Why is the gap between rich and poor in America yawning ever wider?
The issue is urgent. As my colleague Annie Lowrey writes, there is growing evidence that income inequality impedes economic growth.
And one interesting explanation boils down to the high price of housing.
A recent paper by researchers at Harvard University argues that the prohibitive cost of living in the areas with the greatest economic opportunities has forced low-wage workers to migrate instead to areas with inferior opportunities.
“The best places for low- and high-skilled workers used to be the same places: California, Maryland, New York,” said Peter Ganong, a doctoral student in economics, who wrote the paper with Daniel Shoag, a professor of public policy. “Now low-skilled workers can no longer afford to move to the high-wage places.”
In this account, people aren’t moving to the Sun Belt because they want to live there. They are moving because they can’t afford to live in Boston. And the result isn’t just second-best for them; it also slows the pace of economic growth.
Basically, the economy works best when people can move where their skills are most valued. But for low-skill workers, the high price of housing means the cost of living in those places often exceeds the benefits of working there.
The trends are beautifully illustrated by three time-lapse graphics.
The first shows that average incomes by state converged between 1880 and 1980 as low-skilled workers moved to wealthier states. The second shows the pattern of migration, which has changed significantly over the last 30 years.
The third shows the increase in land-use regulations in rich states.
And here’s the crucial point: It doesn’t have to be this way. High housing prices are the result of public policies that discourage new development. Those policies are generally embraced by the residents of wealthy areas, who benefit, at least in the short term, from restrictions on the supply of new housing. But this paper is one more reason to worry about the long-term economic consequences.
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K-L Schools Honor Tenure Candidates | Katonah Lewisboro Schools
The Katonah-Lewisboro school board awarded tenure to 10 district staff members during Thursday’s board of education meeting.
The annual ceremony took place inside the theater John Jay Middle School in front of an audience of family, friends and colleagues. The John Jay High School Vocal Jazz Ensemble gave a brief performance near the start of the program before the tenure candidates were introduced by their respective building adminstrators.
Tenure is granted to a district employee after a three-year probationary period, during which employees write annual goals and are observed and evaluated on their associated job tasks. Tenure indicates a permanent employment status.
“Tonight you are recognized for your professionalism, dedication, commitment, values and for demonstrating the qualifications we believe to be indicators of a successful educator,” said Carol Ann Lee, the district’s assistant superintendent for human resources. “We applaud your achievement and extend our support for you continued success and achievements.”
The ceremony was bittersweet for Li Lai Ng-Luongo. Although she received tenure, her teaching assistant position was terminated during the June 1 school board meeting.
“It’s an honor to receive tenure,” Ng-Luongo said. “But there’s a lot of mixed emotions because my position was laid off.”The board also honored Troy Chryssos, who served as the board’s student representative this year, and Eve Hundt, who is finishing her last term on the board after serving on it for six years.
Here’s a list of the individuals who were given tenure Thursday:
District
Barbara Milone, school social worker
John Jay High School
Jennifer Carde, school psychologist
Christopher Griffin, director of guidance
Therese VonSteenburg, English teacher
Elizabeth Krissoff, teaching assistant
John Jay Middle School
Monica Bermiss, assistant principal
Anne Doebler, teaching assistant
Diana Keith, English and special education teacher
Li Lai Ng-Luongo, teaching assistant
Katonah Elementary School
Whitney Zorn, teaching assistant
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Buying Title Insurance in Katonah NY | Katonah NY Homes
To understand title policy insurance in America, let’s look at chain-of-title and how title companies search the public records. Title insurance companies aren’t really concerned with where dinosaurs once roamed, whether our ancestors trekked across the Bering Straight or where American Indian tribes settled. Title searches begin with when the United States government stole the land, I mean claimed it — from the U. S. patent — and move forward from that point.
Because humans are involved in recording deed transfers and plotting land parcels, a lot can go wrong. You want title insurance because it will protect you against defects and human error.Property Searches and Public RecordsDivision of Land
Early deeds involved large chunks of land known as Townships.
Townships contain 36 sections and are six miles by six miles.
Sections measure one mile by one mile and contain 640 acres.
Half of a section is 320 acres.
1/4 of a section is 160 acres.
1/4 section of 1/4 section is 40 acres.
An acre is 43,560 square feetTitle Search Basics
Title searches start with the most recent deed, searching the grantee’s name (the person now holding title) backwards in time, until the deed when the grantee acquired the property is located.
That grantor’s name is then searched backwards in time in the grantee’s book to find when the grantor acquired title as a grantee.
This process continues, and over time, the property description involves larger and larger parcels of land.
Eventually, the searcher finds the U. S. Patent.Other Factors Affecting Title
Deeds establish chain-of-title, but sometimes those chains are broken. In addition, title searchers also look for reconveyances (proof that the encumbrances are paid off), and they look for easements, rights-of-way, cc&rs, other elements affecting title to the property. Here are more records that are searched to piece title together:
Marriage records
Death certificates
Tax salesTitle Insurance Coverage
Depending on the title company, consumers can choose among a variety of options, but the top three choices are Owners, Lender’s and Extended Coverage.
Basic Owner’s Title Policy Coverage:
Clear title to the property
Incorrect signatures on documents
Forgery, fraud
Defective recordation
Restrictive covenants
Encumbrances or judgments
Basic Lender’s Title Policy Coverage:
Mechanic’s liens and unrecorded liens
Unrecorded easements and access rights
Defects and other unrecorded documents
Extended Owner’s Coverage
Building permit violations from previous owners
Subdivision maps
Covenant violations from previous owners
Living trusts
Structure damage from mineral extractions
Variety of encroachments and forgeries after title insurance is issuedWho Pays For Title Policy Insurance?
This depends on your local custom.
It can differ from county to county, but it is also negotiable in the purchase offer.
Sometimes sellers and buyers split the fee for the owner’s policy.
Typically, the buyer pays for the lender’s coverage.How Long Are Title Policies Good For?
Forever, theoretically. If you are planning to resell the property within a couple years, ask your title company about “binder” coverage. Most companies will sell you a binder policy for 10% more. A binder is good for two years, often can be extended beyond that time, and the fee charged for the new buyer’s policy will be the difference between what you bought the property for and the price at which it sold. In other words, you will get a credit for the amount of coverage you purchased under your own Owner’s Title policy.How Often Are Title Policy Insurance Premiums Paid?
Once. The fee is due when you buy. You will never pay it again. Title policy insurance is the best insurance policy you can ever buy.Property transfers were first recorded alphabetically in separate Grantor and Grantee books.
The books are heavy to lift and dusty.
County records are often maintained at local courthouses or the Clerk of Registrars.
Today, most records are stored on the computer.
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Katonah NY Weekend Real Estate Report | RobReportBlog | Katonah NY Homes
71 homes currently available
$940,000 median price
$15,000,0000 high price
$379,000 low price
$348 average price per foot
193 average days on market
3776 average size
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Facebook’s next big media move: Comments | The Social Media Realtor | Katonah Homes
Facebook is planning to launch a third-party commenting system in a matter of weeks, according to multiple sources familiar with the new product. This new technology could see Facebook as the engine behind the comments system on many high-profile blogs and other digital publications very soon.
The company is actively seeking major media companies and blogs to partner with it for its launch, part of a bigger media industry move spearheaded in part by the recent hires of Nick Grudin and Andy Mitchell, media business development executives with respective track records at Newsweek and The Daily Beast.
Representatives from Facebook were not immediately available for comment.
Facebook, of course, is already very present in blog comments. Currently, a digital publishing outlet–say, a blog or a newspaper’s Web site–can integrate Facebook’s developer API and allow users to “connect” to their Facebook accounts, or can build in “Social Comments” in a widget of related messages. Often, users can post alerts on their Facebook walls announcing that they’ve commented, or can have a “Social Comment” turned into a status message. The new commenting product is a significantly deeper expansion of this, according to sources. Facebook will be able to power the entire commenting system–handling the log-in and publishing, cross-promoting comments on individuals’ Facebook walls, and possibly even promoting them as well on media outlets’ own “fan” pages. Undoubtedly, the Facebook “like” button will be deeply integrated as well.
Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-13577_3-20030106-36.html#ixzz1CjJ6BgFt