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New panda marks a birthday here for the first time

New panda marks a birthday here for the first time

Washington Post9 hours ago
He will be 4 years old on Monday, and his birthday is to be celebrated at his home in D.C. in a way that seems relatively modest, given the great interest in him as well as his significance in such areas as world diplomacy and wildlife conservation.
The party will be in the morning, at 9 a.m. — a time not usually associated with uproarious festivities.
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What's on the Aug. 5 primary ballot in Greater Lansing?
What's on the Aug. 5 primary ballot in Greater Lansing?

Yahoo

time31 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

What's on the Aug. 5 primary ballot in Greater Lansing?

LANSING — Aug. 5 is Election Day in many communities across the Lansing region, and, if you haven't voted already, here's what's on the ballot for Greater Lansing on Tuesday. Polls are open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Aug. 5, for both in-person voting and to drop off any last minute absentee ballots. Voters who have not yet dropped off their absentee ballots can also put them inside a ballot drop box in their community until 8 p.m. Aug. 5. Find a map of more than a dozen drop boxes in the city of Lansing here: Election Drop Box Locations for Lansing City Voters Only. Check on your voter registration and make sure you're voting at the right precinct by visiting here. All three public transportation agencies are offering free rides to the polls. The Capital Area Transportation Authority, EATRAN and Clinton Transit ask voters to notify the bus driver they are going to vote, and no ID is required to ride. Here's what on local ballots: Lansing Lansing has mayoral and city council candidates on the ballot. There are five candidates for mayor, 10 candidates for an at-large race and three candidates for Ward 4. Lansing mayor City voters will pick the top two candidates, out of a field of five, who will compete in the November general election with a four-year term at stake. Running are incumbent Mayor Andy Schor and challengers Brett Brockschmidt, Jeffrey Brown, David Ellis and Kelsea Hector. Lansing City Council at-large seats The at-large race, with 10 candidates, will be narrowed to four for the November election. After the Nov. 4 election, the top two vote getters will go on to become at-large council members. The packed at-large race has no incumbents, although Jeremy Garza is a sitting council member in a Ward 2 seat looking to move into an at-large position. Garza is running alongside Miles Biel, Aurelius Christian, Gloria Denning, Clara Martinez, Nick Pigeon, Jonah Stone, Olivia Vaden, Julie Vandenboom and Tirstan Walters. Lansing City Council Ward 4 The other council seat on the primary ballot, Ward 4, will see three candidates narrowed to two. The Ward 4 race also has no incumbents, although Peter Spadafore is a sitting council member in an at-large seat looking to move into a ward position. Spadafore is running alongside Heath Lowry and Zacharie Spurlock. More: Can downtown apartments offset loss of state workers? Lansing mayor candidates weigh in More: 10 Lansing candidates running for 2 at-large council seats. Here's where they stand on key issues More: What Ward 4 council candidates are saying about downtown Lansing construction, other issues More: Meridian Township senior center, Lansing parks among tax proposals on August ballot Parks millage proposal Voters in the city of Lansing will decide if they want to renew a 1-mill levy for operating the city's parks and recreation system. If it passes, the millage would be renewed for five years beginning on July 1, 2026. Renewing the existing millage would continue taxes of $50 a year for the owner of a home with a taxable value of $50,000. Lansing Township In Lansing Township, voters are being asked if they are willing to continue a franchise agreement with the Lansing Board of Water & Light in place since 2012. If passed, the proposal would authorize the collection of a surcharge not to exceed 5% of net revenues from BWL customers for a franchise fee for a term of 30 years. Meridian Township Meridian Township voters will consider two separate millage proposals intended to fund a 40,000-square-foot community and senior center proposed for Central Park Drive between the Central Fire Station and the U.S. Post Office. If both measures pass, the millage rate would go up by slightly more than 0.9 mills, beginning with the December 2025 tax bill, officials said. The proposals are written so that if one passes and the other fails, neither will take effect. One of the measures is a 0.557-mill construction bond proposal. The other would authorize a 0.347-mill levy to pay for operations. The owner of a home with the average taxable value of about $152,200 would see a tax increase of $138 per year, township officials said. A typical condominium owner would pay an additional $83 a year, they said. Bath Voters in the Bath School District will decide the fate of a proposed $26.8 million bond issue to improve facilities, build athletic-support and transportation buildings, buy schools buses and improve playgrounds and athletic fields. The estimated millage to be levied for the bonds in 2025 would be 3 mills. But if the proposal passes, schools officials said, the debt tax rate is expected to remain at 7 mills, meaning residents would see no increase in their taxes from this year. Eaton County Voters will see Democrat Rob Piercefield of Mulliken and Republican Andy Shaver in a special primary election for an open seat on the Board of Commissioners. The District 1 seat was vacated by former Commissioner Tim Barnes, who resigned for personal reasons early this year, and the rest of the board failed to appoint a successor. Both candidates will move on to a special election in November. District 1 includes Sunfield, Roxand, Vermontville, and Chester townships. Contact Mike Ellis at mellis@ or 517-267-0415. This article originally appeared on Lansing State Journal: What's on Tuesday's Lansing primary ballot? Solve the daily Crossword

'Concerning news': Wall Street worries Trump's BLS firing could shake market confidence
'Concerning news': Wall Street worries Trump's BLS firing could shake market confidence

Yahoo

time31 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

'Concerning news': Wall Street worries Trump's BLS firing could shake market confidence

President Trump's firing of Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) commissioner Erika McEntarfer has Wall Street worried about the future path of economic data. In a note to clients titled "Concerning news from the BLS," JPMorgan chief US economist Michael Feroli wrote that the removal of the agency's commissioner creates "risks to the conduct of monetary policy, to financial stability, and to the economic outlook." "The risk of politicizing the data collection process should not be overlooked," Feroli wrote. "To borrow from the soft-landing analogy, having a flawed instrument panel can be just as dangerous as having an obediently partisan pilot." The firing came just hours after the BLS released the July jobs report, which showed more than a quarter million fewer jobs were added to the economy in May and June than initially thought. In a Truth Social post on Friday, Trump wrote that "we need accurate numbers" and the numbers "must be fair and accurate." On Monday morning, Trump continued posting on social media about the matter, writing, "last weeks Job's Report was RIGGED." Trump has maintained a stance that the revisions done prior to the 2024 presidential election were made to make the US economy look better under then-President Biden. While last Friday's jobs revisions were "larger than normal," per the BLS, the act of revising data once more information collected is a standard operating procedure for the agency. For Wall Street, the chief concern with Trump's rhetoric is his calling into question the accuracy of key economic data that typically drives the Federal Reserve's monetary policy decision making and is closely tracked by investors for a read on the health of the US economy. "The US public statistics represent the gold standard," Renaissance Macro head of economics Neil Dutta wrote in a note to clients after the firing on Aug. 1. "Calling them into question just because they tell you something you don't like undercuts market confidence." Barclays chairman of research Ajay Rajadhyaksha pointed out in a note to clients on Monday that a US president hasn't attempted to fire an active head of the BLS since President Nixon was in office 50 years ago. Recent examples of statisticians being fired because the heads of government disliked the data include cases in Greece and Argentina. "This move could lead to markets questioning data integrity, especially for releases that surprise investors," Rajadhyaksha wrote. Trump's firing of McEntarfer at the BLS came the same day Federal Reserve governor Adriana Kugler said she will resign from the central bank's Board of Governors, effective Aug. 8. Trump is expected to appoint a new Fed official and a BLS commissioner in the coming days. Josh Schafer is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow him on X @_joshschafer. 登入存取你的投資組合

German Finance Chief Plans to Ask Bessent About Quotas for Steel
German Finance Chief Plans to Ask Bessent About Quotas for Steel

Yahoo

time31 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

German Finance Chief Plans to Ask Bessent About Quotas for Steel

(Bloomberg) -- German Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil plans to bring up the issue of quotas for European steel when he meets with his US counterpart Scott Bessent. Seeking Relief From Heat and Smog, Cities Follow the Wind Chicago Curbs Hiring, Travel to Tackle $1 Billion Budget Hole PATH Train Service Resumes After Fire at Jersey City Station NYC Mayor Adams Gives Bally's Bronx Casino Plan a Second Chance 'It's precisely in the steel industry where there are indications that there could be a quota system — exceptions on both sides of the Atlantic,' Klingbeil told reporters in Washington on Monday. 'This would be important for the German steel industry and for many jobs in Germany, and it's one of the topics I will address today.' A US-European trade deal agreed last month will raise duties on most imports from the bloc to 15%. Brussels got a partial waiver on certain industry-specific US tariffs that carry higher rates worldwide – like for automobiles – but not on others like steel and aluminum, where talks on an exemption involving quotas continue. 'I think we were too weak, we cannot be satisfied with the result that was achieved,' said Klingbeil. 'We Europeans must become stronger, focus on the internal market, and ensure that we are force to be reckoned with. Then we can counter the US with greater self-confidence, not against the US, but in dialogue with the US. That has been lacking somewhat in recent weeks.' Still, he added that an agreement does mean that the uncertainties of recent months have been removed, and that there is now planning security for companies on both sides of the Atlantic. Klingbeil, who also is his country's vice chancellor, is in the US on the invitation of Treasury Secretary Bessent, whom he met at the Group of Seven gathering in Banff, Canada, in May. 'I hope that the close relationship between myself and Scott Bessent will help us to clarify issues and gain a better understanding of the situation,' he said. 'This will hopefully lead to sensible solutions that are in the interests of the German economy.' AI Flight Pricing Can Push Travelers to the Limit of Their Ability to Pay How Podcast-Obsessed Tech Investors Made a New Media Industry Russia Builds a New Web Around Kremlin's Handpicked Super App Government Steps Up Campaign Against Business School Diversity What Happens to AI Startups When Their Founders Jump Ship for Big Tech ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

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