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Leaving the bayarea for other states because of high housing cost

During the 12 months ending June 30, the number of people leaving California for another state exceeded by 61,100 the number who moved here from elsewhere in the U.S., according to state Finance Department statistics. The so-called “net outward migration” was the largest since 2011, when 63,300 more people fled California than entered.

“The main factors are housing costs in many parts of the state, including coastal regions of California such as the Bay Area,” said Dan Hamilton, director of economics with the Economic Forecasting Center at California Lutheran University in Thousand Oaks.

“California has seen negative outward migration to other states for 22 of the last 25 years.”

A recent poll revealed that an unsettling sense of yearning has descended on people in the Bay Area: About one-third of those surveyed by the Bay Area Council say they would like to exit the nine-county region sometime soon.

“They are tired of the expense of living here. They are tired of the state of California and the endless taxes here,” said Scott McElfresh, a certified moving consultant. “People are getting soaked every time they turn around.”

The area’s sizzling job market and robust economy have created a domino effect: income spikes for highly trained workers, more people packing the area’s roads, red-hot demand for housing.

What’s more, the technology boom has unleashed a hiring spree that has intensified the desire for homes anywhere near the job hubs of Santa Clara County, the East Bay and San Francisco. The South Bay job market has hit an all-time high after a 5,800-position surge in May, fueling an overall gain of 3,400 jobs for the Bay Area, according to a state labor report released Friday.

The region’s soaring housing prices are a key factor driving dissatisfied residents toward the exit door. Several people who have departed, or soon will leave, say they potentially could have hundreds of thousands of dollars left over even after buying a house in their new locations.

“They’re taking advantage of the housing bubble right now,” McElfresh said. “The majority of the people we are seeing are moving to states that don’t have state income taxes.”

Thomas Norman, of San Francisco, said he and his wife, Patricia, are seriously considering leaving the Bay Area. They have actively scouted for houses in the Rocky Mountains region, including a trip to Colorado to look for prospective homes.

“The inconvenience of the Bay Area is a major factor,” said Thomas Norman, a lifelong Bay Area resident burdened by a two-hour round-trip commute to an East Bay optometry practice. “The traffic is very bad. It is becoming more congested with all the housing that is being added here.”

Eaton, who left the South Bay to relocate near Dayton, Ohio, cited the high cost of living as a major factor driving her decision. The struggle to make ends meet became too much.

“You can’t get ahead,” Eaton said. “It’s more than the cost of living; it’s the high taxes.”

Eaton and her sister had a $724,000 house in The Villages in South San Jose that they sold before moving to Ohio. Their mortgage payments were $2,200 a month, plus $1,000 for association fees in the gated community. They were able to pay $300,000 in cash for their new home in Ohio.

Priya Govindarajan, a San Francisco resident, is planning to leave the Bay Area at the end of June and head with her husband, Ajay Patel, to North Carolina.

Govindarajan, who works in the consumer packaged goods industry, and her husband, who is in the medical profession, determined that their wages aren’t going far enough to cover their living expenses.

Living in UC San Francisco housing, the couple pays $2,100 a month in rent. And they have to cough up $1,900 a month for child care.

“My husband’s salary would be in the six figures, but six figures is not enough to cover the rent, day care (and) food prices,” Govindarajan said. “It all starts to add up.”

Govindarajan said she figures they can put down 20 percent on a nice house in North Carolina and have a monthly payment of $1,800 — which would include the mortgage, property taxes and insurance.

“I get why people want to live in the Bay Area, I really do,” Govindarajan said. “But it is so difficult to live here, especially for people coming here for the first time.”

Some experts believe the boom in the Bay Area has exacerbated the problem of income inequality and the resentment that can accompany that economic reality.

“There is a declining middle class in the Bay Area,” said Christopher Hoene, executive director of the California Budget & Policy Center, a research group that recently completed a study about income inequality in Silicon Valley. “Widening income inequality can create polarization socially and economically.”

In 1989, the middle class accounted for 56 percent of all households in Silicon Valley, but by 2013, that share had slipped to 45.7 percent, the study found.

“The region’s middle class has shrunk, while the numbers of lower-income and higher-income households has grown,” the report stated. Silicon Valley, for the purposes of the study, consists of Santa Clara County, San Mateo County and San Francisco.

Lower-income residents accounted for 30.3 percent of Silicon Valley’s households in 1989, and that number grew to 34.8 percent in 2013. Upper-income residents had 13.7 percent of the share of households in 1989, and that figure swelled to 19.5 percent in 2013, the study found.

“A lot of middle-class jobs have vaporized,” said Russell Hancock, president of San Jose-based Joint Venture Silicon Valley. “The support positions, the assembly line positions, the jobs that paid the middle class — a lot of those have gone away.”

A big chunk of the jobs that are being created in the Bay Area are in the high-tech sector, which requires specialized skill sets to fill them. When jobs that would cater to the middle class wane, that can force people to relocate — in many cases, out of the Bay Area entirely.

“This summer, I have booked more business than in any of the other 27 years that I’ve been working,” said McElfresh, the moving consultant. “People are packing up and leaving.”

Eaton, while happy to have escaped the high cost of living and traffic, recently found herself longing for one Bay Area staple — its mild weather.

“There’s a huge thunderstorm overhead,” Eaton said while talking to a reporter. “Got to get used to that, I guess.”

Contact George Avalos at 408-859-5167. Follow him at Twitter.com/georgeavalos

 

Trump is doing to the Republican Party what he did to Atlantic City casino, a failure

WASHINGTON — Not long ago, Donald Trump set a $1 billion fundraising goal for his presidential battle against Hillary Clinton. Now he says there’s “no reason” to raise that …

Source: Trump is doing to the Republican Party what he did to Atlantic City casino, a failure

Trump is doing to the Republican Party what he did to Atlantic City casino, a failure

WASHINGTON — Not long ago, Donald Trump set a $1 billion fundraising goal for his presidential battle against Hillary Clinton.

Now he says there’s “no reason” to raise that much, and his operatives fear they will struggle to raise even $300 million. He brought in only $3.1 million in May to Clinton’s $27 million, leaving him with $1.3 million in the bank to her $42 million.

He has virtually no campaign apparatus, has sacked his campaign manager and has one-tenth Clinton’s staff. Yet he managed to spend more than $1 million in payments in May to Trump companies and in travel reimbursements to his family members.

Republicans are panicky, for good reason. We have seen this movie before. It’s called the Trump Taj Mahal Atlantic City.

In that, the first of his enterprises’ four bankruptcies, he convinced regulators he could raise plenty of money to complete the $1 billion project, claiming his golden name meant he wouldn’t have to rely on high-interest junk bonds, as other developers did. But then he issued junk bonds. Gamblers didn’t show up and spend the money he needed. Costs got out of control. Six months after the Taj opened in April 1990, it was in default, and nine months after that it went bankrupt, followed by two other Trump casinos.

The former head of the casino regulatory authority told The Washington Post’s Robert O’Harrow Jr. that Trump had built a “Potemkin village.” Atlantic City never quite recovered, but Trump came out fine. He told O’Harrow: “I got out great.”

Now Trump is doing to the Republican Party what he did to Atlantic City.

Substitute voters for gamblers, “contributors” for bankers and the Republican Party for gambling regulators, and the arc has been eerily similar. Call it the Taj Technique.

Trump did well at first, winning control of the Taj — much as he won the primaries — with what one regulator called a blend of “hyperbole, contradictions and generalities,” making grand promises that his name alone guaranteed success. He threatened to walk away from the project if he didn’t get full ownership — not unlike his threat to bolt the GOP if he didn’t secure the nomination. The massive resort got brisk business at first because of the free publicity Trump generated — much as he benefited from free publicity during the primaries.

 

But once he gained full ownership of the Taj, he quickly failed in his vow to secure prime lending, just as he quickly abandoned his fundraising goals after locking down the nomination. Then, as now, he made sure the Taj generated money for other Trump businesses. Then, as now, he alienated many who had supported him, and regulators suspected deception — but they continued to support his ownership of the floundering casino (much as GOP leaders support his nomination) because they were already in too deep.

 

It’s worth rereading O’Harrow’s definitive January account of the Taj Mahal bankruptcy. The tale of overpromising and underdelivering will sound familiar to those who watched Trump’s triumph in the primaries and subsequent swoon.

 Trump had based his purchase of the Taj on a basic untruth: He didn’t need junk bonds. “I can build at the prime rate,” he told regulators. “I mean, the banks call me all the time. ‘Can we loan you money?'” He said, “It’s easier to finance if Donald Trump owns it.”

 But Trump blithely walked away from this pledge, claiming this year that doing so was his “prerogative” and that “I would do it again.”

 Trump ignored stark and repeated warnings that he would not be able to attract enough gamblers to pay the bills — just as many warned last year that Trump’s coalition of angry white men was not large enough to win a general election.

 Trump expanded the Taj into the biggest, costliest casino ever built at the time. He got fired a securities analyst who warned, correctly, that after the initial “free publicity,” the Taj “won’t make it.”

 The analyst was correct, and Trump ultimately had to sell his yacht and give up some casino interests. But his investors, large and small, suffered the most, and Atlantic City didn’t rebound the way Trump did.

 Now that Trump has clinched the nomination with outlandish promises and free publicity, polls show that the “market” isn’t there for his mix of bigotry and strongman promises. Donors are fleeing, and party officials would like to cut him loose but could lose even more if they abandoned him now.

 In short, the promissory notes are coming due, and Trump doesn’t have the cash to back up his big boasts.

 Dana Milbank is a Washington Post columnist.

 

Why do the elderly get a lot of medical conditions?

Why do the elderly get a lot of medical conditions? by Connie b. Dellobuono

Answer by Connie b. Dellobuono:

As we age, we are not efficient in cleansing or detoxing or getting rid of accumulated toxins in our body, coming from lack of exercise, sleep, whole food nutrients, so much stress and poor innate immunity (inborn immunity as we are nourished before conception, when inside the womb and the first 7years of our lives). Clean air, water and food (we have relied on canned processed foods, moldy food) and been over medicated. Most diseases are caused by being over medicated, one of the toxins of our livers. So dance, laugh often, use oil and herbs for aches and healing, sleep more, drink and eat whole foods and share your blessings with others. Connie of http://www.clubalhea.com , a senior concierge team in the bay area – soon in a mobile app with health monitoring. Your collaboration in any form is much appreciated.

Why do the elderly get a lot of medical conditions?

How big a threat is Facebook to LinkedIn over the next 2–3 years — given Facebook’s new public Intro / Describe Who You Are sections of p…

How big a threat is Facebook to LinkedIn over the next 2–3 years — given Facebook’s new pub… by Connie b. Dellobuono

Answer by Connie b. Dellobuono:

By engagement, Facebook users are more engaged every minute because of fun videos.
By current stocks, Facebook stock is positive posted today while LinkedIn is negative.
By search profile, both are in page one of Google results.
By happiness factor of employees, Facebook employees are more happy.
By CEO factor, Facebook CEO is more community sharing conscious.
By recruiters, more recruiters and real estate pros are in LinkedIn.
In the end, the future gen or millenials are flocking to Facebook. So in 3 years, as more companies are hiring younger gen than older gen, Facebook will be a threat to LinkedIn. Already more millenials are not using LinkedIn when searching for jobs.

How big a threat is Facebook to LinkedIn over the next 2–3 years — given Facebook’s new public Intro / Describe Who You Are sections of p…

How do you get rid of red lines around the stomach?

How do you get rid of red lines around the stomach? by Connie b. Dellobuono

Answer by Connie b. Dellobuono:

Liver detox and Vitamin C might help with red lines around the stomach. I have stretch marks and I use coconut oil for massage. Here is the info in WedMD that might not be related but for info only.
You may not have symptoms in the early stages of cirrhosis. As it gets worse, it can cause a number of symptoms, including:
• Fatigue.
•Small red spots and tiny lines on the skin called spider angiomas.
•Bruising easily.
•Heavy nosebleeds.
• Weight loss.
•Yellowing of the skin (jaundice).
• Itching.
•Swelling from fluid buildup in the legs (edema) and the abdomen (ascites).
•Bleeding from enlarged veins in the digestive tract.
•Confusion.
Source:
http://www.webmd.com/digestive-disorders/tc/cirrhosis-topic-overview

How do you get rid of red lines around the stomach?

Kidney disease and Rheumatoid arthritis

Rheumatoid arthritis patients are likelier than the average person to develop chronic kidney disease, and more severe inflammation in the first year of rheumatoid arthritis, corticosteroid use, high blood pressure and obesity are among the risk factors, new Mayo Clinic research shows. Physicians should test rheumatoid arthritis patients periodically for signs of kidney problems, and patients should work to keep blood pressure under control, avoid a high-salt diet, and eliminate or scale back medications damaging to the kidneys, says senior author Eric Matteson, M.D., Mayo rheumatology chair. The study is published in the American Journal of Kidney Diseases, the National Kidney Foundation journal.

Researchers studied 813 Mayo Clinic patients with rheumatoid arthritis and 813 without it. They found that over a 20-year period, people with rheumatoid arthritis have a 1 in 4 chance of developing chronic kidney disease, compared with the general population’s 1-in-5 risk.

“That might not seem like a lot, but in fact that’s quite a big difference, and it has important implications for the course of rheumatoid arthritis and for the management of the disease,” Dr. Matteson says.

In addition, heart disease is more common in rheumatoid arthritis patients who have chronic kidney disease, he adds.

Factors contributing to a higher kidney disease risk for rheumatoid arthritis patients include use of corticosteroids such as prednisone and cortisone; a higher “sed rate” — a blood test that measures inflammation — in the first year of rheumatoid arthritis; obesity; hypertension; and dyslipidemia, abnormally high cholesterol in the blood, according to the study.

There are currently no medical guidelines specifically for the management of chronic kidney disease in rheumatoid arthritis, says Dr. Matteson, adding that he hopes the research will make physicians more alert to the risk of kidney disease in rheumatoid arthritis and lead to guidelines.

Dr. Matteson recommends that physicians be careful about the medications they give people with rheumatoid arthritis, to reduce the risk of medication-induced kidney disease. Rheumatoid arthritis patients should have blood tests and urine analysis once a year or more often to detect kidney problems, depending on the medications they are taking and on other conditions such as diabetes and high blood pressure they may have, he says.

“Kidney disease in patients with rheumatoid arthritis can be detected very simply, and the techniques are the same as are used in the general population,” Dr. Matteson says.

To reduce their risk of developing kidney disease, patients should be attentive to their blood pressure and keep it under control, maintain a diet that isn’t high in salt; avoid or reduce use of medications that are directly toxic to the kidneys; including nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; and get their rheumatoid arthritis and inflammation under as good of control as possible, he adds.

More research is planned to understand contributors to kidney disease in rheumatoid arthritis and how to intervene to reduce the risk, Dr. Matteson says.

Story Source:

The above post is reprinted from materials provided by Mayo Clinic. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.

Journal Reference:

1.LaTonya J. Hickson, Cynthia S. Crowson, Sherine E. Gabriel, James T. McCarthy, Eric L. Matteson. Development of Reduced Kidney Function in Rheumatoid Arthritis. American Journal of Kidney Diseases, 2014; 63 (2): 206 DOI: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2013.08.010

 

 

 

 

Mayo Clinic. “Vigilance for kidney problems key for rheumatoid arthritis patients, study finds.” ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 10 April 2014. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/04/140410083339.htm>.

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