Игроки всегда ценят удобный и стабильный доступ к играм. Для этого идеально подходит зеркало Вавады, которое позволяет обходить любые ограничения, обеспечивая доступ ко всем бонусам и слотам.

Staying Safe at the World Cup

Brazil is steadily moving into the international spotlight as it prepares to host the World Cup, which begins next week on June 12, and the Olympics in 2016, both of which are forecasted to showcase its status as an emerging economic power. On the other hand, these events are also likely to amplify security risks in the country.

The primary risk for travelers during the World Cup is the rise of common crime in host cities.

Often times, foreigners are perceived as wealthier and thus make attractive targets for pickpockets and armed robbers as well as express and traditional kidnappers. Risk managers should be aware that preparing travelers for these crimes is the best mitigation strategy.

Beyond crime, civil unrest is also a threat. Many groups already have plans in place to protest; the magnitude of their demonstrations and effectiveness of the government’s response are factors that are unpredictable. Widespread rallies may result in localized and violent clashes with police, especially in Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, where they may be larger and more frequent.

These demonstrations can also routinely halt traffic, which can force an ambulance to take an hour to reach a hospital that may only be 20 minutes away. Risk managers are advised to plan an alternative route, especially in a medical crisis.

The Proactive Risk Manager
Due diligence and intelligence are every risk manager’s responsibility, but conveying this information to travelers is critical. This includes offering pre-trip training which teaches travelers how to be self-aware, and addresses visa requirements, language and cultural information, and any relevant medical and security threats. Simultaneously, all risks, mitigation strategies and contingency plans should be clearly communicated to relevant departments.

During trips to and within Brazil, risk managers should be aware of any itinerary delays and security incidents.

Knowing where travelers are at all times is vital; traveler tracking services, often offered by assistance providers, can help enormously in case of an emergency.

Following Best Practices
As we approach the World Cup, travelers and risk managers should expect a heightened security presence of police and other law enforcement officials, especially in all 12 host cities. That said, it is easy to fall into a false sense of security. Using common sense safety precautions can help to mitigate risks and ensure peace of mind:

  • Avoid exposing flashy jewelry or high-price items such as cell phones, laptops, cameras, etc.
  • Always carry extra medications with you.
  • Choose an indoor ATM so you don’t fall prey to express kidnappers or muggers.
  • Carry only a small amount of cash with you.

    Leave passport and credit cards in your hotel’s safe.

  • Do not walk alone at night. It is best to travel in groups.
  • Avoid public transportation. Hotels can assist in hailing “radio taxis” (taxis you call ahead of time to arrange a pick-up rather than cabs on the street).
  • Take out comprehensive travel and medical insurance before your travel.
  • Remember the local equivalent to “911″ is divided up into three services: 190 – Policia (Police), 192- Ambulancia (Ambulance), and 193- Bombeiros (Fire).
  • Carry the number of the nearest English speaking hospital and an emergency contact on you.

For more on staying safe at the World Cup, read our cover story in this month’s issue of Risk Management.

Chicago Board of Ed Wins Major Battle with Teachers Union

On May 27, 2014, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois handed a major win to the Chicago Board of Education in its battle with the Chicago Teachers Union over the selection of 10 schools for turnaround in 2012, which affected the jobs of more than 200 African-American teachers and para-professionals. The decision – Chicago Teachers Union v. Board of Education of Chicagois reflective of a growing trend that raises the Rule 23 class certification bar in employment discrimination class actions.

In an important lesson for all employers, the Court held that the Board’s rigorous, individualized assessment of the schools considered for turnaround meant that the case was unsuitable for class treatment of plaintiffs’ discrimination claims.

Background

Under the Illinois School Code, schools may be subject to a “turnaround” if they had been on probation for at least one year and have failed to make adequate progress in correcting deficiencies. In a turnaround, the Board of Education takes control of the school and removes all staff. Affected teachers and para-professionals are either placed in a reassignment pool or a substitution pool with different rights to salary and other benefits depending on their tenure status and job position.

In 2011, the Board began considering which school should be turned around in 2012. The process started with an initial list of 226 schools. That list was reduced to 74 schools based on composite standardized test scores and graduation rates. Subsequently, a qualitative “in-depth investigation process” began for the remaining 74 schools. This involved school visits, additional data collection, and meetings with a variety of school representatives and community members. No written policy applied to the turnaround decision and no one set of factors was applied to determine whether a turnaround was appropriate for a particular school. Some of the factors considered were: the academic culture of the school, whether quality instruction was being provided, the quality of the leadership, and the academic trends of the school.

After reviewing the information, the Board ultimately voted to turnaround 10 schools. The schools were located exclusively on the south and west sides of Chicago where African-Americans made up 40.9% of tenured teachers. The total percentage of African-American tenured teachers at the 10 schools selected for turnaround was approximately 51%, while the total percentage of African-American tenured teachers in the entire Chicago public school system was only 25%.

The Chicago Teachers Union and three African-American tenured teachers brought suit against the Chicago Board of Education alleging that the board’s decision to turn around 10 Chicago public schools was racially discriminatory. Plaintiff sought to certify a class consisting of all African-American teachers or para-professionals in any school subjected to the 2012 turnarounds.

The Certification Decision

The Court held that the individualized, qualitative nature of the Board’s selection process made the case unsuitable for class certification. Relying on Wal-Mart v. Dukes, the Court held that it could not resolve “in one stroke” the question of whether the Board’s turnaround policy was discriminatory as applied to all class members because that would require an examination of the rationale behind the decisions to turnaround each of the 10 schools selected for turnaround in comparison with the decisions concerning the remaining 63 schools that had not been selected. The Court noted that its decision may have been different if schools had been selected based solely on objectively measurable criteria applied across the board, which would have eliminated the need for further review into how the criteria were applied to individual schools.

Although the commonality question drove its decision, the Court went on to analyze the other class certification requirements. In particular, the Court found that plaintiffs had failed to establish that they met the requirements of Rule 23(b)(2) or the predominance requirement of Rule 23(b)(3).

The Court held that plaintiffs’ claims for relief were not amenable to certification under Rule 23(b)(2) because the injunctive and declaratory relief sought by plaintiffs would merely initiate a process through which highly individualized determinations of liability and remedy would have to be made. The relief would be class-wide in name only, and could not be final without further individualized inquiries involving, for example, placement of individual class members in specific jobs based on their qualifications or providing them with back pay and front pay if no positions were available.

With respect to Rule 23(b)(3), the Court held that the case was unsuitable for class treatment because individualized questions of liability and damages would predominate over common questions. Because the selection process involved a qualitative review, claims would have to be resolved on a school-by-school basis, eliminating any efficiencies gained by certifying the matter as a class action. The Court went on to note, however, that the mere fact that damages may be individualized would not preclude certification. Distinguishing the Supreme Court’s decision in Comcast v. Behrend, 133 S. Ct. 1426 (2013), the Court held that it was enough for class certification purposes that all putative class members attributed their damages to the turnaround decisions. Although the extent to which individual class members were able to mitigate their damages would involve individualized inquiries, those were not enough to merit departure from the prevailing rule that individualized damage issues will not preclude class certification.

Implications for Employers

This case is another interesting decision in the line of cases interpreting Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes. The Court applied the reasoning of Wal-Mart to hold that a policy of selecting schools for turnaround that relied on the individualized application of common criteria was not enough of a common policy such that the claims of all class members could be resolved in one stroke. In other words, because each school got a separate, fact-intensive and individualized review, there was no one common question that could provide a common answer on an essential question of liability for the entire class.

This has important implications for all employers considering any kind of mass lay-offs. Common, across-the-board numerical or objective criteria that are applied to select individuals for termination are going to make the company’s actions more easily challenged on a class-wide basis. To the extent that an employer utilizes and can document a more searching, qualitative selection process, this decision supports that approach as a process that may be better immunized from attack on a class-wide basis.

This blog was previously posted on the Seyfarth Shaw website.

Insuring Against Third-Party Cyberrisk

The tremendous growth in cyber insurance is being fueled in part by the desire of companies to cede some of the risk of a cyber breach to insurers.

  In many cases insurers are eager to take on this risk—provided they can objectively quantify and understand the risks they are underwriting.

However, is it enough to only look at the cyber risk of the insured?  Increasingly companies are being attacked through their third-party vendor networks; one study by the Ponemon Institute reported 23% of data breaches are attributable to third party vendors. As companies share critical customer information with vendors, they expose themselves to a breach through these extended networks. Criminals have even started to target small to medium sized companies as a way to access the sensitive information of the larger firms they serve.

One case of this new tactic is documented in a recent New York Times article in which a mischievous attack was perpetrated by inserting malware into a Chinese take-out menu favored by employees of the targeted company. Last December, when Target Corp was breached and hackers stole credit card data for 70 million customers, the attack was traced to malicious code getting into Target’s network through a heating and air conditioning vendor.

For an insurer, these risks are very real and pose a potential blind spot in the risk assessment process.  When a breach occurs through a third-party vendor and involves the loss of sensitive data on behalf of a customer, the financial and reputational damage that ensues falls primarily on the owner of the data—and their insurer. While insurers today are grappling with the task of evaluating the cyber risk of the insured themselves, often there is little thought given to the cyber security of the insured’s third-party vendors.

Some underwriters are asking prospective clients to list their critical vendors in policy applications, but this is primarily to identify areas of risk aggregation—where a large percentage of insureds are all relying on the same set of vendors.

 Identifying risk aggregation is an important part of overall risk assessment, however simply enumerating critical vendors and identifying potential aggregation issues fails to identify whether those vendors are secure.

In order for underwriters to overcome this obstacle, objective cyber risk metrics can be used to both assess the insured AND their critical vendors. Ratings can be a valuable tool in identifying problem areas within an insured party’s internal network and extended ecosystem. Identifying and mitigating these problems before a breach occurs can help both client and insurer avoid costly monetary losses and damage to their reputation.

Businesses Feel Less Prepared For Increasingly Risky World, Travelers Finds

In its 2014 “Business Risk Index,” Travelers surveyed more than 1,100 businesses on the top risks they perceive and how ready they are to mitigate those threats. Overall, respondents clearly see an increasingly risky world around them, but feel notably unprepared  to handle the risks.

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The top seven threats, in order of reported concern, are: medical cost inflation, increasing employee benefit costs, legal liability, broad economic uncertainty, cyberrisk, complying with laws, and attracting and retaining talent.

Check out this infographic for more of the study’s insights:

Travelers Business Risk Index