May 7, 2024

The Saturday Profile: Hara Kefalidou Pushes Back Against Perks

IN her tiny office here, Hara Kefalidou rolled her eyes remembering the days just after her letter was first published in the conservative daily Kathimerini.

In that letter, Ms. Kefalidou, a newly elected member of Parliament, called on her fellow legislators to give up some of their vaunted perks, including free cars, the $425 fee for attending committee meetings and double pensions.

It was not an idea they immediately embraced. She soon found herself being lectured by party leaders about her lack of judgment. “I was so alone,” she said. “People that I really admired called and said in private in a paternalistic way: ‘O.K., you said what you had to say. Now, move on.’ ”

The letter — and her eventual decision to give up some of her own perks, including her free Mercedes — catapulted her into the headlines here, some praising her for her boldness. But it has also unleashed a torrent of criticism from fellow politicians who have called her an opportunist and a hypocrite.

Ms. Kefalidou, 46 and five months pregnant with her first child, says it just seemed obvious to her that lawmakers needed to make sacrifices, too. After all, her country was near bankruptcy and the government was asking Greek citizens to pay higher taxes, even as their wages, benefits and pensions were being cut.

“Consider for a minute the trade-off that I suggest,” she wrote in her letter, which was published in January, adding, “perhaps we will convince people to consider us as worthy leaders instead of privileged hangers-on.”

Ms. Kefalidou put the spotlight on an inventory of questionable perks, some widely in use. Why, she asked, should members of Parliament get extra pay for sitting on committees? Was that not part of the job? (In fact, in recent years, some legislators, sitting on four or five committees had doubled their salaries with the fees.) And why extra pay for summer meetings?

Some of the privileges Ms. Kefalidou dragged into the spotlight seemed to defy common sense. For instance, a lawmaker who is also a physician and fails to be re-elected, is entitled to a job running a hospital — even if he has never run so much as a clinic before, she said.

“That is an entitlement I don’t understand,” she said. “That cannot be right.”

And was it right, she asked, that members of Parliament should be entitled to two pensions — one attached to their profession and another after they have served just two terms in the legislature?

Ms. Kefalidou, a member of the governing Pasok party, had hoped her letter would prompt organized, institutional action — an intelligent review of salaries and privileges. But months followed and nothing along those lines emerged.

Meanwhile, her fellow legislators shunned her and newspapers, including the Kathimerini, started referring to her as the “attention grabbing” Hara Kefalidou.

Some politicians made ranting about her a part of the national political dialogue — pointing out that she was the daughter of a politician and “a scion” herself.

Letters and e-mails from her constituents buoyed her spirits, she said. “They applauded,” she said. “They were very supportive.”

Ms. Kefalidou grew up in Drama, a small city in northern Greece, an area of farming and light manufacturing, though in recent years much of the industry departed for former Eastern bloc countries like Bulgaria.

Her father was a veterinarian and a member of Parliament who retired from politics in 1989. Politics, she said, is in her blood like a virus.

But she studied mechanical engineering and left Drama for Athens. She ran for local office and worked on public-works projects — antiflooding measures, homes for the elderly, public parks.

“Very tangible things,” she said, clearly seeing that as a plus.

Nikolas Leontopoulos contributed reporting.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: October 28, 2011

An earlier version of this article incorrectly described Kyriakos Mitsotakis as the leader of an opposition party.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/29/world/europe/hara-kefalidou-pushes-back-against-perks-in-greek-parliament.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Oracle OpenWorld Convention Engulfs San Francisco

This is not for a political convention or even this week’s introduction of the new iPhone.

All this is for Oracle, a company that sells database management software. In a city of this size — 805,000 people — Oracle’s OpenWorld convention really takes over. The production, which runs through Thursday, requires a quarter-million cups of coffee and 14,700 hotel rooms, filling the city’s supply and spilling down the San Francisco peninsula past Redwood Shores, Oracle’s headquarters. “We have had bigger events in San Francisco — the World Series, the All-Star Game — but that is about it,” said Sgt. Michael Andraychak, a spokesman for the city’s police department.

With flagship products including Database 11g, Oracle is understandably not a household name. Its technology for storing and managing data, however, is at the heart of the modern business world, bringing Oracle $35.6 billion in annual revenue and the skills to stage a sales event before a crowd equal to the population of Hackensack, N.J.

Oracle’s annual gathering is also a snapshot of one of the few bright spots in the nation’s economy. Tech continues to prosper, while the people working — or not working — in other sectors struggle.

Oracle used to hold smaller events in America and Asia, but it found that more people would come, traveling thousands more miles, when it turned the San Francisco fete into a monster tech party. Besides Oracle, nearly 500 other computer makers, consultants and industry hangers-on have bought booth space on a half-million-square-foot show floor. A free concert on Wednesday features Sting, Tom Petty and the English Beat, as well as a Ferris wheel.

Oracle’s so-called engineered systems make sense of mountains of data, for needs as diverse as internal management and Internet commerce. The computer systems using it can cost millions of dollars, too, so they are not the sort of thing people buy over the phone.

The owners of the trendy One Market restaurant in downtown San Francisco opened their doors on Sunday — normally a day off — for two private parties. The private rooms are sold out for the entire convention, and new private spaces have been partitioned, like luxurious cubicles, in the main room. “They have their expense accounts,” said Larry Bouchard, general manager, “so their tastes buds are elevated.”

The W Hotel near the Moscone Center, the epicenter of the immense convention, recently spent $5 million to remodel its lobby and restaurant, which will reopen just in time for the show. Kristiann Galati, the W’s director for sales and marketing, said its rooms, costing $300 to $500 a night, have been sold out for months, as most nearby hotels have. A few bunks remain at the Orange Village Hostel, in the dodgy but nearby Tenderloin district, for $35 a night. The manager, Edward Kim, said these would most likely be gone by the time the show began on Sunday.

Peter Zernik expects to get his share of the $100 million that Oracle users will spend in this town.

“A businessman can close a deal here, and have a good time later,” said Mr. Zernik, the V.I.P. host at the Gold Club, a strip club a block from the convention center. “The city looks forward to it and so do I. I make my living on commissions.”

Matt Richtel contributed reporting.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=c8f9d06e0d752e9bb75896a9d54af330