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Tag: GROWS

  • US economy grows at slower-than-expected pace in fourth quarter


    The US economy grew at a slower-than-expected pace in the fourth quarter.

    The Bureau of Economic Analysis’s advance estimate of fourth quarter US gross domestic product (GDP) showed the economy grew at an annualized pace of 2.3% during the period, below the 2.6% growth expected by economists surveyed by Bloomberg. The reading came in lower than the 3.1% growth seen in the third quarter.

    Increases in consumer spending and government spending drove economic growth in the quarter while decreases in investment offset some gains. For the year, the US economy grew at 2.8% pace, slightly below the 2.9% number seen in 2023 but above the 2.5% growth seen in 2022.

    Meanwhile, the “core” Personal Consumption Expenditures index, which excludes the volatile food and energy categories, grew by 2.5% in the fourth quarter, in line with estimates and above the 2.2% seen in the prior quarter.

    The data’s release comes as investors try to gauge if the Federal Reserve will start cutting interest rates again in 2025 after holding them steady on Wednesday. Powell said in a press conference that the economy “remains strong” while inflation “remains somewhat elevated.”

    “We don’t need to be in a hurry to adjust our policy stance,” Fed Chair Powell said.

    Following Wednesday’s Fed meeting, markets see less than a 50% chance that the Fed cuts rates before its June meeting, per the CME FedWatch Tool.

    This is breaking news. More to come…

    Jan 19, 2025; Atlanta, GA, USA;  A United States flag on the field at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, the site of the 2025 College Football Playoff National Championship between the Ohio State Buckeyes and the Notre Dame Fighting Irish. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images
    Jan 19, 2025; Atlanta, GA, USA; A United States flag on the field at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, the site of the 2025 College Football Playoff National Championship between the Ohio State Buckeyes and the Notre Dame Fighting Irish. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images · USA TODAY Sports via Reuters Connect / Reuters

    Josh Schafer is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow him on X @_joshschafer.

    Click here for in-depth analysis of the latest stock market news and events moving stock prices

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    The US economy grew at a slower-than-expected pace in the fourth quarter of 2021, according to recent data released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. While many analysts had anticipated a more robust expansion, the economy only grew at a 2.3% annualized rate in the final three months of the year.

    This slower growth was primarily attributed to a combination of factors, including supply chain disruptions, labor shortages, and rising inflation. The ongoing challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic also continued to weigh on economic activity, particularly in sectors such as travel, hospitality, and entertainment.

    Despite the weaker-than-expected growth in the fourth quarter, many economists remain cautiously optimistic about the outlook for the US economy in 2022. The rollout of COVID-19 vaccines, along with significant fiscal stimulus measures, are expected to support a more robust recovery in the coming months.

    However, uncertainties remain, particularly with regards to the trajectory of inflation and the potential for further disruptions to global supply chains. As policymakers and businesses navigate these challenges, the path to sustained economic growth in the US remains uncertain.

    Tags:

    1. US economy growth
    2. Fourth quarter GDP
    3. Economic indicators
    4. Slow economic growth
    5. US economic trends
    6. Economic forecasts
    7. GDP analysis
    8. US economic data
    9. Economic performance
    10. Economic news updates

    #economy #grows #slowerthanexpected #pace #fourth #quarter

  • ‘Stay in LA’ Campaign Grows to 15K With Keanu Reeves, Patty Jenkins


    Supporters of the “Stay in LA” campaign have more than doubled in the four days since it launched, with several A-listers now throwing their weight behind the petition.

    Among them, Keanu Reeves, Olivia Wilde, Bette Midler, Patty Jenkins, Rian Johnson, Kevin Bacon, Joey King, Zooey Deschanel, LeVar Burton, Joshua Jackson, Alex Winter, Connie Britton, Sian Heder, Jason Reitman and Charlie Hunnam.

    They join a growing list of supporters that in just three days has pushed the number of signatories from 6,000 to, as of this writing, more than 14, 729.

    Organized by writer Alexandra Pechman and director Sarah Adina Smith, the petition calls for California politicians and studios to “help our beloved city rebuild itself and ensure L.A.’s future viability as a place where craftspeople, film workers and businesses thrive.” Among its proposals, it asks the state to uncap the tax incentive for productions that shoot in Los Angeles County, and urges studios and streamers to pledge at least 10% more production in L.A. over the next three years.

    Many entertainment industry figures have enacted efforts to help out Los Angeles since the fires — for example, Vin Diesel announced that Universal will finish shooting “Fast X: Part 2” in Los Angeles, noting that his sister pointed out that “Los Angeles needs it now more than ever.”



    The “Stay in LA” campaign has gained even more star power, with Keanu Reeves and Patty Jenkins joining the cause. The campaign, which aims to encourage people to stay in Los Angeles and support local businesses during the pandemic, has now reached over 15,000 supporters.

    Reeves, known for his roles in “The Matrix” and “John Wick,” and Jenkins, the director behind “Wonder Woman” and “Monster,” have both shown their support for the campaign on social media. They have urged their followers to stay in LA and help the city recover from the economic impact of COVID-19.

    With the support of these two Hollywood heavyweights, the “Stay in LA” campaign is sure to gain even more momentum. Supporters are encouraged to continue spreading the word and supporting local businesses as they navigate these challenging times. Stay in LA, support LA! #StayinLA.

    Tags:

    Stay in LA campaign, Keanu Reeves, Patty Jenkins, Los Angeles, tourism, celebrity endorsements, local attractions, LA travel, Hollywood influencers, LA tourism growth, staycation in LA

    #Stay #Campaign #Grows #15K #Keanu #Reeves #Patty #Jenkins

  • ‘I love our look – I think it grows on you’: Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man creator defends the Marvel show’s animation style after fierce fan criticism



    • Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man‘s creator has defended the show’s animation style
    • Some Marvel fans have criticized how the series looks from a movement viewpoint
    • Jeff Tramell says viewers should judge it after watching the whole season, rather than a two-minute trailer

    Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man‘s showrunner has defended its animation style in the wake of fierce fan criticism.

    Speaking to TechRadar ahead of the Marvel show’s premiere on January 29, Jeff Tramell implored viewers to “give it a chance” after some fans reacted negatively to how it looks. Tramell, who also acts as the series’ head writer and one of its executive producers, wants people to watch all 10 episodes before they comment on the animation techniques that have been used.

    Ever since the Disney Plus animated series was first shown exclusively to D23 Expo 2024 members last August, fans have had plenty to say about the choice of animation. In the aftermath of said footage leaking online, threads on r/MarvelStudios, r/SpiderMan, r/MarvelStudiosSpoilers and other Reddit pages were full of comments labeling character movements as “weird”, “off-putting”, “awful”, “rough”, and “lazy”.

    Fans haven’t held back over what they think about the show’s animation style (Image credit: Marvel Animation/Disney Plus)

    The negativity grew exponentially once the animated show’s first trailer – one of six big entertainment stories you might have missed over the 2024 holiday season – was released, too. Once the teaser was revealed in late December 2024, new threads on r/SpiderMan, r/MarvelStudios, r/MarvelStudioSpoilers, and other Reddit pages were similarly packed with people’s opinions on its animation. Indeed, from those saying Marvel was “trying too hard” and that the backgrounds look “empty”, to even harsher critiques suggesting it looked “ugly” and “dogs**t”, fans didn’t hold back as they passed judgment on the series’ animation style.





    As the creator of Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man, I want to address some of the recent criticism our show has received regarding its animation style. I understand that some fans may have initially been taken aback by the unique look we have chosen for our series, but I truly believe that it is a style that grows on you.

    When we set out to create Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man, we wanted to do something different and innovative. We wanted to push the boundaries of traditional animation and create a visually stunning and dynamic world for our beloved web-slinger to inhabit. And while I know that change can be unsettling for some, I am confident that once fans give our show a chance, they will come to appreciate and even love the artistic choices we have made.

    I am incredibly proud of the animation style we have developed for Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man. I believe it captures the essence of the character in a fresh and exciting way, and I hope that fans will eventually come to see it as a bold and imaginative interpretation of the classic superhero.

    So to all the fans who have expressed doubts about our animation style, I ask you to keep an open mind and give Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man a chance. I think you will find that our look is not only eye-catching and visually stunning, but also perfectly suited to the dynamic and action-packed world of Spider-Man. Thank you for your continued support, and I hope you will join us on this thrilling animated adventure.

    Tags:

    1. Spider-Man creator
    2. Marvel show
    3. Animation style
    4. Fan criticism
    5. Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man
    6. Defends
    7. Love our look
    8. Grows on you
    9. SEO specialist
    10. Search engine optimization

    #love #grows #Friendly #Neighborhood #SpiderMan #creator #defends #Marvel #shows #animation #style #fierce #fan #criticism

  • With rain on the way, dread grows in fire-ravaged Palisades, Altadena and landslide-prone Rancho Palos Verdes


    Michael Gessl’s house survived the Palisades fire that destroyed much of his neighborhood, but something else is making him nervous.

    Rain.

    There is, at last, precipitation in the forecast for this weekend. And Gessl worries about water seeping through his skylight, which was removed during the firefight. He’s holding it in place, for now, with rocks.

    “I don’t want all the contents of my house to get wet and soggy,” said Gessl, 75, who never evacuated and has been hunkered down inside his cold, dark Pacific Palisades house since the fire started on Jan. 7.

    He is keeping a close watch on the charred hillside behind his home, hoping old tree roots keep it from sliding when it gets wet.

    About 40 miles south, Marianne Hunter dreads the rain because of an another ongoing disaster: the landslides on the Palos Verdes Peninsula.

    A section of Dauntless and Exultant Drives is closed due to the ongoing landslide and work to continue to repave the streets and fix the water lines in the Portuguese Bend neighborhood in Palos Verdes on June 21, 2024. According to a resident, two of the homes in the neighborhood have been red tagged.

    (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

    Such is the paradox of Los Angeles County this winter: It is dangerously dry. But recent disasters — the Palisades, Eaton and Hughes fires and the peninsula landslides — have made people fear the effects of rain they know they desperately need.

    If the rain doesn’t come, the fire danger will increase. If it comes too fast, it could trigger mudslides and toxic runoff in the burn scars, and it could accelerate movement on the Palos Verdes Peninsula.

    There, back-to-back wet winters triggered last year’s extreme land movement that warped roads, cracked houses and transformed landscapes. With the lubricated ground shifting, at times, nine to 12 inches a week, utility companies shut off electricity, gas and internet for hundreds of homes.

    “L.A. needs the rain, obviously. All of Southern California does. However, rain here in any excessive amount is a problem,” said Hunter, 75, whose house in Rancho Palos Verdes has not had heating since the gas was shut off last summer.

    Michael Anderson, the state climatologist for the California Department of Water Resources, calls it a “kind of uneasy dichotomy — we need the rain, but we’d really like it to come in as an overly friendly marine layer.”

    Most of Los Angeles County is in a severe drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor.

    From Oct. 1 through Dec. 31, the county logged 0.19 inches of rain, Anderson said. In a typical year, 4.35 inches falls during that time.

    Even if this weekend’s storms, which are predicted to be mild, bring an inch of rain, January would be the fifth driest since record keeping began in 1896, Anderson said.

    The current dry spell comes after the back-to-back wet winters of 2023 and 2024. Atmospheric rivers pummeled the Southland with record-breaking rainfall that brought lush vegetation — which dried out and became combustible last summer when intense heat also shattered records.

    “You’re really kind of piling extreme on extreme here,” Anderson said.

    A small amount of rain is forecast for the region this weekend, most likely between Saturday afternoon and Monday evening, said Mike Wofford, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Oxnard.

    A half-inch of rain or less is expected across most of the county, but precipitation totals could be up to 1.5 inches in the eastern San Gabriel Mountains.

    Because the rain is expected to be light, the risk of debris flow in burned areas is low, Wofford said. But there is a small chance a thunderstorm could emerge directly over a burn scar — a worst-case scenario that could cause problems.

    Mayor Karen Bass issued an emergency executive order Tuesday to shore up Los Angeles burn areas and protect watersheds ahead of potential rain.

    Mudslides damaged both lanes of Mulholland Drive in February 2024 during a very wet rainy season.

    (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

    She directed city crews to clear and remove vegetation, reinforce hillsides and roads and clear debris. The city will install reinforced concrete barriers and sandbags to buttress affected areas and stem the flow of toxins, according to the mayor’s office.

    The city also will work to divert stormwater into the sewer system to prevent fire-contaminated runoff from flowing directly into the ocean.

    In Pasadena and the neighboring, unincorporated community of Altadena, the Eaton fire burned more than two feet into the hillsides, “so there is no root system left” to hold soil and debris, said Lisa Derderian, a spokeswoman for the city of Pasadena.

    “We are concerned for even the lightest rain” in burned foothills areas, Derderian wrote in an email, adding that “it’ll be several years of heightened awareness and preparedness every time we get rain [and] wind.”

    Officials will be distributing thousands of pre-filled sandbags in the coming days, she said.

    Elizabeth Richey, a 59-year-old landscape designer, has been watching the forecast with growing alarm.

    Her rented home in Altadena burned in the Eaton fire. For two weeks, it was off limits, blocked off by local authorities and the National Guard.

    When Richey returned for the first time this week, she salvaged a few personal treasures from her blackened garden: Her grandmother’s flower pot. Her mother’s stone Buddha statues. Some vintage, colorful glass fishing balls and wrought-iron furniture.

    A fallen street sign and destroyed homes on Marathon Road in Altadena on Jan. 14.

    (Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)

    “Its beautiful stuff, all charred, but still there,” she said, adding: “The rain brings an urgency to getting the stuff out before its becomes a soupy mess.”

    Richey had checked the garden but had not yet scoured the wreckage of the house, because she did not have proper protective gear.

    She left early the night of Jan. 7 because she was initially worried about wind, not fire. On her way out, she grabbed one photo of her late mother sitting in a field of poppies — but nothing else.

    “I’m still in shock about everything that I’ve lost. Four generations of memorabilia, all my kids memories: gone,” said Richey, who has two adult children.

    Richey was desperate to comb through the house — before it gets wet.

    On the landslide-plagued Palos Verdes Peninsula, Hunter said she hoped for a gentle weekend rain, not an inundation that would cause the ground to slip farther and her community’s problems to escalate once again.

    Her house in the hard-hit Portuguese Bend neighborhood has just minor cracks from land movement, but the last year has been challenging.

    She said she and her husband made “a huge investment” for solar power for their house after the electricity was cut off. With no gas, they sporadically use a fireplace to stay warm.

    The telephone landline was disabled. And thus, so was her husband’s pacemaker monitor, which was connected to it.

    In recent weeks, the land movement in Rancho Palos Verdes has slowed.

    Local officials credit the dry winter and several newly installed deep de-watering wells, which have pumped out millions of gallons of groundwater that drives the area’s landslide movement.

    But as worried as she is about too much water, Hunter is equally concerned about fire.

    “We have a lot of foliage, a lot of trees … a lot of dry brush,” she said. “So, there’s good in every bad. And vice versa.”



    As rain clouds loom over the scorched landscapes of Palisades, Altadena, and Rancho Palos Verdes, residents are grappling with a new wave of fear and uncertainty. The recent wildfires have left these communities vulnerable to mudslides and debris flows, adding a new layer of danger to an already devastated region.

    In Palisades, where the flames have left a trail of destruction in their wake, residents are bracing for the potential impact of heavy rainfall. The charred trees and barren hillsides offer little protection against the threat of mudslides, prompting many to fear for their safety and the safety of their homes.

    Similarly, in Altadena, where the scars of the Bobcat Fire are still visible, residents are anxiously monitoring weather forecasts and preparing for the worst. The steep terrain and lack of vegetation make the area particularly susceptible to mudslides, raising concerns about the potential for further damage and destruction.

    And in Rancho Palos Verdes, where landslides are a constant threat, the approaching rainstorm has only heightened fears of a disaster waiting to happen. The unstable cliffs and eroded slopes leave little room for optimism, as residents brace themselves for the possibility of evacuation and loss.

    As these communities grapple with the aftermath of wildfires and the looming threat of mudslides, one thing is clear: the dread grows with each passing day. The residents of Palisades, Altadena, and Rancho Palos Verdes are facing an uncertain future, as they wait to see what the rain will bring to their already fragile landscapes.

    Tags:

    1. Rain in Palisades
    2. Fire-ravaged Altadena
    3. Landslide-prone Rancho Palos Verdes
    4. Weather update for Palisades
    5. Wildfire aftermath in Altadena
    6. Rainfall concerns in Rancho Palos Verdes
    7. Natural disaster fears in Palisades
    8. Recovery efforts in Altadena
    9. Landslide risk in Rancho Palos Verdes
    10. Weather forecast for fire-ravaged areas

    #rain #dread #grows #fireravaged #Palisades #Altadena #landslideprone #Rancho #Palos #Verdes

  • Advancing the Gospel DVD and Study Guide Set: How the Gospel Bears Fruit and Grows


    Price: $18.00
    (as of Jan 24,2025 05:12:30 UTC – Details)



    Advancing the Gospel is the calling for all followers of Christ. But to many, it’s more of a lofty concept than a day-to-day reality. In this five-part DVD series, Mike Treneer uses Paul’s letter to the Colossians to show us what it means to advance the Gospel today.

    • Session 1: The Power of the Gospel Seed
    • Session 2: How the Gospel Takes Root
    • Session 3: What Impedes the Gospel’s Growth
    • Session 4: Take Time to Tend the Garden
    • Session 5: Partnering to Sow Gospel Seeds

    The rapid expansion of the Gospel throughout Colosse proves what’s possible when the life-changing message of the Gospel spills out of a group of committed believers. It’s happening today, just as it happened then.

    Additional copies of the Study Guide are available separately (ISBN 9780972902335).
    Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.38 x 0.5 x 8.5 inches; 2.93 ounces
    Media Format ‏ : ‎ NTSC
    Run time ‏ : ‎ 1 hour and 12 minutes
    Release date ‏ : ‎ March 13, 2008
    Studio ‏ : ‎ NavPress
    ASIN ‏ : ‎ 0972902341


    Are you looking to deepen your understanding of how the Gospel spreads and transforms lives? Look no further than the Advancing the Gospel DVD and Study Guide Set. This comprehensive resource delves into how the Gospel bears fruit and grows, equipping you to share the good news with others effectively.

    Join renowned theologians and pastors as they explore key concepts such as evangelism, discipleship, and the power of the Holy Spirit in advancing the Gospel. Through engaging video sessions and thought-provoking study guides, you will gain practical insights and strategies for effectively communicating the message of Jesus Christ in today’s world.

    Whether you are a seasoned believer or new to the faith, the Advancing the Gospel DVD and Study Guide Set is a valuable resource for anyone seeking to deepen their understanding of the transformative power of the Gospel. Order your set today and start on the path to becoming a more effective ambassador for Christ.
    #Advancing #Gospel #DVD #Study #Guide #Set #Gospel #Bears #Fruit #Grows,grow

  • Boston taxpayer tab for controversial White Stadium rehab grows again to $100M


    Boston taxpayers are now expected to fork over $100 million as part of the city’s public-private plan to rehab White Stadium to house a pro soccer team, the latest cost increase to be revealed in a project that continues to draw strong opposition.

    The city’s half of the project, which swelled from $50 million to $91 million late last year, has grown again, to “roughly $100 million,” Dion Irish, Boston’s chief of operations, testified at a Wednesday City Council hearing that was held days after demolition work began at the 75-year-old stadium in Franklin Park.

    While Irish said the city’s goal was to keep its taxpayer-funded portion of the project to that latest estimate, he wouldn’t rule out further cost overruns. He pointed to a public bidding process for construction that may change the final cost. Final bids for a new fire station in the Seaport, for example, tacked on a few million dollars to that project, he said.

    “I would not venture to say a lot more money,” Irish said, when City Councilor Erin Murphy posited that the Wu administration “may choose to spend a lot more money” to fulfill its commitment to the tear-down and rebuild project.

    Murphy, prior to making that statement, asked whether the city administration had determined a limit for what it was willing to spend on the project, and if there was an amount that would cause it to walk away from the public-private partnership with Boston Unity Soccer Partners, which owns the new pro women’s team.

    “We have now said we can come up with $100 million,” Murphy said. “Just like any responsible person, anyone who runs their home budget, at some point you have to say, that’s great but I can’t afford it, so I’m going to have to say no.”

    Murphy last week called for the city to halt demolition, and Councilor Ed Flynn has called for the project’s cancellation.

    Mayor Michelle Wu drew criticism last month for saying that the city was committed to paying for its half of the project, “no matter what it costs” to taxpayers, after the city’s tab ballooned to $91 million.

    Boston Unity, an all-female ownership group that includes Boston Globe CEO Linda Pizzuti Henry as an investor, will now pay more than $100 million, pushing the cost of the project, initially estimated at $100 million, to more than $200 million, Wu administration officials said at the day’s hearing.

    The city’s new cost for White Stadium’s rehab appeared to catch councilors and community members off-guard. The revelation drew immediate criticism from opponents, including the plaintiffs in a lawsuit that seeks to stop the project over claims that the city and Boston Unity are illegally privatizing public trust land.

    Irish denied privatization, saying that the new stadium would be owned by the city and Boston Public Schools, which would share use with the new soccer team, a tenant subject to a 10-year lease agreement. Critics say, however, that BPS football teams would be displaced for much of their season.

    “Boston taxpayers are being asked to pay through the nose to build an oversized professional sports complex for the benefit of a few millionaire sports investors,” Jean McGuire, a 93-year-old community activist and former School Committee member, said. “The fact is, we were never asked if we wanted a professional sports and entertainment complex in our park.

    “Community members’ concerns about public access, transportation impacts and countless other issues are being ignored, all in a mad rush to demolish White Stadium in order to meet the soccer stadium’s desired opening date,” she added.

    The new National Women’s Soccer League team is expected to take the pitch in spring 2026 — leading to questions at the day’s hearing about whether the tight deadline may lead to further cost overruns.

    An updated project timeline presented by Wu officials at the hearing shows demolition work, which began this week, is set to continue for the next two months. Construction would take place for the rest of this year and continue into 2026. The NWSL schedule typically begins in March.

    Further complicating matters for the team, as mentioned in a November court filing by Boston Unity following the plaintiffs’ push to move back the March 18 trial date — which was denied by a Suffolk Superior Court judge — are the delays to construction brought on by the pending lawsuit.

    “Clearly this is a transparent ploy by the plaintiffs to ‘delay, delay, delay,’ — a tactic, which if sanctioned by this court, they know would be fatal to the singular element required for Defendant BUSP to bring a professional women’s soccer team to Boston — a constructed and operational White Stadium at the start of 2026,” the investors said.

    The tight turnaround led to questions from Councilor Brian Worrell around whether the city had a contingency plan in place should the team back out, to finish construction.

    Should the deal fall apart after work has already started, Diana Fernandez Bibeau, Boston’s deputy chief of urban design, said the city would be able to pull from an escrow account and put those funds toward construction activity.

    Boston, per legal agreements, has a corporate guarantee of $45 million to cover stadium expenses, if the team chooses to “walk away,” Fernandez Bibeau said.

    Worrell also asked whether the city was equipped to cover annual maintenance expenses, should the new women’s pro team fold within 10 years. The team contributes $2 million annually for maintenance, per the terms of the lease.



    The Boston taxpayer tab for the controversial White Stadium rehabilitation project has once again grown, now reaching a staggering $100 million. This comes as a shock to many residents who were already concerned about the rising costs of the project.

    Originally estimated to cost around $50 million, the project has faced numerous setbacks and delays, leading to the ballooning budget. Critics have pointed to mismanagement and poor planning as contributing factors to the cost overruns.

    Despite the high price tag, city officials are standing by the project, citing the importance of preserving the historic stadium and providing a modern facility for the community. However, many taxpayers are questioning whether the hefty bill is worth it.

    As the debate over the White Stadium project continues, one thing is clear – the burden on Boston taxpayers is only growing. Stay tuned for more updates on this controversial and costly endeavor.

    Tags:

    Boston taxpayer, White Stadium rehab, controversial, $100M, taxpayer tab, Boston news, city spending, stadium renovation, public funds, Boston controversy

    #Boston #taxpayer #tab #controversial #White #Stadium #rehab #grows #100M

  • LIVE: Castaic fire: Hughes Fire erupts, quickly grows to over 50 acres


    Crews are responding to a wind-driven wildfire burning near Castaic Lake that has prompted evacuations on Wednesday. 

    The Los Angeles County Fire Department and Angeles National Forest fire crews report the Hughes Fire is estimated at 50 acres and is burning in heavy fuels and spotting across Lake Hughes and Castaic roads near the northbound 5 Freeway.

    SUGGESTED: California Fires Updates: Wednesday, Jan. 22

    Officials said there is a “rapid rate of spread.” 

    Evacuations

    This is the latest wildfire burning in Los Angeles County as a red flag warning remains in effect due to Santa Ana winds.

    This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

    The Source: Information for this story is from the Angeles National Forest and LA County Fire Department.

     

    WildfiresInstastories



    Breaking News: Castaic fire: Hughes Fire erupts, quickly grows to over 50 acres

    Residents in Castaic are on high alert as the Hughes Fire has quickly grown to over 50 acres. The fire, which started earlier today, has spread rapidly due to strong winds and dry conditions.

    Firefighters are currently on the scene working to contain the blaze, but the situation remains fluid. Evacuation orders have been issued for several areas in the vicinity of the fire, and residents are urged to stay informed and follow all instructions from authorities.

    We will continue to provide updates on the Hughes Fire as more information becomes available. Stay tuned for the latest developments on this dangerous situation. Stay safe, Castaic.

    Tags:

    1. Castaic fire
    2. Hughes Fire
    3. Wildfire in Castaic
    4. Southern California fire
    5. Hughes Fire update
    6. Castaic fire grows to 50 acres
    7. California wildfire news
    8. Emergency response to Castaic fire
    9. Fire containment efforts in Castaic
    10. Hughes Fire live updates

    #LIVE #Castaic #fire #Hughes #Fire #erupts #quickly #grows #acres

  • The MTA’s Capital Plan Remains Held at the Station as Major Funding Gap Grows – Commercial Observer


    It was Christmas Eve 2024, and the New York State Legislature wasn’t in the giving mood. 

    The Metropolitan Transportation Authority was asking lawmakers to approve its 2025-2029 capital plan — a spending blueprint $10 billion larger than the last one that seemed so outlandishly expensive back in 2019.

    SEE ALSO: L.A. Fires Damaged or Destroyed 374 Commercial Buildings Valued at Nearly $2B: CoStar

    The $68.4 billion capital improvement plan, even with congestion pricing starting up in the new year, was still short by about $33 billion. And, no, there were no proposals of how to fill the gap between income and expenses.

    But the legislature’s end-of-year rejection of the five-year capital plan, which technically began Jan. 1, means the MTA starts 2025 without the approval it needs to get rolling on contracts it could hypothetically sign off on considering at least half the funding for them is in place, MTA Chairman Janno Lieber said in a letter to Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie and Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins.

    “To veto the plan because funding issues remain to be resolved creates an almost insurmountable Catch-22 scenario,” Lieber wrote in the letter. “The MTA is required by law to submit an approved plan prior to the very legislative session where funding issues related to that plan will be addressed.”

    Lieber had hoped, as stated in the letter, that the legislature would reverse its course on the capital plan by Jan. 9. To drive home his point, Lieber rattled off a number of projects that will be delayed thanks to the legislature’s actions.

    “Power upgrades at 47 substations and 16 circuit breaker houses, structural repairs on more than 10 lines, painting and repairing more than 20 miles of elevated structures, modernizing signals on the A line, replacing elevators or escalators at 13 stations, three station renewals, and ADA improvements at 17 stations,” Lieber catalogued in the letter, the last item a reference to the Americans with Disabilities Act.

    During the MTA’s September board meeting, the capital plan was unanimously approved and included the assumption of $14 billion in grants from the federal government. Those grants likely will not get approved by federal officials in Washington without a capital plan in place from the state, according to the agency.

    The plan will be re-evaluated during the next legislative session between now and June.

    The $55 billion 2020-2024 capital plan was the largest of its kind, having been approved in late 2019 and including ambitious modernizations across the MTA systems. Much of that work is still underway after the COVID-19 pandemic stalled some projects, but the MTA’s list of fixes needed to keep the system in a state of good repair grew exponentially nonetheless.

    “We’re moving 5 million people a day on subways and buses, and it’s a 100-year-old system,” Jamie Torres-Springer, president of MTA Construction and Development, told Commercial Observer. “What happens with infrastructure, real estate and physical facilities is that they tend to deteriorate, particularly if, historically, you haven’t invested in keeping them in a state of good repair. And, honestly, a lot of previous generations have not made some of those behind-the-curtain investments that don’t get a lot of public play, but are really important to keep running the service safely and reliably.”

    Legislative approval would also allow the agency to raise about $10 billion through bonds. If unable to sell bonds, the MTA could now be forced to reallocate money that has already been earmarked to delayed items in the 2020-2024 capital plan, Lieber also stated in the letter.

    “We are reviewing the letter,” Mike Murphy, spokesperson for the New York Senate’s Democratic majority, said in a statement. “But I think it is absurd to say this rejection will result in the delaying of projects when we all know there are projects from the last capital plan that haven’t even started yet. We look forward to continuing the conversation with all the stakeholders in order to advance a fully funded capital program that addresses the vital transportation needs of the MTA network, which are critical to the state’s and region’s economic well-being.”

    While not ideal for the MTA, lawmakers aren’t totally out of line by vetoing the capital plan.

    “It’s not surprising at all to see the legislature use their leverage here,” Rachael Fauss, senior policy advisor of watchdog group Reinvent Albany, said in an interview. “Technically speaking, when the [MTA’s] Capital Program Review Board looks at the MTA capital plan, having the funding identified is very important and part of their role – and it isn’t there. It’s not like the last capital plan, where the congestion pricing was teed up ahead of the capital plan being approved … This is a much bigger funding gap than we’ve seen before, because the plan is that much bigger.”

    Generally speaking, a bigger, more ambitious plan is not always in the best interest of the public if improvements and expansions are prioritized above state of good repair investments, Fauss said. On the other hand, Fauss pointed to a September report from State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli’s office that the bare minimum needs of the MTA could range from $57.8 billion to $92.2 billion, with a midpoint of about $75 billion.

    “We’ve always been, as a watchdog group, concerned that a capital plan weighs too heavily on expansion versus state of good repair,” Fauss continued. “No. 1 should always be to make sure things don’t fall apart and improve service reliability.”

    This capital plan, giant as it is, is 90 percent focused on keeping the system in a state of good repair, according to Torres-Springer. He noted prices are higher these days for new rolling stock, such as the 270 new electric buses on the MTA’s shopping list, as well as the infrastructure upgrades and facility renovations meant to keep the system running to the expectations of New Yorkers. Those costs are equally as subject to the 30 percent inflation seen over the last five years as a bag of groceries.

    The MTA, too, is eliminating some of its oldest train cars from its fleet, namely the 1980s-era cars with the orange and yellow toned seats, replacing them with 435 R211 cars that will have surveillance cameras and which cost about $1.27 billion. The plan is to deliver these by 2027.

    Meanwhile, the MTA has already initiated procurement work for portions of the Second Avenue subway extension, a decades-old pipe dream for many, bringing improved subway service to East Harlem at 125th Street as well as diverting foot traffic from the 4, 5 and 6 trains.

    The legislature’s rejection of the capital plan also puts into question the status of the Brooklyn-Queens light rail project known as the Interborough Express Connector, meant to channel commuters along north-south routes between the two boroughs where they can access 17 subway lines and 51 bus routes.

    The MTA still needs to fund modern signals on the A and C lines in Brooklyn and Queens, which is also in the 2025-2029 capital plan.

    Putting off approval of the capital plan until later comes with a number of other challenges, especially considering all the legislative matters that hit a peak in the first and second quarters of any given year, as well as Trump re-entering the Oval Office, said Tiffany-Ann Taylor, vice president of the Regional Plan Association.

    “I think that we’re also going to see, or at least maybe we’re starting to see, the state legislature getting ready for more of a skirmish as we start to approach budget season in the spring because the capital plan already has a deficit,” Taylor said in a Dec. 31 interview. “I think that this decision [by the legislature] is now setting the stage for MTA spending to be even more of a front-line conversation come the springtime.”

    Obtaining federal grants and allowing the MTA to issue bonds before the Trump administration takes office Jan. 20 was considered one of the most critical steps for Lieber given that the Biden administration has historically been more infrastructure-friendly than the administration that came before it. (Biden also earned the nickname “Amtrak Joe” because of his love of trains.)

    The Trump administration, after all, had let congestion pricing languish in bureaucratic limbo for a number of years until Joe Biden took office in 2021, finally granting federal approval for the state program to proceed. Regardless of the momentum behind congestion pricing during the Biden years, the program is only now getting underway.

    At the very least, the new congestion pricing tolls will provide some independence from Washington.

    “Hopefully, fingers crossed, congestion pricing will be actively running and we’ll understand what revenue is really coming in now that it’s $9 versus the $15 [originally proposed],” Taylor said of the toll for most motorists entering Manhattan’s core. “I think the legislature will have more information at their fingertips to figure out where the money is really coming from.”

    Without the $15 billion in revenue from the tolls, New Yorkers could have faced another era like 2017’s “summer of hell” (then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s words). In fact, it was the transit meltdowns of that year that made a congestion pricing toll into Manhattan below 60th Street suddenly more palatable for legislators, government officials and transit advocates.

    Previous proposals for a similar toll had fallen flat.

    The MTA also plans to pick up on tasks that have been deferred over the years, such as adding elevators to at least 60 more subway stations, still making only about half of the 472 stops in the system compliant with the 1989 Americans with Disabilities Act. The new capital plan will also replace the old trains, which cause a high number of delays due to unreliability. The agency also proposed replacing over 70 miles of signals, mostly in parts of Brooklyn.

    Soon after approving the 2020-2024 capital plan, the agency found itself in the heat of a different kind of battle entirely as COVID-19 sickened and killed transit workers and drove ridership to historic lows. Unbeknownst to officials at the time, congestion pricing was still five years from becoming a reality.

    Fast forward to June 2024, more wrenches were thrown into the gears as Gov. Kathy Hochul put a last-minute pause on the initiation of congestion pricing, just days before the tolling cameras were set to be activated.

    Rumors swirled that Hochul paused congestion pricing’s launch purely to help Democrats hold onto power in Washington, D.C. Eventually, the governor set a Jan. 5 date for the start of tolls that would cost the average motorist $9, a 40 percent discount from what MTA officials and their advisers, including from commercial real estate, had recommended.

    The MTA tried its luck at adding another 25 percent to the $9 toll on “gridlock alert” days, but Hochul wasn’t having any of it, saying tat the entire reason she had reduced the price of admission into central Manhattan was to keep costs low for lower-income motorists.

    “The legislature not approving the MTA plan only means it should be realigned to identifiable revenues until we have a better understanding of the sources of funds for the unfunded portion of the plan,” Mike Whyland, a spokesperson for the Assembly speaker’s office, said in a statement. “Currently, more than $30 billion of the MTA’s plan is fully financed, and the MTA can reasonably resubmit a plan to utilize expected federal dollars and other specified revenues, which would allow projects to begin or continue while additional revenue sources are identified. It is also vitally important for the federal government to step up and support the lifeblood of one of the most important economic drivers in the country.”

    Mark Hallum can be reached at mhallum@commercialobserver.com.



    The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) is facing a major setback as its capital plan remains stuck at the station due to a growing funding gap. The MTA’s capital plan, which outlines investments in infrastructure and upgrades across the transit system, is crucial for the continued improvement of public transportation in New York City.

    However, delays in securing adequate funding have put the plan in limbo, leaving critical projects on hold and risking the future of the city’s transit system. The MTA’s capital plan is estimated to cost billions of dollars, and without sufficient funding, the agency may not be able to make necessary upgrades and improvements to the aging infrastructure.

    The funding gap has only worsened in recent months, with the COVID-19 pandemic causing a significant drop in ridership and fare revenue. This has put additional strain on the MTA’s finances, making it even more challenging to secure the necessary funding for the capital plan.

    As the MTA struggles to secure the funding needed to move forward with its capital plan, it is crucial for policymakers and stakeholders to come together to find a solution. The future of public transportation in New York City depends on the success of the MTA’s capital plan, and it is imperative that the necessary funding is secured to ensure the continued improvement of the transit system.

    Tags:

    1. MTA capital plan
    2. MTA funding gap
    3. transportation infrastructure funding
    4. public transportation funding
    5. MTA budget shortfall
    6. transportation funding crisis
    7. New York City transit funding
    8. MTA financial challenges
    9. MTA investment plan
    10. public transportation finance

    #MTAs #Capital #Plan #Remains #Held #Station #Major #Funding #Gap #Grows #Commercial #Observer

  • XRP Trading Volume Overtakes Bitcoin (BTC) on Coinbase as U.S. Investor Interest Grows


    XRP, the third-largest cryptocurrency by market value, has replaced bitcoin (BTC) as the most-traded digital asset on Coinbase (COIN), the Nasdaq-listed cryptocurrency exchange that’s seen as a proxy for U.S. demand.

    Bitcoin retained its position as most-traded crypto asset on Binance, the largest exchange by volume, which is off-limits to U.S. investors.

    Volume trends are consistent with the recovery in the U.S. demand for XRP, which is closely linked to blockchain-based payment network Ripple, as presaged by the Coinbase premium indicator a week ago.

    Interest in XRP, the biggest gainer following Donald Trump’s election victory in November, increased after Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse met the president-elect almost two weeks ago. It’s also been supported by speculation of a spot XRP exchange-traded fund (ETF) being approved in the U.S.

    At press time, the XRP/USD pair accounted for 25% of Coinbase’s 24-hour trading volume of $6.86 billion. The BTC/USD pair ranked second, contributing 20% with ETH/USD in third place, according to data source Coingecko. On Binance, XRP was the second-most traded coin.

    Since November, the payments-focused cryptocurrency’s price has risen over 600% to $3.33, the highest since 2017. The valuation has increased by a third this week alone, according to CoinDesk and TradingView data.

    The rally is backed by a record futures open interest and a spike in the number of large holders. Data tracked by TradingView and CoinMetrics show the number of unique addresses holding at least $100,000 worth of cryptocurrency has increased to 108,540.

    Sum of all addresses holding at least $100K in XRP. (TradingView/Coinmetrics)

    Sum of all addresses holding at least $100K in XRP. (TradingView/Coinmetrics)





    XRP Trading Volume Overtakes Bitcoin (BTC) on Coinbase as U.S. Investor Interest Grows

    In a surprising turn of events, XRP has overtaken Bitcoin (BTC) in terms of trading volume on Coinbase, one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges in the United States. This surge in XRP trading activity comes as U.S. investor interest in the digital asset continues to grow.

    While Bitcoin has long been the dominant cryptocurrency in terms of market capitalization and trading volume, XRP has been gaining momentum in recent months. The surge in XRP trading volume on Coinbase is a clear indication that more U.S. investors are turning to XRP as a viable investment option.

    This increase in XRP trading volume on Coinbase could be attributed to a number of factors, including the recent partnerships and developments within the Ripple ecosystem, as well as the growing acceptance of XRP by mainstream financial institutions.

    With XRP now surpassing Bitcoin in trading volume on Coinbase, it will be interesting to see how this trend continues to evolve in the coming months. As U.S. investor interest in XRP continues to grow, we may see further shifts in the cryptocurrency market landscape.

    Overall, this development highlights the increasing importance of XRP in the cryptocurrency space and underscores the growing interest in digital assets beyond Bitcoin. Keep an eye on XRP as it continues to make waves in the world of cryptocurrency trading.

    Tags:

    1. XRP trading volume
    2. XRP vs BTC
    3. Coinbase XRP trading
    4. U.S. investor interest
    5. cryptocurrency trading
    6. XRP market update
    7. Bitcoin vs XRP trading
    8. XRP price analysis
    9. Coinbase cryptocurrency trends
    10. XRP investment opportunities

    #XRP #Trading #Volume #Overtakes #Bitcoin #BTC #Coinbase #U.S #Investor #Interest #Grows

  • What happens when a whole generation never grows up?

    What happens when a whole generation never grows up?


    Amid steep declines in homeownership, marriage and birth rates, economists have long been warning that young people are struggling to meet the milestones of adulthood. Although some 30-somethings are consciously choosing a less traditional path, many say these goals are simply out of reach.

    “It feels like the instructions for how to live a good life don’t apply anymore,” says 38-year-old Cody Harding, who is single and lives with three roommates in Brooklyn. “And nobody has updated them.”

    Now, as a mix of social and economic factors holds back an entire generation, what researchers once called a lag is starting to look more like a permanent state of arrested development.

    “We’re moving from later to never,” says Richard Reeves, president of the American Institute for Boys and Men. He notes that the longer people take to launch into a more conventional adulthood, the less likely they are to do it at all.

    A third of today’s young adults will never marry, projects conservative think tank the Institute for Family Studies, compared to less than a fifth of those born in previous decades. The share of childless adults under 50 who say they are unlikely to ever have kids, meanwhile, rose 10 percentage points between 2018 and 2023, from 37% to 47%, according to Pew Research Center.

    “You can kick the can down the road, but only so far,” says Reeves.

    The conventional explanation for what’s freezing young adults in place is that they can’t afford to grow up, given rising inflation and ballooning housing costs. Yet this doesn’t quite explain what’s going on.

    It’s true that 30-somethings have had a run of tough economic luck. Many of them entered the job market during the Great Recession, rode out the pandemic by moving back in with their parents, and are now dealing with the worst housing market in 40 years. But the numbers paint a more complicated picture.

    Median wages for full-time workers ages 35 to 44 are up 16% between 2000 and 2024, from $58,522 to $67,652 adjusted for inflation, according to the Labor Department. The overall wealth of 30-somethings, too, rose 66% between 1989 and 2022, according to the St. Louis Federal Reserve, from $62,000 to $103,000.

    In many ways, this age group is in a better place financially, on average, than their parents were at this age. The problem is that they don’t seem to know it. Only 21% of adults in their 30s rated the overall economy as good or excellent last year, per the Federal Reserve, and economists say young adults are significantly more pessimistic about the future than prior generations were.

    “They see the world they are going to live in 20 years from now as really screwed up,” says Brookings Institute economist Carol Graham, who studies well-being. She points to how climate change, political polarization, AI and a growing resentment of corporate power have made the future feel more uncertain.

    Younger adults are far less likely than Americans over 50 to say achieving the American Dream of success from hard work is still a possibility, according to a Wall Street Journal/NORC poll in July. But here, too, the reality is more complicated. At least part of what’s stunting the growth of a generation of young people are outsized dreams of what a good life looks like.

    “Our expectations are so much higher today,” says Melissa Kearney, an economist at the University of Maryland whose research focuses on children and family. “Generations before us didn’t expect to have large houses where every kid had a bedroom and there were multiple vacations.”

    To be sure, financial averages are just that. A sizable share of this generation is worse-off than their parents were. Young men in particular are struggling in the labor market. And some of the traditional goals of adulthood really have become more difficult to achieve. Student debt has more than doubled over the past two decades, yet a college degree is no guarantee of a well-paying job. Rising interest rates and dwindling supply have also put homeownership out of reach for a growing share of Americans. The median age of first-time homebuyers hit a record high of 38 this year, according to the National Association of Realtors, up from 35 in 2023 and 29 in 1981.

    Still, growing up with less pressure to follow the same narrow route to adulthood imposed on their parents and grandparents—a career, spouse, house and kids all by age 35—has raised the bar for what these milestones look like, if they choose to hit them at all.

    Stymied by this mix of high expectations and challenging economic circumstances, many 30-somethings sound disoriented and unsure about what it means to be a successful adult now.

    After watching his parents raise three kids and buy a house on his parents’ salaries in retail and manufacturing, Cody Harding assumed that being the first in his family to earn a Bachelor’s degree would grant him an even better quality of life. Although he now makes around double what his parents did at the height of their careers combined, he’s disappointed by what it affords him in New York City.

    Harding says graduating college in 2008, just as companies across the country were hemorrhaging funds and laying off workers, was the first sign that he seemed destined for an economically precarious adulthood. When he couldn’t put his double major in English and history to use, he waited tables and worked in construction.

    “I never caught up,” he says. Harding entered law school to wait out the sluggish labor market, but emerged with $180,000 in student-loan debt. He now owes over $200,000, after making only the minimum payments.

    Instead of being able to support a family or at least live on his own as a full-time lawyer, he’s paying $1,700 in monthly rent to live with roommates in Brooklyn. When it became clear his dreams of homeownership were not achievable in New York, he recently got help from his parents to close on a fixer-upper in his hometown of Easton, Pa. Like many of his peers, he earns extra income from a side hustle: in his case running a vintage furniture store.

    Harding still hopes to get married and have children, but has grown disenchanted with a dating culture that he feels prizes short-term flings over long-term commitment. He’d also rather stay single than compromise on the wrong fit. Most of his friends are in the same state of suspended adolescence, he says, which sometimes makes it feel like time is standing still.

    “It’s fine trying to reinvent what a modern life looks like, but I’m a little disappointed by everything that it lacks,” Harding says. “I’m sick of partying. I did that already. I want to grow up.”

    Just over half of Americans between the ages of 30 and 40 were married as of last year, according to an analysis of American Community Survey data by Aspen Economic Strategy Group economist Luke Pardue. This is down from more than two thirds in 1990, when those in the middle of the cohort were born. The share of women in this age range who had ever given birth fell 7 percentage points between 2012 and 2022 alone, Current Population Survey data show, from 78% to 71%.

    “Part of this is social expectations, part of this is shifting priorities and part of this is economic realities,” says Kearney at the University of Maryland, who has looked at how the same dynamic is playing out in high-income countries around the world. “But all together they seem to be pushing in the same direction, which is increased rates of staying single and staying childless.”

    Even leaving the nest—long considered a prerequisite to full-fledged adulthood in the U.S.—is proving harder to pull off.

    By the time Renata Leo’s parents were 31, the age she is now, they had gotten married, purchased a home and had her. Yet she is still sleeping in her childhood bedroom, gazing at the same unicorn wallpaper put up before she was born.

    “Redecorating would mean accepting that I’m not leaving,” says Leo, who has been back home in Glassboro, N.J., since graduating college in 2015 with $20,000 in student-loan debt.

    She was close to moving out in 2020, but the pandemic’s surging home prices derailed plans to buy a starter house with her then-fiancé. (He moved into her childhood bedroom with her before they broke up this past summer.) Since losing her full-time job at a startup in 2021 she’s been working part-time and has felt stuck, unsure of what she wants to do next.

    “I feel like a failure,” she says, adding that a recent chance meeting with the principal of her high school, where she graduated as valedictorian, left her scrambling for how to describe what she’s been up to for the past 13 years. “I let the fact that I published a book do a lot of the heavy lifting,” she jokes.

    Nearly 9% of those aged 30 to 40 still live with their parents, according to Pardue’s analysis of Census data, up from nearly 6% in 1990.

    Renata’s parents, Ed and Paula Leo, say they want their daughter to have the freedom to pursue the life she wants rather than feeling, like they did, that she should submit to any job as long as it pays something.

    “There’s no longer one right, certain path,” says Paula, a 61-year-old retired math teacher, who admits that she never even thought about whether she wanted to get married or become a mother—she just assumed that she would. Yet Paula recognizes that operating in an atmosphere with less pressure to conform or settle comes with its own costs. Having more options, she says, “makes it harder to know what to do.”

    Renata acknowledges that it’s a privilege to be able to wait for a job she loves rather than take whatever’s offered. But she admits that the longer she stands by, a seeming bystander in her own life, the more hopeless she feels about ever launching at all.

    “I still feel like a little kid,” she says.

    By the time Semira Fuller’s mom was her age, 39, she was a home owner and a single mother of two. But even though Fuller’s roughly $100,000 salary as a payroll manager is more than her mom ever made when Fuller was growing up, she’s been disappointed by how little it buys in Los Angeles, where she lives with a roommate. “Everything feels like a struggle,” she says.

    She knows her salary would go farther in her hometown of Philadelphia, but she prefers to stay in L.A. Inflation has raised the price of small luxuries, such as her Spotify subscription, but she doesn’t want to give them up.

    “There isn’t any part of my life that doesn’t feel more expensive than it did two years ago,” she says.

    Fuller says she enjoys meeting friends and waking up when she wants, which makes the upheaval of children unappealing. Motherhood, she says, is a “nonstarter.”

    “Kids become the first priority,” says Fuller. “I’m still figuring myself out as a priority.”

    Rachel Wolfe is a reporter covering the economy for The Wall Street Journal.



    In today’s society, it seems like more and more young adults are struggling to fully embrace adulthood. With the rise of extended adolescence and the phenomenon of the “Peter Pan Generation,” it begs the question: what happens when a whole generation never grows up?

    One of the most obvious consequences of a generation that refuses to grow up is a lack of responsibility and accountability. Without the pressures and expectations of adulthood, individuals may struggle to take on the responsibilities that come with it, such as holding down a job, paying bills, or starting a family. This can lead to a sense of entitlement and a lack of motivation to work towards long-term goals.

    Additionally, a generation that never grows up may struggle with emotional maturity and self-awareness. Without facing the challenges and experiences that come with adulthood, individuals may have difficulty navigating complex relationships, managing their emotions, and making important life decisions. This can lead to a sense of stagnation and a lack of personal growth.

    Furthermore, a generation that never grows up may struggle to find their place in the world and establish a sense of identity. Without taking on adult responsibilities and experiences, individuals may have difficulty finding their purpose and fulfilling their potential. This can lead to feelings of uncertainty, confusion, and a lack of direction in life.

    Overall, when a whole generation never grows up, it can have far-reaching implications for society as a whole. It is important for individuals to embrace the challenges and responsibilities of adulthood in order to lead fulfilling and meaningful lives.

    Tags:

    1. Generation never grows up
    2. Adulting crisis
    3. The impact of delayed maturity
    4. Peter Pan syndrome
    5. Stunted growth in millennials
    6. Social consequences of perpetual adolescence
    7. Psychological effects of extended youth
    8. Coping with a generation that refuses to grow up
    9. A world of eternal children
    10. Dealing with perpetual teenagers

    #generation #grows

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