Friday, October 21, 2016

Fastest-Growing Jobs: Cities Where They Cluster > #6 Phoenix It's Community & Social Service

Builder
The Best Employment Markets for the Fastest-Growing Jobs
ABODO reports the top-ten cities for the top-five occupations, as ranked by employment density.
Nationally, the current unemployment rate is at less than 5%, down from a high of 10% in 2009. The job market was and still is in a period of steady growth, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, with a national average job growth rate of 4.47% across 22 job field categories between 2012 and 2015.

The top five fastest-growing job categories far surpass the average.
1. Community and social service sector grew by 14.61% between 2012 and 2015
2. Computer and mathematics sector grew by 14.49%.
3. Health care practitioners and technicians grew by 9.89%,
4. Construction and extraction by 9.24%, and
5. Art, design, entertainment, sports, and media by 8.42%.

But “not all cities are created equally,” as ABODO states in its new “Best Cities for Job-Seekers” report. Different occupations and industries are clustered in different cities across the country, and depending on a job-seeker’s chosen field, moving to one of these occupation centers may be the best move for their career.
. . . For most of the nation’s fast-growing occupations, metropolitan areas were among the best locations for job seekers. The exception was farming, fishing, and forestry, which grew by 7.95% between 2012 and 2015, but did not rise above the national average in any of the cities surveyed.
Although ABODO’s density calculations highlight the robust industries already in place in the nation’s largest cities, they also make note of smaller cities and their occupational communities. Depending on what a job-seeker prefers in a potential home, they might do better in job-hunting and in quality if they choose a rapidly-expanding market over a long-expanded larger city.
A chart of density ratios across the five fields in all 25 surveyed cities can be found in the full ABODO report.

Wednesday, October 19, 2016

From New Cities Foundation: Download: New 85-page Publication on Connected Mobility

Now Arriving: A Connected Mobility Roadmap for Public Transport
By Greg Lindsay, Senior Fellow, New Cities FoundationWe are experiencing the triple convergence of “mobility” — physical, digital, and socio-economic.
 

Discover lessons, strategies and steps undertaken by London, Manila, São Paulo and Washington D.C. and other major cities to find viable solutions in this group's latest publicationNow Arriving: A Connected Mobility Roadmap for Public Transport

Here's the Introduction in Executive Summary: The form and functioning of cities is defined by transportation. How we traverse them affects everything from our accessto opportunities to land uses to energy consumption and pollution. Railroads, streetcars, and automobiles each produced cities made in their respective images, from skyscrapers to suburbs to sprawl.
Today, the state-of-the-art in transportation is the smartphone. Its two-way ability to locate, coordinate, and orchestrate both passengers and vehicles is more important than any one mode, including the automobile. Smartphones and their successors will transform cities once again. The only question is how.
To date, the ones seizing these opportunities have been private actors, whether in  way-finding [e.g. Google maps, Wayz, Apple] , ride-hailing [Uber,  Didi, Grab, Lyft] or autonomous vehicles [Alphabet, Tesla, Amazon]

This represents both a missed opportunity and a looming threat for public transport, which has struggled to adapt for a litany of historical, political, and technological reasons.

Readers can download here




Tuesday, October 18, 2016

IMPORTANT DISCUSSIONS at this Mesa City Council Study Session - 10/13/2016

WATCH & LISTEN
Long session: 1:43:02
Published on October 17, 2016
Views: 4


Extensive talk about real estate values in downtown Mesa, somewhat unusual for the mayor to make opening statements like this e.g..urging to wait after the election - and the mayor gets challenged. Three City Councilmembers speak out for Mesa Housing Associates with Dennis Kavanagh speaking up for affordable and attainable housing in a diverse housing market.

Council Study Session - 10/17/2016

As usual: No views
Excerpt with Chris Brady

Mesa mayor John Giles sounds very tentative, as if this is his first reading of a meeting agenda that all City Council members are supposed go have spent time reading ahead of meeting

CIty Council Meeting - 10/17/2016

Views: 6 [how bad is that?]
The agenda for this meeting was previously posted

Somewhere Over The Rainbow - Israel Kamakawiwo'ole ( I.Z. ) - Lyrics

Time to Chill

SHAME SHAME on You Shelly Allen: A Desperate Candidate for Mesa City Council District 2

Are we not all getting really angry about lies in political campaigns that don't get fact-checked?
Your MesaZona blogger has tried to live up with being blessed by his last name, but when it comes to running clean election campaigns and someone wants to play dirty, "mellow" gives way to not-so mellow.
Case in point: lies appearing on one candidate's social media page on Facebook by a retired city bureaucrat.
3 days ago with a fast correction posted by the other candidate Jeremy Whittaker

Voters in District 2 please pay attention to how the two candidates are campaigning,

















Zelensky Calls for a European Army as He Slams EU Leaders’ Response

      Jan 23, 2026 During the EU Summit yesterday, the EU leaders ...