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News Cut: April 26, 2011 Archive

The only life they knew (5X8 - 4/26/11)

Posted at 7:30 AM on April 26, 2011 by Bob Collins (5 Comments)
Filed under: Five by 8

Two roads back, LRT street art, tune out and turn off in college, Ron Paul jumps in, and how to escape a disaster you just made.

Continue reading "The only life they knew (5X8 - 4/26/11)"

Do most people still want to own their home?

Posted at 8:48 AM on April 26, 2011 by Bob Collins (11 Comments)
Filed under: Economy

There was a fair amount of criticism at this site last month when I characterized the housing price situation in the Minneapolis area as "a basket case," based on the Case Shiller survey of housing resale prices in 20 major American cities. Minneapolis was at the bottom of the heap.

The numbers for February are out today from Case Shiller and as much as we might be tempted to put lipstick on a pig, there's simply no other way to describe Minneapolis' housing price situation. It's bad.

The seasonally-adjusted numbers for February show Minneapolis near the bottom again.

City
Change from January
Detroit
2.0%
Cleveland
1.2%
Washington
0.7%
Chicago
0.7%
Dallas
0.5%
Atlanta
0.4%
Phoenix
0.0
Los Angeles
-0.1%
Denver
-0.2%
New York
-0.2%
Las Vegas
-0.3%
Tampa
-0.4%
Boston
-0.6%
Charlotte
-0.6%
Portland
-0.8%
San Diego
-0.9%
San Francisco
-1.1%
Minneapolis
-1.3%
Miami
-1.4%
Seattle
-1.7%


There's something wrong when Cleveland and Detroit lead the nation in housing prices. True, of course, they had nowhere to go but up. But at least they went up.

Minneapolis has now declined for eight consecutive months, still a far cry, though, from the 23 consecutive months of housing value declines that started in 2007.

City
Change from a year ago
Washington
2.8%
Boston
-1.0%
Dallas
-1.2%
San Diego
-1.8%
Los Angeles
-2.1%
Denver
-2.5%
Cleveland
-2.8%
New York
-3.1%
San Francisco
-3.4%
Detroit
-3.6%
Charlotte
-4.9%
Las Vegas
-5.0%
Atlanta
-5.8%
Tampa
-5.9%
Miami
-6.1%
Portland
-7.0%
Seattle
-7.4%
Chicago
-7.5%
Minneapolis
-8.2%
Phoenix
-8.5%


What's particularly troubling is the pace of decline. In 2008, the Minneapolis area's prices declined 19%. But that decline pace slowed to 2.1% in 2009. In 2010, however, it increased to 5.1% and now the year-over-year drop is over 8 percent.

But lower prices usually attract people to the housing market, making owning a home more affordable than a year or two ago. That, however, may be changing.

"A lot of Americans don't want to own a house; they don't see it as a good long-term investment and they don't see it as a better way to live and raise a family," said David Blitzer of Standard and Poor's, which runs the survey.

Is that a sea change in the American Dream? "It's really not quite clear," he says. "If a year from now, we're sitting in the same place, we'll have no choice but to conclude that a lot of people who would've bought a house 10 years ago, aren't interested in it anymore."

You can find all the data here. (11 Comments)

Once upon a ribbon

Posted at 10:48 AM on April 26, 2011 by Bob Collins
Filed under: Tech

It's a sure sign of my age, I suppose, that I felt a twinge of sadness today when I read Marianne Combs' post that the alleged last typewriter manufacturer in the world has closed up shop.

Even worse, the first thing I thought of was this:

Most interesting: The firm was still selling 12,000 typewriters a year to someone.


Its last shipment consists of 500 typewriters, which presumably will be a hot item. A classic restored Underwood, for example, currently runs about $1,200. If you really want a typewriter, you'll be able to find one. They're still being made, actually.

Why? Because people still want them, of course.

What's the best part about owning a typewriter? You can get work done without the distraction of the Internet. Also, if you spill beer or coffee on the keyboard, you're still in business.

Once you try it, you'll never go back to your PC.

The company says it intends to concentrate on a refrigerator business. We'll always need refrigerators.

Why would Minnesota want to be like Florida?

Posted at 12:02 PM on April 26, 2011 by Bob Collins (11 Comments)
Filed under: Surveys and trivia

jeb_bush_apr_26_2011.jpg At the invitation of Republican legislative leaders, former Florida governor Jeb Bush came to Minnesota today to lecture the state on ways to be more like Florida, at least where education reforms are concerned.

Do you want to be more like Florida in anything? There's virtually no measurement by which the grass looks greener there, except for the green of the grass, of course.

Courtesy of the Census Bureau (and others as indicated), here's how the two states stack up in national rankings.

CategoryFloridaMinnesota
 
Persons 25 Years Old and Over with
Bachelor's Degree or More
27th10th
 
Average ACT score19.522.9
 
Average SAT reading score496594
 
Average SAT math score498607
 
Average SAT writing score479580
 
Infant mortality (high to low)19th45th
 
American Health Rankings40th1st
 
Violent crime rate (high to low)5th35th
 
Current unemployment rate11.1%6.6%
 
Persons living in poverty22nd42nd
 
Personal income21st11th
 
Foreclosure rate13.682.9
 
National Driver's Test41st4th
 
Traffic fatalities18th46th
 
Car insurance rates (lowest)37th6th
 
Business climate index5th43rd
 
Average temperature1st47th
 


What does Florida have to teach Minnesota? That Minnesota is a pretty great place to live.

By the way, the Palm Beach Post evaluated Bush's claims that his education reforms have worked. Although fourth-grade test scores are higher than they were 10 years ago, it's not sustained through high school, the paper says.

(Photo:Mark Zdechlik) (11 Comments)

Birther case closed

Posted at 1:38 PM on April 26, 2011 by Bob Collins (4 Comments)
Filed under: Politics

CNN has blown the lid off this story! It went to Hawaii to investigate whether Barack Obama was born in the United States, a requirement to be president of the United States. It found he was.

That surely puts an end to the controversy. The nation will now focus on more pressing issues. Let's begin:

(4 Comments)

Analyzing the same-sex marriage ban vote

Posted at 3:19 PM on April 26, 2011 by Bob Collins (10 Comments)
Filed under: Politics

Republicans at the Minnesota Capitol today announced attempts to put before voters a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage. It comes as no surprise since that's exactly what they said they'd do not long after last November's election, which wiped out the last vestige of DFL influence in the Legislature: the Senate.

In early interviews in January, the leaders, however, said "there'd be time" for the issue at some point in the session, but the focus would be on passing a state budget.

We're a month from the end of the session, and there's no sign of a budget being passed. Time is running out to get the same-sex marriage amendment on the 2012 ballot. Today, five Republicans filed SF1308.

Opponents of the amendment have annually suggested that it's a way to get Republican conservatives to turn out for a re-election bid. In Indiana last month, state Sen. Dennis Kruse said here are 30 states that now have a marriage amendment to their constitution, "and they all passed in all 30 states by an average of 68 percent of the electorate," Kruse said.

Does an amendment increase voter turnout?

In Maine last November, 53-percent of the voters voted to repeal the state's same-sex marriage law. Turnout was heavy, but both sides said a heavy turnout favored those in favor of allowing same sex marriage. "It means we succeeded in reaching younger people and others who don't always vote," said Mark Sullivan, spokesman for No on 1/Protect Maine Equality, the coalition seeking to uphold the law.

In a paper released last month (open in Word), researchers in Wisconsin pointed out that regardless of what pre-election polls said about opposition to same-sex marriage, the percentage of people actually voting for a ban on same-sex marriage was markedly higher.

In North Dakota in 2004, for example, polls showed 52% of those surveyed were against same-sex marriage. On Election Day, 68% voted against it. In Wisconsin in 2006, 59% voted against same-sex marriage, compared to 53% who voiced opposition in a late pre-election poll.

Possibly more significant, however, is this finding: The question could make Republican allies of a traditional DFL voter: The African American.

"The higher the proportion of African Americans in the county, the higher the vote for banning same sex marriage. While this fails to confirm our hypothesis, this result seems easily explained as an indication that, on the issue of same-sex marriage, the LGBT community's argument that marriage is a civil right, and not a moral question, has failed to win favor among black citizens."

But, the researchers said, there are three "striking" conclusions from their study (emphasis mine):

First, the noticeable impact that time has. There is clearly an increase in support for gay marriage over time and it will be particularly interesting to see if this issue follows a similar trajectory to gays serving in the military. That is a highly controversial issue that is met with a compromise that provides only partial equality (Don't Ask Don't Tell in the military case, civil unions in the case of gay marriage) followed a generation later by full recognition of equality. Second, the very big impact that turnout has and the possible implications for results. To take one concrete example, Colorado in 2006 voted 55-45 to ban same sex marriage. Turnout among registered voters was 19 percent higher in the 2008 presidential election. If we assume a 19 percent increase in turnout, our regression equation predicts almost a 4 point drop in the yes vote. Such a drop would transform this race from a very comfortable ten point win for the referendum to a nail biter at 51-49. The third impact we believe is worthy of more extensive consideration is the differences in referendum language. This is because this issue has broader implications beyond just this question, but because of the significance for democratic theory and discussions of referendum as a democratic tool. That is a discussion for another paper.
(10 Comments)

One picture: Skating's championships

Posted at 4:54 PM on April 26, 2011 by Bob Collins (2 Comments)
Filed under: Sports

The ISU Figure Skating World Championships began today in Moscow. Georgia's Alison Reed and Otar Japaridze perform their free dance during preliminary round. This is their signature move. You can do this, right?

russian_skaters.jpg

The event was to be held in Japan this year, but was hastily moved to Moscow after the earthquake and tsunami.

(2 Comments)
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