Showing posts with label spend. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spend. Show all posts

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Drones over Down Under: Australia to spend $2.7bn on border UAV patrols

At Not Just The News, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Not Just The News and how it is used.


Log Files


Like many other Web sites, Not Just The News makes use of log files. The information inside the log files includes internet protocol (IP) addresses, type of browser, Internet Service Provider (ISP), date/time stamp, referring/exit pages, and number of clicks to analyze trends, administer the site, track user"s movement around the site, and gather demographic information. IP addresses, and other such information are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable.


Cookies and Web Beacons


Not Just The News does use cookies to store information about visitors preferences, record user-specific information on which pages the user access or visit, customize Web page content based on visitors browser type or other information that the visitor sends via their browser.


DoubleClick DART Cookie


  • Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on Not Just The News.

  • Google"s use of the DART cookie enables it to serve ads to users based on their visit to Not Just The News and other sites on the Internet.

  • Users may opt out of the use of the DART cookie by visiting the Google ad and content network privacy policy at the following URL - http://www.google.com/privacy_ads.html.

These third-party ad servers or ad networks use technology to the advertisements and links that appear on Not Just The News send directly to your browsers. They automatically receive your IP address when this occurs. Other technologies ( such as cookies, JavaScript, or Web Beacons ) may also be used by the third-party ad networks to measure the effectiveness of their advertisements and / or to personalize the advertising content that you see.


Not Just The News has no access to or control over these cookies that are used by third-party advertisers.


You should consult the respective privacy policies of these third-party ad servers for more detailed information on their practices as well as for instructions about how to opt-out of certain practices. Not Just The News"s privacy policy does not apply to, and we cannot control the activities of, such other advertisers or web sites.


If you wish to disable cookies, you may do so through your individual browser options. More detailed information about cookie management with specific web browsers can be found at the browser"s respective websites.



Drones over Down Under: Australia to spend $2.7bn on border UAV patrols

Friday, February 21, 2014

MO Republican to Spend State Money on "Tin Foil Hats" for Common Core Opponents



Former high school teacher, Representative Mike Lair (R-Chillicothe), chair of the state education appropriations committee, is bucking to become former Republican representative to the Missouri House from Caldwell, Carroll, Clinton, and Livingston Counties.


This week Mike made the terminal decision to hi-jack the state appropriations process to insert “$ 8 for tin foil hats,” according to Missouri.net. “The line item’s exact language reads, ‘For two rolls of high-density aluminum to create headgear designed to deflect drone and/or black helicopter mind reading and control technology.’”


The line item is was inserted to chastise all those anti-Common Core activists who seem to have a problem with schools taking retinal scans of children without parents’ permission.


“When you deal with conspiracy theorists, you do logic first,” said Lair.


“If you can’t deal with folks with logic,” he continued, “I always felt you use humor.”


Oh too FUNNY, Mike. Way to pee on the base during an election year.


If he doesn’t have a primary for the GOP nomination for his seat, Lair should probably count on one now.


Because if there is an establishment GOP version former Rep. Todd Akins, who, when running for U.S. Senate in Missouri, made the verbal boner of saying that victims of “legitimate” rape rarely get pregnant, Rep. Lair is it.


When you wonder why citizens express increasing frustration with politicians who seem out-of-touch, Lair is exhibit one.


You might agree with the adoption of common standards, while having reservations about the data collection aspects that are always a part of an Obama initiative, without wearing a tin-foil hat.


In Wisconsin the GOP managed to address privacy concerns without blaming the parents for their concerns. Or insulting them along the way.




Townhall’s Recent Columns



MO Republican to Spend State Money on "Tin Foil Hats" for Common Core Opponents

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

UPDATE 1-Australians learn to spend again as low rates lift spirits

UPDATE 1-Australians learn to spend again as low rates lift spirits
http://pixel.quantserve.com/pixel/p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif




Wed Jan 8, 2014 10:06pm EST



* Retail sales outpace forecasts for fourth month of solid gains


* Home building on track for much stronger year as low rates work


* Markets all but price out risk of further RBA easing


By Wayne Cole


SYDNEY, Jan 9 (Reuters) – Australians have rediscovered the urge to spend as retail sales and house building blew past expectations in November, just the warming mixture needed to help offset a cooling mining boom.


That is exactly the outcome the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) sought when it steadily cut interest rates to record lows last year and reinforces market expectations that the next move will be up, albeit not for some time yet.


“Sales momentum has picked up since August, and given the reasonably positive anecdotes, the odds are that sales finished 2013 on a firm note,” said Su-Lin Ong, a senior economist at RBC Capital Markets.


“The RBA will welcome the ongoing signs of policy traction and stay on the sidelines.”


Rates have been on hold at 2.5 percent since August and investors have priced out almost any chance of another easing this year. Indeed, futures markets show some are wagering that 2014 could end with rates on the rise.


Thursday’s figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics showed retail sales rose 0.7 percent in November to a seasonally adjusted A$ 22.5 billion ($ 20 billion), easily outpacing market forecasts of a 0.3 percent gain.


Importantly, it was also the fourth straight month of solid increases in spending after a fallow period earlier in the year and lifted annual growth in sales to 4.6 percent, the fastest pace in 17 months.


That is a big plus for economic growth since retail spending makes up almost a third of household consumption, which in turn accounts for 53 percent of the country’s A$ 1.5 trillion in annual gross domestic product (GDP).


Evidence suggests wallets have stayed open with the major retailers reporting a strong holiday shopping period. The Australian Retailers Association estimates A$ 42 billion was spent just in the lead up to Christmas.


Demand for new vehicles also ended the year on a high note with sales in December up 5.3 percent on the previous month, according to the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries.


“Anecdotally the Australia economy seems to have lifted a gear over December, which has continued early into the New Year,” said Savanth Sebastian, an economist at CommSec.


“Consumers certainly have more reason to be optimistic given, warmer weather, rising house prices and recent share market gains – all supporting a lift in sentiment.”


The ascent of home prices, which grew at an almost 10 percent pace over 2013, has in turn encouraged a much needed revival in home construction.


Approvals to build new houses jumped 6 percent in November, from the previous month, to be at the highest since mid-2010. For the year to November, approvals were up by a barnstorming 18 percent.


Include apartment buildings, and approvals for the year were up no less than 22 percent.


Home construction has an outsized impact on the economy given all the different trades involved and habit of buyers to pick up new furniture and electronics. The sector is also a big employer and contributes heavily to state tax revenues.


The ABS estimates that every A$ 1 spent on residential construction generates A$ 1.31 worth of spending elsewhere in the economy, while every million dollars spent creates 17 jobs.


As a result, a typical recovery in housing can add 2 percentage points or more to economic growth over a two to three year cycle.


“The residential construction upturn looks to be firmly entrenched, and will be one offset to lower levels of mining construction.” said Diana Mousina, an economist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia.


“The RBA will be pleased that prior cuts to interest rates are having a noticeable impact on the housing market.” (Reporting by Wayne Cole; Editing by Jacqueline Wong)






Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate




Read more about UPDATE 1-Australians learn to spend again as low rates lift spirits and other interesting subjects concerning Real Estate at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

How Will The Economy Improve In 2014 If Almost Everyone Has Less Money To Spend?

Piggybank-Photo-by-Damian-OSullivan-300x199Is the U.S. consumer tapped out?  If so, how in the world will the U.S. economy possibly improve in 2014?  Most Americans know that the U.S. economy is heavily dependent on consumer spending.  If average Americans are not out there spending money, the economy tends not to do very well.  Unfortunately, retail sales during the holiday season appear to be quite disappointing and the middle class continues to deeply struggle.  And for a whole bunch of reasons things are likely going to be even tougher in 2014.  Families are going to have less money in their pockets to spend thanks to much higher health insurance premiums under Obamacare, a wide variety of tax increases, higher interest rates on debt, and cuts in government welfare programs.  The short-lived bubble of false prosperity that we have been enjoying for the last couple of years is rapidly coming to an end, and 2014 certainly promises to be a very “interesting year”.


Obamacare Rate Shock


Most middle class families are just scraping by from month to month these days.


Unfortunately for them, millions of those families are now being hit with massive health insurance rate increases.


In a previous article, I discussed how one study found that health insurance premiums for men are going to go up by an average of 99 percent under Obamacare and health insurance premiums for women are going to go up by an average of 62 percent under Obamacare.


Most middle class families simply cannot afford that.


Earlier today, I got an email from a reader that was paying $ 478 a month for health insurance for his family but has now received a letter informing him that his rate is going up to $ 1,150 a month.


Millions of families are receiving letters just like that.  And to say that these rate increases are a “surprise” to most people would be a massive understatement.  Even people that work in the financial industry are shocked at how high these premiums are turning out to be…


“The real big surprise was how much out-of-pocket would be required for our family,” said David Winebrenner, 46, a financial adviser in Lebanon, Ky., whose deductible topped $ 12,000 for a family of six for a silver plan he was considering. The monthly premium: $ 1,400.



Since Americans are going to have to pay much more for health insurance, that is going to remove a huge amount of discretionary spending from the economy, and that will not be good news for retailers.


Get Ready For Higher Taxes


When you raise taxes, you reduce the amount of money that people have in their pockets to spend.


Sadly, that is exactly what is happening.


Congress is allowing a whopping 55 tax breaks to expire at the end of this year, and when you add that to the 13 major tax increases that hit American families in 2013, it isn’t a pretty picture.


This tax season, millions of families are going to find out that they have much higher tax bills than they had anticipated.


And all of this comes at a time when incomes in America have beensteadily declining.  In fact, real median household income has declined by a total of 8 percent since 2008.


If you are a worker, you might want to check out the chart that I have posted below to see where you stack up.  In America today, most workers are low income workers.  These numbers come from a recentHuffington Post article


-If you make more than $ 10,000, you earn more than 24.2% of Americans, or 37 million people.


-If you make more than $ 15,000 (roughly the annual salary of a minimum-wage employee working 40 hours per week), you earn more than 32.2% of Americans.


-If you make more than $ 30,000, you earn more than 53.2% of Americans.


-If you make more than $ 50,000, you earn more than 73.4% of Americans.


-If you make more than $ 100,000, you earn more than 92.6% of Americans.


-You are officially in the top 1% of American wage earners if you earn more than $ 250,000.


-The 894 people that earn more than $ 20 millionmake more than 99.99989% of Americans, and are compensated a cumulative $ 37,009,979,568 per year.



It is important to keep in mind that those numbers are for the employment income of individuals not households.  Most households have more than one member working, so overall household incomes are significantly higher than these numbers.


Higher Interest Rates Mean Larger Debt Payments


On Tuesday, the yield on 10 year U.S. Treasuries rose to 3.03 percent.  I warned that this would happen once the taper started, and this is just the beginning.  Interest rates are likely to steadily rise throughout 2014.


The reason why the yield on 10 year U.S. Treasuries is such a critical number is because mortgage rates and thousands of other interest rates throughout our economy are heavily influenced by that number.


So big changes are on the way.  As a recent CNBC article declared, the era of low mortgage rates is officially over…


The days of the 3.5% 30-year fixed are over. Rates are already up well over a full percentage point from a year ago, and as the Federal Reserve begins its much anticipated exit from the bond-buying business, I believe rates will inevitably go higher.



Needless to say, this is going to deeply affect the real estate market.  AsMac Slavo recently noted, numbers are already starting to drop precipitously…


The National Association of Realtors reported that the month of September saw its single largest drop in signed home sales in 40 months. And that wasn’t just a one-off event. This month mortgage applications collapsed a shocking 66%, hitting a13-year low.



And U.S. consumers can expect interest rates on all kinds of loans to start rising.  That is going to mean higher debt payments, and therefore less money for consumers to spend into the economy.


Government Benefit Cuts


Well, if the middle class is going to have less money to spend, perhaps other Americans can pick up the slack.


Or maybe not.


You certainly can’t expect the poor to stimulate the economy.  As I mentioned yesterday, it is being projected that up to 5 million unemployed Americans could lose their unemployment benefits by the end of 2014, and 47 million Americans recently had their food stamp benefits reduced.


So the poor will also have less money to spend in 2014.


The Wealthy Save The Day?


Perhaps the stock market will continue to soar in 2014 and the wealthy will spend so much that it will make up for all the rest of us.


You can believe that if you want, but the truth is that there are a whole host of signs that the days of this irrational stock market bubble are numbered.  The following is an excerpt from one of my recent articles entitled “The Stock Market Has Officially Entered Crazytown Territory“…


The median price-to-earnings ratio on the S&P 500 has reached an all-time record high, and margin debt at the New York Stock Exchange has reached a level that we have never seen before.  In other words, stocks are massively overpriced and people have been borrowing huge amounts of money to buy stocks.  These are behaviors that we also saw just before the last two stock market bubbles burst.



If the stock market bubble does burst, the wealthy will also have less money to spend into the economy in 2014.


For the moment, the stock market has been rallying.  This is typical for the month of December.  You see, the truth is that investors generally don’t want to sell stocks in December because they want to put off paying taxes on the profits.


If stocks are sold before the end of the year, the profits go on the 2013 tax return.


If stocks are sold a few days from now, the profits go on the 2014 tax return.


It is only human nature to want to delay pain for as long as possible.


Expect to see some selling in January.  Many investors are very eager to start taking profits, but they wanted to wait until the holidays were over to do so.


So what do you think is coming up in 2014?  Please feel free to share what you think by posting a comment below…


Michael T. Snyder is a graduate of the University of Florida law school and he worked as an attorney in the heart of Washington D.C. for a number of years. Today, Michael is best known for his work as the publisher of The Economic Collapse Blog and The American Dream. If you want to know what things in America are going to look like in a few years read his new book The Beginning of the End.



SHTF Plan – When It Hits The Fan, Don’t Say We Didn’t Warn You



How Will The Economy Improve In 2014 If Almost Everyone Has Less Money To Spend?

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

How Will The Economy Improve In 2014 If Almost Everyone Has Less Money To Spend?


Piggybank - Photo by Damian OIs the U.S. consumer tapped out?  If so, how in the world will the U.S. economy possibly improve in 2014?  Most Americans know that the U.S. economy is heavily dependent on consumer spending.  If average Americans are not out there spending money, the economy tends not to do very well.  Unfortunately, retail sales during the holiday season appear to be quite disappointing and the middle class continues to deeply struggle.  And for a whole bunch of reasons things are likely going to be even tougher in 2014.  Families are going to have less money in their pockets to spend thanks to much higher health insurance premiums under Obamacare, a wide variety of tax increases, higher interest rates on debt, and cuts in government welfare programs.  The short-lived bubble of false prosperity that we have been enjoying for the last couple of years is rapidly coming to an end, and 2014 certainly promises to be a very “interesting year”.


Obamacare Rate Shock


Most middle class families are just scraping by from month to month these days.


Unfortunately for them, millions of those families are now being hit with massive health insurance rate increases.


In a previous article, I discussed how one study found that health insurance premiums for men are going to go up by an average of 99 percent under Obamacare and health insurance premiums for women are going to go up by an average of 62 percent under Obamacare.


Most middle class families simply cannot afford that.


Earlier today, I got an email from a reader that was paying $ 478 a month for health insurance for his family but has now received a letter informing him that his rate is going up to $ 1,150 a month.


Millions of families are receiving letters just like that.  And to say that these rate increases are a “surprise” to most people would be a massive understatement.  Even people that work in the financial industry are shocked at how high these premiums are turning out to be…


“The real big surprise was how much out-of-pocket would be required for our family,” said David Winebrenner, 46, a financial adviser in Lebanon, Ky., whose deductible topped $ 12,000 for a family of six for a silver plan he was considering. The monthly premium: $ 1,400.



Since Americans are going to have to pay much more for health insurance, that is going to remove a huge amount of discretionary spending from the economy, and that will not be good news for retailers.


Get Ready For Higher Taxes


When you raise taxes, you reduce the amount of money that people have in their pockets to spend.


Sadly, that is exactly what is happening.


Congress is allowing a whopping 55 tax breaks to expire at the end of this year, and when you add that to the 13 major tax increases that hit American families in 2013, it isn’t a pretty picture.


This tax season, millions of families are going to find out that they have much higher tax bills than they had anticipated.


And all of this comes at a time when incomes in America have been steadily declining.  In fact, real median household income has declined by a total of 8 percent since 2008.


If you are a worker, you might want to check out the chart that I have posted below to see where you stack up.  In America today, most workers are low income workers.  These numbers come from a recent Huffington Post article


-If you make more than $ 10,000, you earn more than 24.2% of Americans, or 37 million people.


-If you make more than $ 15,000 (roughly the annual salary of a minimum-wage employee working 40 hours per week), you earn more than 32.2% of Americans.


-If you make more than $ 30,000, you earn more than 53.2% of Americans.


-If you make more than $ 50,000, you earn more than 73.4% of Americans.


-If you make more than $ 100,000, you earn more than 92.6% of Americans.


-You are officially in the top 1% of American wage earners if you earn more than $ 250,000.


-The 894 people that earn more than $ 20 million make more than 99.99989% of Americans, and are compensated a cumulative $ 37,009,979,568 per year.



It is important to keep in mind that those numbers are for the employment income of individuals not households.  Most households have more than one member working, so overall household incomes are significantly higher than these numbers.


Higher Interest Rates Mean Larger Debt Payments


On Tuesday, the yield on 10 year U.S. Treasuries rose to 3.03 percent.  I warned that this would happen once the taper started, and this is just the beginning.  Interest rates are likely to steadily rise throughout 2014.


The reason why the yield on 10 year U.S. Treasuries is such a critical number is because mortgage rates and thousands of other interest rates throughout our economy are heavily influenced by that number.


So big changes are on the way.  As a recent CNBC article declared, the era of low mortgage rates is officially over…


The days of the 3.5% 30-year fixed are over. Rates are already up well over a full percentage point from a year ago, and as the Federal Reserve begins its much anticipated exit from the bond-buying business, I believe rates will inevitably go higher.



Needless to say, this is going to deeply affect the real estate market.  As Mac Slavo recently noted, numbers are already starting to drop precipitously…


The National Association of Realtors reported that the month of September saw its single largest drop in signed home sales in 40 months. And that wasn’t just a one-off event. This month mortgage applications collapsed a shocking 66%, hitting a 13-year low.



And U.S. consumers can expect interest rates on all kinds of loans to start rising.  That is going to mean higher debt payments, and therefore less money for consumers to spend into the economy.


Government Benefit Cuts


Well, if the middle class is going to have less money to spend, perhaps other Americans can pick up the slack.


Or maybe not.


You certainly can’t expect the poor to stimulate the economy.  As I mentioned yesterday, it is being projected that up to 5 million unemployed Americans could lose their unemployment benefits by the end of 2014, and 47 million Americans recently had their food stamp benefits reduced.


So the poor will also have less money to spend in 2014.


The Wealthy Save The Day?


Perhaps the stock market will continue to soar in 2014 and the wealthy will spend so much that it will make up for all the rest of us.


You can believe that if you want, but the truth is that there are a whole host of signs that the days of this irrational stock market bubble are numbered.  The following is an excerpt from one of my recent articles entitled “The Stock Market Has Officially Entered Crazytown Territory“…


The median price-to-earnings ratio on the S&P 500 has reached an all-time record high, and margin debt at the New York Stock Exchange has reached a level that we have never seen before.  In other words, stocks are massively overpriced and people have been borrowing huge amounts of money to buy stocks.  These are behaviors that we also saw just before the last two stock market bubbles burst.



If the stock market bubble does burst, the wealthy will also have less money to spend into the economy in 2014.


For the moment, the stock market has been rallying.  This is typical for the month of December.  You see, the truth is that investors generally don’t want to sell stocks in December because they want to put off paying taxes on the profits.


If stocks are sold before the end of the year, the profits go on the 2013 tax return.


If stocks are sold a few days from now, the profits go on the 2014 tax return.


It is only human nature to want to delay pain for as long as possible.


Expect to see some selling in January.  Many investors are very eager to start taking profits, but they wanted to wait until the holidays were over to do so.


So what do you think is coming up in 2014?  Please feel free to share what you think by posting a comment below…


Piggybank - Photo by Damian O



Be Sociable, Share!

















The Economic Collapse



How Will The Economy Improve In 2014 If Almost Everyone Has Less Money To Spend?

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Americans not willing to spend without deals

Americans not willing to spend without deals

NEW YORK (AP) — This holiday season, Americans may not spend their green unless they see more red.
Business Headlines



Read more about Americans not willing to spend without deals and other interesting subjects concerning Economy at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Friday, October 25, 2013

"Shop-And-Get-Frisked" When You Spend $350 At Barneys


A young black man is suing high-end retailer Barneys, saying he was arrested after buying a $ 350 belt. Host Michel Martin checks in with the Barbershop guys for a fresh cut on that story and the rest of the week’s news.




Arts & Life



"Shop-And-Get-Frisked" When You Spend $350 At Barneys

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Cash-strapped University of California may spend millions on president"s residence


Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano speaks during a news conference after being voted in as the next president of the University of California on the campus of UCSF in San Francisco, California, July 18, 2013. REUTERS/Beck Diefenbach

Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano speaks during a news conference after being voted in as the next president of the University of California on the campus of UCSF in San Francisco, California, July 18, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Beck Diefenbach






SAN FRANCISCO | Wed Sep 18, 2013 7:13am EDT



SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – As Janet Napolitano prepares to lead the cash-strapped University of California, the Board of Regents is set to vote Wednesday on whether to take first steps toward spending millions to repair a decaying mansion to house the system’s presidents.


The move to fix up the mansion, which could cost as much as $ 6 million over two years, comes just two weeks before the former Homeland Security chief is expected to take over as U.C. president, and provides a telling example of what she faces as she tries to bring financial order to the prestigious but struggling system.


The Board of Regents for the sprawling, 13-campus system is set to decide whether to spend an initial $ 620,000 toward renovating the dilapidated Blake House mansion, which was designed by prominent turn-of-the century architect Walter Danforth Bliss, whose work included such San Francisco landmarks as the St. Francis Hotel and the Bank of America building.


In hiring Napolitano, state officials were counting on her political savvy and fund-raising prowess to restore a system racked by years of budget cuts and turmoil.


She won’t be on the job Wednesday to argue for or against the renovation project, but Napolitano could influence subsequent votes on additional spending.


The dwelling has been vacant since 2008 and has fallen into extreme disrepair, said Patrick Lenz, U.C. vice president for budget. It will cost about $ 370,000 for the most basic repairs and deferred maintenance, including fixing its leaking roof, officials said, plus another $ 250,000 for preliminary architectural plans.


Even if the Regents vote to renovate the mansion, it won’t be inhabitable for at least two years, during which time the university will spend about $ 10,000 per month for Napolitano’s rented residence.


Chosen from among more than 300 candidates in part because of her political skills, the 55-year-old Democrat and two-term Arizona governor takes the helm as the university is struggling to recover from economic crises that have eaten away at the state budget on and off for nearly two decades.


Cuts of nearly $ 1 billion over the last five years have led to tuition increases and class shortages, and have strained relations with faculty and staff through the imposition of furlough days and hiring freezes.


Napolitano has not said what she thinks of repairing the mansion, and university officials said Tuesday that they had not “fully” discussed it with her.


A regents committee voted to recommend beginning the work, for a total cost of $ 620,000.


Some regents, however, were skeptical.


“The last time I was at the Blake House was about eight years ago and I thought it was pretty run down then,” said Regent Fred Ruiz, who suggested that the university sell the property instead of renovating it.


The historic mansion sits in the quiet community of Kensington – four miles to the north of the U.C. Berkeley campus and proximate to the system’s administrative offices in nearby Oakland. It was donated to the university in 1957 and has traditionally been used to serve as the living quarters for the university system’s presidents.


As the mansion lay in disrepair, the university was paying to lease living quarters for its presidents, spending more than $ 100,000 for each of the past five years to house outgoing President Mark Yudof, and entering into a two-year lease of about $ 10,000 per month for a house for Napolitano.


The president’s residence must be large, officials said, because he or she is expected to host events there as well as live on the premises.


Lenz, who supports the idea of renovating the mansion, said the cost of leasing such a facility would eclipse the cost of repairs on Blake House in just 15 years.


To be habitable, he said, the mansion would require seismic and security upgrades, repairs to the kitchen and residential areas along with other fixes.


His department will look into the possibility of selling the site, but that initial repairs were needed right away.


“We’re kind of at a point where we need to retain the value that we have,” he said.


University spokeswoman Dianne Klein said in a statement that the large public rooms on the first floor of the 13,000 square foot mansion were large enough for university functions, but the upstairs living quarters were “not currently adequate to meet the needs of the president.”


If approved, funding for the project would come from the Searles Fund, an endowment used for expenses not covered by the state, Klein said.


(Reporting by Laila Kearney, Editing by Sharon Bernstein and Ken Wills)






Reuters: Politics



Cash-strapped University of California may spend millions on president"s residence