Friday, July 12, 2013

Inspiring Spaces Presentation - July 9, 2013



Statement from the City of Hickory administration about the Inspiring Spaces Project:


In 2011, the Hickory City Council visited leaders from five southeastern cities to learn how those communities are successfully transitioning to new economic realities. The themes emerging from the success stories included the importance of public investment in the public spaces of their city, the benefit of private/public partnerships, focusing on economic development and redevelopment, providing venues and programming for outstanding special events, and engaging the philanthropic community for their support of activities and projects that will enhance the city.
Since those visits, the City of Hickory has been working with Land Design to develop a comprehensive list of projects that will improve the appearance of Hickory. This plan is called Inspiring Spaces, which will help to chart the course for improvements in the public spaces that will bring about revitalization in many areas of Hickory.

 Inspiring Spaces Documents

Monday, July 8, 2013

Economic Stories of Relevance in Today's World -- July 7, 2013

Have Central Bankers Lost Control? Could The Bond Bubble Implode Even If There Is No Tapering? - The Economic Collapse Blog - July 4, 2013 - Are the central banks of the world starting to lose control of the financial markets?  Could we be facing a situation where the bond bubble is going to inevitably implode no matter what the central bankers do?  For the past several years, the central bankers of the planet have been able to get markets to do exactly what they want them to do.  Stock markets have soared to record highs, bond yields have plunged to record lows and investors have literally hung on every word uttered by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and other prominent central bankers.  In the United States, it has been remarkable what Bernanke has been able to accomplish.  The U.S. government has been indulging in an unprecedented debt binge, the Fed has been wildly printing money, and the real rate of inflation has been hovering around 8 to 10 percent, and yet Bernanke has somehow convinced investors to lend gigantic piles of money to the U.S. government for next to nothing.  But this irrational state of affairs is not going to last indefinitely.  At some point, investors are going to wake up and start demanding higher returns.  And we are already starting to see this happen in Japan.  Wild money printing has actually caused bond yields to go up.  What a concept!  And that is what should happen - when central banks recklessly print money it should cause investors to demand a higher return.  But if bond investors all over the globe start acting rationally, that is going to cause the largest bond bubble in the history of the planet to burst, and that will create utter devastation in the financial markets.                     Central banks can manipulate the financial system in the short-term, but there is usually a tremendous price to pay for the distortions that are caused in the long-term.                In Bernanke's case, all of this quantitative easing seemed to work well for a while.  The first round gave the financial system a nice boost, and so the Fed decided to do another.  The second round had less effect, but it still boosted stocks and caused bond yields to go down.  The third round was supposed to be the biggest of all, but it had even less of an effect than the second round.  If you doubt this, just check out the charts in this article.                 Our financial system has become addicted to this financial "smack".  But like any addict, the amount needed to get the same "buzz" just keeps increasing.  Unfortunately, the more money that the Fed prints, the more distorted our financial system becomes.                      The only way that this is going to end is with a tremendous amount of pain.  There is no free lunch, and there are already signs that investors are starting to wake up to this fact.                      As investors wake up, they are going to realize that this bond bubble is irrational and entirely unsustainable.  Once the race to the exits begins, it is not going to be pretty.  In fact, the are indications that the race to the exits has already begun...


Breaking News–Today’s Job Report - Paul Craig Roberts - July 5, 2013 - Do you remember the promise of the New Economy that was going to replace the lost “dirty fingernail” manufacturing jobs with innovative highly paid New Economy jobs? Well, the promise was just another deception from the elites who have stolen Americans’ future.                    For the umpteenth consecutive month and year, the June BLS payroll jobs report (released on July 5) shows that the US economy has created no such jobs. The same old tired categories account for the same old lowly paid new domestic service jobs.                      Of the 195,000 new private sector jobs alleged to have been created, 75,000 or 38% are accounted for by the category “leisure and hospitality.” Within this category there were 52,000 new waitresses and bartenders, and 19,000 jobs in “amusements gambling, and recreation.”             Retail trade added 37,000 employees. Is your local shopping center that busy?                   Wholesale trade added 11,000.                         Zero Hedge points out that the retail and wholesale jobs numbers seem inconsistent with the latest report from the Institute of Supply Management, which shows a sharp drop in new order components and business activity. http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-07-03/non-manufacturing-ism-crashes-lowest-february-2010-new-orders-devastated-july-2009-l Perhaps the New Economy’s inefficiency requires more people to sell less.                     Professional and business services added, allegedly, 53,000 jobs, which are largely building management services, janitors, employment services, and temporary help.              Ambulatory health care services added 13,000 jobs.                       Financial activities allegedly added 17,000 jobs despite the Bank of America moving its property appraisals to India. http://www.bizjournals.com/charlotte/blog/morning-edition/2013/07/bank-of-america-routing-property.html?ana=lnk                         Local government, despite severe budget cuts, added 13,000 jobs.                     The BLS news release points out that the number of involuntary part-time workers (the number of people who are unable to find full-time jobs or whose hours were cut back) increased by 322,000 in June to 8.2 million.                     This deplorable report provided the cover for the market riggers to take the stock market up and the gold market down. Remember that economic theory about “rational markets”? Another deception.


Wonder why America is failing?  53 percent of all American workers make less than $30,000 a year - Social Security Online - (Check out the Stats)



The American Middle Class Under Stress - Sherle R. Schwenninger and Samuel Sherraden - New America Foundation - April 2011

Wages and Salaries as a percentage of GDP



There are fewer Americans working in manufacturing today than there were in 1950 even though the population of the country has more than doubled since then.  The United States has lost more than 56,000 manufacturing facilities since 2001, and the bought off politicians and Wall Street types keep pushing to offshore jobs.



Only 47% of Adults Have Full-Time Job - Breitbart - Mike Flynn - July 5, 2013 - The release of the June Jobs' Report Friday was something of a relief for the markets. The Labor Department reported that the economy gained 195,000 jobs in June, which beat economists' expectations. The Department also reported that the economy gained 70,000 more jobs in April and May than it originally estimated. The report, however, also provides clear evidence that the the nation is splitting into two; only 47% of Americans have a full-time job and those who don't are finding it increasingly out of reach.                       Of the 144 million Americans employed last month, only 116 million were working full-time. Friday's report showed that 58.7% of the civilian adult population of 245 million was working last month. Only 47% of Americans, however, had a full-time job.                     The market's positive reaction to Friday's report is another sign of how far our economic expectations have fallen. If today the same proportion of Americans worked as just a decade ago, there would be almost 9 million more people working. Just in the last year, almost 2 million Americans have left the labor force. With a majority of the population not holding a full-time job, it isn't surprising that economic growth has been so weak.




Obamacare Strikes: Part-Time Jobs Surge To All Time High; Full-Time Jobs Plunge By 240,000 - Zero Hedge - Tyler Durden - July 5, 2013 - As a reminder: jobs have quantity and quality components. The quantity component was good enough to convince the 10 Year the taper is imminent (if not stocks, which continue to trade dislocated from any and all fundamentals). But how about the quality? In a word: not good. In June, the household survey reported that part-time jobs soared by 360,000 to 28,059,000 - an all time record high. Full time jobs? Down 240,000.  And looking back at the entire year, so far in 2013, just 130K Full-Time Jobs have been added, offset by a whopping 557K Part-Time jobs. And there is your jobs "quality" leading to today's market euphoria (if only for now).




06-06-13 - Macro Analytics - Coming cRACK uP BOOM = w/ John Rubino 


Sunday, July 7, 2013

Conflict of Interest Documents from the HDR article of July 7, 2013

The following are the conflict of Interest Documents that are mentioned in the Hickory Daily Record article of July 7, 2013 entitled - Conflict-of-interest questions raised about two members of Hickory City Council - John Tinklenberg

Conflict of Interest Documentation:
https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B4C4lvVyAYFlQk4tRVFIMVNXRVE/edit?usp=sharing

I want you to look at these documents and see how slipshod they were filled out and how incomplete these statements are. There really has been no oversight of these records or the process. Information was asked to be provided up through present (July 1, 2012 at the time requested a couple months ago). As you will see, the info provided only ran through July 1, 2008. Who will hold anyone accountable should violations occur. Don't expect the City Manager to do anything. He serves at the pleasure of the City Council.

And that Parking Deck Fund that is mentioned, the City Council and City Administration have been misappropriating that fund - read it for yourself below.  As section one states, this money is set aside for funding future parking facility Capital project needs. This fund was created to increase Parking Capacity and address its issues, not for building canopies on the Square or whatever other whims and fancies the Council and staff see to.


Saturday, July 6, 2013

CEG Letter to Editor in response to HDR opinion on Transparency - Joe Brannock - July 6, 2013

More transparency needed, Hickory - As printed in the Hickory Daily Record - July 6, 2013

No, Hickory Daily Record, you do not really hear us. Clearly, Citizens for Equity in Government and the newspaper agree that governmental transparency is important, even crucial if elected officials and those who work for them are to be prop­erly held accountable. But just as clearly, the HDR seems to think that the burden for ensuring transpar­ency and accountability rests on the shoulders of the people, not the elected officials or the city staff whom we the people pay through our tax dollars. In this regard, you sound very much like some on the City Council and the city manager.

Instead of encouraging, indeed expecting government to do everything feasible and prudent to enhance public access to the ac­tions the Council takes, you blame the people for being apathetic. You argue that “there is no shortage of access.” However, have you consid­ered that not everyone can afford
to subscribe to the newspaper, or that not everyone has access to a computer? Have you considered that even for those who can afford the HDR, only reading your version of what happened in a meeting is not the same as seeing it for themselves?

Had Citizens for Equity in Gov­ernment not urged the council to video tape its proceedings, there is no evidence to suggest that the city would have ever made even one video to put on its website. Now we must ask (because the HDR hasn’t) why they feel it is necessary to de­lete the video after only two weeks. These videos may not be the official minutes of a meeting, but they are public documents and part of the public record. And as we under­stand it, because the city already has an agreement with Charter Cable for access to the government channel, there should not be an extra cost for airing the videos. It is
also worth mentioning how the city had no problems with airing the forum at the SALT Block during the referendum debate on cable when it served their purposes.

Citizens for Equity in Govern­ment agrees with all of the positive suggestions the HDR makes in its editorial.

Indeed, we have been doing just what you suggest for over two years, and we will continue to do so. We also encourage other residents to do so as well.

But whether a council meeting is entertaining or not is irrelevant. We are not looking for a “show,” as your headline implies, simply the great­est degree of transparency feasible, provided to as many residents as possible about how the people’s elected representatives are doing their jobs. We don’t think that is too much to ask.


JOE BRANNOCK