Wednesday, December 20, 2017

Sharing Good Wishes For The Holiday Season

Why the Red Nose? . . . don't ask me
 

31 Dec 2017: Nominations Due for 2018 Real Estate Design Awards


Don’t forget to nominate your company’s biggest, best and most notable commercial real estate projects . . . Admittedly your MesaZona blogger has a bias and a recommendation for an outstanding work by Community Development Partners right here in Mesa: El Rancho Del Sol. (see image and links below)


2018 Real Estate Development Awards > the deadline closes on Sunday, Dec. 31.
Now in its 13th year, the RED Awards are Arizona’s most comprehensive annual real estate awards, recognizing the top projects of the prior year along with the people and companies that make them happen from the developer and general contractor to the architect and broker(s).
The form to nominate your projects are now open online, but must be submitted by Sunday, Dec. 31 to be considered. To qualify, all projects submitted must be completed with construction by Dec. 31, 2017.
AZRE will publish a special feature highlighting all RED finalist projects within the March/April issue. Additionally, finalists will be recognized and winners announced at the Annual RED Award Event on Thursday, March 22 at 6 p.m. at the Pointe Hilton Tapatio Cliffs Resort, located at 11111 N. 7th Street in Phoenix.
All nominations will be reviewed by a selection committee comprised of commercial real estate professionals, business leaders and the AZRE editorial team. Selection committee will determine winners from nominations submitted by the December 31, 2017 deadline. Please email David.McGlothlin@azbgimedia.com with any questions.
Link to map and list of 2017 RED Award finalist projects.
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Original Source: https://azbigmedia.com/submit-your-projects-for-the-2018-red-awards-now/
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El Rancho Del Sol
Image taken just weeks before the
Grand Opening Celebration that took place on Tuesday, Nov 7 2017 shows both phases of the project by Community Development Partners that has transformed what used to be the site of a blighted motel into a visual statement of outstanding design on Main Street, waiting in-place for forward progress of Valley Metro's Light Rail extension east from the Central Business District.
Superstructure on the rooftops is planned for the installation of large-scale renewable solar energy.
For more information: Please use the search box in upper left-hand of this blog site

 

Smokin' Hot News: High-Ho! Mesa Is Getting 'Greener'

What to your MesaZona blogger's wondering eyes should appear just a few hours ago in an online report from AZ Big Media is that here in the most conservative city in America, the grand-daddy of Mesa law firms where both Mesa Mayor John Giles and D4 Mesa City Councilmember Chris Glover got their first start in the practice of law, there was this headline below. Being the Pundit-at-heart yours truly is, it appears that the 'grass-roots' citizen activist movement that put the issue of what's called in popular jargon medical marijuana' in a referendum overlwhelmingly approved by voters has creating an entire new engine for economic development.
It's reason to celebrate! Visions of sugar-plums, anyone?
Udall Shumway expands into cannabis law
"After over 50 years in business, practicing everything from criminal, immigration and real estate law to elder abuse, education and medical malpractice, Mesa-based Udall Shumway is now expanding their full-service law firm with 12 practice areas to include cannabis law.
“Finding quality information about cannabis law and the legal implications relevant to the business of cannabis is like finding a needle in a haystack,” said Justin M. Brandt, associate at Udall Shumway who is the leading counsel for the firm’s practice in cannabis law. “The flood of misinformation in the public realm only highlights the need for good legal counsel, and with the industry growing at a rapid rate we’re now working with cannabis-related businesses to minimize their risk as the law evolves.”
Though many state and tribal governments have fast-tracked cannabis legalization, the legal implications of commercial cannabis is still in its infancy due to constraints imposed by federal law. Udall Shumway now advises these cannabis-related businesses (CRBs) regarding the unique legal and regulatory issues surrounding the cannabis industry given the constantly changing dynamics between federal, state and local law. . . "
How big are the opportunities?
Among the areas in which Udall Shumway is helping CRBs navigate this developing industry includes:
• Corporate Formation and Entity Structure
• Licensing and Regulatory Compliance
• State and Local Government Relations
• Financing
• Labor and Employment
• Tax
• Mergers and Acquisitions
• Cultivation, Processing and Distribution Practices
• Litigation
• Corporate Governance
• Real Estate Transactions
• Intellectual Property & Asset Protection
• Land Use and Zoning

 

Monday, December 18, 2017

How Vibrant Are We Feeling Here In DTMesa?

Here's the Data > An InfoGraphic > No Comment 
 

Tech Jobs In Top 10 States > Arizona #7

Top 10 states for tech jobs
The Findings: At a Glance UNITED STATES
To quantify the software industry’s role as an engine for economic growth and to measure how quickly these benefits are expanding, Software.org commissioned The Economist Intelligence Unit to conduct a comprehensive analysis of software’s impact on the US economy. This analysis, based on 2016 data, is the first-ever to track the actual growth of software’s economic impact throughout the United States.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Total Value-Added GDP: $1.14 trillion
(includes indirect and induced impacts)
Direct Value-Added GDP: $564.4 bill
Direct Job Growth
The number of software jobs nationwide is up 14.6 percent since 2014, but some markets are growing faster than others.
DOWNLOAD STATE FACT SHEETS using the underlined link above

1. Kansas37.53%
2. Indiana32.20%
3. Mississippi23.49%
4. Idaho22.49%
5. Louisiana21.74%
6. California21.25%
7. Arizona20.22%
8. District of Columbia17.59%
9. New York17.42%
10. North Carolina16.65%

BEA Release: Travel and Tourism Spending Accelerated in the Third Quarter


 
News Release
EMBARGOED UNTIL RELEASE AT 8:30 A.M. EDT,Wednesday, Dec. 13
Travel and Tourism Spending Accelerated in the Third Quarter
Travel and Tourism Satellite Account: Third Quarter 2017
For the full release and tables, visit https://www.bea.gov/newsreleases/industry/tourism/tournewsrelease.htm.
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PLEASE NOTE: Discontinuation of Quarterly Travel and Tourism Estimates
Due to budget constraints, BEA is discontinuing production of quarterly travel and tourism estimates. Annual estimates, published each June in BEA’s Survey of Current Business, will continue to be produced with support from the Office of Travel and Tourism Industries, International Trade Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce.
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Real spending (output) on travel and tourism accelerated in the third quarter of 2017, growing at an annual rate of 6.6 percent after increasing 6.0 percent (revised) in the second quarter, according to new statistics released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Real gross domestic product (GDP) for the nation also accelerated, increasing 3.3 percent in the third quarter (second estimate) after increasing 3.1 percent in the second quarter of 2017.
The leading contributors to the acceleration in real spending were traveler accommodations and food and beverage services. Traveler accommodations accelerated, growing 13.5 percent in the third quarter after increasing 3.8 percent (revised) in the second quarter. Food and beverage services increased 0.6 percent after decreasing 1.4 percent (revised) in the previous quarter.
Chart 1. Quarterly Growth in Real Tourism Spending
Tourism Prices. Prices for travel and tourism goods and services decreased 1.1 percent in the third quarter of 2017. This was a smaller decrease than the 3.2 percent (revised) decline in the second quarter. The decrease was largely attributable to the prices of traveler accommodations and passenger air transportation.
Prices for traveler accommodations decreased 9.9 percent in the third quarter, a larger decline than the 0.3 percent (revised) decrease in the previous quarter. In the third quarter, passenger air transportation prices decreased 6.7 percent after decreasing 3.4 percent (revised) in the second quarter of 2017.
Transportation-related commodity prices increased in the third quarter. This price, which includes gasoline, increased 7.4 percent in the third quarter after decreasing 11.2 percent (revised) in the previous quarter.
Chart 2. Tourism Prices
Tourism Employment. Employment in the travel and tourism industries decelerated, growing 1.2 percent in the third quarter of 2017 after increasing 2.1 percent (revised) in the previous quarter. Overall U.S. employment growth remained steady, increasing 1.3 percent in the third quarter after increasing 1.3 percent in the second quarter.

  • Traveler accommodations was the leading contributor to the deceleration, losing approximately 800 employees in the third quarter of 2017 after adding 6,400 employees in the second quarter.
  • Food and beverage services also contributed to the deceleration, adding approximately 5,600 employees in this quarter after adding 11,800 employees in the previous quarter of 2017.
Chart 3. Tourism Employment
Total Tourism-Related Output was $1.6 trillion in the third quarter of 2017, comprising $945 billion (58 percent) of direct tourism spending and $682 billion (42 percent) of indirect tourism-related spending.
Total Tourism-Related Employment was 7.9 million jobs in the third quarter of 2017, comprising 5.5 million (70 percent) direct tourism jobs and 2.4 million (30 percent) indirect tourism-related jobs.

These statistics are from BEA’s Travel and Tourism Satellite Accounts (TTSAs), which are supported by funding from the Office of Travel and Tourism Industries, International Trade Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce. The current-price statistics of direct tourism output were derived from BEA’s annual TTSAs and from current-price quarterly statistics of personal consumption expenditures from the National Income and Product Accounts (NIPAs). The real statistics of direct tourism output were developed using price indexes from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and real quarterly statistics of personal consumption expenditures from the NIPAs. The statistics of direct tourism employment were derived from the annual TTSAs from BEA, the Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW), and Current Employment Statistics (CES) from BLS.

Discontinuation of Quarterly Travel and Tourism Estimates
Due to budget constraints, BEA is discontinuing production of quarterly travel and tourism estimates. Annual estimates, published each June in BEA’s Survey of Current Business, will continue to be produced with support from the Office of Travel and Tourism Industries, International Trade Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce.