In the GOP's weekly address Saturday, Virginia Rep. Eric Cantor, the House Republican whip, accused the Democratic-controlled Congress of reckless spending and careless borrowing. (July 11) [www.clipsyndicate.com | Associated Press]
Private and household consumption rebounds in South Korea. (The Trade) [www.clipsyndicate.com | Bloomberg]
A look at Wisconsin's hunting culture [www.clipsyndicate.com | WLUK FOX 11 Green Bay]
wavy news 10 at 5pm 20nov [www.clipsyndicate.com | WAVY NBC 10 Norfolk]
Friday morning, the Milwaukee Common Council sustained Mayor Tom Barrett's one veto from the 2010 budget. The original budget had one furlough day, but Barrett added another in an effort to bring down the property tax levy. [www.clipsyndicate.com | WISN ABC 12 Milwaukee WI]
New small business health care option is available. [www.clipsyndicate.com | KXAN NBC 36 Austin]
Zionsville leaders say their town in flourishing while other municipalities complain about state-imposed tax caps. [www.clipsyndicate.com | WRTV ABC Indianapolis]
The first locomotive ever acquired by the National Railroad Museum could be coming back to Ashwaubenon, but not without some cost controversy. [www.clipsyndicate.com | WLUK FOX 11 Green Bay]
02:00
U.S. Stocks Fall as Dell, D.R. Horton Trailed Estimates: Video
Nov. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Bloomberg's Michele Steele reports on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. U.S. stocks fell, joining a global retreat, as earnings at Dell Inc. and D.R. Horton Inc. trailed analysts’ estimates and concern grew that European Central Bank policy makers will phase out economic stimulus measures. The dollar rose and two-year Treasury note yields fell to the lowest level of the year as investors sought safer assets. (Source: Bloomberg) [www.clipsyndicate.com | Bloomberg]
Storm damage Tour 20Nov 5pm [www.clipsyndicate.com | WAVY NBC 10 Norfolk]
02:00
Hassett Says Geithner `Reneging on Duty,' Should Resign: Video
Nov. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Kevin Hassett, director of economic-policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute and a Bloomberg News columnist, talks with Bloomberg's Mark Crumpton about a Republican lawmaker's call for U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner to resign. Hassett also discusses the potential impact of U.S. tax policy on the dollar and bond markets, and Federal Reserve monetary policy. (Source: Bloomberg) [www.clipsyndicate.com | Bloomberg]
In Dauphin County, millions of dollars in federal stimulus money for weatherizing homes is going unspent because rules and regulations are not yet in place. [www.clipsyndicate.com | WGAL NBC 8 Lancaster PA]
02:00
Riverfront's Anderson Sees No Bubble in U.S. Bond Market: Video
Nov. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Tim Anderson, chief fixed-income officer at Riverfront Investment Group, talks with Bloomberg's Deirdre Bolton about the U.S. bond market and Riverfront's strategy for corporate bonds. (Source: Bloomberg) [www.clipsyndicate.com | Bloomberg]
The White House says President Barack Obama’s stimulus plan has helped create and save jobs, but as FOX’s James Rosen shows us, the top federal official seeing the program can’t confirm that. [www.clipsyndicate.com | KRIV FOX 7 Houston, TX]
Save $100 in 30 days [www.clipsyndicate.com | WVBT FOX 43 Hampton Roads]
Dell shares could have a rocky day today after the company posted earnings last night that were less than half what they were in the same quarter last year. Net income dipped to $337 million, or 17 cents per share, as compared to $727 million, or 37 cents per share, in the same quarter last year. [www.clipsyndicate.com | Market News Video]
A survey shows federal stimulus money not necessarily going to job creation. [www.clipsyndicate.com | WCVB ABC 5 Boston MA]
It costs Bay State drinkers 6.25-percent more to buy booze now than it did back in July. While the Bay State desperately needs new revenue to close the budget gap, one group is fighting back, trying to repeal the state's new liquor tax. [www.clipsyndicate.com | WWLP NBC 22 Springfield M]
KMBC's Micheal Mahoney reports. [www.clipsyndicate.com | KMBC ABC 9 Kansas City MO]
Albuquerque- mayor elect richard berry will be faced with a budget shortfall when he takes office. Some say it could be as high as 30-million dollars. Berry has been making a lot of new hires lately. We looked into how much money those new employees will be making -- and if they'll save the city any money. Jeff maher is live in the newsroom with what he learned. Jeff. A spokesman for richard berry says the soon to be mayor has appointed more than a dozen employees so far - most of whom make less than one-hundred thousand dollars per year. Compare that to what their predecessors were making - and it comes out to be 212,587 dollars in savings. But some say that comparison is misleading. ? Is mayor-elect richard berry being as fiscally conservative as he promised to be during his campaign ? His people gave us a comparison -- showing that the majority of his appointees are making less than their predecessors, even though most still make more than 90-thousand dollars per year. But they're comparing many of their new-hire salaries to previous employees who had been working under mayor martin chavez for several years and had gotten raises during that time. And two of the department heads are actually getting a salary increase, including family and community services -- --going from 97-thousand dollars under chavez to 107- thousand under berry: "i think that's going to come under more scrutiny as we go forward, if we start raising the spector of furloughing city employees, everything this mayor does in terms of how much he pays people and who he's hiring, there's going to be a higher bar because now people's livelihoods aron the line" City councilor brad winter says there were a lot of positions created under mayor chavez that berry should look at cutting. One position that the city council has questioned before is chief public safety officer -- the position berry gave to darren white after pete dinelli resigned. "i don't understand the reason for it, but then again i'm not the mayor" "i think he's been very cautious, h
An Indianapolis man who stole millions of tax dollars and bought seven properties and several cars, even fur and leather, was in federal court Thursday trying to get his sentence reduced. [www.clipsyndicate.com | WISH CBS 8 Indianapolis]
united way [www.clipsyndicate.com | WLFI CBS 18 Lafayette]
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