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Some City of Detroit Offices Closed on May 20 for Budget-Required Furlough

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Some City of Detroit Offices Closed on May 20 for Budget-Required Furlough

  Some City of Detroit offices will be closed on Monday, May 20 for budget-required furlough (BRF): ·        Board of Ethics ·        City Council ·        Communications & Creative Services Division & Total Copy Center ·        Detroit Building Authority ·        Greater Detroit Resource Recovery Authority (GDRRA) ·        Human Resources (with the exception of Payroll Division) ·        Human Rights ·        Mayor’s Office ·        Purchasing Division (Finance Department) ·        Recreation (Administration, Recreation Centers & Community Affairs) However, these departments will be open on May 20: ·        Buildings, Safety Engineering and Environmental Department (BSEED) ·        Department of Public Works ·        Finance Department (Income Tax, Assessments, Property Tax & Treasury) ·        Planning & Development Department

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LAST MOTOR CITY MAKEOVER CLEANUP IS IN THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHWEST AREAS ON S…

Community 05-17-2013 Hits:76 Michigan Chronicle Staff - avatar Michigan Chronicle Staff

LAST MOTOR CITY MAKEOVER CLEANUP IS IN THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHWEST AREAS ON SATURDAY, MAY 18

  Volunteers are invited to join hundreds of others cleaning and beautifying neighborhoods throughout the central and southwest sides of Detroit on Saturday, May 18, as Motor City Makeover moves into its last weekend. Motor City Makeover is a bagged litter campaign that encourages volunteers to participate in a citywide cleanup by sector. The campaign is part of a larger City initiative called Keep Detroit Beautiful, which focuses on cleaning, beautification, recycling, adopting parks and vacant lots, and gardening. Below are some of the many sites being cleaned on Saturday, May 18. Henry Ford Hospital Contact: Meagan Pitts-Dunn (313) 475-3993 Chauncey Samuel, Recreation Community Affairs Manager, (313) 207-8416 Location: Martin Luther King Jr. Park at W. Grand Boulevard & Rosa Parks Time: 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. Volunteers: 50+ Northend Neighbors Contact person: Phillis Judkins (313)815-1440 Location: Northeast Corner of Kenilworth & Brush/West corner of Josephine and Owens Streets Time: 9 a.m. – Noon Volunteers - 100 Focus:HOPE Contact Person: Mary Simpson (313) 492-4292 Location: 2146 Oakman Blvd., 3406 Ewald Circle at Fullerton St. Volunteers: 50 Time: 10 a.m. – 1 p.m. Mariners Inn Contact Person: Kyle Hocker (313) 215-6961 Location: Cass Park (located between Temple, Ledyard, 2nd & 3rd streets) Time: 10 a.m. – 1 p.m. Volunteers: 200 Mc Graw Resource Center 6900 Wagner (Vacant Lot) Contact: Raquel de Whitt (248) 842-0302 Volunteers: 30 - 50 Time: 9 a.m. – 1 p.m. Patton Recreation Center Contact: Ninfa Cancel, Recreation Community Affairs Manager, (313) 283-8252 Karla Williamson, Patton Center Supervisor, (313) 600-3555 Location: 2301 Woodmere off Vernor Hwy. (Park cleanup, graffiti removal & painting bleachers) Time: 9 a.m. – 2 p.m. Volunteers: 80-120 This Saturday is the last Motor City Makeover cleanup. There is still time for residents, business owners, houses of worship, block clubs, and schools to: · Call (313) 224-3450 to register to join the cleanup effort or register online at www.MotorCityMakeover.org. · Clean the area around their home, business, house of worship, or school on the Saturday designated for their sector. · Organize their neighborhoods or their...

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City of Detroit is insolvent

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City of Detroit is insolvent

by Chris Isidore The Detroit city government is weeks away from running out of the cash it needs to operate, according to an initial report from the emergency manager overseeing its finances. The report from Kevyn Orr, the bankruptcy attorney appointed by the state in March, lays out a bleak financial position for the city. "The city has effectively exhausted its ability to borrow," he writes in the report, adding that the city "is clearly insolvent." To avoid running out of cash before the end of its fiscal year on June 30, it must "defer payments on its current obligations," including more than $100 million in pension payments that are due. "No one should underestimate the severity of the financial crisis," Orr said in a statement. "The path Detroit has followed for more than 40 years is unsustainable and only a complete restructuring of the city's finances and operations will allow Detroit to regain its footing." He said this report was a baseline from which to develop that restructuring plan. It does not use the term "bankruptcy," but Orr hasn't ruled that out. Detroit is struggling under at least $15 billion in debt, due to years of borrowing to pay its bills as tax revenues plummeted. The population of the city has fallen by nearly 30 percent since 2012, and there are currently over 100,000 vacant lots and buildings. Together, this has meant a drastic drop in revenue from both income and property taxes. Detroit is struggling to come up with annual debt payments of about $246 million, which eat up almost 20 percent of the its general fund budget. Orr says the city needs relief from the money it owes, suggesting that investors holding its debt could end up taking haircuts. But investors won't be the only ones hit by Orr's efforts to restructure the city's finances. He...

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New Wall Street threat to homeownership

Community 05-17-2013 Hits:229 Stella J. Adams, NNPA - avatar Stella J. Adams, NNPA

New Wall Street threat to homeownership

  by Stella J. Adams (NNPA)—Private-equity firms, hedge funds and other Wall Street investors are seeking to develop a Real Estate Owned (REO)– to- Rent Securitization Market with the blessing of the FED and FHFA. A year ago, the Federal Reserve Board issued a policy statement on rental of REO owned by the banks they supervise and allowed the banks to rent REO properties without requiring them to demonstrate continuous efforts to market the properties. Last fall, FHFA initiated a "pilot" REO bulk sale program in urban markets across the nation. This munificence by the federal regulators will change the course of America's future and signals the abandonment of homeownership as a pathway to prosperity. Single-family rental properties have attracted more than $10 billion from equity firms, hedge funds, REITs and institutional investors. According to Goldman Sachs Group Inc., this market may attract a total of $2.8 trillion in capital investments in the not so distant future. The government's encouragement of this new housing market is fraught with potential societal and economic risks to the long-term health of our neighborhoods and our nation. As a fair housing professional, I am concerned that this allows the Wall Street predators to once again prey upon urban and inner-ring suburban communities across the country. These new investors in the rental housing market may not be aware that they are covered under Section 805 of the Federal Fair Housing Act and its implementing regulations. As a homeowner, I am concerned that there may be homes on my block or in my community that are owned by Wall Street firms that have shown no accountability for maintaining the properties they have acquired. A judge recently denied Deutsche Bank AG's bid to dismiss a lawsuit by the city of Los Angeles, accusing it of letting hundreds of foreclosed properties fall into...

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Powerball jackpot 3rd largest in U.S. history

Top News 05-17-2013 Hits:264 CNN - avatar CNN

Powerball jackpot 3rd largest in U.S. history

The odds of winning the Powerball jackpot are 1 in 175 million. STORY HIGHLIGHTS No one matched winning numbers in Wednesday night's Powerball drawing The jackpot for Saturday's drawing will be at least $550 million Largest jackpot in U.S. history was $656 million in Mega Millions game in 2012 (CNN) -- The Powerball jackpot for Saturday's drawing will be at least $550 million, the third largest lottery jackpot in U.S. history, after no one matched the winning numbers in Wednesday night's draw. Wednesday's jackpot in the multistate lottery was $360 million. The numbers were 2, 11, 26, 34 and 41 with a Powerball of 32. Saturday's jackpot will be the second largest in the history of the Powerball game, behind a $587.6 million jackpot that was split by winners in Arizona and Missouri in November. The largest lottery jackpot in U.S. history was $656 million in the Mega Millions game in March 2012. That was split by three tickets sold in Illinois, Kansas and Maryland. The Powerball game is played in 43 states, the District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands. A single ticket costs $2, and the odds of winning the jackpot are 1 in 175 million. And if that's a little too pricey for you, a Mega Millions ticket will cost you only $1. The jackpot for Friday's Mega Millions drawing will be at least $190 million, and the odds are the same, 1 in 175 million. Mega Millions is played in 42 states, the District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Jackpots in both games are based on payouts as annuities over 30 years. Players can choose a cash payout that will be less.

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U.S. options to 'capture or kill' Benghazi suspects [Video]

Top News 05-17-2013 Hits:97 By Barbara Starr - avatar By Barbara Starr

U.S. options to 'capture or kill' Benghazi suspects [Video]

      The U.S. military has updated plans to "capture or kill" alleged perpetrators of the deadly terror attack on the American diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, CNN has learned.   The development comes amid growing pressure on the White House to show progress in the effort to catch those who killed Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans last September 11. Officials emphasize that military planning has been underway since the immediate aftermath of the armed assault. One part of the plan calls for potentially putting U.S. military personnel on the ground inside Libya, if ordered by President Barack Obama. Two U.S. officials confirmed the details to CNN, but declined to be named because of the sensitive nature of the information. The plan was updated and discussed at the highest levels of the military as recently as last week. The military has a list of several targets including some inside Benghazi and others in outlying areas. There are specific individuals named who are believed associated with the Benghazi attack as well other militants the United States wants to get. There are also militant camps or stronghold areas on the list that could be attacked. The plan has series of "capture or kill" options that Obama would have to approve. It's not known how much of this he may have been briefed about. One military official said the military is well aware that if it is ordered into action now by the White House, it could be viewed as a political move in light of the ongoing controversy over Benghazi. But he noted that initial planning began shortly after the attack last year. Special operations forces have stayed in the North Africa region since the attack in varying numbers to collect intelligence and be ready to launch attacks if ordered. CNN has been asked to not say where those forces are located. Officials are...

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FEDERAL CANCER RESEARCH FUNDING CRISIS THREATENS DETROIT, NATION

bobweinerForty years ago, the Nation Declared a War on Cancer. Now, “Funding is in crisis,” Dr. Judy Garber, outgoing President of the American Association for Cancer Research, told the 18,000 scientists gathered at their national convention in Chicago last week. Jon Retzlaff, Director of Science Policy & Government Affairs, added that the “price index places the National Cancer Institute’s budget 20% below its real dollars in 2003.” The impact: “Things are having to slow down…. We cannot support the fantastic research” that has improved survival from cancer by over 30% the last three decades.

 

As the government keeps funding two foreign wars and ongoing tax breaks, curing diseases like cancer is being threatened in the budget process. In both the State of the Union and Budget Message, President Obama promised investment in biomedical research. However, the House budget just passed (the Ryan-Rodgers budget endorsed by now-presumptive Presidential nominee Mitt Romney) reduces NIH research by so-called “flat funding” for three straight years. While making hard budget choices, the nation is almost schizophrenic between cuts and necessary programs. With the economy still in crisis, the private sector does not have the ability to make up the difference.

 

DRPATBERGCOLORA recently published Avon Foundation-funded study by Steven Whitman, Jennifer Orsi, and Marc Hurlburt points to race and poverty as primary factors for disproportionately high cancer mortality figures, and Detroit is affected by both. Whereas the national African-American cancer mortality is 1.4 times the Caucasian rate, in Detroit, with the highest poverty among the nation’s 25 largest cities, the ratio is 1:1. The researchers said that Detroit’s median family income of $29,109 is the lowest among the 25 largest cities and that poverty and resulting “access to care” are among “likely explanations” for high cancer rates. The article, “Racial Disparity in Breast Cancer Mortality in the 25 Largest Cities in the U.S.”, is in Cancer Epidemiology (April 2012).

 

Research cuts mean ongoing cancer deaths. One in two men and one in three women will develop cancer in their lifetime according to the National Cancer Institute. There are 1.5 million new cancer cases and 570,000 deaths annually in the U.S. There are over 200,060 new breast cancer patients and 40,000 deaths each year.

 

Thanks to successful laboratory research, a woman's risk of dying of breast cancer has now dropped 31 percent since 1989. Dr. Francis Collins, Director of the National Institute of Health (NIH) told the National Press Club, “There is a direct line from NIH research to the life-span increases” in America. Despite these breakthroughs, the U.S. now ranks 49th in life expectancy, right above Taiwan, Kuwait, Cyprus, Cuba, Panama, and Costa Rica.

 

Just while such clear breakthroughs are being made—and with breast cancer still ranking as the number one fear for women – now is no time to stop the train and cut funding.

 

If government funding does drop or stalemate, cutting-edge researchers will have to seek even more funding from private foundations and corporations, trying to fill the void.

 

And they do try. The Avon Foundation has donated nearly a Billion dollars to breast cancer education, research, and prevention since 1992, and 200 million to research in the last decade. Avon expedites tests and advancement of cutting-edge discoveries with significant diagnosis and treatment potential like BP1, a gene expressed in the tumors of 80% of women with breast cancer and 70% of men with prostate cancer – and showing disproportionately high numbers for African-American women with breast cancer. Komen and the Susan Love Foundation also help make up the difference. In the world’s wealthiest nation, with hard-to-explain government funding cuts, private industries are scrambling to fund life-saving research.

 

Dr. William Grizzle, Professor of Pathology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and Senior editor of Clinical Cancer Research, says that because of the recent standstill, “We are 5-8 years in arrears” in developing better therapies. “If there is less money for research, it means there are fewer cures,” Garber points out.

 

One of President Obama’s key lieutenants, Cong. Debbie Wasserman-Schultz of Florida’s 20th District, a breast cancer survivor, won the 2011 AACR Distinguished Public service award. However, the military’s insistence on maintaining old unending wars and the House insistence on health research budget cuts make the objectives difficult no matter how many heroic warriors research has.

 

The future of the new national health care law, which provides free mammograms and colonoscopies that detect cancer early when it is more curable and could catch Stage I cancers before they develop into Stage IV, is also under fire. The future is uncertain.

 

Regrettably, too many scientists are shy about helping their mission. Sridhar Ramaswamy, Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Cancer Center, told us at the AACR convention, “Scientists think if they press for money it’s self-serving.” But not all are shy. Dr. Steven Meltzer, Professor of Medicine and Oncology at Johns Hopkins University, has led two national petition drives with thousands of signatures calling for a 10% increase in NIH funding and arguing, “Don’t let the United States fail in biomedical research.”

 

Under President Clinton and under the Obama stimulus, NIH’s budget doubled, but efforts to maintain the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars and the political insistence on tax cuts are now causing medical research to be sliced – and lives with them.

 

To keep the breakthroughs and research going strong, the public must support cancer research foundations -- and press Congress to halt its efforts to dry up federal research dollars. If we want to fight cancer, and win, there is no substitute for the federal catalyst.

 

Dr. Patricia Berg is director of a breast cancer research laboratory and Professor at George Washington University Medical Center.

Robert Weiner, is a former White House spokesman, former Chief of Staff for the House Aging Committee and Health Subcommittee, and former spokesman for the House Government Operations Committee under Chairman Cong. John Conyers (Detroit).

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