Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Our culture of violence needs to cease

Two things of prominence are on my mind today, this Hump Day.

1. This situation that occurred in Chicago, with the unfortunate fatal beating of a high school honor student just days ago. It is something I'm wrestling with as I grew up in Chicago and know the area in which the incident took place. As Chicago brass (even the White House) prepare to sell the city on the 2016 Summer Olympic Games later in the week, it is critical that the violence (that has been spinning and spiraling out of control there for months and months) must end, and soon. This goes beyond "Black-on-Black crime," this is beyond anything that is logical. We're talking about an out-of-control culture of violence.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/media/thumbnails/columnist/2009-08/295609-23192337.jpg Noted Chicago Tribune syndicated columnist Clarence Page has a great column on this today...Page says that there is a connection between the "impact of poverty and the disconnection from hope."

Page:


For example, those who are moved by video to judge Chicago's liveability are no more ridiculous than Rush Limbaugh's recent rant after Matt Drudge's Drudge Report Web site posted another video of youth violence: a school bus security camera in downstate Illinois captured a black kid pounding on a white kid in the next seat.

Police reported, but then discounted the possibility, that the incident was a hate crime. But Limbaugh was not deterred by a mere lack of evidence. "Greetings, my friends. It's Obama's America, is it not?" he bellowed. "Obama's America -- white kids getting beat up on school buses now. I mean, you put your kids on a school bus, you expect safety, but in Obama's America, the white kids now get beat up with the black kids cheering, 'Yeah, right on, right on, right on!' "

Note to Rush: Most black youths have not exclaimed "right on" since the days when you and I were young.

The truth is that race has little to do with youth violence compared to the impact of poverty and the disconnection from hope.


2. This gets into my second point...addressing the culture of violence is something our colleges and universities should be attempting to address. But for one prominent institution in Greensboro, NC, the messenger is raising eyebrows.

At issue is an invited performer to the upcoming homecoming for North Carolina A&T State University. The school's alumni is prestigious, and its homecoming draws visitors from around the country. For Greensboro, which is experiencing unprecedented negative effects from the current recession, the expected windfall from money spent in town for this event every year is incredible.

http://mm.news-record.com/drupal/files/imagecache/nrcom_article_image_landscape/Images/mane_092909.jpg The performer is rap artist Gucci Mane, who apparently raps about drug dealing, violence, and reported ties to the Bloods street gang.

Mr. Mane will be performing his songs at the annual homecoming day concert. Mr. Mane was booked by student homecoming representatives a while back. Now his message (and the messenger himself) are causing controversy to the school, its students and the city itself. Student leaders say it is too late to tear up the contract for Mr. Mane.

Coverage from the local paper, the Greensboro News & Record found here. Independent blog coverage from Piedmont Publius found here.

I'm not sure what's more wacky, the eyebrow-raising comments following the News & Record article, or the fact that some think it is okay for him to perform. With Greensboro's rate of crime under intense scrutiny in a local municipal election season that's currently underway, once one would expect other names or other performers to surface that would be more positive and uplifting to the students, the alumni and the community at large.

This constant culture of violence is one that I have a massive problem with. And if we're ever going to address it head-on in our schools, it starts at home and talking to our children and preaching education, education, education! Forget the 3Rs for a minute..we need to preach "E...or J"...education or jail. Who's with me?

E.C. :)

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

NPRI demands we get our money's worth from CCSD

http://t1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ptRBpBO0ZmCTpM:http://www.fiscalaccountability.org/userfiles/NPRI%2520logo.jpg http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:tcjKDOkYMGSnuM:http://employerblog.recruitingnevada.com/wp-content/uploads/CCSD.gif The conservative Nevada Policy Research Institute's Patrick Gibbons recently inked an interesting column breaking down just how much CCSD spends per student. And while the results are astounding, Gibbons says we clearly are not getting our money's worth.

NPRI:


For the 2009-10 school year, CCSD will spend $3.731 billion providing education for just over 303,000 weighted students — a number that most likely will decrease. Total expenditures, thus, will come to at least $12,307 per pupil. While that is an 8.9 percent decrease from the previous year, it still is a substantial sum devoted to education.
To better understand the real priorities of the school district, however, let's break that total into its parts.
Of the $3.7 billion, CCSD will spend $649 million repaying debt. This breaks out as $2,143 per pupil going toward debt repayment. Total debt for the district, with interest, balloons to $6,428,470,473. In other words, for every student currently enrolled, CCSD owes $21,203 in principal and interest.
CCSD will also spend $671 million, or $2,214 per pupil, on capital projects. With approximately $4,357 per pupil spent on debt and capital projects, CCSD desperately needs to figure out ways to reduce these expenditures to save taxpayers money or to make more funds available for use in the classroom. 

Gibbons says CCSD needs to investigate expanding charter schools throughout Clark County. Simultaneously, the state, he says, needs to advocate for vouchers. In the same breath, Gibbons says that Clark County is spending as much as what private schools spend per student, yet, the results couldn't be more far apart.


E.C. :)

Monday, September 28, 2009

Stifling free speech at CCSD?

http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:tcjKDOkYMGSnuM:http://employerblog.recruitingnevada.com/wp-content/uploads/CCSD.gif School board meetings down at CCSD allow for public comment. After all, the Board is an elected one, elected by their peers to represent them in matters involving the Valley's children. Now it appears the Board wants to stifle some of the more "inflammatory" speech.

In a move that's designed to certainly irk some of the Valley's parents and advocates of public education, school board members have asked CCSD staff to craft a scheme to "cut off" speakers during various Board meeting comment periods.

Las Vegas Sun:


Board members have asked staff to come up with a warning to potential public speakers that personal attacks won’t be tolerated.
For first-term member Linda Young, who has been the recent target of a few of her West Las Vegas constituents, “it’s becoming badgering and harassment. We want to hear what you have to say. You have good ideas and recommendations ... at the same time, none of us up here relishes being smacked around.”
The current regulation says “members of the public are free to express themselves as they see fit, and are personally responsible for their comments.”
In a draft proposal, which the School Board has asked be refined, the warning reads: “Public comment, the content of which is irrelevant, beyond the authority of the board, willfully disruptive of the meeting, repetitious, slanderous, offensive, inflammatory, irrational, amounts to personal attacks or interferes with the rights of other speakers, is prohibited.”
The language came from a 2002 opinion by the Nevada attorney general about public meeting conduct.

May I remind this Board that they are elected by the citizens. They are elected officials. If you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen.

And considering the issues I've been reading, and hearing, and learning about since I've been in town, may I also remind this Board that they can be voted out. Sorry, but when it comes to our children, I don't play.

E.C. :)

Teacher reassignments cause headaches

http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:tcjKDOkYMGSnuM:http://employerblog.recruitingnevada.com/wp-content/uploads/CCSD.gif For some Valley-area teachers, the beginning of the year census within CCSD has caused a unique headache.

Today's Las Vegas Sun reports fewer teachers are needed at elementary schools and as electives are being cut at middle and high schools, others are reassigned a month into the school year. And that's caused problems for parents who desire a sense of stability at their child's school.

Sun:

Spanish teacher Marie King spent three weeks setting up her classroom at Gibson Middle School, even paying to have one wall painted a cheery shade of purple that she thought her students would enjoy.
On Friday, she spent three hours taking down posters and packing up her belongings, one of the 168 Clark County School District teachers who were reassigned after enrollment came in lower than expected at their campuses.

The process of reassigning teachers in the wake of “count day” happens every fall in Clark County — but historically, the changes are the result of growth, when campuses get extra, portable classrooms to accommodate more students, and staffs are altered to fairly distribute the more experienced teachers.
This year, however, administrators are cutting elective classes at some middle and high schools, and discovering fewer classroom teachers are needed at elementary schools.
The fate of 168 of them played out Thursday night at Del Sol High School. They were called one by one, in order of seniority, to review a list of open positions in the district and write down their top three choices. By the end of the evening, all but one teacher had a new assignment — and that individual is expected to be offered a position soon, said Bill Garis, deputy human resources chief.
King is used to shifting assignments. In May she was transferred from Eldorado High School because of the shift of a large number of students there to a new school. King considered herself lucky to land at Gibson, a magnet middle school, where she says, she was warmly welcomed.
“Everyone was wonderful to me,” King said. “I’m sorry to leave them.”
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E.C. :)

LAS August traffic drops

http://www.lovemytool.com/photos/uncategorized/2007/08/14/mccarran_logo.jpg Passenger traffic at McCarran Airport (LAS) shows declines across the board; down 9.8 percent year-over-year for the month of August, the Las Vegas Sun reports today.

Sun:


The Clark County Department of Aviation today reported that 3,495,522 passengers arrived or departed from the airport, which is down from 3,877,059 passengers in August 2008. Last month's number is down from 3,557,509 passengers a month earlier in July.
The number of passengers through McCarran year-to-date is 27,278,666, down from 30,739,817 through the first eight months of 2008. That's a drop of 11.3 percent.
Southwest Airlines, McCarran's busiest air carrier, saw a 2.8 percent drop in passengers from August 2008 to last month. The second busiest carrier, US Airways, dropped 37.3 percent while the third busiest, United, dropped 4.1 percent.

US Airways down 37.3 percent...ouch!

E.C. :)

New lows in trust of news media

http://images.politico.com/global/080825_cnnad_calderone.jpg
A New York Times article shows Americans have a new mistrust of the news media. Data acquired by the Pew Research Center "showed that self-described Republicans continued to take the dimmest view of news organizations, but discontent among Democrats was catching up."

On crucial measures of credibility, faith in news media eroded from the 1980s to the ’90s, then held fairly steady for several years, according to Pew surveys that have asked some of the same questions for more than two decades. But in the two years since the last survey, those views became markedly more negative.
In this year’s survey, 63 percent of respondents said news articles were often inaccurate and only 29 percent said the media generally “get the facts straight” — the worst marks Pew has recorded — compared with 53 percent and 39 percent in 2007.

One thing to keep in mind is that many on the cable news outlets are commentators, not journalists. Many watching these programs for the first time would not necessarily know.

E.C. :)

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Social Networking and "Flocking"

http://i.usatoday.net/_common/_images/usat_logo2.gif How we behave on social networking sites is a topic for discussion in a USA Today article by Sharon Jayson.

Jayson says researchers are studying the effects of relationships we make online versus the ones we maintain offline.

A new twist on an old thesis? Could be. We've heard for years about Internet addictions and the like.

USA Today:


The interconnected web of our friends, family, neighbors and acquaintances may dominate our lives more than we know. 
They've always been there, making up our social support systems. But now, largely thanks to the burgeoning popularity of online social networks like Facebook, researchers are discovering what a powerful influence our connections — both online and off — really have over our lives.
"Those of us who study social networks believe they matter — that things do spread along social networks," says Claude Fischer, a sociology professor at the University of California-Berkeley.
Because social networks online are much more clearly defined than offline connections, they have been a boon to researchers. And studies are finding that despite dire predictions from naysayers who warned that spending too much time online would be damaging to real-life relationships, the opposite appears to be true.
The findings, trickling in from early research, suggest health and psychological benefits for those who "friend" and are "friended." But as with all new media, critics say it's much too soon to know about all the possible long-term effects online social networking might have — from growing obesity and musculoskeletal problems to loss of privacy and overwhelming commercialism. 
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E.C. :)

Summer Vacations Threatened?

http://www.momlogic.com/images/just_say_no_to_linger_school_hp-thumb-132x132.jpg An Associated Press article touts an idea that President Barack Obama wants more school time for children and less summer breaks. My question...is this the answer?

AP:

Obama says American kids spend too little time in school, putting them at a disadvantage with other students around the globe.
"Now, I know longer school days and school years are not wildly popular ideas," the president said earlier this year. "Not with Malia and Sasha, not in my family, and probably not in yours. But the challenges of a new century demand more time in the classroom."
The president, who has a sixth-grader and a third-grader, wants schools to add time to classes, to stay open late and to let kids in on weekends so they have a safe place to go.
"Our school calendar is based upon the agrarian economy and not too many of our kids are working the fields today," Education Secretary Arne Duncan said in a recent interview with The Associated Press.
Fifth-grader Nakany Camara is of two minds. She likes the four-week summer program at her school, Brookhaven Elementary School in Rockville, Md. Nakany enjoys seeing her friends there and thinks summer school helped boost her grades from two Cs to the honor roll.
But she doesn't want a longer school day. "I would walk straight out the door," she said.

We've heard so many ideas about what to do about our public schools. And we've heard ideas like this in the past. Is it time for this to be looked at more? Do you think this will work?

E.C. :)

The State of the Valley's PR Firms

http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:6lcy1GvirAwebM:http://blog.kcnvlaw.com/wp-content/themes/kkbrf/images/sub_news.jpg An excellent, well-written article in today's R-J (via the Las Vegas Business Press) discusses the state of the Valley's PR firms, in terms of how they are doing and how they are holding up in this economy.

R-J

The news is far from all bad for small and sole-proprietor PR firms; most say they expect to survive the recession. Finding a niche is the secret to success for some. Tami Belt formed Blue Cube Marketing Solutions after working in-house for St. Rose Dominican Hospital and the Las Vegas Review-Journal. She has since taken on, and retained, big clients such as 7-Eleven.
The convenience-store chain was referred to her years ago by The Firm Public Relations and Marketing owner Solveig Thorsrud, Belt recalled.
"It's really cool because all the PR firms help each other. It is more like friends," Belt said.
Even as those referrals may be getting harder to come by, professionals who can hang onto the clients they have -- and specialize -- seem to have an edge.
With Belt, that specialty is in philanthropy.
"I do the charities," as she puts it, with a slight laugh. "I try to show companies how to get involved with the community, and showcase a plan."

I was also struck by this quote:


The number of mom-and-pop PR shops continues to grow -- at least by some accounts. No formal year-over-year figures were available. The Public Relations Society of America's local chapter keeps track of its members, but that doesn't account for nonmembers.
Las Vegas is home to 14 sole proprietor or small PR agencies and 15 larger firms. "Small" in this case is defined by PRSA as three people or fewer, local PRSA President Diane Gibes said. Individual membership is 135.
She sees signs of hope and reason for caution in her industry.
"I did see one of our members get a job recently," Gibes said. "And I saw one person go out of market to get a job."
Public relations is downsizing locally, much like practically any other industry, Gibes added.
Sarah Procopio knows firsthand about consolidation. She had to cut the staff of her 4-year-old True Marketing firm almost in half a year ago, after the recession first hit. Going from 12 to six employees made her keenly aware of the industry's current fragility.
"It's challenging, but we are hanging in there," she said.
Still, True Marketing's sales are down about 40 percent from mid-September last year.

I think finding a served niche, along with social marketing will be the key to which firm survives and thrives in this economy. 

E.C. :)



Saturday, September 26, 2009

World Market Center to host additional shows in 2010

http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:vF_bgplv_i8BnM:http://media.lvrj.com/images/2115975.jpg The other shoe may have just dropped for High Point, NC as World Market Center officials announced new trade shows for 2010.

This week's Las Vegas Business Press reports that WMC officials announced three new shows targeting other convention segments. The announcement was made as WMC officials continue to laud the successful Fall market, held just last week in which the show brought in about 50,000 attendees.

High Point's Fall market, still considered a competitor by some in the industry, kicks off in a matter of weeks.

LVBP:


The timing is right to expand into other events, Maricich said. The hospitality trade show is scheduled to be held in February, using 150,000 square feet of World Market Center pavilion space. It will coincide with the winter Las Vegas Market. The gift and "Vegas Kids" juvenile furniture shows will run in mid-June in existing space in buildings B and C.

The existing gift show market could see more consolidation as a result of the Las Vegas event.

"The gift industry has 300 million square feet of show displays throughout the country, and we think there is a better way to focus that," he said.

"There's no need to have shows in Seattle, Portland (Ore.), Los Angeles, Denver and Las Vegas," Maricich added.


E.C. :)

No Child Left Behind will CONTINUE to leave MANY children behind

http://sitemaker.umich.edu/356.bourgeois/files/nclb_cartoon_deficit.jpg For those conscientious objectors to standardized testing as part of No Child Left Behind, it doesn't appear testing will go away anytime soon.

AP:

WASHINGTON – The Obama administration is committed to the school accountability at the heart of the No Child Left Behind law championed by former President George W. Bush but also wants to make changes, says Education Secretary Arne Duncan.
Duncan credited the law for shining a spotlight on children who need the most help, according to a speech prepared for delivery Thursday. No Child Left Behind pushes schools to boost the performance of minority and poor children, who trail their white peers on standardized tests.
Duncan agreed with critics that standardized tests are not ideal measures of student achievement. Yet "they are the best we have at the moment," Duncan said.
"Until states develop better assessments," he said, "we must rely on standardized tests to monitor progress."
Duncan noted the administration is giving states money through the economic stimulus law to come up with better assessments.

I'm not against accountability, I'm against this constant teaching to a test where our children become robots and don't learn anything else...except how to sit quietly and take a three hour exam.

And it seems apparent that some parents in Clark County agree. I found this anonymously written on another Web site while doing some research:

Terrible schools!  I've lived here for 19 years and would never enroll my children in a CCSD school.  The teachers are lazy.  They "teach the test" before required standardized testing is held.  They're only concerned with acceptable scores - not actually teaching.  Teachers leave as soon as they can at the end of the day.  They don't offer help or make themselves available.  If a student doesn't do well they blame it on the parents.  Administrators are defensive and only interested in protecting their jobs, decent standardized test scores and keeping a low profile. Never enroll your child in one of these public schools.  CCSD has one of the lowest high school graduation rates in the country.  Students can't pass the required proficiency exam because they were never taught the material - they were only taught enough to pass the required standardized testing that makes the school look good every year.  Put your children in a private school!

Looks like Vegas Valley View will be focusing on CCSD for the foreseeable future.

E.C. :)

Friday, September 25, 2009

The Hand Sanitizer Controversy Within CCSD

http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:tcjKDOkYMGSnuM:http://employerblog.recruitingnevada.com/wp-content/uploads/CCSD.gif If you take a look at today's Las Vegas Sun article on hand sanitizer purchases within the Clark County School District, it really isn't a big deal on the surface. But read between the lines, and the way the purchases were made could possibly raise an eyebrow.

The underlying story is not the flu prevention aspect of the story, but the political aspect.

LV Sun:


After fielding dozens of calls from parents concerned about the upcoming flu season, Principal Tam Larnerd decided to provide each of his classroom teachers with hand sanitizer, spending about $450 in school supply money for 60 large bottles at Sam’s Club.
He could have used the Clark County School District’s online purchasing system, and would have paid a slightly higher price — 13 cents per ounce for the name brand, compared with 10 cents per ounce for the discount warehouse’s own product. And he would have gotten free delivery.
Purchasing hand sanitizer through the district’s online system has other benefits too — no tax and the product is more sanitary than the Sam’s Club brand because it has a self-contained refill mechanism, so you’re not unscrewing the top of a bottle when you refill it.
But Larnerd, principal of Bob Miller Middle School in Henderson’s Green Valley, said he wasn’t aware that the district’s online catalog included hand sanitizer until he was asked about it by the Sun.
“Let’s just say this is not something that’s well-advertised,” Larnerd said.
He later found hand sanitizer listed under “custodial supplies,” but couldn’t immediately locate the bulk order option that would bring the price down to near the discount warehouse price. Instead, the largest bottle he could find was 12 ounces for $5.60, or 47 cents per ounce.
At that price, it’s certainly a less attractive purchase for a principal, Larnerd said.

So how many school officials are overpaying for supplies out there?  Especially in these times where money is extremely tight.

I also found this interesting from the article:

Hand sanitizer is one of the many optional items that teachers often end up paying for themselves. And teachers are digging a little deeper into their own pockets this year — the $200 purchasing cards that the district used to hand out every year were eliminated as part of the $120 million in budget cuts.

Given everything else that’s expected of teachers, the least the district could do is provide hand sanitizer for the classrooms,” said Ruben Murillo, president of the Clark County Education Association, which represents the majority of the licensed personnel.

When I used to teach high school back in North Carolina, it was common to dig into your own pockets to pay for supplies.At one of the highly-impacted schools I taught at, we were regularly told not to order anything because there was no money to do so.

Sad, but realistic.

E.C. :)

New airline links LAS-Paris

http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:dn5LPKYSzJ9WzM:http://www.flightglobal.com/airspace/photos/goose/images/19714/xl-airways-b767-g-vknh.jpg This didn't get a lot of play in the local press over the last couple of days...a new airline will link Las Vegas and Paris, France beginning next Summer.

The Las Vegas Sun reports Paris-based charter carrier XL Airways will fly Airbus A330s between both cities. It is unclear whether the flights will be nonstop or not.

McCarran's growing international service is being enhanced due to the ongoing construction of Terminal 3. In addition, British Airways will begin new nonstop service between LAS and London-Heathrow (LHR) next month.

And I already have the marketing plug...fly FROM Paris, TO Paris!

E.C. :)

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Keeping the Arts & Music alive within CCSD

http://blog.artsusa.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/artsednetwork.jpg My friend Pierce Egerton, a personal injury attorney in Greensboro, NC, posted a link to an arts blog titled Arts Education Network (on the Web at http://blog.artsusa.org/).

It is timely for a couple of reasons...one, while blogging about public education in Greensboro for my former blog site, Guilford School Watch, I covered the issue of threatened arts/music education cuts. And two, the issue is taking center stage here in Clark County.

http://t0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:Ql_QY90_jezD7M:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/6/61/Durango_High_School.JPG At Durango High School, where cuts in arts and music classes were threatened due to an enrollment shortfall, students and staff were elated to hear those cuts would not occur. True music to their ears.

See R-J story here.

An excerpt:

An announcement made Tuesday during the last period at Durango High School was music to the ears of choir students.

Principal Mark Gums told the school that he managed to retain three teachers and save classes in choral music, art and woodworking that were on their way to being eliminated or reduced.


Good for them. I'm a big advocate for keeping the arts and music alive in our schools. It is important to have our children well-rounded.

E.C. :)

Links to my previous blogs

You can view all of my past and previous blogs here:

Guilford School Watch (#1)
Guilford School Watch (#2)
GreensboroMetro
Triad Media Watch

E.C. :)

Cleveland Clinic has plans for Las Vegas, Goodman has choice words for naysayers

http://blog.cleveland.com/medical/2009/02/medium_ruvo1.jpg Officials with the famed Cleveland Clinic were in town yesterday to discuss their plans to build an advanced health care facility in Symphony Park, just west of Downtown near the World Market Center and County Government Center.

The building would locate adjacent to the Clinic-run Lou Ruvo Brain Institute on city-owned property being donated to the Clinic.

R-J coverage here. Sun coverage here.

http://t1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:HjUVwtuinNVNgM:http://www.sierraclubgreenhome.com/cms/wp-content/uploads/oscar-goodman1.jpg And what does Mayor Goodman think about the Clinic building a new facility here?
R-J:
Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman said Wednesday that he doesn't care whether the local medical community supports or opposes a plan to bring the Cleveland Clinic to downtown Las Vegas..."The good thing is, we don't care," he said.

Sun:
Cleveland Clinic explored coming to Las Vegas about six years ago, but received a chilly reception from the local medical community. Goodman said that “it’s always the same thing” with the doctors who don’t want the Cleveland Clinic in Las Vegas.
“They want to preserve their income,” Goodman said. “They don’t want competition.”... Now when physicians tell him the Cleveland Clinic shouldn’t expand in Las Vegas he tells them to “drop dead.”
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E.C. :)

 

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

How about that Furniture Market?

http://t0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:h5A8sMD03O-mOM:http://veryvintagevegas.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/world-20market-20center.jpg Last week's fall furniture market here in Las Vegas is what many are calling a successful event. An estimated 50,000 industry insiders attended the event at the World Market Center, just west of Downtown.

WMC officials, on their Facebook page said:

Thanks to ALL OF YOU who made the inaugural September Las Vegas Market such a wonderful one! The energy this week was unbeatable.

My question...is the WMC still positioned to give High Point (and other regional furniture markets) a run for their money? 

We will see.

E.C. :)

Good news-Bad news on the public utilities front

First...the good news...

http://www.nvenergy.com/images/framework_images/NPC_logo.gifThe Nevada Public Utilities Commission denied a request by Nevada Energy to raise electric rates by 3.2 percent. If anything, officials said rates for consumers will go down almost $3.00 a month. See R-J story here.

http://www.snwa.com/style/images/snwa_logo.gif
Now, the bad news...your water rates are headed up.

Says the R-J:

...the Southern Nevada Water Authority will raise rates over the next two years to help bolster its construction activities.

On Jan. 1, the authority will double its commodity charge to 20 cents per 1,000 gallons of water used, then increase it by another 10 cents per 1,000 gallons on Jan. 1, 2011.

Water authority board members approved the rate hikes in a unanimous vote Thursday.
Each 10-cent increase amounts to a 3.2 percent rate hike for valley water customers.

The average single-family home served by the Las Vegas Valley Water District can expect to see its monthly water bill go up about $1 next year, said Dick Wimmer, deputy general manager for the water authority.
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You win some, you lose some...

E.C. :)

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

T-3 project continues as tourism numbers dip

http://www.walterpmoore.com/images/projects/airports/mccarran/mccarran/images/mccarran_03.jpg





 While tourism numbers continue to take a fall, the Terminal 3 project at McCarran Airport continues full-speed ahead.

The $1.6 billion project is scheduled to open in 2012, adding 14 new gates, its own ticketing and baggage areas, and even a brand new parking deck.


The terminal will also accommodate international flights.

What's troubling is the fact that tourism numbers are on the slide. McCarran's traffic fell in July by 9.3% (see recent R-J story).

Something to chew on next time you're cutting through LAS.

E.C. :)

CCSD Enrollment Dips

http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:tcjKDOkYMGSnuM:http://employerblog.recruitingnevada.com/wp-content/uploads/CCSD.gif In another sign that the Valley's growth may have plateaued, general enrollment within Clark County's public schools is down 1.31 percent.

During this past Friday's "annual census," enrollment levels top 309,573 students, down from the District's projections of 313,688. Last year, the District enrolled 311,240 children.

More from the R-J here.

While funding levels will not necessarily decrease, staff and programs will. And seems to have students and parents grumbling.

R-J:

Durango High School Principal Mark Gums once thought "the worst was over."

But because enrollment has fallen short of expectations, Durango and many other Clark County public schools now face additional program cuts and staff reductions.

In addition to the 13 teaching positions and the theater program that Gums has already sacrificed this school year, he will now have to eliminate five more teaching positions, a counselor and a part-time staff position.

He also is reducing the number of elective classes offered in art, woodworking and choral music.
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E.C. :)

Vegas Valley View welcomes readers from the Piedmont Triad

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Las Vegas, NV and Greensboro, NC are 2,250 miles apart. And yet, some things are strikingly similar.

Greensboro, in an area known as the Piedmont Triad located about an hour from Raleigh, about an hour from Charlotte, is the city I just relocated from back in late July. And while the circumstances of my relocation remain personal, there are some similarities and contrasts between both places.

The unemployment situation in both cities is eerily similar. About 13% in Las Vegas, about 11% in Greensboro-High Point.

Diversification of the economy is an issue: for central North Carolina, furniture, textiles, tobacco, apparel, manufacturing--all are taking a hit. This area is now an almost service-based economy.

For Las Vegas...ditto. Gaming, hospitality, the service-sector...anything to do with entertainment, has felt a major pinch here lately.

And we haven't even begun talking about dual furniture markets...which may end up being a duel. Las Vegas versus High Point.

There's where the similarities end. The differences are simple. In my opinion, Las Vegas has an extremely active creative class. Several networking groups are available on Facebook and LinkedIn that provide networking opportunities here in the Valley. But with the truth comes reality...if Greensboro doesn't jump start its creative class, many more will leave the Gate City. That's not a thinly-veiled threat...that's cold, hard truth.

So I look forward to sharing my personal viewpoints on the comings and goings around town, and sharing my comparisons with you about life while in North Carolina, and the DC area (where I spent time previously also) and Chicago (where I grew up).

E.C. :)

The "View" is On!

No, I'm not talking about the Gab-fest on daytime television. I'm talking about the all-new Vegas Valley View. 

The idea for the Vegas Valley View was very simple:  taking notice of things that are eye-popping in the city. Having a strong desire to see what could be better in the Valley. Taking notice of the politicians and the movers and shakers that have something to do with how this city works (and more importantly, how it doesn't work)...and how it can be fixed to work again.

And whether it's traffic, the rapid growth, stalled growth, the various industries that keep this Valley going, public education, or just the general ho-hum-come-what-may, everyone has something on their mind and something to say. The Vegas Valley View will keep an eye on the politricksters and will watch out for you, the citizen. I invite you to participate and comment on the issues of the day related to what's happening in and around town.

There are a lot of Las Vegas area blogs out there. I hope this one will carve out its niche pretty early. After all, the Valley has one of the most active blogging communities out there.

Settle in, and welcome.

E.C. :)

Monday, September 21, 2009