamics” …

iFanboy.com Comic Book Podcast
Pick of the Week #623 - Legion #2

iFanboy.com Comic Book Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2018 62:45


With Josh Flanagan possibly trapped in the belly of an antique airplane, iFanboy's resident silver fox Ryan Haupt sits in with Conor Kilpatrick to talk comics and teach us all a little about how the evolution of birds relates to spicy foods or something. Running Time: 01:02:00 Pick of the Week:  00:01:29 - Legion #2 Comics: 00:09:40 - Jessica Jones #17 00:14:27 - Hal Jordan and the Green Lantern Corps #39 00:17:13 - Avengers #682 00:20:43 - Detective Comics #975 00:24:54 - Peter Parker: The Spectacular Spider-Man #300 00:26:57 - X-Men: Blue #22 00:28:45 - Doctor Strange #386 00:31:10 - Saga #49 00:34:44 - Hungry Ghosts #2 Patron Pick: 00:37:22 - The Terrifics #1 Patron Thanks: 00:45:54 - Bill Hogan 00:47:23 - Michael Scuderi 00:48:09 - Luis Carrillo 00:50:12 - Ben Skinner Audience Questions: 00:53:49 - Hussein from Toronto, Canada is about to fill up his first longbox and needs helping figuring out how to proceed. • If you want to support the Black Panther Challenge at Howard University click here. Brought To You By: • Mack Weldon - Mack Weldon makes fantastic premium men's underwear and essentials. Go to MackWeldon.com and get 20% off using promo code IFANBOY • iFanboy Patrons - Become one today for as little as $3/month! Or make a one time donation of any amount! • iFanboy T-Shirts and Merch - Show your iFanboy pride with a t-shirt or other great merchandise on Threadless! We've got a new design! Music: "Found Out About You" Gin Blossoms Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

A Lot You Got to Holler
EP 9: Praise to the Squirrels! And Other Election Season Dystopian Fairy Tales

A Lot You Got to Holler

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2016 58:18


For A Lot You Got to Holler's first election season special, co-hosts Zach Mortice and Newcity Design Editor Ben Schulman visit the totalitarian and poorly described world of Agenda 21, a book written by Glenn Beck, a conservative commentator known for his full heart, clear eyes, and tear-streaked cheeks; and Harriet Parke, a nurse of some literary renown. This dystopian artifact from 2012 describes a world in which an all-seeing authority uses clipboards and squirrel worship to manage every aspect of the population's life, forcing them to march on energy boards, recycle, ride around in pedicabs, and eat lots of soy. (It's basically a Silicon Valley spa retreat.) Zach and Ben are joined by returning guest and experienced discourser Bill Hogan to evaluate where this historical document of right wing anti-statism falls in the ascendent Age of Trump, how thousands of rural conspiracy theorists got really into obscure United Nations bylaws and non-binding resolutions, and how [solemn pause] a home-schooled girl is going to change the world. Special thanks to recording engineer Tim Joyce.   

The History of Literature
56 Shelley, HD, Yeats, Frost, Stevens – The Poetry of Ruins (with Professor Bill Hogan)

The History of Literature

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2016 65:31


In 1818, the Romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley published his classic poem “Ozymandias,” depicting the fallen statue of a once-powerful king whose inscription “Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!” has long since crumbled into the desert. A hundred years later, a set of Modernist poets revisited the subject of ruins, injecting the poetic trope with some surprising new ideas. Professor Bill Hogan of Providence College joins Jacke for a look at the treatment of ruins in the poetry of H.D. (1886-1961), William Butler Yeats (1865-1939), Robert Frost (1874-1963), and Wallace Stevens (1879-1955).   Works Discussed:  “Ozymandias” (1818) – Percy Bysshe Shelley  “The Walls Do Not Fall” (1944) – H.D.  “The Tower” (1928) – W.B. Yeats  “The Directive” (1946) – Robert Frost  “The Anecdote of the Jar” (1919) and “The Man on the Dump” (1939) – Wallace Stevens  Show Notes:  Brand new! Check out our Facebook page at facebook.com/historyofliterature. You can find more literary discussion at jackewilson.com and more episodes of the series at historyofliterature.com. Contact the host at jackewilsonauthor@gmail.com or by leaving a voicemail at 1-361-4WILSON (1-361-494-5766). Music Credits: “Handel – Entrance to the Queen of Sheba” by Advent Chamber Orchestra (From the Free Music Archive / CC by SA).   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

A Lot You Got to Holler
EP 1: Chicago Plays Itself

A Lot You Got to Holler

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2015 38:06


From the 80s to the 90s, movies set and filmed in Chicago showed a city cleaving itself in half. From John Hughes suburban-kid-in-the-city hijinks to the near apocalyptic urban horror of Candyman and Child's Play, these 20 years of film reflected the straining inequalities of the city that produced them. Newcity Design Editor Ben Schulman and Chicago architectural journalist Zach Mortice recount Billy Crystal and Gregory Hines as sociopath cops and that time Kentucky hillbillies took on the Chicago Outfit. With special guest Bill Hogan (dude was in Home Alone).  

FSR Energy & Climate
Bill Hogan, EU Power Target Model? Not for me! | Energy Today with JM Glachant

FSR Energy & Climate

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2015 5:05


http:fsr.eui.eu The Florence School of Regulation presents: Jean-Michel Glachant's Energy Today no.010 14 April 2015, Harvard Kennedy School, Cambridge Massachusetts. Director of Florence School asks Harvard Prof. Bill Hogan how he views the existing EU Power Target Model and compares it with his own preferred Target Model. Bill Hogan is Professor of Global Energy Policy and Director of the Harvard Electricity Policy Group (HEPG) at Harvard Kennedy School. "There is a fundamental problem associated with my understanding of this design that has to do with the underlying principles of markets, and in particular with what we call in the US ‘open access’ and ‘non-discrimination’." “…we had markets in California, Texas, New England and PJM in the early days, which all collapsed because you couldn’t reconcile open access, non-discrimination, and substantial arbitrage opportunities between the market and the physical system” “The difference has to be explained in the implementation of these principles of open access and non-discrimination, I think I that the TSOs in Europe have much more power and flexibility to discriminate between market participants than the independent system operators do in the United States"

The Tao of Sports Podcast – The Definitive Sports, Marketing, Business Industry News Podcast
Tao of Sports Ep. 285 - Bill Hogan (Athletic Director, Seattle University)

The Tao of Sports Podcast – The Definitive Sports, Marketing, Business Industry News Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2014 40:32


Athletic administrators cannot do better than to replicate someone like Bill Hogan, who has been in the sports field for over 30 years at three different universities. Hogan talks about his time at Seattle University, especially mentioning the fighting to search out the department's long history which had been placed underneath a pool to rot. Hogan discusses his vision for bringing back Division I athletics to Seattle University after 29 years as well as capturing the city's attention by playing at the Key Arena. Hogan exemplifies his philosophy on grooming young administrators in his department and takes a few shots at the host, which is not unlike Hogan at all.