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I'm a Minnesota Girl, living in the south. I tell my friends I try not to talk and think like a Yankee, but sometimes I slip up!

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

What's Up With the Tampa Bay Economy


We're starting to see signs of life here.


After spending a lot of time in the 10 worst housing cities for decline in America (we are probably still there), we learned this week that home sale prices in Tampa Bay were flat from April to May, with no decline. This is the first time in 3 years!! From May 2008-April 2009, prices declined a total of 20.8%. No movement upward in prices is predicted until 2nd quarter 2010, but we are breathing sighs of relief.


Bad news is still on tap for Las Vegas, Phoenix, Miami and Seattle. They are the four major cities is the US where prices continued to decline in May 2009.


50+ police officers will be hired/rehired in the quad county region around TB. Stimulus money will be used for the first 3 years of salary. The counties/cities agreed to fund the 4th year of their employment. Hopefully, by 2013, the need for the officers and the funds to keep them will be available when we are back on our feet.

Monday, July 27, 2009

Blogging VS Social Networking


"A blog lets you define yourself, whereas on a social network you are more likely to be defined by others.
A blog lets you raise your voice without asking anyone's permission, and no one is in a position to tell you to shut up.
It is, as the journalism scholar Jay Rosen puts it, "a little First Amendment machine," an engine of free speech operating powerfully at a fulcrum-point between individual autonomy and the pressures of the group. Blogging uniquely straddles the acts of writing and reading; it can be private and public, solitary and gregarious, in ratios that each practitioner sets for himself.
It is hardly the only way to project yourself onto the Web, and today it is no longer the easiest way. But it remains the most interesting way.
Nothing else so richly combines the invitation to speak your mind with the opportunity to mix it up with other minds."


~Scott Rosenberg

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Let's Hope This Isn't Just A Fad

Let me incur your wrath by saying I don't hold much stock in the need for a high-price wedding.
I just think it is all way, way, way out of control... in the money that is spent, the time and effort expended and the thought that it is absolutely necessary. I'm all for simplicity and creativity in the ceremony by which two are married. (Perhaps that is because I've been in 17 weddings in my lifetime....!)

There was a funny show about getting creative with your first dance at the wedding reception/dance. It was called "Rock the Reception". People arranged to have Emmy nominated choreographers Napoleon and Tabitha D'Umo choreograph their wedding party for the first dance. Some fun clips from that:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=czsEvIhBZBI

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7tjX89RCfxE&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z1wZ--mxNqU

Running with that idea, apparently choreographers and dance teachers all over the US have been getting gigs to make weddings more creative. Not just the reception, mind you.
Take a look at this (hope you enjoy it as much as I did!):

Friday, July 24, 2009

Some Job Relief


In July, my group hired 11 people, on a base of 480 people in Tampa. 8 of these were new jobs. We did fill 5 of the positions with people who had worked for us before, people who had been laid off by another sector of our company. Still and all, it feels good.


Dropping the political out of all of it, there really are some good things happening with jobs due to stimulus funds. Here's a small update (source, Monster):


STIMULUS JOBS.... JULY, 2009


So where are stimulus jobs being created today? Let’s look at a few examples across industries and around the country.


Healthcare:

Clinics Hire in Indiana

Stimulus-funded hiring in community health has begun in Indiana. Neighborhood Health Clinics, a nonprofit community health provider in Fort Wayne, Indiana, has been allocated $340,000 in ARRA money. “We’ve received stimulus funding to hire an additional physician, two nurses and a billing specialist,” says Mary Haupert, president. The physician begins work in June; the clinic is in the process of making the other three hires. The process of transferring the clinic’s ARRA money to its payroll account is simple, Haupert says: “We have a grant amount and can access it online.” What happens when the stimulus funding runs out in April 2011? “We feel the physician will have acquired enough patients to generate the revenue to pay for the salaries of the staff hired via ARRA,” Haupert says. Meanwhile, the clinic is applying for a second round of ARRA funding -- $675,000 to help expand the physical plant, which will mean construction jobs and more healthcare employment opportunities.


Government Contracting:

Putting Training Funds to Work

Recovery Act funding is already creating good jobs with government contractors nationwide. With ARRA money, Department of Energy contractor Washington River Protection Solutions has hired dozens of health physics technicians who will protect the safety of workers cleaning up radioactive waste from nuclear weapons production at Washington state’s Hanford nuclear reservation. “We’re getting $326 million of Recovery Act money over two-and-a-half years,” says John Britton, a Washington River spokesman. “We’ve hired 30 health physics technicians. They will get 20 weeks of classroom training and six weeks on the job. We hope they’ll stay for their entire career.” The project -- the largest environmental cleanup in history -- is expected to last until 2035. The technician jobs are unusually well-paying considering they require only a high school diploma and some aptitude for math and science. Trainees begin at $20 per hour; senior technicians may earn $35 an hour. ARRA money is also flowing through state and local governments to those entering the workforce for the first time, sometimes to fund temporary jobs. For example, Indiana is hiring 2,000 young adults from low-income households for the summer to improve the state’s parks and trails.


Construction:

Shovels Dig into New England

Those thoroughly hyped “shovel-ready” infrastructure projects are finally putting construction boots on the ground. Pike Industries has won contracts for 10 stimulus projects in Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont, says spokesman Erik Taylor. “As a result, Pike has gone from a position of considering significant layoffs to hiring feverishly,” he says. “Sixty-five people have been hired and 70 more hires are in process.” Pike is hiring mostly equipment operators and laborers, but also knowledge workers such as construction project managers and administrative assistants. “The economy has been basically garbage, so I’m excited about this job,” says Jason Fullerton, recently hired by Pike to operate an excavator on an Interstate 89 resurfacing project in New Hampshire. “I’m hoping that when the stimulus work is done, the economy will have come back a bit [creating further opportunities].” What’s the future of stimulus spending under ARRA? “We’ll see a lot more money in the next six months -- much more than has already hit,” says the EPI’s Pollack.

Monday, July 20, 2009

WHERE WERE YOU????????











40 years ago today, while most of America was riveted to their black and white television screens to watch one of the greatest efforts our country has ever made in exploration, I was 100 miles away from civilization and television access.





Sunburned, sore-muscled and weary, I was 3/4 of the way through a long trek by canoe through the Boundary Waters Canoe area. My voyage, and that of my companions, was free, in return for a lot of hard, after-school work for one of our teachers, Mr. Wold, who ran a canoe trip outfitting business in the summer in Ely, Minnesota. We tuckered ourselves out each day, ate like offensive linebackers around the campfire each night, and narrowly escaped a raid by a black bear on our elevated bag of food one night.





We knew what was going on in the great wide world. Mr. Wold came up with a boat launch one night to tell us about the landing and to rave about what all America couldn't get enough of. I confess, most of us were sad at the thought of missing one of the great milestones of our lifetime. Then again, in the wilderness, seeming to be in commune with nature and the big old "man in the moon" each night (not to mention the thousands of stars in one of the great unspoiled areas of this land of ours), being together, being young, courageous, in love with the unknown.... perhaps we were some of the moon landings greatest spectators, even if we didn't see the film until AFTER we returned to civilization.





It's an all time favorite memory of mine. And though I traversed the Boundary Waters Canoe Area twice more in my lifetime, no trip was as special as the one where America made a moon landing with a dozen 14 year old girls, sans televisions, cheering us on. Life was simpler then

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Have You Seen This?

If not, you are not one of the nearly 2.4 million people who have seen this since the 6th of July, enjoy! Having had a nightmare baggage experience with United, and having worked for a long time to get some compensation, only to be told "Nyet" by the airline, musician Dave Carroll and his band, the Sons of Maxwell, have gone viral with the first of 3 videos telling his story. It's great fun....






A few days later, having been picked up by CNN and a lot of radio shows, to name a few, Carroll gives his now worldwide fans an update:


Friday, July 10, 2009

Double Rainbow






Tuesday, July 7....




Just when it seemed my week would be a big yawn; the daily rainstorms, heavy clouds, thunder and lightning that plagued us in the Bay area for the month of June had ceased during the 4th of July weekend. But starting on the 6th, when the workaday world butted in again, the rains resumed.




On the way west towards the bay, on the Courtney Campbell Causeway, around 7:20, my daughter broke the monotony of the radio morning show with a "look, Mom...a rainbow". And, she was right. Seeing the full arc of the rainbow woke me up to what the differences have been since I've been in Florida. It seems, at least in my part of the state, that a full arc rainbow is a rarity..potentially I hadn't seen even one since I arrived in 1995. For some strange reason, we seem to get only the rising part of the arc....or only the descending part. A partial rainbow, at best.




But this one was a vision, and a full arc, with both bases appearing to end in the water. And as we drove west, the colors blazed from pastel to nearly primary. It was then that Andrea craned her neck to look through the uppermost part of the windshield... and spotted the full, pastel second arc, above the first. We drove in awe. Inspired, the beauty of it all carried me through the rest of the week, storms and all. And while we were unable to get a picture with our silly little cellphone cameras, I hope that this photo, from Ken Rockwell , which almost exactly duplicates the phenomenon we saw, will inspire you all, as well.




quid

Saturday, July 4, 2009

She's Gone Where the Goblins Go

Goodbye politics... hello money!



I can live with the Palin who can appear Pat Buchanan-like or Greta Van Susteran-like on news shows, or give speeches wherever (Note to Sarah: please practice; the resignation speech was "rambling, incoherent and illogical") candidates need her political support. I breathe a sigh of relief for the family who was placed in the national spotlight, all their dysfunctional threads dangling. I sincerely hope she makes all the money she seems to need. That she's a quitter is no surprise. A narcissist? Of the highest order. I hope there is no "hidden political scandal or investigation" forthcoming, because, because, because, because, because....




We Have Had Enough of Sarah Palin




go quietly into that good night.....















We tell lies when we are afraid... afraid of what we don't know, afraid of what others will think, afraid of what will be found out about us. But every time we tell a lie, the thing that we fear grows stronger. ~Tad Williams

The glory which is built upon a lie soon becomes a most unpleasant incumbrance. How easy it is to make people believe a lie, and how hard it is to undo that work again! ~Mark Twain

With lies you may get ahead in the world - but you can never go back. ~Russian proverb

If you tell the truth you don't have to remember anything. ~Mark Twain

There is no well-defined boundary between honesty and dishonesty. The frontiers of one blend with the outside limits of the other, and he who attempts to tread this dangerous ground may be sometimes in one domain and sometimes in the other. ~O. Henry

Honesty pays, but it don't seem to pay enough to suit some people. ~Frank McKinney "Kin" Hubbard

Some people will not tolerate such emotional honesty in communication. They would rather defend their dishonesty on the grounds that it might hurt others. Therefore, having rationalized their phoniness into nobility, they settle for superficial relationships. ~Author Unknown

Friday, July 3, 2009

A great birthday



Accompanied by my favorite birthday video.... a great day! Flowers, dinner, books, movies, breakfast and great ecards from all. It should come as no surprise that this was a milestone birthday....55! For 5 years I have resisted all efforts by the AARP for me to join them in their midst (I thought 50 was too young.) However, I am seriously considering it now, along with the use of selective senior citizen discounts. I know, I know, people at restaurants will refuse to take my sr. citizen coupons because I look too young.... but, the savings are too much to refuse!

Love and chuckles and thanks to all! Quid