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In 1982, TransUnion was acquired as a subsidiary of Marmon Group, a holding company formed by Jay Pritzker and Robert Pritzker. It was spun off as a separate company under Pritzker control in 2005. The wealthy Pritzker family, most famous for owning the Hyatt hotel chain, began divesting the family's assets in late 2001 following the death of Jay Pritzker. Notable major divestitures include Hyatt Hotels Corp. public in 2009 and selling majority stake in TransUnion in 2010.[1] In April 2010, the Pritzker family, with Penny Pritzker as TransUnion Chair, sold controlling interest of TransUnion to a new majority owner, the Chicago-based private-equity firm Madison Dearborn Partners.[2] Madison Dearborn Partners acquired 51 percent stake in TransUnion, and the Pritzker family maintained 49 percent ownership. It is based in Chicago, Illinois.
un owners." The influential lobby has opposed past nominees and been a critic of the agency itself, arguing it has been too intrusive in its enforcement of gun laws."I think we're going to get it," Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill., the Senate Democratic vote counter, said Tuesday about efforts to round up 60 votes for Jones.Many gun control groups have supported Jones' nomination, including Mayors Against Illegal Guns, led and largely financed by wealthy New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg."Senators have come to understand that one of the reasons we have the worst gun violence problem in the world is the agency that's supposed to deal with it is rudderless and under-resourced," said Mark Glaze, the group's executive director.Many Republicans still have qualms about Jones. Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, has complained that the nomination should not move forward because of two whistleblower complaints against him involving his work as U.S. attorney for Minnesota, a post he has held since 2009."It is imprudent and unwise for the Senate to give final consideration to any nominee where there is an open investigation into that nominee's conduct," Grassley said this week.Jones has also been acting ATF director since 2011.Also expected to win Senate approval this week is Power, a former Obama foreign policy adviser and long-time human rights activist, whom the president wants to become U.N. ambassador.Power, who won a Pulitzer Prize for a book on
July 29, 2013: Tourists and locals play on Ko'Olina beach on the island of Oahu, Hawaii.ReutersLawmakers in the Aloha State want to wave goodbye to their growing homeless population -- by buying them a one-way ticket off the island.Hawaii's controversial three-year Return to Home pilot program launches later this year and is being billed as a way to help the states 17,000 homeless residents, while reducing the financial burden the state has in caring for them. Under the plan, the state will pay for a one-way plane ticket for any homeless resident who can find someone on the mainland to take them in.The program, which has a $100,000 annual budget, is the brainchild of state Rep. John Mizuno, who had unsuccessfully tried to get a similar plan through the past three legislative sessions. This year, the measure was attached to a larger spending bill and squeaked through the state legislature.Critics, though, say the program is a quick fix and does nothing to address the root causes of homelessness.Patricia McManaman, director of the Department of Human Services the agency tasked with implementing the program -- told lawmakers she had reservations about the plan to send the states homeless away and questioned the programs funding. She also had a problem with language in the bill that suggests homeless people are in need of sufficient personal hygiene in order to travel something she calls an unnecessary and inappropriate stereotype.But Miz
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