“Save Airbnb in New York!” Activist Group Delivers Petition With 230,000+ Signatures

A delegation of thirty-six pro-Airbnb activists dropped by the
office of New
York State Senator Liz Krueger (D)
this Pro-Airbnb Activists drop off a petition with NY State Sen. Liz Krueger ||| Photo by David Medeiros, courtesy of Peers.afternoon to deliver a petition
with over 230,000 signatures asking that she help make it
explicitly legal for New Yorkers to rent out their spare rooms
through the popular short-term
rental site
. The group then broke off into groups and met with
Krueger Chief of Staff Brad Usher, who displayed some
“defensiveness,” according to one participant, but said that the
senator would be open to “looking at the law.”

Sen. Krueger sponsored a 2010
bill
to make it illegal for landlords to rent their apartments
through sites like Airbnb. The city’s administrative code allows
individuals to rent rooms in their apartments on a short-term
basis, but only if they’re at home at the same time as their
guests. The law is also ambiguous on several points, including
whether Airbnb hosts are responsible for collecting hotel taxes—an
issue that became a cause for alarm when New York State The group is greeted by Brad Usher, Sen. Krueger's chief of staff ||| Photo by David Medeiros, courtesy of Peers.Attorney General Eric
Schneiderman issued a subpoena in October, requiring Airbnb to hand
over a detailed list of all its hosts statewide, their bookings,
and how much money they’ve earned.

Krueger press officer Andrew Goldston says the senator “is
always open to having discussions about improving the law.” 
But recently Krueger took a hard line against Airbnb,
stating
that the company is putting New Yorkers “in the line of
fire by recruiting them to feed its business model and participate
in what is essentially a black market.” While “some may call that
‘paradigm-breaking’ or ‘disruptive’,” Krueger said, “ultimately,
it’s just irresponsible and greedy.”

The petition drive is part of
a week of activism
aimed at liberalizing the laws governing
short-term rentals in New York City, which is spearheaded by
Peers, a self-described
“member-driven organization that supports the sharing economy
movement.” The group recently played a pivotal role in defeating a
bill in Grand Rapids, Michigan that would have made it a
misdemeanor for residents to advertise on Airbnb.

I wrote about
New York’s Petty War on Airbnb
for The Daily Beast in
October, and Naomi Brockwell and I covered the story
for Reason TV:

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/10/save-airbnb-in-new-york-activist-group-d
via IFTTT

Matthew Feeney Discusses Scrapping the Welfare State and Giving People Free Money on Wisconsin Public Radio

I will be on Wisconsin Public Radio at at
5:45pm ET talking about
my article
on the guaranteed national income where I argued
that giving everyone free money is preferable to the welfare system
currently in place. 

Listen live here.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/10/matthew-feeney-discusses-scrapping-the-w
via IFTTT

Thank you, church musicians

Yes, as Christmas approaches, let’s take a moment to stop and thank all of you church musicians for all the wonderful blessings you add to our celebration of Christ’s birth. Without the music of the faith which you bring us, we surely confess that the season would be something far less meaningful than it is. And certainly you bless us all year long in every season and occasion with your precious gifts of sacred music.

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/blogs/justin-kollmeyer/12-10-2013/thank-you-church-musicians

Evensong service set for tonight at Nativity Episcopal

Evensong, a musical setting of the Book of Common Prayer service of Evening Prayer, will be presented at 7 p.m. today (Wednesday, Dec. 11) at the Church of the Nativity, located at 130 Antioch Rd., just off Ga. Hwy. 85, south of downtown Fayetteville.

The Nativity church choir, directed by Charlesworth Gordon, will lead the service. Immediately afterward, everyone is invited to attend a continuation of Wednesday evening discussions on the relation of Biblical texts to the Handel oratorio, Messiah.

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/12-10-2013/evensong-service-set-tonight-nativity-episcopal

Hay accepts call to First Presbyterian in Peachtree City

The Rev. Morgan Morse Hay has been called to serve as senior pastor at First Presbyterian Church in Peachtree City.

Hay is a cum laude graduate of Presbyterian College in Clinton, S.C. She received her master of divinity degree from Columbia Theological Seminary in Decatur and previously served as associate pastor of St. Andrews Presbyterian Church in Tucker.

Phil Hamilton, chairman of the Pastor Nominating Committee (PNC), said, “The PNC went through a process of comparing the candidates’ strengths with the needs of the church. Pastor Hay ranked highest in every area.”

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/12-10-2013/hay-accepts-call-first-presbyterian-peachtree-city

Jim Hendricks will appear in concert at Peachtree City UMC

Pianist Jim Hendricks will be in concert at Peachtree City United Methodist Church on Sunday, Dec. 15 at 7 p.m. Admission is free. The concert is open to the public.

Hendricks intrigued musicians and family members as a child with the uncanny ability to play anything he heard on records and memorize any printed music that came across the piano. While still in grammar school, he was able to transcribe by ear complex harmonies and melodies — without the use of a piano. He continued intensive musical studies and was considered a professional as a teenager.

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/12-10-2013/jim-hendricks-will-appear-concert-peachtree-city-umc

Wall Streeter's Lament Volcker Rule: "Liquidity Is About To Be Sacrificed At The Altar Of Ignorance & Fear"

Another perspective on the Volcker Rule via Colin Burgess of Sterling International

It is no secret that the banks have fought very hard to prevent Volcker from taking effect but it looks suspiciously as though it is now game over and the industry in which we are working will, if it is introduced in the format which is proposed, never be the same again.

I am still of the generation which came into banking because we were not smart enough to get a proper job. The cream of the graduate population either competed for a slot on the British Antarctic Survey or for one of the highly prized positions as a graduate trainee in marketing with one of the principal consumer or pharma groups. The big queues at the graduate job fairs were at the stands for Shell, BP, Unilever, Proctor and Gamble, Coca Cola or Kodak. Banking was for those left over and who neither wanted to join the army or enter the church. Bank shares were for boring pension funds and figured somewhere with utilities, in as much as any of those were listed and not still in public ownership.

Luckily for me, I defaulted into a twenty five year period when banking lit up like shooting star. Deregulation of markets and the creation of so called “products” based on mathematical modelling drove the industry forward and even the smallest boats rose with the tide. Wall Street and the City found themselves full of people who believed that they were worth what they were being paid and the queue of those who wanted a part of it stretched all the way to Oxford and Cambridge and to New Haven and the other Cambridge. If you had a PhD in astro-physics or theoretical chemistry, you simply had to be perfectly qualified to advance in banking. My degree in politics and modern history might have helped me get a slot on the reception desk, no more.

Alas, the growth of the derivative markets along with relatively generous capital rules helped to boost bank earnings and with that their ability to lend. Lending led to growth which fostered further lending and further growth and the miracle of rising living standards which took off in the late 70s/early 80s under Reagan and Thatcher but which was funded more by easy borrowing as it was by higher productivity was up and running.

“Ordinary people” could aspire to possessions they had never been able to dream of before and in their hubris they never appreciated how much they were paying in fees and interest in order to buy the goodies they packed into the house which, in the end, they bought as well.

The culture of estimating how much debt service one could afford was born and with it the culture of worrying how one could ever repay what one had borrowed died. And the banks, bless them, encouraged the nonsense. That’s right; if you don’t ask borrowers to repay, you reduce the risk of default. Simples!

The entire socio-economic model is now built on this and, whether right or wrong, it demands a very different sort of banking that the “pay 3% on deposits and lend them at 5%” kind of industry which I came into and which prevailed until the late 1970s or early 1980s.

Volcker seemingly wants to go back to the world he oversaw as Chairman of the Federal Reserve but Pandora’s Box has been opened and it can’t be sensibly closed, post factum. Bond markets are not equity markets and they don’t always have buyers and sellers afoot. Bonds tend to be all bid or all ask and the efficiency of the market is based on the banks’ ability to act as a huge reservoir taking up the slack in both directions. This is not a matter of simply playing the intermediary – bond markets need much, much more than that in order to function in a manner which protects the ultimate investors’, that’s the savers’ and policyholders’ interests.

Minimum clip sizes of 100,000 units or more have driven small private investors out of direct participation bond markets and into institutional funds but these need forms of liquidity which the Volcker Rule risks effectively out-lawing. Sure, many of the trading patterns of the first decade of the century were reckless and crazy but higher capitalisation rules have taken care of most of this. Volcker risks over-egging the pudding and, to mix my metaphors, killing the goose that lays the golden egg.

I have no doubt that investment banking in general and fixed income in particular are still overpopulated and rife with people who still believe that a job in the industry is a free ticket to get rich quick. However, banks and brokers are in the natural Darwinian process of right-sizing and to do that they don’t need the Volker Rule. Yet, it is difficult for people outside our industry to truly understand all the mechanics and drivers within it and if they are fuelled by the desire to perform populist legislative acts which they can carry to the hustings or, as Americans say, to the stump, then even less. I see trouble ahead if Volker is passed and a decade in getting it right again. Liquidity, the holy grail of markets, is possibly about to be sacrificed on the altar of ignorance and fear.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/66nf5VlkcHU/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Wall Streeter’s Lament Volcker Rule: “Liquidity Is About To Be Sacrificed At The Altar Of Ignorance & Fear”

Another perspective on the Volcker Rule via Colin Burgess of Sterling International

It is no secret that the banks have fought very hard to prevent Volcker from taking effect but it looks suspiciously as though it is now game over and the industry in which we are working will, if it is introduced in the format which is proposed, never be the same again.

I am still of the generation which came into banking because we were not smart enough to get a proper job. The cream of the graduate population either competed for a slot on the British Antarctic Survey or for one of the highly prized positions as a graduate trainee in marketing with one of the principal consumer or pharma groups. The big queues at the graduate job fairs were at the stands for Shell, BP, Unilever, Proctor and Gamble, Coca Cola or Kodak. Banking was for those left over and who neither wanted to join the army or enter the church. Bank shares were for boring pension funds and figured somewhere with utilities, in as much as any of those were listed and not still in public ownership.

Luckily for me, I defaulted into a twenty five year period when banking lit up like shooting star. Deregulation of markets and the creation of so called “products” based on mathematical modelling drove the industry forward and even the smallest boats rose with the tide. Wall Street and the City found themselves full of people who believed that they were worth what they were being paid and the queue of those who wanted a part of it stretched all the way to Oxford and Cambridge and to New Haven and the other Cambridge. If you had a PhD in astro-physics or theoretical chemistry, you simply had to be perfectly qualified to advance in banking. My degree in politics and modern history might have helped me get a slot on the reception desk, no more.

Alas, the growth of the derivative markets along with relatively generous capital rules helped to boost bank earnings and with that their ability to lend. Lending led to growth which fostered further lending and further growth and the miracle of rising living standards which took off in the late 70s/early 80s under Reagan and Thatcher but which was funded more by easy borrowing as it was by higher productivity was up and running.

“Ordinary people” could aspire to possessions they had never been able to dream of before and in their hubris they never appreciated how much they were paying in fees and interest in order to buy the goodies they packed into the house which, in the end, they bought as well.

The culture of estimating how much debt service one could afford was born and with it the culture of worrying how one could ever repay what one had borrowed died. And the banks, bless them, encouraged the nonsense. That’s right; if you don’t ask borrowers to repay, you reduce the risk of default. Simples!

The entire socio-economic model is now built on this and, whether right or wrong, it demands a very different sort of banking that the “pay 3% on deposits and lend them at 5%” kind of industry which I came into and which prevailed until the late 1970s or early 1980s.

Volcker seemingly wants to go back to the world he oversaw as Chairman of the Federal Reserve but Pandora’s Box has been opened and it can’t be sensibly closed, post factum. Bond markets are not equity markets and they don’t always have buyers and sellers afoot. Bonds tend to be all bid or all ask and the efficiency of the market is based on the banks’ ability to act as a huge reservoir taking up the slack in both directions. This is not a matter of simply playing the intermediary – bond markets need much, much more than that in order to function in a manner which protects the ultimate investors’, that’s the savers’ and policyholders’ interests.

Minimum clip sizes of 100,000 units or more have driven small private investors out of direct participation bond markets and into institutional funds but these need forms of liquidity which the Volcker Rule risks effectively out-lawing. Sure, many of the trading patterns of the first decade of the century were reckless and crazy but higher capitalisation rules have taken care of most of this. Volcker risks over-egging the pudding and, to mix my metaphors, killing the goose that lays the golden egg.

I have no doubt that investment banking in general and fixed income in particular are still overpopulated and rife with people who still believe that a job in the industry is a free ticket to get rich quick. However, banks and brokers are in the natural Darwinian process of right-sizing and to do that they don’t need the Volker Rule. Yet, it is difficult for people outside our industry to truly understand all the mechanics and drivers within it and if they are fuelled by the desire to perform populist legislative acts which they can carry to the hustings or, as Americans say, to the stump, then even less. I see trouble ahead if Volker is passed and a decade in getting it right again. Liquidity, the holy grail of markets, is possibly about to be sacrificed on the altar of ignorance and fear.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/66nf5VlkcHU/story01.htm Tyler Durden

LDS church will present ‘Festival of the Nativity’

The Peachtree City Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (LDS) will present “The Festival of the Nativity,” featuring 250 Nativity sets from around the world on display, Friday and Saturday, Dec. 13 and 14 from 6-9 p.m.

Special musical performances will be presented both evenings.

A special viewing for seniors will be offered Saturday, Dec. 14, from 1-3 p.m. Music and refreshments will be provided for the seniors. All are welcome. There is no admission charge.

There will also be a collection box for the Fayette Care Clinic.

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/12-10-2013/lds-church-will-present-%E2%80%98festival-nativity%E2%80%99

Christ Our Shepherd Lutheran will offer ‘Love Feasts’ services

Christ Our Shepherd Lutheran Church in Peachtree City will offer Love Feasts in Moravian Tradition on Saturday, Dec. 14 at 7 p.m. and Sunday, Dec. 15 at 11 a.m. There is no admission charge.

Love Feasts became a tradition after the revitalization of the Moravian Church in 1727. During these music-filled services everyone is served a special-recipe Love Feast bun, and either apple juice or Moravian-recipe coffee. During “Silent Night” beeswax candles with red ruffs are distributed.

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/12-10-2013/christ-our-shepherd-lutheran-will-offer-%E2%80%98love-feasts%E2%80%99-services