Sunday, November 16, 2008

Turkey Trot Early Registration Ends Today

Today is the last day for early registration for the 2008 Fort Worth YMCA Turkey Trot. Held each Thanksgiving Day morning. The biggest draw of the race is the 5k which attracts everyone from the serious runners to those just happy to finish the course in time for lunch. For the more adventurous, there's a 10k race, as well as a 1k race for the kids.

No matter what place they finish, all runners can take joy in their good deed. The Turkey Trot allows the YMCA of Metropolitan Fort Worth to fund scholarships for thousands of local youth and adults so they can participate in YMCA activities.

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Monday, November 10, 2008

Can't We All Get Along? Local Papers to Team Up

That rumble you heard today wasn't thunder.


No. That loud sound was the late Amon G. Carter rolling over in his grave at the news that the Fort Worth Star-Telegram and the Dallas Morning News are going to share editorial content.

More from Editor & Publisher:

Dallas Morning News Editor Bob Mong wrote in a memo to employees that parent company A.H. Belo and the McClatchy Co. -- owner of the Star-Telegram -- are looking for ways to save money.

"We commenced talks because of the challenging economic and revenue
environment we find ourselves in," Mong wrote. "I can assure you we have no intention of diluting our powerful brand. But I do know there are ways to move forward with the /Star-Telegram/, save money and continue to provide the outstanding unique content we are known for."

A few years ago the two dailies locked horns in a huge fight over readers in Arlington. Now with readership dropping at double-digit rates at both papers they appear ready to combine forces in order to more efficiently bring us the bland mediocre coverage they become famous for.

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Thursday, November 06, 2008

Wall St. Journal Takes Note of Gas Drop

The Wall Street Journal has taken note of the recent decline in energy prices and its effect on the local economy:

The torrid pace of oil and gas exploration pumped billions of dollars into regions such as North Texas, bringing stronger housing prices, lower unemployment and soaring tax revenue as drilling rigs rose in urban neighborhoods. Many residents benefited directly from royalty checks and land-lease payments that soared toward $30,000 an acre as recently as this summer.

"We were all sitting over here in a kind of blissful stupor enjoying a great market compared to the rest of the United States," said commercial-real-estate broker Jack Huff. "Until 30 days ago, there was no feeling at all that anything going on in the rest of the country affected us."

The Journal notes that the price of oil has fallen by more than half from its all-time high of $145.29 a barrel, while natural gas is off nearly half from its 52-week peak of $13.577 per million British thermal units, finishing Tuesday at $7.219 per million BTUs.

The economic gap between the Lone Star State and the rest of the country is narrowing. In August, the state's unemployment rate of 5.1% was a full percentage point better than the 6.1% national mark; that difference shrunk to 0.8 point in September at 5.2% versus 6.0% nationally. More specifically in Cowtown, the growth in sales-tax revenue has begun to slow, and unemployment is rising.

The bright side from the Journal:

Some in Fort Worth argue that even if gas production declines drastically, it has left the local economy in a better position to survive the broader national downturn. The city has saved much of its natural-gas windfall in a rainy-day fund, and has put the rest toward long-term capital projects that won't evaporate if drilling slows.

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