Point 2: "From coast to coast, states are cutting funding for schools, public safety and the poor as they struggle with fallout left by politicians who made pay-and-pension promises that taxpayers couldn’t afford." - In California, the state is controlled by a supermajority of Democrats. The only real thing that we have in common is that we can both quit, and walk away (though my costs would be substantially higher).
Thus, there really is no comparison to a police detective and a private detective. I don't get to go home until I'm relieved, which can be days beyond when I'd like to go home. I don't get money for overtime worked - I get time off (which has to be used before vacation time). I can't have a second job unless the city gives me permission. I have to pay the union for the privilege of bargaining against my interests. I can't actually opt out of my benefits package. I don't have a say in benefits (including retirement). Speaking of my own situation, I don't set my wage or working hours (no matter how hard I work, or how much I innovate, I get the same rate as everyone else in my pay grade). What's lost on both pages is the fact that private sector workers can work as much as they are able, take on additional work, work for whomever they like, and negotiate for all of those conditions individually. Point 1: "Today, the state’s highest-paid employees make far more than comparable workers elsewhere in almost all job and wage categories, from public safety to health care, base pay to overtime." - This interesting page makes the point that police detectives make more than private detectives on average and by region. Pay Giveaway." Being a part time government employee, I'd like to offer a bit of a rebuttal. I read an article on about government employee costs under the title, "$822,000 Worker Shows California Leads U.S. For government and non-CC members, it just got interesting. Note: With the exception of Retina display support, the new features listed above will only be available to Adobe Creative Cloud members. These commands use logic to automatically choose between different Actions based on rules that you establish. Speed up image processing by creating Conditional Actions.
Ensure consistent type formatting across multiple documents by defining global styles, which are then available in any Photoshop document.
Easily create large images for signage, panoramas, and other large outputs by saving JPEGs of up to 65,000×65,000 pixels, more than twice the size previously supported. See more of the details in your images and in the Photoshop user interface when viewing on new Retina displays available on MacBook Pro.ĭiscover new user-inspired timesavers including Crop tool refinements, better naming of merged layers, the ability to quickly move a path anchor point using the spacebar and the option to see up to 100 items in your list of recently opened files. Some of the improvements that may interest you are: For a closer look at what’s new in Photoshop CS6 (13.1), click here.