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  • Flu Cases Surge in Kansas City | City News | CITY OF KANSAS CITY | OFFICIAL WEBSITE – City of Kansas City (.gov)

    1. Flu Cases Surge in Kansas City | City News | CITY OF KANSAS CITY | OFFICIAL WEBSITE  City of Kansas City (.gov)
    2. Media Coverage: Flu Cases on the Rise in the Kansas City Metro  Saint Luke’s Health System
    3. Southeast Mo. hospital offers tips on when to…

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  • $5 million grant for key worker homes in Fitzroy Crossing

    $5 million grant for key worker homes in Fitzroy Crossing

    • $5 million for design, development, and infrastructure costs to enable
      delivery of the first 13 homes of the Fitzroy Crossing Key Worker Housing Project
    • Homes will be delivered by local Aboriginal-owned organisation Leedal
      (via Tarunda Housing Pty Ltd)
    • Grant is part of the Cook Government’s efforts to ensure regional Western
      Australians have a place to call home

    The Cook Government has announced a $5
    million capital grant to support more key worker housing in the Kimberley.

    The grant awarded to Kimberley-based Leedal (via
    Tarunda Housing Pty Ltd) will go towards the costs of design, development, and
    civil works to support delivery of 13 homes in the first stage of a key worker
    housing project in the Fitzroy Valley.

    The Fitzroy Crossing Key Worker Housing
    Project is being funded through the North-West Aboriginal Housing Fund (NWAHF)
    and will eventually deliver up to 51 homes.

    On completion, the homes will be available to
    Aboriginal Community Controlled Organisations (ACCOs) and non-government
    service delivery organisations to meet demand for worker accommodation in the
    region.

    Leedal is an Indigenous-owned organisation
    that operates tourist businesses and key town facilities in Fitzroy Crossing on
    behalf of six incorporated ACCOs in the Fitzroy Valley.

    The State Government’s
    NWAHF invests in Aboriginal-led housing programs and supports the delivery of
    housing as well as culturally informed support services.

    Comments attributed to Housing and Works Minister John
    Carey:

    “Our government’s partnership
    with Leedal will support the delivery of more homes for Aboriginal key workers
    in Fitzroy Crossing.

    “These homes will
    ensure that low to middle-income Aboriginal workers are able to source
    affordable housing close to where they work.

    “It’s part of our
    record $6.3 billion investment in housing and homelessness measures across the
    State since 2021.”

    Comments attributed to
    Kimberley MLA Divina D’Anna:

    “The Cook Government is
    continuing to make important investments to benefit the Fitzroy Crossing
    community, including in this development and the newly completed expansion of
    the renal health centre.

    “This $5 million grant
    to Leedal means more secure homes for Aboriginal key workers in the community,
    also supporting the local economy.”

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  • Business Daily – The UAE’s growing influence in Africa

    Business Daily – The UAE’s growing influence in Africa

    Available for over a year

    The United Arab Emirates has become the largest state investor in Africa. It’s spending billions of dollars across the continent; building ports, power plants and renewable energy projects.

    We look at why Emirati…

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  • Newsom plans crackdown on corporate landlords

    Newsom plans crackdown on corporate landlords

    By Ben Christopher and Jeanne Kuang, CalMatters

    This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.

    In his final year in office, Gov. Gavin Newsom plans to go after large investors buying and owning California housing — in the same week that President Donald Trump also took rhetorical aim at Big Landlord.

    It’s an unlikely meeting of the minds of two political foes who, in a race to head off the electorate’s concerns about affordability, have landed upon the same populist message: Blame Wall Street.

    Newsom plans to say during his State of the State address to lawmakers on Thursday that he wants to work with them to regulate the practice of investors buying up large stocks of housing to rent out, forcing California residents to compete with them to afford buying a home, according to the governor’s office.

    Proposals could include “enhanced state oversight and enforcement and potential changes to the state tax code,” according to the governor’s office.

    “When housing is treated primarily as a corporate investment strategy, Californians feel the impact,” a source in the office said. “Prices go up, rents rise, and fewer people have a chance to buy a home.”

    That sounds similar to a proposal Trump made on his social media platform Truth Social on Wednesday. The two previously closely aligned on policy related to clearing of homeless encampments. 

    “I am immediately taking steps to ban large institutional investors from buying more single-family homes,” the president wrote, sending stock prices of major publicly traded residential investment firms plummeting. He urged Congress to put the proposal into law and promised to unveil additional housing policy proposals at the World Economic Forum summit in Davos, Switzerland later this month.

    Newsom is stopping short of calling for an outright ban on institutional investors’ ownership, though the source said he will seek to “curb” it with the goal of making home ownership more affordable for California residents. 

    He hasn’t yet proposed anything concrete. Whatever Newsom seeks to do, he’ll need the approval of the state Legislature.

    Trump, for his part, did not offer any details about his proposal, such as how institutional investors would be defined under the proposed law or why he targeted single-family homes in particular. The White House’s press office did not respond to an email with those questions. 

    The twin announcements come after years of long-shot efforts by California progressives to address a surge in companies buying up single-family housing stock in the wake of the Great Recession. The issue has been the subject of renewed anxiety in post-fire Los Angeles, where a recent report by RedFin showed investors (loosely defined as any buyer with a name that includes “LLC,” “Inc” or “Corp”) have purchased 27 of 61 burned vacant lots that sold in Altadena — more than 40%. 

    Asked about that report in an interview on MS Now this week, Newsom said he had signed an executive order last year seeking to protect homeowners who find it too expensive to rebuild from falling for “predatory” lowball offers for their properties. But he acknowledged “the broader market conditions are challenging.”

    The proposals mark new territory for Newsom’s housing affordability platform. The governor, now in his final year in office, has spent most of the past seven years focused on boosting construction. It’s a pivot toward populism for the governor, who is widely expected to run for president in 2028.

    Blaming deep-pocketed investors for the nation’s housing woes has become an increasingly ideological-spanning exercise in recent years, with politicians as diverse as New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Vice President J.D. Vance championing the cause.

    Shortly after Trump’s post, Republican Sen. Bernie Moreno of Ohio, an enthusiastic supporter of the president, promised to introduce legislation in his own post on X.

    Is this actually a problem in California?

    Many housing industry professionals, economists and policy researchers are skeptical.

    “It’s really hard to buy a house right now so people are looking for someone to blame for that, but I think (institutional investors) are more of a symptom of the affordability crisis than they are a perpetuator of it,” said Caitlin Gorback, a University of Texas at Austin economist who has studied investors’ effect on local real estate markets.

    Research on the topic is mixed, though most analyses have found that by taking owner-occupied homes  and converting them into rentals, these companies tend to increase the supply of rentals. That puts downward pressure on rents, while taking away purchasable homes leads to higher prices. 

    Fewer than 3% of all single-family homes in the state are owned by companies that own at least 10 properties.

    That conversion also takes away opportunities for would-be homeowners to buy a coveted single-family home. But even that comes with an under-appreciated upside, said Gorback: It provides more priced-out renters the opportunity to live in single-family homes — typically located in wealthier, whiter and higher-resourced neighborhoods — something that has historically reserved for those who can afford to buy.

    While apartment buildings are commonly owned and managed by large financial companies, single-family rentals weren’t seen as Wall Street-worthy money-making opportunities until the aftermath of the Great Recession. Since then, companies like Invitation Homes, Blackstone, Progress Residential and AMH Homes have focused on markets with relatively low prices and rapidly growing populations.

    That doesn’t describe California. As a result, larger investors — however defined — make up a relatively small share of single-family landlords in the state. Fewer than 3% of all single-family homes in the state are owned by companies that own at least 10 properties, according to an analysis by the California Research Bureau, which conducts research for state lawmakers. A mere 20,066 are owned by firms with portfolios of 1,000 units or more. The largest of those owners is Invitation Homes, which owns over 11,000 homes in the state and reached a settlement with Attorney General Rob Bonta’s office last year over allegations it price-gouged tenants and illegally raised rents on more than 1,900 properties.

    There are more than 16 million rental units across the state, according to Census data.

    Though inveighing against big monied investors for the high cost of housing is a “huge distraction,” it has obvious political appeal, said Stan Oklobdzija, a UC Riverside public policy professor. “Attacking institutional investors is the latest iteration of appearing to do something without actually doing anything. …It’s just kind of archetypical cheap talk.”

    For nearly a decade, Democrats in the state Legislature have proposed bills to track or ban the practice. Former Gov. Jerry Brown in 2018 vetoed a bill to create a registry of institutional investors that own 100 or more single-family homes, noting that “collecting the data would not stop the purchase of these homes by private investors.” 

    In 2024, lawmakers proposed banning investors that own at least 1,000 single-family homes from buying more houses and renting them out, prohibiting institutional investors from buying single-family homes for any reason and banning developers from selling entire new single-family subdivisions to investors to rent. All three bills died in committees. 

    Assemblymember Alex Lee, author of the first proposal, revived the bill last year. It passed the Assembly and awaits a hearing in a Senate committee. 

    Lee, a Democratic Socialist who has long critiqued the role of big money in the state’s real estate market, said he was “flabbergasted” to find himself on the same page with Trump, whom he described as a “far-right fascist.” Though he expressed doubts that the Trump administration would follow through with the promises the president made in his social media post, he said that “Democrats need to wake up to this populist, but righteous, position.”

    “We can’t let the far-right capture the housing positions that the people care about,” Lee said.

    Newsom evidently agrees.

    This article was originally published on CalMatters and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.

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  • Jefferson, Lipsey Named to Wooden Award Midseason Top 25

    Jefferson, Lipsey Named to Wooden Award Midseason Top 25

    LOS ANGELES – Iowa State seniors Joshua Jefferson and Tamin Lipsey have been named to the Wooden Award Midseason Top 25 Watch List. 

    Selected by a midseason poll of national college basketball experts, the list comprises 25 student-athletes who…

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  • Post-stroke injection protects the brain in preclinical study: For Journalists

    Post-stroke injection protects the brain in preclinical study: For Journalists

    • ‘Dancing molecules’ were delivered intravenously without surgery or direct injection into the brain
    • Therapy significantly reduced brain damage and showed no signs of side effects
    • Could…

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  • Five healthy habits for longevity in your 40s and 50s

    Five healthy habits for longevity in your 40s and 50s

    “Your body really needs that daily stimulus to get the most benefit,” he said. “But it also becomes easier to make it a habit if you’re doing it more often. It becomes integrated into your routine.”

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  • Inside the sub-zero lair of the world’s most powerful computer

    Inside the sub-zero lair of the world’s most powerful computer

    It looks like a golden chandelier and contains the coldest place in the universe.

    What I am looking at is not just the most powerful computer in the world, but technology pivotal to financial security, Bitcoin, government secrets, the world…

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  • Lee Marks Named Associate Head Coach/Running Backs Coach

    Lee Marks Named Associate Head Coach/Running Backs Coach

    CORVALLIS, Ore. – Lee Marks will join the Oregon State football program as the Associate Head Coach/Running Backs Coach, Head Coach JaMarcus Shephard announced Wednesday.
     
    “Lee Marks is first and foremost a family man, and he will build this…

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  • Inside the sub-zero lair of the world’s most powerful quantum computer

    Inside the sub-zero lair of the world’s most powerful quantum computer

    Much of our conversation is about what we are not allowed to film in this restricted lab. This critical technology is subject to export controls, secrecy and is at the heart of a race for commercial and economic supremacy. Any small advantage,…

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