Health Tips

June 30, 2011

Glendale Keeps Throwing Money After Sports

Filed under: Health Care — Nancy @ 1:58 pm -0700

I have no idea why this town of 250,000 people is so fired up to hand money over to sports enterprises.  This time, its a Superbowl bid:

Glendale is throwing its support behind a regional bid to bring Super Bowl XLIX to the city in 2015.

In return for the prestige of hosting the National Football League game at University of Phoenix Stadium, Glendale must guarantee services such as public safety and sanitation for free and exempt game-day tickets from sales tax for the NFL.

When Glendale hosted its first Super Bowl in 2008, it saw $1.2 million boost in sales-tax revenue. But a city-commissioned study showed it cost the city $2.6 million in services.

The City Council on a 5-2 vote Tuesday approved the resolution. Councilwomen Joyce Clark and Norma Alvarez dissented.

Councilman Phil Lieberman asked for Glendale’s cost to host the Super Bowl in 2015, but Deputy City Manager Cathy Gorham said she didn’t want to speculate because “things change on a regular basis.” The needs in 2015 may be much different from 2008, she said.

These guys are beyond parody. We lost money last time so lets do it again, and by the way lets be sure not to estimate our costs before we make this decision.  Here is a bit more:

Clark said the NFL’s demands grow more “invasive” every year.

Clark ticked off requirements such as use of the stadium for nearly two months, final cleaning of the stadium and equipment as needed for free. The NFL doesn’t pay state or local levies such as payroll, sales, use and occupancy taxes.

Clark cited two former host cities, Arlington, Texas and Miami Gardens, Fla., which did not shoulder the costs of a Super Bowl. In both those cities, the states stepped in and reimbursed them, Clark said. She said that communities that hosted the NFL game didn’t see “big spikes” in their tax revenues.

“The city of Glendale should not be expected to pay the Super Bowl’s costs without recompense when it benefits the entire region,” she said. “We are at a disadvantage because the NFL is hosting in our city.”

Alvarez, an ardent opponent of using taxpayer money for professional sports, said the city was in no position to be spending money for the Super Bowl with the economic crisis. She said she couldn’t face her constituents if she supported the resolution when there are unmet community needs and employees are still taking unpaid days off.

Note the only alternative suggested – the alternative is not “let’s not do this, it makes no sense” but “let’s make sure we stick the costs on a larger group of taxpayers.

More articles on Glendale and sports subsidies here.

from: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/CoyoteBlog/~3/gx-zsiTwsys/glendale-keeps-throwing-money-after-sports.html

Share/Bookmark

Belfast, Northern Ireland — Belfast, United Kingdom

Filed under: Health Care — Nancy @ 1:42 pm -0700

Belfast, United Kingdom



A lovely bright sunny day, at the beginning. We are learning that we need to be out and about early to take advantage of what good weather there is.

This morning we took a bus tour of Belfast. So Tom could better take photos we sat upstairs in the open. We hope you appreciate the photos that we suffered to take. It was berry cold there. After the tour we returned to our room to thaw out before going to a local café to get our Internet “fix” with our cups of tea and coffee then venturing out to explore Belfast, and for Tom to take more photos. With the weather now cold and wet, we settled for an early night “at home”.

from: http://www.travelpod.com/travel-blog-entries/tomodea/4/1309462423/tpod.html

Share/Bookmark

Reader Consult: Could Text Messages Help You Quit Smoking?

Filed under: Health Care — Nancy @ 1:13 pm -0700

A smoking habit is so hard to break that it doesn’t seem possible that a series of simple encouraging text messages could help in any significant way.

But a study of wannabe quitters published by the Lancet suggests that those messages act like a little electronic Jiminy Cricket, doubling the quit rate compared to people who received texts unrelated to quitting. Of 2,911 smokers randomly assigned to the no-smoking texts, 10.7% were abstinent six months out. Only 4.9% of the 2,881 smokers getting texts unrelated to quitting did so.

People got five text messages daily for the first five weeks and then three per week for the next six months, the study says.

Other studies have also found a positive effect from text messages, but the authors (led by researchers from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine) say this is the first to actually verify whether people had quit by testing saliva for a byproduct of nicotine called cotinine.

The texts worked equally well among older and younger people, and among people of different socioeconomic groups.

The mystery is why they worked, the authors write. One hypothesis, that the no-smoking texts encourage people to use smoking-cessation services at greater rates, wasn’t borne out, for example. And the messages weren’t anything that you couldn’t get from other stop-smoking programs; they helped prepare people for quitting, and after the quit date, offered tips for reducing cravings or getting back on track after a lapse.

However it works, text messages are pretty easy to scale up and are likely to be very cost-effective because they’re so inexpensive. As the authors of a comment published alongside the article write, mobile phones are also widely available in the developing countries where smoking rates are particularly high.

Readers, do you think text messages could help you quit?


from: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/wsj/health/feed/~3/jPoYyeG9nh0/

Share/Bookmark

« First...«567891011121314»...Last »

Copyright © 2009 ChinaFinancialNews.com; Powered by WordPress