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Bidenomics, Border, & Borrowers

Jul 20, 202337 min
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Episode description

Jason Middleton hosts your Thursday Wake Up Call. ABC News White House Reporter Karen Travers discusses Bidenomics, the border situation, and borrowers. David Collado, Small Business Expert and President of Happy Howie’s comes on the show to talk over small business owners feeling the squeeze of economic uncertainty, how small business owners are using credit cards, and new legislation that could put an end to credit card rewards. Jason speaks with Senior Economic Analyst at BankRate.com Ted Rossman about his most recent data dive centers on junk fees and their effects on monthly household budgets. Ted also looks at the trend of companies trying to be more transparent about their fee structures. The show wraps with ABC News Radio Correspondent Jim Ryan talking about the thousands of solar panel owners who have been left in the dark.

Transcript

You're listening to Wake Up Call on demand from kf I AM six forty kf hand KOST HD two, Los Angeles, Orange County. It's time for your morning wake up Call. Here's Jason Middleton. Good morning everybody, Thanks for joining us. It is wake Up Call. It's July the twentieth. It's Thursday, and we have a winner. They're talking about it all week. Finally got a winner where we get to the lottery thing though. This morning, let's look at the scores BEFA Women's World Cup. Australia looks like they're

gonna beat the Republic of Ireland one nil. New Zealand already one today. The United States team plays tomorrow at six o'clock Pacific time six pm Pacific tomorrow. The award for the winning team this year is the players get a hundred and ten million dollars to split among them. The minimum is thirty thousand per that's about a five x increase over the last time. So some equity happening on that side of FIFA. It's got a few headlines. Then we'll get

into the rest of this morning show. A single winning ticket in the billion dollar Powerball lottery sold in downtown La yesterday. In November, a powerball ticket worth more than two billion dollars was sold to the gas station in Altadena, Go La County. If you didn't win the jackpot, don't throw that ticket away, though, because more than thirty people did match at least five numbers

to win at least a million dollars. Record heat in Phoenix continues. The low never dipped below ninety seven degrees overnight, and the high in Phoenix hit one hundred and nineteen. Highs have been at least one hundred and ten since the end of June. The wife of the suspected Long Island at New York serial killer is filing for divorce. Let's start with some of the other stories

coming out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. US officials say North Korea has not responded to attempts to discuss the American soldier who ran across the heavily armed border from South Korea. Private Travis King was being returned to Fort Bliss, Texas this week after finishing a prison sentence for assault when he crossed into North Korea. The country has no diplomatic ties to the US. Ups drivers have rallied in LA ahead of a possible strike over pay and ac in delivery

trucks. Team STAIRS, representing about three hundred and forty thousand members, are demanding pay increases for part time workers and increases in the number of full time positions. The Anderson Economic Groups Patrick Anderson says striking drivers would lose about one point one billion in wages. The biggest number over four billion dollars losses to businesses and consumers that rely on UPS. The union gathered yesterday, saying many

workers are living at the poverty line. UPS says it will continue talks next week before contracts expire at the end of the month. Chris Adler KFI News. A federal appeals court has reversed a ruling the grant four LAPD officers immunity in a wrongful death lawsuit. The pseudolledges the officers used excessive force on an

unarmed burglar who had already surrendered. Court papers obtained yesterday show the officers repeatedly shocked the man with a taser in twenty twenty and held him down until he had a heart attack and died. A four legged firefighter has become the newest member of the LA County Fire Department. Her name is Julia and she's half Golden Retriever and half Labrador. She just had a birthday on July seventh, so she's two years old now. Julia is part of the arson unit and

especially trained as an accelerant sniffing canine. Captain Casey Flanders is Julia's handblo. She comes home with me every off duty day. She's great with the kids, great with the family. The other thing about these dogs is they're part of that sporting group. They have the hunting drive that excelerant dogs need to have, Flanders says. He and Julia are called out to a scene after it's been safe to enter, and Julia quickly goes to work checking for anything

that might have contributed to the cause of a fire. It's everything spanning the spectrum of knightable liquids from light, medium to heavy discs, gasoline. We're talking about diesel, kerosene, lamp oil, lighter fluid, nail polished removal. Girl. That's a good girl. Good girl. The cost of training, acquiring, and maintaining Julio was covered by a grant from State Farm Insurance, and if this experiment works, the department may add another dog or even

two. Steve Gregory, King of five News, in a couple of minutes. The first topic on wake Up Call is ABC's Karen Travers joining us to discuss border and biden Omics, and maybe some student loan repayments. But first from the Southern California Toyota Dealers Traffic Center, Let's go places. Let's check the five. This is in Downey on the five northbound, right before Paramount Boulevard. We have cleanup proofs from an earlier crash. You're taking up the

two bright lanes. Your drive is stacking up right around Florence Avenue and in Boil Heights. This is all the five northbound at Seventh Street. We have a crash and emerges the crews blocking the off ramp right there. Your drive is bunching up as you approach. And Glenn Helen This is on the fifteenth southbound before Glen Helen Park. We have a crash there taking up the two left lanes. Your drive is stop and go from ken Wood. K if

I in the sky hopes get you there faster. From Brian Vance. Before we talk to ABC's Karen Travers, Let's get back to some of the stories coming out of the KFY twenty four hour newsroom. A girl's basketball coach in Orange County is facing one hundred and fifty years in prison for sexually molesting players seventeen years old. Orange County DA spokeswoman Kimberly Ed says, in all, six girls testified against Carlos Francisco Warez, he would have players run around the

basketball jim topless. He would french kiss these young girls, who had never been kissed before. The girls testified this week, Warres told them such acts would make them better players. He gave an eleven year old girl an envelop full of cash after sexually assaulting her in a parking lot, knowing that her family needed the money. Sentencing is set for next month in Orange County. Corbin Carson, k if I News. Right now, ABC's Karen Travers is

on the line with us. She's the White House correspondent for ABC. Good morning, Karen, A, good morning. Let's start with biden Omics because later this hour we're going to have an interview about junk fees. I know that the Bidenomics is the new nomenclature coming out of the administration. Any updates are yeah, yeah, So Yesterday, the President was talking about his economic agenda, saying that his policy is his strategy or working. He pointed to

easing inflation and strong jobs numbers. He was meeting with his competition counsel and he's highlighted the work that they're doing to help consumers get greater transparency on things like apartment rentals. That was the focus yesterday, but also on buying plane tickets, hotel rooms, concert tickets, or even signing up for short term

healthcare plans. Yesterday, they were talking about how when you go onto zulo dot com or apartments dot com, if you can go on there now and get a better sense of what your final price tag is going to be, whether it's security deposits, one time rental fees, things like that in addition to the monthly cost of an apartment. And the President, in his blunt way, said folks are tired of being played for suckers. He said, it's all about basic fairness, and these are all these kind of you know,

small announcements that they say add up to big things for consumers. Again, doesn't necessarily bring down the cost of it, but it does give you more transparency, so you know what you're paying for right from the start. Yeah, that does help. He he is branded as the middle class President, so it makes sense that this would be part of his political campaign as well. Right, So, yeah, this is going to be a message theme that we hear a lot about over the next year. Plus bidynomics.

It feels like he is a little hesitant to use it sometimes, but his team certainly is. And he's going to be up in Philadelphia today again pushing this, talking about clean energy and union jobs. He's going to be at what they call a steel cutting ceremony for the Acadias, the vessel that's going to be sent offshore to help build offshore wind farms, which the White House says will then support hundreds of new union jobs. So again, bidonomics for

day two this week for the President. Right on, and we're alliterative today, let's go from bidonomics to the border. Seems like there's been some more news coming out this week, especially on the Rio Grande. Yeah, Mexico is very upset about these floating barrels and razor wire that Texas has put into the river under the guidance of Governor Greg Abbott. They say that this violates several international water treaties and they want them removed immediately. It's a lot of

questions. Yesterday the briefing about this reaction to this request by Mexico and Parne Jumpierre was referring to the Justice Department for the specifics on the authority about the barriers being removed on any legal action. She said, the Justice Department is looking into this, but in terms of the actual situation there and what was done. Parne condemned Governor Abbott, saying that this was an inhumane and atrocious move. I guess our final b in the last minute we have with you

would bionomics, we on the border, Let's go to borrowers. Any movement on the student loan front. Yeah, so obviously, you know, the big thing will be in the fall when the repayment process begins for those people who have been on pause for three plus years because of the pandemic. The repayments for federal borrowers starts up again. But the Winehouse had put in place this twelve months on ramp transition, where if you do miss a payment,

you are not going to default on your loans. They're trying to give people a little bit of a grace period, But there were Democratic senators who reached out to some of the providers saying they're worried that these loan providers are not prepared for this restart, that because they have not been dealing with the processing over the last three months, three years, this is going to be a

really big tax on their systems. They said they have been layoffs at these companies, they've been shifts of borrowers, like getting bounced from one company to another, and that they don't have a good handle on what is coming in the fall. I asked the White Hearts yesterday if they share those concerns, and Kareem wouldn't say, but said that the the Department of Education is in contact with the blown providers to provide whatever help they can to make this a

smooge transition. Thanks a lot, Karen, We went all the way around the infield this morning. Appreciated absolutely thanks ABC's White House correspondent Karen Travers. There. Let's get back to some of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. Let's go back to we having a winner. Someone in California has won the one billion dollar powerball jackpot. The ticket was sold

in downtown La at Las Palmata's mini market. The numbers drawn last night ready ten, eleven, thirteen, twenty four and that important powerball number was twenty four. A man in Auckland, New Zealand, has killed two people in a shooting before the first game of the FIFA Women's World Cup tournament. The man was then killed in a shootout with police. An officer was hurt in the shooting. New Zealand's Prime Minister said the tournament would go on as planned.

The opening match is between New Zealand and Norway, and New Zealand has already won that one. A tornado has damaged a Fiser pharmaceutical plant in North Carolina. The company says they were serious injuries yesterday, but medicine was damaged. Police in Alabama say there's some mystery surrounding the disappearance of a woman who says she was kidnapped and held captive for almost two days. Police Chief Nick Durses says the woman had searched for things online like do you have to pay

for an amber alert? And movies about abductions. I do think it's highly, highly unusual to the day that someone gets kidnapped that several seven hours or eight hours before that, that they're searching the internet, googling the movie taken. He says investigators have been unable to verify most of the woman's statement, including claims she tried to rescue a toddler walking on the side of the highway

before being taken by a man with orange hair. Santa Anna is building what could be a first edition outdoor library in Jerome Park, complete with self serve kiosk. You can check out a book a movie using your library card. Santa and A Library services director Brian Sternberg says there will be an area for reading, joining programs, and free WiFi. People want spaces, people want places to go on weekends. People want community destinations, and things are expensive

these days. The city's investing forty six million dollars in grant funding to also buy a new bookmobile, build a new library inside a community center, and upgrade its two branch libraries with the latest tech. And they're all free. In Santa Anna. Corbin Carson k FI news a pilot program in California will provide free legal services to migrant farm workers who are in the country illegally. Governor Newsom announced the four and a half million dollar program Yesterday, which includes

case review services in labor investigations, legal advice, and representation. Newsom says more than fifty percent of farm workers in California are undocumented, and many don't speak up out of fear of retaliation and deportation. He says the program aims to prevent the exploitation of the workers. A beer maker is using the scent of the SuDS so salmon can swim to their spawning spot. The Oregon Hatchery Research Center has been working for years on helping samon find their way back to

their birthplace to lay their own eggs. Hatchery raised salmon use their noses to get back home, but often mistakenly end up in areas with the wild salmon. So finding the right smell for them to latch onto is key. Turns out, the director for the OHRC is also a homebrewer, and he realized the grossest part of home brewing or hop culture contains an amino acid that is

to the salmon's liking. Tests have been positive so far, with the OHRC getting a grant for the next two years to continue with their beer fueled research. Michael Crozier, KFI news a couple of quick headlines that we're going to talk about the credit card perks. The state of California is finding the Temeculi Valley Unified school Board one and a half million dollars for rejecting curriculum that features LGBTQ studies. Governor Knewsom announced to find yesterday, one day after the school

board voted not to use the state endorsed curriculum. How Speaker McCarthy is coming to the defense of former President Trump for his actions centered around the January sixth capital attack. Air Quality is slowly improving for millions as smoke from Canadian wildfire starts to thin out. Despite the improvements, air quality alerts are still in place in more than a dozen states, ranging all the way from New Hampshire to Wyoming. At five thirty ish, we're gonna get junkie with it.

We're gonna break talk Brett, We're gonna break down junk fees. I got Kono's attention. These things land on everything from airfare to hotel rooms to concert tickets, politics, bidonomics aside, these fees impact monthly budgets for the majority of Americans Right now, though it's credit card perks, not necessarily the rewards we use on the consumer side of things when we clickity clack that buy now button. This is how small businesses can use credit card awards to bolster their

bottom lines. David Colado is a small business expert and president of Happy Howe's welcome in, David, good morning, Thank you for having me. Absolutely. Look, Wall Street is a running of the bulls right now. How are the economics playing out from Main Street? Yeah, I totally empathize with my small fellow small business owners out there that are coming into work and making a go at their business. And these challenging economic times. And two of

the biggest challenges that we're dealing with our inflation and managing the competition. With inflation, even though it's not as aggressive as it was last year, we're still seeing rising costs of transportation, raw materials, labor, and that's really impacting our business. So we're enlisting the help of our employees, our team members to help us find ways to become more efficient at what we're doing and help us find ways to save money. Another challenging aspect to the current economy

is managing competition. The last few years have made it very easy for anyone to start a new business. And that's great, although that makes it very difficult for a small business owner to acquire gain new customers. And what we do there to help gain new customers is making sure that our customers new customers, know they can pay us with a credit card. We find that when they know they can use their credit cards to make a purchase from us,

they're much more likely to make a purchase from us the first time. And they also get the added benefit of earning rewards for themselves as they make purchases from us. So are you highlighting those perks because obviously if you get a first time customer, you want to have a repeat customer built out of that. Right, Yes, absolutely, we are highlighting those perkses Okay, great, So a little bit of a headwind on main Street and we've talked a

little bit about the credit card rewards. How these programs going to stick around overall? Are they working for both sides of the equation. I'm part of a large group that believes that credit card rewards today are in jeopardy, and they're in jeopardy because of a proposed piece of legislation called the credit card Competition

Act. This proposed legislation attempts to save businesses money by helping them by reducing credit card fees, but it disregards the fact that those credit card fees are what fun the credit card rewards program that small business owners like myself rely on. So rather than targeting credit card fees, politicians are better off educating small business owners on how to maximize the rewards on the credit cards that they're using. When I think about credit card rewards, I think there's two types of

cards. And back in the day at least there was a business card, a corporate card, a travel card that you could use, and then you'd have your personal card too. It helped with expense accounts and whatnot. Those are probably not as prevalent as they were, say twenty years ago. Right, Well, I've only been running my business for the last ten years, so I've only had my credit card, which I'm extremely happy with and I've used really well for just the last ten years. David, thank you for

joining us this morning. You're welcome. Thank you. Where can we point people online for more information? What do you suggest to go online and learn more about this legislation? I recommend going to a website called hands off my

Rewards dot Com. Again, that's hands off my Rewards dot com. The website does a good job of educating visitors about what this proposed piece of legislation is, this credit card competition hack, and the website also does a good job of explaining how credit card processing fees work and how that network works. You can also write to your congressman through that website as well. Very cool.

Thanks a lot again, David, Thank you. It's David Colodo, a small business expert and president of Happy Howe's let's get back to some more news coming out of the KFI twenty four hour news room. A two year old boy and Granada Hills has been hurt in a shooting that killed a man at a local park. The shooting happened just before eleven thirty last night. Police say the child was on the playground with his mom at the time. LA police are trying to find a man who's assaulted several women in the Pico

Union District and downtown over six days. The crime spree started Monday of last week, when a woman was attacked near Olympic Boulevard and Albany Street. On Saturday, a woman was punched in the face multiple times and knocked unconscious as she walked home from church. The guy police are looking for is twenty one year old Sergio Garcia. He's Latino five feet six inches tall, about one hundred and fifty pounds, with black hair, brown eyes, and a mustache.

He is known to carry a black statchel with red lettering that spells Gucci. A seventy one year old man from La has collapsed and died at a trailhead in Death Valley. The man is believed to have been hiking Tuesday, when temperatures hit one hundred and twenty one degrees. Officials say it's even hotter inside Golden Canyon because the canyon walls radiate the sun's heat. Earlier this month, a sixty five year old man from San Diego was found dead in his

car in Death Valley. Universal has denied pruning trees to remove shade from striking WGA and SAG members. The La City Controller is investigating the trees being cut where picketing actors and writers have been gathering. The controller says the ficus trees lining the street outside the studios are regulated by the city and need permits before they can be cut. NBC Universal said yesterday it wasn't trying to make striking more difficult, but that the trees are cut annually for safety. If found

in violation, the studios could be cited or face a hearing. Chris Adler Ka Fine News. Russia has hit cities in southern Ukraine with drones and missiles for a third consecutive night. The wave of strikes is destroyed some of the country's critical grain export sites. At least two people in Odessa were killed. Back to California, the Orange County Board of Supervisors has approved plans to apply for a state grants so it can buy and refurbish a motel in Coasta Mesa.

The supervisors save the motel would provide low cost housing and shelter. The county plans to use a six million dollar loan to rehab the one hundred and twenty room travel lodge. Supervisor Doug Chaffee says he strongly supports the home key program, but is concerned about the debt servicing of the project. Space Shuttle Endeavor is going into a launch position at the California Science Center. The shuttle has been on display horizontally for eleven years. The new vertical display will have

two rocket boosters and an external fuel tank. Construction on the shuttle's new home began last year. New center is expected open in twenty twenty five. Hacker and former KFI host Kevin Mitnick has died following a battle with pancreatic cancer. Mitnick served time in prison for computer and communications related crimes. He hacked into companies like Motorola, Nokia, Sun Microsystems, and USC in the nineties before

going to prison for five years. He hosted The Dark Side of the Internet on KFI in two thousand and two thousand and one, he was fifty nine. Only one of the state's wealthiest counties is in southern California. The financial website smart Assets as Orange County is the seventh wealthiest county in the state, with a median household income of just over one hundred thousand dollars and a median home value of one million and six thousand dollars. The other nine wealthiest counties

are up north, with Santa Clara coming in first. The median income there is over one hundred forty thousand dollars. La County ranked twenty third wealthiest in the state. The median income is just over seventy six thousand, and the median home value is just over eight hundred and fifteen thousand. Angelinos who makes seventy thousand dollars a year are considered low income. Any king Kfi news, Oh Kenny got it up its game Right now on wake up Call, we're

going to talk about junk fees. Junk fees are back in the news again as the Biden administration has made fighting them a top priority, at least for the campaign. But what does the term junk fees include? And will eliminating them help consumers save money or at least making them more transparent? Bank right, Senior industry analyst Ted Rossman is going to help us get caught up on

what could be a money saver junk fees. Now, junk fees to me, sounds a lot like one of those catch all phrases, kind of like mistakes were made or results may vary. What exactly about junk fees are we talking about? These are basically surprised fees. The Biden administration and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau have made fighting junk fees a priority. They talk about these

fees as being disproportionate to the value received. So some examples would be airline seed selection fees, ticket fees, and you're buying concert tickets or sports tickets and they have all those add ons. Credit Card lead fees have been in the crosshairs bank over draft fees. These are all examples of fees that they

think are basically unfair and too high. Unfair and too high. This is not news though, right, So why are we talking about junk fees now or why are you guys over at bank right giving it some quantitative efforts. There have been some recent movements. There was an event at the White House a couple of weeks back with the CEOs of a lot of the big ticket companies like live Nation and Ticketmaster and seed geek, and they've recently pledged much

more transparency on these issues. And Airbnb made a similar pledge late last year, so we're starting to see some movement. There's a fight brewing on credit card lead fees. The CFPB has proposed capping those at just eight dollars, a pop down from the current cap of thirty for a first offense that can actually go higher for subsequent offenses. This would supposedly trim banks fee profits by about three quarters in this area, so you know, maybe from twelve billion

down to just three billion. This I think is emblematic of the broader topic, which is fees are like whack mole. One goes down, another one pops up. I think something like this could happen with credit card lay fees and other bank fees. I worry about the unintended consequences, even though I applaud the transparency. Okay, real quick, let's do some housekeeping. CFPB explain to us what that is again, please, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

So they're basically this consumer watchdog agency. It's interesting because in some respects they've taken a more active stance during the current administration, which you would expect. But what's kind of unexpected is they haven't had nearly as many enforcement actions. And some of that is because there have been some tie ups in the courts where some in Congress are kind of questioning the legality of their funding structure.

So kind of long story short, I think they're trying to sort of balance this carrot and the stick approach. I think those credit card late fee one is one that could really come to a head. I think consumers would love to pay lower fees the unintended consequences. Does that lead another fee to go up somewhere else, or does it become harder to get a credit card? You know, these are some of the things that we worry about. Hey, let's go back to your whackamole analogy, because I think it's dead on

its transparency. Is that more valuable here than just necessarily reducing fees, because wouldn't transparency help with the whackamole problem? I think transparency is good in some areas. I think it's a good thing for concert and sports tickets because you know what you're getting into. I think it's great for those short term home

rentals like Airbnb. Some other things I think we need more progress, like hotel resort fees or a big gotcha that right now is still pretty hidden from a lot of people, and these are very common in certain destinations like Las Vegas would be a good example, where you think you're paying a certain amount and then there's actually a fifty dollars add on for the gym or the pool

or whatever it is. That's one that we have not seen as much movement on, and I think does snag a lot of people now Sometimes you can negotiate your way out of it. That's actually a good tip where I think your case is even better if you didn't use those amenities or they were under construction. Maybe if you have a lead status or you're paid with points, maybe you can get out of it. You can ask for a credit card late fee waiver two. By the way, that actually works more than eighty

percent at a time. You can't do it every month, of course, but once in a while it doesn't hurt to ask. Yeah, good call. Let's do another piece of housekeeping, because in your report is something called the Durban amendam Can you give us a working definition of that please? That was a rule that went into place a little more than a decade ago that capped debit card interchange. So interchange is the fee that merchants pay every time

somebody uses their card. And this was wrapped into the Broader Dodd Frank Act back in twenty ten. And this is a perfect example I think of unintended consequences because on the face of it, the proposal was, Okay, let's bring down the fees that merchants are paying when customers use a debit card, and then won't be great merchants a lower prices and everybody will be happy, maybe the financial industry. But unfortunately it didn't work out for consumers because merchants

didn't lower fees. They just pocketed the difference. And that's something that the FED reported on that only one percent of merchants lowered prices. Something similar is playing out now in the credit card world, where the so called Credit Card Competition Act has been proposed. That's a little different, but I think he's

intended to solve the same kind of issue. But I think the point is that, yeah, on the face of it, doesn't it sound great to pay lower prices, But what if that doesn't happen, or what if in the case of the Durban Amendment. You know, another thing we saw was debit card rewards went away, and it became harder to get a free checking account, and overdraft and ATM fees went up. And I don't mean to be cynical, but I do think that companies are going to look to make

up the shortfall. So I think probably transparency is a worthy goal, but I do worry that prices won't come down. Thank you again for your time, and hope we could talk again soon. Sounds good, me too, Thank you. It's Ted Rossman. He's a senior analyst and his newest data and report on junk fees is at bankrate dot com. Some housing rental companies are promising to show so called junk fees on their websites. This just happened.

The Bid Administration announced yesterday that Zillo Apartments dot com and Affordable Housing dot Com will be included. Abc'sjim Ryan is on the line to talk about solar panels and the solar panel panel industry and rather large bankruptcy too. Welcome back, Jim. Yeah. Pink Energy is a company that filed for bankruptcy this past yere is Jason, and yeah, not before a lot of customers had already signed on with that company, had solar panels put on their roofs.

It tried to get them wired up. In some cases they were wired. Pink Energy says that one of its parts suppliers was giving it faulty and defective parts, so when those were put into the panels they would break down. But now it's been impossible, nearly impossible to get those things service because Pink Energy went out of business or filed for bankruptcy. At least and thousands of customers around the country now are looking at solar panels on the roofs that don't

work, work only part of the time. Whether they do or not, those customers are still paying every month for loans that they took out to put those up. I'm looking at a report out of Hampton Roads, Virginia about a class action suit from some of the customers as well. Is this going to be a rolling issue? Are they going to try to stick it to their suppliers supplier? Yeah, first, the suppliers perhaps, but also I think the state attorneys general in about a dozen states are going to the lending

companies instead of the solar panel company. They're going to the lending company that lent the consumers the money to put the panels up, urging them to suspend the payment requirements, to suspend bills to those customers until the whole thing has worked out. Because you've got a lot of customers who are paying two hundred and fifty three hundred, four hundred dollars a month sometimes more to a lending

company for solar panels that simply don't work. They're on the roof, but it's supplying little or no electricity either to that house or into the grid. Is this indicative of anything that we should be watching for industry wide, or is this hopefully just a siloed event. Well, I think it alls. It does point out the consumers need to be careful in any situation, whether it's or panels or the purchasing home repair services, whatever it might be.

Keep careful records. That's what consumers specialists are saying now about those solar panel installations and complaints you might have about them. Keep those records so that you can either participate in a class action lawsuit or at least lay out your claim precisely to the company. But right now, I mean, this was why they call it bankruptcy protection, Jason, because Pink Energy is in bankruptcy and

it's protected from lawsuits filed by consumers like you and me. Right. Yeah, When about twelve years ago or so, I was at NBC in the Bay Area and Celindra went under, you might remember that one. And they had just gotten a bunch of federal grants from the Obama administration as well,

and that was one of the biggest stories we covered for that year. And it's kind of sad that we have to go back to covering some more bankruptcies within the solar industry after twelve years, right, and some of these cases just haven't been resolved at all. Some might date back that far. These most recent cases are within just the last couple of years that Pink Energy was marketing these systems, selling the systems, and then unfortunately filed for bankruptcy.

But Pink Energy again says that some of this has nothing to do with it, that faulty systems may be the work of either installers or faulty equipment, faulty parts that were brought in. Jim, I know you may not have anything on this, but you're based in Dallas and I was reading a headline earlier in the show. A suspected serial killer is in custody in Dallas. Can you update us on anything there? Yes, Oscar Sanchez Garcia is twenty

five years old. He was taken into custody yesterday, first in connection with the slaying of a sixty year old woman, but her killing is one of three that police have been investigating is possibly being connected potential motive. Investigators have said that the women at least two of the women who were killed had connections to prostitution and that this may have been some kind of vendetta sort of killing. So yes, he is in custody looking at three cases or murder.

Police are studying other potential cases to see if they may be connected to Thank you for that, Jim. I appreciate you being able to pivot ABC's Jim Ryan. They're always a pro great to hear from him. Again, let's get back to some of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. One ticket sold at Las Palmatas Mini Market in downtown La as all

six winning numbers for the one billion dollar powerball jackpot. The numbers drawn last night are seven, ten, eleven, thirteen, twenty four and the powerball twenty four. For those who did not win this one, there's another big one on the line tomorrow. The Mega Millions drawing is worth an estimated seven hundred and twenty million. I mean that's kind of like it's not a billion, but whatever, seven hund twenty million dollars. Ups drivers have rallied in

LA to demand higher pay and benefits for workers. The Anderson Economic Groups Patrick Anderson says if workers strike August first, it would cost the economy billions and quickly impact customers of the UPS. Shipments that are currently going out could be fulfilled by substitute for another carry or even driving things or walking them or biking them to where they would otherwise go. The Teamsters rallied yesterday to demand air

conditioning in delivery trucks and pay increases for part timers. Their contract expires July thirty first, a girls basketball coach in Orange County has been convicted of twenty one felonies, including molesting an eleven year old girl. DA spokeswoman Kimberly Eds

says Carlos Francisco Uarez coached club teams in multiple cities in South oc. He spent many, many months grooming these young girls into sometimes believe in that they were an actual relationship with him when they were just teenagers and he was in his late thirties, says. Six girls testified this week to things like having their first kiss with Warez and being made to run topless during private practices.

Sentencing is set for next month. Pink Mania, not pink Energy. Pink Mania, inspired by the New Barbie movie, has extended to the kitchen at Cafe Landewire in Landwar Landward, Yeah, Cafe Landward and said, oh, it's in Century City. Of course. The restaurant has released a limited time

menu ahead of the release of Greta Gerwig's Barbie movie tomorrow. The cafe says it's added a wide selection of pink drinks and food like the Strawberry Cream and Glitz and Glitter cocktails, which can also be made as mocktails, or people can get a hot pink latte or smoothie. The menu also features pink hummus and pink waffles with pink whipped cream. A few business briefs before we get to the top of the hour. Artificial intelligence news briefly sent Apple's market cap

up sixty seven billion dollars. Put a pin in that number for a second. Bloomberg reported that Apple is developing its own version of Chat, GPT and bard to compete with open Ai and others. Now that sixty seven billion dollars, that's a one day build in market cap. Market Cap is how much a company's worth, depending on how much it's trading for that day. Microsoft and Activision gave themselves more time to close their sixty nine billion dollar deal,

so this deal is huge. Sixty nine billion dollars between micro Soft and gaming company Activision, basically one day's movement of Apple's market cap. That's just for context, but anyway, Microsoft and Activision are the two companies that have three more months to clear their final hurdle to merge. The British government is the last hurdle. Netflix added five point nine million subscribers in the last quarter.

That's the streamer's biggest challenge is to build up its ad business. Now it's going to lower take away actually the lowest tier that you can have for no ads. So when people come back to Netflix platform, they're expected to go ahead and get that ad tier. It's a little bit cheaper on the front end, but for Netflix, they get to serve more ads. So that's why that's enticing for them, and that's why the Netflix shares surged yesterday.

Miami is feeling that Messi fever. I know the FIFA Women's World Cup is going on in New Zealand, but tickets for Inter Miami's first games since officially signing Lionel Messi schedule for July twenty first is tomorrow, is commanding three digit prices. Even if the Argentine Stars presence on the pitch is not yet guaranteed. H Live from the KFI twenty four hour Newsroom, I'm Jason Middleton. This has been your wake up call. You've been listening to wake up call?

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