Acknowledge all those tax exempt millionaires ROFL
Stated within the tax cap? Ask the people who got the BILLS, they were not within the "tax cap"
Too bad the news media is too much of wusses to ask him about the tax base.
What a joke
Optimists close their eyes and pretend problems are non existent. Better to have open eyes, see the truths, acknowledge the negatives, and speak up for the people rather than the politicos and their rich cronies.
"our realtors have been aggressively marketing houses."
Can we say UNSUCCESSFULLY.
Even the 'featured" house has NO TAKERS AFTER TWO YEARS for sale!!!!!!!!!!!
Anyone wish to contradict? TOTAL SILENCE.
Optimists close their eyes and pretend problems are non existent. Better to have open eyes, see the truths, acknowledge the negatives, and speak up for the people rather than the politicos and their rich cronies.
Yep, FORCED "investment" via stealing more from the financially struggling homeowners via higher taxes.
Optimists close their eyes and pretend problems are non existent. Better to have open eyes, see the truths, acknowledge the negatives, and speak up for the people rather than the politicos and their rich cronies.
Wonder how much tax dollars McCheese had to use to bribe his cronies to come and applaud.
Optimists close their eyes and pretend problems are non existent. Better to have open eyes, see the truths, acknowledge the negatives, and speak up for the people rather than the politicos and their rich cronies.
McCheese's cronies will quite willingly come to applaud, because he is keeping things patched up just enough for them to keep 'getting theirs'. You see, Schenectady's problems are fixable, not easily fixed, but it could be done. the trouble is, the problems are only fixable if we lower the taxes to stop the exodus, and then we ONLY USE THE STILL HIGH TAXES REMAINING FOR THE DIRECT BENEFIT OF THE RESIDENTS AND NO ONE ELSE! You don't live here, and/or pay taxes here, then GET YOUR HAND OUT OFTHE COOKIE JAR! But no, Cheesy will not do that, he is trying to have his cake and eat it too. You cannot serve two masters, McCheese is stubbornly trying to have it both ways, even though he is collecting a very high salary from one group, the residents, to perform certain duties for them BY LAW.
Half of U.S. Counties STILL Haven't Recovered From the Great Recession — See This Map Tom McKay's avatar image By Tom McKay 7 hours ago 10 SHARES 0 The news: Here's something you probably suspected, but never had the proof for: About half the counties in the U.S. are still deep in the throes of the Great Recession.
While the overall U.S. economy reached pre-recession levels of gross domestic product about three years ago according to the U.S. Department of Commerce, new figures from the National Association of Counties show that roughly half the nation's counties have failed to achieve pre-recession levels of output.
Four-hundred counties saw no hit to their GDP from pre-recession levels. Large counties with big cities and/or high populations have recovered nicely from the recession. But 800 counties had prerecession employment levels in 2013. These are largely grouped in the Midwest and South. Only 54 of those had gotten back up to par on employment by the end of the year.
In other words: If you live in a big city or a densely populated area, it's much more likely that you've felt the economic recovery than if you live in a more rural area or in the South or Midwest. For some, the economy is still worse than it was in December 2007. Despite the much-vaunted recovery, large stretches of the country have been more-or-less abandoned by national policymakers.
Which areas are doing worst? In the Great Lakes region, Detroit, Chicago, and Cleveland are all lagging behind pre-recession levels of GDP. Most of Florida is doing terribly, including Tampa and Miami, as is much of the Southwest. Las Vegas isn't doing super well. And rural areas in the Northeast, including upstate New York, Vermont, and Maine have done particularly badly.
Meanwhile, the areas that weren't hit by the recession at all aren't necessarily all filled with cartoon capitalists smoking cigars, counting their money through squinty little monocles. Much of North and South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, and Wyoming weathered the storm, presumably due to the ongoing shale oil boom.
The map is littered with nodes of recovery around major cities, surrounded by their poorly-performing neighboring counties. With little investment and increasing migration to cities in general (though not necessarily big Eastern ones), this trend makes sense.
Nationally, we're still recovering — but very slowly: 47 million Americans remain poor enough to qualify for food stamps, while the unemployment rate is falling, that might just be reflecting the number of people dropping out of the workforce entirely. Around 350,000 Americans gave up looking for work in November, or four times the amount of jobs created.
North and South Dakota, with or without the shale boom, probably do not have a non-resident leech class stealing money from homeowners, in the areas that are doing okay.