

Cover Story:
For RBD, It Was
a Very Good Year
Feature Stories:
Lessons Learned
Starting a small business can be a daunting proposition
Web Masters
RBD's online presence is a natural progression
RBD Round-Up:
How's Business?
The results are in from our
first survey
RBD Business Survey
What's your take on the rising cost of healthcare?
DEPARTMENTS:
Economic Round-Up
• The Smart Investor
How to minimize the affect of the Alternative Minimum Tax
• Economic Viewpoint
Interpreting the Inverted
Yield Curve
• Visitor's Guide
Tour busses in Rockland?
Retail Round-Up
• Where the Jobs Are
Tips for students looking
for work
Business Round-Up
• PSI Health Plans
Offer flexibility and
cost savings
• Marketing By Design
The top 15 campaigns of the last 100 years - Part 2
Ask The Expert
• The Human Factor in
Human Resources
Invest in Your Community
• Looking For a Better Way
Tomorrow's Workplace
offers help
• Leadership Rockland
Graduates class of 2007
• Youth Forum & Awards
Rockland Youth Volunteers Honored
Odds & Ends
• Letters to the Editor
• Rockland Newsmakers
Dedicated Section:
Rockland Business Association:
The President’s Desk
Heart-felt Congratulations
to Rockland's only B2B resource
RBA/United Way Golf Outing
A beautiful day for all
RBA Happenings
• Committee and Council Info
• Calendar of Events
• New Members


CEO Forum
RBA's CEO Forum provides a vehicle by which senior executives
can address the challenges inherent in operating a sizable business
within the county.
The Women’s Forum:
The Women’s Forum of the RBA is “by
professional women, for professional women.” It conducts an
interactive monthly meeting structured around high-impact business
issues. Sometimes a unique “Facilitated Brainstorming” approach
is used; sometimes there is a keynote speaker (from inside the group
or an outside professional); other times a small group analysis is
employed to come up with solutions to pressing business problems.
The group is co-chaired by Fran Reinstein of Mortgage World and Ellen
Bernstein of Accent on Promotions, Inc. It is an informal gathering
with huge energy and synergy, stemming form the diverse and talented
group in attendance.
Small Business Council
The council was begun as a place where small
business owners could meet and discuss strategies for improving
their companies and overcoming potential obstacles to success.
The Small Business Council also offers informative guest speakers
on a wide range of business issues, from insurance to marketing,
to worker’s compensation, and more.
Meetings are the last Thursday of the month at the Iona College campus
at Blue Hill Plaza in Pearl River.
Hospitality/Tourism Alliance
Serves as a clearing house on issues affecting this vital segment
of Rockland's economy - concentrating on building tourism in Rockland
County.
Home Improvement Alliance
Alliance members, for instance, look for
ways to help each other understand different permit regulations
of the various municipalities in Rockland. Small differences
from village to village and town to town can cause a lot of confusion.
The Alliance is also interested in advocacy, working toward ways
to improve insurance requirements for contractors, which can
be unfair in New York. Reforming the infamous “ladder
law” — if an employee gets drunk on his lunch break,
for instance, and then falls off a ladder and breaks his leg, the
business is liable for his injury, and other issues are on the Alliance’s
agenda.
Government Affairs
As an advocate for small business on not only
the county level, but on the state and federal level, the Government
Affairs Council provides critical information to members of the RBA
and Rockland’s
small business community, and responds on their behalf to the appropriate
government officials. This council makes annual trips to Albany and
Washington to lobby for changes to laws that affect small business,
such as the Wick’s Law, workers’ compensation, and more.
The RBA Small Business Committee
Burt Steinberg of Dress Barn, and
Sheldon Horowitz of Safe Harbour Group, are co-chairing a new endeavor
from the RBA Board of Directors called the Small Business Committee.
Recently formed to help meet the needs of RBA members with nine or
less employees, their goal is to help small businesses succeed and
assist new businesses by helping them create their own opportunities.
By offering the following, the Committee envisions assisting small
businesses:
• Overview of starting and growing a business
• Educate
on what starting a new business entails
• Training on simple
issues such as networking and presenting oneself to target audiences
• Input
from other RBA groups (i.e. Consultants Council, Women’s
Forum, Small Business Council, Home Improvement Council, etc)
• Evaluation
process
The goal of the committee is to bring resources together and
identify markets and business plans. RBD