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"The Financial Management Service (or FMS) was a bureau of the United States Department of the Treasury and provided several financial services for the federal government. On October 7, 2012, Secretary of the Treasury Timothy Geithner issued a directive merging the FMS with the Bureau of the Public Debt to form the new Bureau of the Fiscal Service. Services These services include centralized payment, collection, and reporting services, oversight of a daily cash flow of nearly $58 billion into and out of federal accounts, disbursement of more than $1.5 trillion to more than 100 million individuals via Social Security and veterans' benefits, issuance of tax refunds and other federal payments, collection of more than $2.67 trillion per year in payments to the government through financial institutions, and collection of delinquent debts owed to the government. FMS has a total of 2,100 employees located in its headquarters offices in Washington, DC, and Hyattsville, MD, and its five regional centers in Austin, Birmingham, Kansas City, Philadelphia and San Francisco. Before 1984, FMS was known as the Bureau of Government Financial Operations. Credit Gateway On September 13, 2010, the Financial Management Service started to use Credit Gateway as a deposit program for the receipt of federal agency Fedwire and ACH credit transactions. It is an effort to modernize the collections and cash management programs of the US Department of the Treasury and is being implemented in multiple phases over the course of two years. The Credit Gateway is operated by a commercial bank that has been designated as a financial agent of the government. The bank processes FMS transactions using its own infrastructure and commercial software. The transactions settle at Federal Reserve Banks, rather than at the designated commercial bank. The Credit Gateway processes transactions in real time to FMS reporting systems, namely the Transaction Reporting System. ReferencesExternal links *Financial Management Service website Category:United States Department of the Treasury agencies Category:Financial management "
"Qasim Mitchell (born December 3, 1979) is a former American football offensive lineman. He was originally signed by the Cleveland Browns as an undrafted free agent in 2002. He played college football at North Carolina A&T.; Mitchell was also a member of the Chicago Bears, Carolina Panthers, Arizona Cardinals, and San Francisco 49ers. College career Mitchell attended North Carolina A&T; State University and starred in football. As a senior, he was a Sheridan Broadcasting Network Black College All-American selection, won All-Mideastern Athletic Conference first team honors, and was named the Conference Lineman of the Year. External links *Just Sports Stats *San Francisco 49ers bio *Jacksonville Sharks Bio Category:1979 births Category:Living people Category:American football offensive guards Category:American football offensive tackles Category:North Carolina A&T; Aggies football players Category:Cleveland Browns players Category:Chicago Bears players Category:Frankfurt Galaxy players Category:Carolina Panthers players Category:Arizona Cardinals players Category:San Francisco 49ers players Category:Lehigh Valley Steelhawks players Category:Jacksonville Sharks players Category:People from Jacksonville, North Carolina "
"David Williams is an author, journalist and theologian, based in New Zealand. He gained notoriety following the publication of his 1989 account of the failed drug run and subsequent execution of Australian drug runners, Kevin Barlow and Geoffrey Chambers. Titled This Little Piggy Stayed Home: Barlow, Chambers and the Mafia the book was one of the more controversial publications of Panorama Books. The book was never printed again following its initial release, despite continued demand, because of fears of litigation. It caused a stir in the large Italian community based in Western Australia and, for a time, was roundly rejected as an accurate account of the mafia's existence and operation in WA. That changed when famed mafia hunter, Judge Giovanni Falcone, used Williams' book to describe the formation of the mafia in the state around cells of influence. Falcone was assassinated on 23 May 1992, in a massive car bomb attack – not six months following his vindication of Williams' work. Williams took an extended break from journalism after reporting on the deaths of nine people in the Gracetown cliff collapse in 1996. Gracetown is a small coastal community on the south-west coast of Western Australia, near Margaret River. His piece was the only eyewitness journalistic account of the events following the tragedy, but it was his own involvement in the community effort to recover the bodies from beneath the sand that led to his disenchantment with media. Williams pursued theological studies for some years and eventually earned a PhD. He took up an academic role at Laidlaw College, in Auckland, New Zealand, where he designed a new counselling degree programme. He left the college after some years and launched his own news magazine. Williams continues to author books and consults in the areas of communication, human relationships, epistemology and theology, through his consultancy Other Wise. His latest book is on the life and death of Dr Jared Noel, a young Auckland City Hospital surgeon who succumbed to bowel cancer in October 2014. In the five or so years that Jared fought the disease, he wrote a blog about his journey of suffering, faith and hope, which garnered a large following. Williams interviewed Jared almost daily in the final month leading up to his death, and Message to My Girl, told in Jared's voice and from his perspective, is a reflection on a young person's submission to mortality, and an inspirational account of how to approach death with unending hope. Bibliography * Williams, D. (1989). This little piggy stayed home : Barlow, Chambers and the Mafia. Perth, W.A. Panorama Books, * Williams, D.W. (2008). "New wings for a molting eagle: Isaiah's bold message to exiled Israel." In On Eagles' Wings: An Exploration of Strength in the Midst of Weakness. Eugene: Wipf and Stock, * Williams, D.W. (2011). "Imaging the triune god in otherness and encounter: A Response to Yael Klangwisan" In Reconsidering gender: Evangelical perspectives (eds. Myk Habets and Beulah Wood). Wipf & Stock. * Williams, D.W. (2015). "Convergence in joy: A comparison of the devotional lives of C.S. Lewis and 'that dreadful man Karl Barth.'" In A Myth Retold: Re-encountering C. S. Lewis as Theologian (C. S. Lewis Secondary Studies) (ed. Martin Sutherland). Wipf & Stock. * Williams, D.W & Dr Jared Noel (2015) Message to My Girl: A dying father's powerful legacy of hope. Allen & Unwin. References Category:Australian journalists Category:Living people Category:Year of birth missing (living people) "