Posts Tagged ‘California’

California Small Businesses Paid in Scrip

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009
World's 8th Largest Economy Can't Pay Its Bills

World's 8th Largest Economy Can't Pay Its Bills

Just when you thought it was hard enough with lack of access to bank loans, some small businesses in California that contract with the state are being paid for their services in IOUs instead of liquid funds. Owing to a $26.3 billion budget deficit, and the apparent inability of lawmakers to agree to spending cuts or tax hikes, the state does not have sufficient cash to cover all of its payments.  I have spoken with small business owners in California that contract to provide goods and services to the state and cash flow pressures in the summer months are nothing new. The California Legislature has rarely met its own June 30 budget deadline, with the result that the state is often in arrears in making scheduled payments to contractors over the summer months.  However, this is the first time since 1992 that California has printed IOUs against certain of its obligations. State Controller John Chiang has stated that he will issue $3.3 billion in IOUs along with $11 billion in regular cash payments.  Remember, California is the world’s eighth largest economy.

California’s cash flow problems may be disproportionately shouldered by small businesses. When California last issued IOUs for payments, state employees litigated their claims that receiving their paychecks in scrip constituted a violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act. A federal judge agreed, and the workers received their cash payments plus extra vacation time.  So state employees will not receive IOUs for their paychecks this time. And, because the federal government is paying certain of California’s social service obligations to the elderly and disabled, they will not be affected by the lack of cash.  Governor Schwarzenegger reached out to financial institutions to urge them to accept the IOUs, called individual registered warrants, which will be redeemable by October at a 3.75% interest rate. Wells Fargo, Bank of America and Chase Bank have announced that they will accept the IOUs from existing customers through July 10. It is not clear what will happen after July 10 or what other institutions will do.

In Prepare for the Worst, Plan for the Best: Disaster Preparedness and Recovery for Small Businesses (Wiley, second edition, paperback, 2009), I presented a framework for which the California liquidity crisis would qualify as a third-party service failure. Small businesses that depend on clients, such as California, to make timely payments to fund their own obligations are at risk for failure to diversify their client base, just as you would with a vendor or service provider. I am sympathetic to the start-ups in that state, as the market there is brutal.

Working in California

Friday, October 10th, 2008
Cabernet Grapes at the Hanna Winery

Cabernet grapes at the Hanna Winery

I spent a very enjoyable week in California as the guest of Chris Hanna who welcomed me to Hanna Wineries in Sonoma Valley for the fall harvest. Together with a friend, we toured Hanna’s vineyards, tasted their award-winning estate-grown Sauvignon Blanc and Cabernet Sauvignon wines, and accompanied Winemaker Jeff Hinchcliffe on a tour of Hanna’s production facilities, learning first-hand about the art of winemaking.  The highlight was a harvest lunch with Chris and the winery staff. We appreciated the scenic beauty of the Sonoma Valley and particularly its authentic cuisine. We dined at the Dry Creek Kitchen and Cena Luna and enthusiastically recommend both. And if you ever need accommodations in the Sonoma Valley, I recommend the Healdsburg Inn, where we stayed. In addition to visiting eight wineries and one olive oil press in Sonoma, we also attended the Harvest Fair, which was great fun. I particularly enjoyed seeing the fruits of the harvest, such as this impressive array of apples.

A Bountiful Harvest at the Sonoma Fair

A bountiful harvest at the Sonoma Fair

Our stay with Hanna Wineries was a particular delight for me as I have completed four certificate programs at the French Culinary Institute, including study with Master Somnelier Andrea Immer Robinson. Chris Hanna is also writing a cookbook and I look forward to reading about her special cuisine and suggested food and wine pairings. And as Chris Hanna and I are both women business owners, I related to her choices and her values. I also envy her quality of life in Sonoma Valley! Photographs of our visit will be published in a future issue of Gourmet magazine; I will provide the link as soon as it will be available.

We enjoyed the hospitality of Hanna Wineries

We enjoyed the hospitality of Hanna Wineries

We then went to San Jose where we visited the Museum of Technology and its impressive exhibit devoted to the work of Leonardo da Vinci. The presentation focused on da Vinci’s work as an inventor and engineer and featured facsimiles of his notebooks. If you have the opportunity to see this exhibit, do so, as it will leave San Jose in a few months’ time. And before you think I had all fun and no work in California, I should tell you that I did work in San Jose, including doing a book signing at the local Borders Bookstores, although that was fun, too. This photograph below shows two copies of the book remaining after the signing; I guess this is the author’s experience of the harvest and it is very rewarding.

Technology museum in San Jose

Technology museum in San Jose

Don't miss the Leonardo da Vinci exhibit

Don't miss the Leonardo da Vinci exhibit

Fruits of your author's labor

Fruits of your author's labor