Sentences with phrase «entire city economy»

«It's not only hurting our small business owners, it's a missed opportunity for the entire city economy because when we invest in our small businesses, they invest in their neighborhoods and our economy gets stronger,» Stringer continued.

Not exact matches

The affluent city - state's economy has been hobbled by dwindling exports amid stubbornly weak global demand, while domestic consumption has also remained anemic with entire floors at some central shopping malls empty.
Every summer, over 10,000 German - speaking Europeans visit Whitehorse, a number equal to nearly half the city's entire population, contributing $ 16 to $ 17 million to the Yukon economy.
The entire economy of the city of Jerusalem was built on temple activities, bathing before the offerings for a fee, dressing for going to the temple, for a fee, buying the offerings, for a fee, paying the priests, temple entrance fees, food prep fees, growing and feeding the animals for the sacrifices, being paid for them, in the thousands and thousands at festival times, ALL in Jewish currency only, which was required for their rituals, and most people used Roman currency for their civil affairs.
It's fair to ask the New Yorkers who benefit the most from our city's prosperity to pay a little more to repair the infrastructure that the entire economy relies on.
... What I want David Cameron to do is to protect our economy, protect our jobs - mainly, because that's the thing that's under most threat from the Eurozone - protect the City of London, but he needs to help them get a solution to the Eurozone crisis so that the entire European economy doesn't fall apart.
Explore Brooklyn's new and emerging major projects and learn about their impact on the economy of the entire City of New York.»
«This lack of commitment is putting vital projects, the transportation needs of residents, and the economy of an entire city in jeopardy.»
These and similar effort have now been replicated in more than 100 cities, showing that even mundane public races might make a big difference in the health and well - being of citizens, if not the entire U.S. economy.
'' is a separate initiative spearheaded by Former New York Mayor and UN Special Envoy Michael Bloomberg and California Governor Jerry Brown, working in parallel with We Are Still In to compile and tally the climate actions of states, cities, colleges, businesses, and other local actors across the entire U.S. economy.
The four main goals are to: (1) develop a 13 - acre block in the center of the city as a «Green Arts District» beyond the LEED Platinum level for neighborhood development and use that development to catalyze a prosperous city - wide economy; (2) develop a post-carbon energy system for both the city and the College based on efficiency and renewable energy; (3) develop a 20,000 acre greenbelt around the city to revive local agriculture and forestry; and (4) create the most exciting educational experiment in the U.S. by using the entire effort as an educational laboratory for all students in the Oberlin area.
So a national cap / tax could more easily apply to the upstream sources of the entire economy, compared to a state level or city level cap / tax.
So no lawyer, whether they're a solo practitioner in a family law practice in a medium size or small city in the United States or somebody who does the most sophisticated mergers and acquisitions around the globe, no lawyer should think that their practices are unaffected by these large scale forces that are reshaping the entire economy and they ought to be looking for ways that they can use these forces or participate in these broader trends to make their practices more effective, to make the service they provide their clients better, and to make their own lives better.
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