Showing posts with label Cities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cities. Show all posts

Saturday, 2 November 2013

Storms spook some U.S. cities into postponing Halloween fun

A costumed character entertains ticketed participants before they enter the haunted trail known as the 'Horseman's Hollow' on the grounds of the historic Philipsburg Manor in celebration of Halloween in Sleepy Hollow, New York October 25, 2013. REUTERS/Adrees Latif

A costumed character entertains ticketed participants before they enter the haunted trail known as the 'Horseman's Hollow' on the grounds of the historic Philipsburg Manor in celebration of Halloween in Sleepy Hollow, New York October 25, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Adrees Latif

By Timothy Ghianni

NASHVILLE, Tennessee | Thu Oct 31, 2013 7:49pm EDT

NASHVILLE, Tennessee (Reuters) - Forecasts for heavy rain and strong winds spooked dozens of U.S. cities and towns into postponing Halloween trick-or-treating on Thursday as a storm system that flooded parts of Texas, killing at least one person, churned north toward the Great Lakes.

Officials in parts of at least four states in the path of the storm - Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee - said they decided to put off the customary practice of children in costumes going from house to house collecting candy.

"I think it's a good idea," said Tara Dudzik, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Indianapolis. "Winds of up to 60 miles per hour, and lightning - those are the main threats we'd be concerned about."

Low pressure with a trailing cold front is pushing turbulent weather from the Gulf states north through the Mississippi Valley and toward the Great Lakes, said Myron Badgett, meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Wilmington, Ohio.

The cities of Indianapolis and Muncie, Indiana, postponed trick-or-treating, local officials said. Toledo and at least 30 cities in Central Ohio put it off until Friday or as late as Sunday, according to the Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission's website.

At Fort Campbell in Kentucky, the children of soldiers will not be deployed to the streets of the residential area. "Operation Friendly Ghost" has been put off until Friday.

Crievewood Baptist Church in Nashville, Tennessee, said it canceled a "Halloween Break Station" that was planning to offer parents and children hot dogs, chips, water and games along trick-or-treating routes. The decision was made because so few children were expected to be out, it said.

Indianapolis has long required registered sex offenders, who are barred from having contact with children, to attend a meeting during trick-or-treat hours on Halloween night. That meeting has been rescheduled for Friday.

But Halloween was still on in Cincinnati, which according to a local television station, has not delayed or canceled trick-or-treating in two decades because of snow or thunderstorms. The National Weather Service was forecasting rain and gusty winds, and residents were urged to take care.

SOME GO AHEAD

In Nashville, trick-or-treating has also not been put off, but Mayor Karl Dean was urging caution.

"We want everyone to pay close attention to the weather, especially if any thunderstorm or tornado warnings are issued," Dean said. "We know families want to have fun this evening, but most importantly, everyone needs to be safe and make good decisions for themselves and their family members."

Several school systems west of Nashville dismissed classes early to get the children home before the bad weather hits, and some after-school activities were canceled, officials said.

In Mississippi, emergency management officials put out a warning asking parents to be mindful.

Trevor Boucher, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Nashville, Tennessee, said his office was getting a lot of calls from city and county officials who were trying to decide whether to proceed with Halloween activities.

The storm was expected to move northeast from Texas well before evening, but it left behind flooding that caused some evacuation of low-lying areas.

Overnight rains of up to 15 inches in some areas swelled rivers and washed out low-lying crossings in a swath of more than 100 miles around Austin, Texas, according to Jon Zeitler, meteorologist with the National Weather Service Austin-San Antonio office.

"For certain areas, it looks like this will be in their Top 10 (flood events) of all time," Zeitler said.

A man died on Thursday in a flooded area southeast of Austin after being caught in high water in his car, officials said. Local media later in the day reported a second body in a creek closer to the city but further information was unavailable.

More than 1,000 homes in neighborhoods near rising creeks were evacuated during the height of the floods.

The storm was caused in part by Hurricane Raymond, which dissipated in the Pacific Ocean on Tuesday. Its remnants pulled heavy weather across the western United States.

That combined with warm, humid, low-lying air from the Gulf of Mexico and cooler air at higher altitudes to produce the floods - conditions expected to return next week with more potential for flooding from a tropical storm brewing in the same region, Zeitler said.

(Additional reporting by Karen Brooks in Austin, Texas, Susan Guyett in Indianapolis, Kim Palmer in Cleveland, Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee, Suzi Parker in Little Rock, Kathy Finn in New Orleans, Colleen Jenkins in Winston-Salem, North Carolina and Kevin Murphy in Kansas City; Writing by Kevin Murphy; Editing by Greg McCune, Gunna Dickson and Bob Burgdorfer)


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Tuesday, 24 September 2013

Cities transformed by virtual graffiti in Tiger Translate artworks

Photographers and illustrators work together to turn streets into urban art galleries

Author: Photographers and illustrators work together to turn streets into urban art galleries

Photographers and illustrators collaborate to create virtual graffiti in the streets of cities, as part of Tiger Translate's 'Streets' themed year.

Tiger Beer's Tiger Translate, a global initiative that aims to bring artists from the East and West together, has commissioned 10 photographers and 10 illustrators to work together to splash virtual graffiti throughout cities.

As part of Tiger's 'Streets' themed year, which it explains is designed to "celebrate the energy that infuses the streets of Asian cities and transforms them into urban art galleries," participating photographers first captured a photo of a street in their city. Illustrators then transformed those photographs by creating digital artworks over the original image.

The artwork created has been brought to life in a three-minute animation, too, which you can view here.

Tiger Translate's 'Streets' theme has already been travelling around the world, with exhibitions held in Dubai, Mongolia and more.

Use the slideshow controls above and right to see the original photographs and how they were transformed by digital graffiti.

Right: Manila, Philippines. Photographer - Indrau Manahan. Illustrator - Jason Levesque

Photographers and illustrators collaborate to create virtual graffiti in the streets of cities, as part of Tiger Translate's 'Streets' themed year.

Tiger Beer's Tiger Translate, a global initiative that aims to bring artists from the East and West together, has commissioned 10 photographers and 10 illustrators to work together to splash virtual graffiti throughout cities.

As part of Tiger's 'Streets' themed year, which it explains is designed to "celebrate the energy that infuses the streets of Asian cities and transforms them into urban art galleries," participating photographers first captured a photo of a street in their city. Illustrators then transformed those photographs by creating digital artworks over the original image.

The artwork created has been brought to life in a three-minute animation, too, which you can view here.

Tiger Translate's 'Streets' theme has already been travelling around the world, with exhibitions held in Dubai, Mongolia and more.

Use the slideshow controls above and right to see the original photographs and how they were transformed by digital graffiti.

Right: Manila, Philippines. Photographer - Indrau Manahan. Illustrator - Jason Levesque

Singapore

Photographer – Farah Hanna

"Set against Singapore’s developed landscape, a traditional shophouse stands out with its resilience to defy the changes happening around it. Its facade set against a bustling modern backdrop is a perfect representation of the quickly developing city."

See next slide for graffiti version.

Illustrator – Oki-Chu

"Gold Rush: Asian chaos and New World Order."

Ulan Bator, Mongolia

Photographer – Mojoko

"Ulan Bator, the largest city in Mongolia is the melting pot of old plus new. With traditional architecture living side by side next to newly built skyscrapers, Ulan Bator is fast becoming the streets of the future."

Illustrator – Alelx Gordo

"After checking among the Internet’s infinite wisdom, I found out that the edelweiss is a very popular flower in Mongolia so I added this motif in the artwork."

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Photographer – Paullus Stanlunas

"A view of one of the few remaining colonial buildings scattered around Kuala Lumpur’s Chinatown. Many have become blank canvavses for youth to voice social opinions. In the background, the buildings are towering, pushing forward the redevelopment of the new, cutting-edge Kuala Lumpur."

Illustrator – Eakkarlak S.

"This artwork was inspired by many factors such as the ingredients contained in Tiger beer, party lifestyle, music and creativity. This story is about a tiger that jumped into the sea and transformed its blue stripes into many inspirational things and change its surroundings."

Auckland, New Zealand

Photographer - Adam Wouldes

Illustrator - Nick Tearle

Bangkok, Thailand

Photographer - Prasit Limprasatirakit

Illustrator - Rizki Katamsi

Hanoi, Vietnam

Photographer - Phoung Ha

Illustrator - Russell Ong

Phnom Penh, Cambodia

Photographer - Borky Perida

Illustrator - Vexta

Seoul, South Korea

Photographer - Jun-Seok

Tuesday, 16 July 2013

American Cities with the Highest (and Lowest) Taxes

Tax season is here and, according to a recent report, American families in the nation's largest cities will be shelling out 15% or more of their income, and that doesn't even include federal taxes.

The report, released by the Office of Revenue Analysis of the Government of Washington, D.C., reviewed the estimated property, sales, auto and income taxes a family paid in 2011 in the largest city in each state. The differences were stark. A family of three earning $75,000 in Cheyenne, Wy., paid just $2,808, or 3.7% of its income. In Bridgeport, Conn., that same family would have paid $16,105, or 21.5% of its income. Again, this is excluding federal taxes.

One of the biggest factors in how much a family can expect to pay is the state and local tax rates affecting their city. In Bridgeport, Conn., the effective property tax rate, or how much people pay per $100 of property, is among the highest of the large cities reviewed, and property values are higher, meaning a family earning $100,000 per year can expect to spend $11,299 in property taxes alone.

According to Edward Wyatt, fiscal analyst for the Office of Revenue Analysis, while tax rates are certainly a factor in the tax burden on families, it is more the existence of certain kinds of taxes that determines whether families pay through the nose or barely at all come mid-April.

Personal income tax is one of the key factors. Seven states have no income tax, and six of the 10 cities with the lowest tax burdens are in these states. Two more cities in the bottom 10 — Memphis, N.H., and Manchester, Tenn. — only tax nonwage income, such as dividends and interest. None of the cities with high tax burdens are in income tax-exempt states.

The cities with the highest tax burdens tend to be much larger ones, like New York, Philadelphia and Los Angeles, while the low tax burden cities are smaller and in more rural areas, including Fargo, Anchorage and Cheyenne. Wyatt suggested this may have to do with the cost of running these larger cities, as they have to spend less per capita on programs like social services.

Another interesting trend was that cities with higher tax burdens tended to have higher unemployment, while lower-taxed cities tended to have among the lowest unemployment. While this is often a product of the state economy, in some cases, the city's rate is much higher than the state. Bridgeport, the city with the highest tax burden among the 51 cities studied, also had the highest unemployment rate, at 11.7% in December. The state of Connecticut's rate that month was just 8.6%.

[More from 24/7 Wall St.: The States With The Strongest And Weakest Unions]

Based on the local government report: Tax Rates and Tax Burdens in the District of Columbia — A Nationwide Comparison, 24/7 Wall St. reviewed the cities where a family of three in different income brackets would spend the largest and smallest percentages of their income on state and local taxes. In order to reflect the respective rank in all income levels measured by the report, we considered all of them for the purposes of the ranking. As a result, the cities with highest taxes on our list had the highest combined scores and the cities with the lowest taxes had the lowest scores. The report covers the largest city in each state, as well as Washington, D.C. All estimates are for the 2011 fiscal year. 24/7 Wall St. also reviewed data for these cities from the U.S. Census Bureau, including the occupational breakdown of the city's workforce, and income, poverty and home value data, all for 2011. From the Bureau of Labor Statistics, we reviewed the unemployment rates for these cities as of December 2012.

Cities with the Lowest Tax Burdens

10. Las Vegas, Nev.

Taxes for family earning $25,000: $3,027 (24th highest)
Taxes for family earning $150,000: $6,305 (3rd lowest)
Unemployment rate: 10.2% (9th highest)

Las Vegas had no state or local income tax in 2011, which saved a hypothetical family of three earning $25,000 a year $266 over the average city, and a family earning $150,000 per year an estimated $6,835. Also, the city's effective residential property tax rate was just $1.15 per $100 of assessed value, a rate lower than most of the cities reviewed. Although the city had an especially high 7.75% sales tax, it also had one of the nation's lowest sales tax burdens. Among the reasons why, in Nevada only 37.4% of goods are taxed at sale, and food and other consumer goods are exempted. Currently state and local sales tax payments are also tax deductible in Nevada.

9. Manchester, N.H.

Taxes for family earning $25,000: $2,357 (4th lowest)
Taxes for family earning $150,000: $6,582 (7th lowest)
Unemployment rate: 6.0% (16th lowest)

Manchester was one of just five cities reviewed with no state or local sales tax. Additionally, neither the city nor state had an income tax on personal wages, with state income taxes limited to sources such as interest and dividend payments, inheritance and business profits. However, the city is heavily dependent on property taxes, which its website describes as "the principal tax of the City." In 2011, for a hypothetical family of three, Manchester's property tax burden was among the highest for all cities observed at all levels of income. Property taxes also comprised the majority of any family's state and local tax burden: A Manchester family earning $75,000 would have paid $5,134 in state and local taxes in 2011. Of this, $4,645 would have been property taxes.

8. Sioux Falls, S.D.

Taxes for family earning $25,000: $2,565 (7th lowest)
Taxes for family earning $150,000: $7,127 (8th lowest)
Unemployment rate: 4.2% (4th lowest)

Sioux Falls residents benefit from lower than average taxes. Helping to significantly alleviate the total tax burden, Sioux Falls is one of just a few cities where residents are not required to pay any income taxes. In addition, auto taxes are among the lowest of all cities. The one downside for taxpayers is the sales tax burden, which is among the top third of all cities measured. The unemployment rate of 4.2% as of December 2012 was the fourth lowest of all cities measures. The surplus in the city's 2013 budget is expected to be about $1.7 million.

[More from 24/7 Wall St.: The Seven States With The Highest Gas Prices]

7. Memphis, Tenn.

Taxes for family earning $25,000: $2,941 (23rd lowest)
Taxes for family earning $150,000: $6,450 (5th lowest)
Unemployment rate: 9.8% (11th highest)

Memphis charged no city-level personal income tax in 2011. Neither did the state of Tennessee, where only income from dividends or interest payments, as well as corporate income, are taxed. However, residents did pay a total of 9.25 cents per dollar in sales taxes, higher than all but three other cities. All of these cities have higher incomes than Memphis, where more than 27% of the population lives below the poverty level, compared with 15.9% nationwide. Partly because of sales taxes, a hypothetical family earning $25,000 paid 11.8% of its income in state and local taxes, while a family earning $150,000 paid just 4.3%.

6. Billings, Mont.

Taxes for family earning $25,000: $2,223 (the lowest)
Taxes for family earning $150,000: $11,036 (14th lowest)
Unemployment rate: 4.1% (3rd lowest)

In 2011, residents of Billings did not have to pay any sales tax, either to the city or their state. Sales taxes cost a family of three earning $25,000 a year $728 and a family earning $150,000 a year $2,194. Additionally, Montana is a low income tax state. At all income levels, Billings had a lower income tax burden than all observed cities where such a tax was in effect. However, not all taxes in Billings were low; gas taxes were more than four cents per gallon higher than the nationwide average in 2011. The state also provides oil and gas companies with a controversial tax holiday, which allows production at new wells to be taxed at a rate of less than 1% during their first 12 to 18 months of operations.

5. Jacksonville, Fla.

Taxes for family earning $25,000: $2,956 (26th lowest)
Taxes for family earning $150,000: $6,429 (4th lowest)
Unemployment rate: 7.7% (21st highest)

As residents of Florida, individuals and families living in Jacksonville pay neither a state nor local income tax. Partly because of this, the tax burden for wealthier families remained low in 2011. A typical family of three with two sources of income, earning $150,000 per year, would have paid 4.3% of its income on state and local taxes — less than all but four other cities. However, a family earning just $25,000 per year would have had to pay 11.8% of its annual income in taxes. Florida's 6% sales tax accounts for the majority of the state's tax revenue.


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Thursday, 11 July 2013

Top 15 U.S. Cities with Largest Increase in Bedbugs

Hotel News Resource Terminix released its list of cities experiencing the largest increases in bedbug activity, with Sacramento, Calif. taking the top spot with a 54% jump in bedbug customer calls compared to this same time last year.

Thought to be eradicated since World War II, in recent years, bedbugs have been making a comeback throughout the United States. Beyond their annoying bites and welts, research indicates bedbugs can pose physical and psychological health concerns as well. Additionally, reports of bedbugs are increasing in some areas of the country not previously prone to outbreaks, indicating they are on the move.

Terminix, the world’s largest pest control provider, today released its list of cities experiencing the largest increases in bedbug activity, with Sacramento, Calif. taking the top spot with a 54% jump in bedbug customer calls compared to this same time last year.

The 2013 list of cities with the highest increases in bedbug infestations include:

1. Sacramento, Calif.                        54%          
2. Milwaukee, Wis.                         53%         
3. Las Vegas, Nev.                         50%         
4. Columbus, Ohio                            47%         
5. Baltimore, Md.                             46%         
6. Riverside-San Bernardino, Calif.     41%         
7. St. Louis, Mo.                             40%         
8. Cleveland, Ohio                             36% 
9. Louisville, Ky.                                    31% 
10. Denver, Colo.                             28% 
11. Los Angeles, Calif.                     27% 
12. San Francisco, Calif.                    26% 
13. Dallas/Ft. Worth, Texas                25% 
14. Nashville, Tenn.                            17% 
15. Houston, Texas                            15%

Photo of Bedbugs - Source Terminix“Bedbugs continue to have a significant presence across the country, in cities large and small, and pose concern for public health,” said Stan Cope, PhD and entomologist with Terminix. “There is now evidencethat suggests that severe bedbug infestations may be associated with anemia. Also, bedbug bites can result in secondary infections due to excessive scratching. Bedbug infestations are also known to have a psychological impact and can cause emotional stress and irritability, so if you think you have an issue with bedbugs you should immediately contact a professional to treat your home or business,” added Cope.

Terminix created the list by compiling and analyzing bedbug-specific call volume to its more than 300 branches throughout the country. The rankings represent cities with the biggest percentage gains in bedbug customer calls from Jan-May 2013 compared to the same time period in 2012. Eight of the cities – Columbus, Los Angeles, Dallas/Ft. Worth, Houston, Baltimore, Louisville, Cleveland and San Francisco – are also among the top 15 cities in total number of bedbug customer calls year-to-date for 2013. Once relegated to primarily major cities, bedbugs are good travelers and have been reported by nearly all of the Terminix branches throughout the country.

Bedbugs are usually transported from one location to another as people travel. They can travel in the seams of luggage, carry-on bags, folded clothing and furniture. Because bedbugs can go several months without a blood meal, it’s a good idea to thoroughly inspect luggage and mattresses when traveling. When bedbugs bite, they inject an anesthetic and anticoagulant that prevents a person from feeling the bite. Because these bites generally occur while people are sleeping, they don’t realize they’ve been bitten until small marks appear which are generally slightly swollen, red and may itch.

Terminix offers the following tips to mitigate the risk of being bitten or transporting bedbugs:      Check hotel headboards, mattresses and box springs for live bedbugs, their exoskeletons and/or dark blood spots.    Hang all clothing. Leave nothing lying on the bed or furniture.    Avoid storing clothing in a hotel’s furniture drawers.    Store suitcases on a luggage rack as far away from the bed as possible.    Vacuum suitcases when returning home, and immediately wash clothing in hot water.    Between trips, store luggage in a sealed plastic bag in a garage or basement, away from bedrooms.    If you suspect you have bedbugs, have your home inspected by a trained professional. Bedbugs cannot be controlled by over-the-counter treatments.

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