Thanks DIBS. They said something about being the Midwest’s biggest bank but I’ve never heard of them — and I’m from there. I’m happy to have a crappy bank for my mortgage. I assume it will get bought up eventually by Wells Fargo or Chase like every other mortgage I’ve ever had…
That position really puzzles me.
Didn’t benson post just the other day that the
archdiocese is looking to close something like 70 churches in NYC?
I have had no inkling of a widespread lurch towards a religious hegemony. And especially not in NYC!
Didn’t the right wingers have their butts handed to them just last week?
Manhattan Pay Rose 11.9% in First Quarter, Fed by Wall Street
Nov. 9 (Bloomberg) — New York City’s borough of Manhattan experienced an 11.9 percent increase in salaries between January and March, the most for any big county in the nation after federal policies helped stabilize the financial industry, according to the U.S. Labor Department.
The jump in Manhattan, where average weekly wages surged to $2,404, the highest rate among the biggest U.S. counties, didn’t extend to the city’s four outer boroughs, where average pay declined in the 2010 first quarter, the department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics said today. It said wages rose an average of
0.8 percent nationwide.
Brooklyn led the city in job-creation, with a 1.4 percent gain from the 2009 first quarter. The Bronx added 0.7 percent, while Manhattan, Staten Island and Queens each lost employment, according to the bureau. While the losses in Manhattan were second-highest in financial activities, that category also had the greatest average pay, at $7,709 between January and March, up 23 percent from a year earlier.
“The financial-services industry is coming back in New York and we’re seeing the effect that bonuses have on the economy,†said Michael Dolfman, regional labor commissioner in the city.
**This does not bode will for bidding half off peak comps**
No the lawyers are not bugging me about the candy; I am going to start throwing the candy at the lawyers if they don’t GO AWAY. It is NOT OK to be dumb and mean. Dumb, OK, but not dumb and mean.
I went out for a real lunch — baked chicken, garlic string beans and a Dr. Brown diet cherry coke.
lech,
I wasn’t too worried about the missile.
but now that you ‘ve mentioned it several
more times, I’m beginning to think that you’re
in on the conspiracy!
ringo,
Agreed. Bush spent too much.
Medicare Part D was the wrong move.
They may have meant in weight DIBS. You never know.
Ringo, they definitely ARE NOT the Midwest’s biggest bank.
DIBS someone just responded to you in the FIPS thread about the halloween cross dressing 5 year old.
Thanks DIBS. They said something about being the Midwest’s biggest bank but I’ve never heard of them — and I’m from there. I’m happy to have a crappy bank for my mortgage. I assume it will get bought up eventually by Wells Fargo or Chase like every other mortgage I’ve ever had…
Baucus and Grassley are making big noise about restructuring the AMT!!!!!!
Arkady,
That position really puzzles me.
Didn’t benson post just the other day that the
archdiocese is looking to close something like 70 churches in NYC?
I have had no inkling of a widespread lurch towards a religious hegemony. And especially not in NYC!
Didn’t the right wingers have their butts handed to them just last week?
Manhattan Pay Rose 11.9% in First Quarter, Fed by Wall Street
Nov. 9 (Bloomberg) — New York City’s borough of Manhattan experienced an 11.9 percent increase in salaries between January and March, the most for any big county in the nation after federal policies helped stabilize the financial industry, according to the U.S. Labor Department.
The jump in Manhattan, where average weekly wages surged to $2,404, the highest rate among the biggest U.S. counties, didn’t extend to the city’s four outer boroughs, where average pay declined in the 2010 first quarter, the department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics said today. It said wages rose an average of
0.8 percent nationwide.
Brooklyn led the city in job-creation, with a 1.4 percent gain from the 2009 first quarter. The Bronx added 0.7 percent, while Manhattan, Staten Island and Queens each lost employment, according to the bureau. While the losses in Manhattan were second-highest in financial activities, that category also had the greatest average pay, at $7,709 between January and March, up 23 percent from a year earlier.
“The financial-services industry is coming back in New York and we’re seeing the effect that bonuses have on the economy,†said Michael Dolfman, regional labor commissioner in the city.
**This does not bode will for bidding half off peak comps**
No the lawyers are not bugging me about the candy; I am going to start throwing the candy at the lawyers if they don’t GO AWAY. It is NOT OK to be dumb and mean. Dumb, OK, but not dumb and mean.
I went out for a real lunch — baked chicken, garlic string beans and a Dr. Brown diet cherry coke.