Sentences with phrase «city out of its recession»

Not exact matches

Casino operators agreed to raise wages during the last round of negotiations in 2013 as the city was coming out of the recession.
If he believes that the state's tax structure is a job - killer and one of the chief reasons why upstate New York remains mired in a permanent recession, he ought to ask for broader tax cuts, including a decrease in the state's personal income tax rate, which tops out at nearly 9 percent (that does not include the additional tax burden placed on city residents, who pay up to 3.8 percent in personal income taxes.)
Preliminary budget estimates put city reserves at $ 6.6 billion, compared to the $ 11 billion before the Great Recession ($ 7 billion was used to pull the city out of that downturn.)
She stops short of saying art is recession - proof, but points out the UK has had slumps before — and that the last one led to the birth of the Young British Artists (YBA) movement, as well as artists such as Martin Creed and City Racing (a not - for - profit gallery in Oval, run by artists Matt Hale, John Burgess, Peter Owen, Paul Noble and Keith Coventry, that lasted from 1988 to 1998) taking over empty properties and creating art spaces.
It is also that point in which all of the ice in the world melts and we will finally get out of our long running recession as we have to build housing for billions of coastal city dwellers in our new found temperate and tropical paradises.
David LaRue: Like all companies coming out of such a financial strain during the recession in 2008 through 2010, Forest City started to look at best ways to improve its operations.
Coming out of the Great Recession, a handful of real estate developers invested heavily in a bid to lure corporate employers — and, more recently, business travelers and condo buyers — back to the center of the city.
«But coming out of the recession there's been so much more awareness of the power of cities to attract people, the interest in walkable environments, and the desire to not have a car.»
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