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Washed Up Boat in Summerland Creates Maritime Safety Concerns

Kraig Pakulski 0 18 Article rating: No rating

SUMMERLAND, Calif. (KEYT) - During the intense winds Monday, a sailboat broke away from its anchor spot and ended up on the beach in Summerland.

Now it is a serious concern if it should break up against the coast and begins to lose parts or has a leak of oil and gas.

It is slightly up the coast from Lookout Park in a very difficult spot for the owner to retrieve it, even if it is possible at this point.

It's not exactly clear where the vessel was anchored when it began drift.

Heal the Ocean and Marborg are assessing it and TowBoat US is aware of the vessel. It may be crushed and removed on site if it can not be hauled back out at high tide. After two days, that effort had not taken place.

(More details, photos and video will be added here later today.)

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En la última reunión de Powell como presidente, la Reserva Federal mantiene sin cambios las tasas de interés

Kraig Pakulski 0 23 Article rating: No rating

Por Bryan Mena, CNN

La Reserva Federal mantuvo las tasas de interés sin cambios por tercera reunión consecutiva este miércoles, y algunos miembros de la comisión de política monetaria citaron los precios de la energía aún elevados debido a la guerra entre Estados Unidos e Israel con Irán.

Los funcionarios de la Reserva Federal mantuvieron la tasa de referencia en un rango del 3,5 % al 3,75 %, en la que se espera que sea la última reunión de Jerome Powell como presidente antes de que finalice su mandato el 15 de mayo.

Powell compareció ante la prensa tras el anuncio y se refirió a la última decisión de la Reserva Federal. Allí confirmó que dejará su cargo como líder del banco central el próximo mes, pero que tiene la intención de continuar con su mandato concurrente como gobernador, el cual se extiende hasta 2028. Ahora cumple un mandato simultáneo como gobernador de la Reserva Federal que se extiende hasta enero de 2028.

Se espera que Kevin Warsh, el candidato del presidente Donald Trump para suceder a Powell, favorezca recortes adicionales de las tasas de interés este año. Warsh ya superó un obstáculo clave en su proceso de confirmación este miércoles, lo que lo encamina firmemente a asumir uno de los cargos más poderosos de la economía global. Se espera que su nominación avance al Senado para la votación final.

Sin embargo, si bien Warsh podría favorecer tasas más bajas, actualmente no existe un argumento económico convincente para una política monetaria más expansiva a corto plazo, una opinión que tres votantes clave de la Reserva Federal dejaron entrever en esta reunión.

La decisión de mantener las tasas sin cambios fue casi unánime, con solo el gobernador de la Reserva Federal, Stephen Miran, emitiendo un voto disidente a favor de tasas más bajas que las que desea la mayoría por sexta reunión consecutiva.

Pero los presidentes de la Reserva Federal, Beth Hammack de Cleveland, Neel Kashkari de Minneapolis y Lorie Logan de Dallas, “no apoyaron la inclusión de una postura expansiva en la declaración en este momento”.

Sus disidencias ponen de manifiesto la dificultad que tendrá Warsh, de ser confirmado, para persuadir a la mayoría del comité de la Reserva Federal, compuesto por 12 miembros, de que aprueben una bajada de tipos. Si bien el presidente de la Reserva Federal ejerce una influencia considerable, controlando la agenda de cada reunión, solo tiene un voto en un comité que toma decisiones por consenso.

Por diversas razones, será difícil para cualquier funcionario de la Reserva Federal defender una bajada de tasas de forma inminente.

Los precios de la energía siguen elevados debido a la guerra con Irán; los estadounidenses siguen gastando, lo que impulsa los beneficios empresariales; el mercado laboral estadounidense está débil, pero parece haberse estabilizado; y el presidente de la Reserva Federal no tiene autoridad unilateral sobre las decisiones de tasas de interés del banco central estadounidense.

La Reserva Federal suele bajar los costes de endeudamiento si la inflación se desacelera, el desempleo aumenta (y existe riesgo de que siga aumentando) o si se da una combinación de ambos factores. En la actualidad, ninguna de estas situaciones se está produciendo. Esto permite a los responsables de la política monetaria de la Reserva Federal actuar con prudencia y esperar a ver cómo se desarrollan los acontecimientos antes de decidir si suben o bajan los tipos de interés, como han manifestado varios de ellos en recientes discursos públicos, en particular los funcionarios que discreparon esta semana.

El último comunicado de política monetaria de la Reserva Federal reconoció que “los acontecimientos en Medio Oriente contribuyen a un alto nivel de incertidumbre sobre las perspectivas económicas.<

How consumer interest rates have changed during Jerome Powell’s tenure leading the Fed

Kraig Pakulski 0 27 Article rating: No rating

By Jeanne Sahadi, CNN

(CNN) — Wednesday marked the last meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee under the leadership of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.

Powell chaired his first of more than 65 meetings in March 2018. During his eight years at the helm, the FOMC raised the central bank’s key overnight lending rate 15 times and lowered it 11 times, according to Fed data.

This week, as expected, the FOMC decided to stand pat. The committee bases its rate decisions on economic data and its best assessment of how many factors – eg, fiscal policy and geopolitical events – may affect both inflation and employment.

The Fed funds rate is now 2.25 percentage points higher than it was in March 2018. But that doesn’t reflect the wide swings it took during the Powell era – from a low range of 0% to 0.25% during the pandemic to a high of 5.25% to 5.50% from mid-July 2023 through mid-September 2024, when the Fed was trying to beat back inflation.

At each step of the way, the FOMC’s decisions affect – directly or indirectly – how much you make on your savings and pay on your debts – and how much you pay at checkout.

Here is a look at how consumer prices and key consumer interest rates have changed since Powell began his eight-year tenure.

How much more things cost now

Something that cost $1,000 in March 2018 cost $1,323 in March of this year, according to the CPI calculator from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That means overall consumer prices grew 32% during Powell’s term.

While that may seem like a big jump, it is far from the highest across comparable March-to-March eight-year periods from 1957 through today.

That dubious honor belongs to the period between March 1973 and March 1981, when prices rose a whopping 104%, according to calculations from CNN’s Alicia Wallace.

What you’re making on your savings

Keeping cash in a brick-and-mortar bank savings account has never been lucrative, since their average yields live well below 0.5%, and sometimes below 0.1%.

But better options to earn money on your savings include:

Online high-yield savings accounts: Back in March 2018, FDIC-insured online banks offered modest but higher returns than the biggest banks – an average of 1.53% on high-yield savings, according to Ken Tumin, co-founder of DepositQuest.com. Since then, with the exception of the pandemic era when rates were abysmally low, they have offered even better yields. Granted, not as good as the 5%-plus ones on offer when Powell’s Fed was trying to bring inflation down. But this month, Tumin said, the average online savings account had an APY of 3.43%. And online banks with the best deals were offering between 4.2% and 4.4% as of April 27.

Money market accounts: These types of accounts offered by banks can provide a somewhat better yield on average than a regular savings account. And if you shop around, you can get a much higher return.

In mid-March 2018, the average bank money market account had a yield of 0.15% whereas in mid-March of this year it was 0.51%, according to Bankrate. But some of the best MMA deals this month are offering between 3% and 4%.

Certificates of deposit: If you can afford to lock up your cash for a set period of time – a CD can offer you a more lucrative return than just parking your money in a savings account.

The average return on a one-year CD in March 2018 was roughly 0.5%, per Bankrate data. Today it’s 1.92%. But you can often do better than the averages if you don’t restrict yourself to just your bank’s offering. Your brokerage likely provides a wide range of CDs from banks across the country. For example, new

What is the ‘perimeter’ for presidential security?

Kraig Pakulski 0 22 Article rating: No rating

By Harmeet Kaur, CNN

(CNN) — Video from Saturday shows an armed man racing through a security checkpoint at the Washington Hilton, one floor above the ballroom where President Donald Trump, top administration officials and journalists were attending the White House Correspondents’ Dinner. Hotel security footage captured Secret Service officers drawing their weapons moments later, and a subsequent clip indicates that the intruder was captured before reaching a staircase leading down to the event.

“It was a massive security success story,” Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “If you think about what happened, as far as what we know right now, this suspect barely breached the perimeter.”

Despite the disruption and the shock to the attendees, to judge by the outcome, the protective measures worked. The alleged would-be assassin never made it to the ballroom where the dinner was happening. The president and vice president were quickly rushed to safety. The one person hit by gunfire was a Secret Service officer wearing a bulletproof vest, who Trump told reporters was okay after a brief hospitalization. No one died.

But the fact that anyone breached the “perimeter” even slightly has led to a new round of complaints and questions about the bounds of presidential protection: Did the “perimeter” at the Correspondents’ Dinner extend far enough? Would a wider “perimeter” amount to tighter security? Can a “perimeter” at a venue open to the general public be truly secure?

“Perimeter,” from the Latin “perimetros” via ancient Greek, seems to have entered English around the 15th century, appearing in a Middle English translation of Guy de Chauliac’s seminal surgical guide “La Grande Chirurgie.” The word refers to a line delineating the boundary of a closed geometrical figure or of a particular area; over time, “perimeter” also came to encompass figurative boundaries, as in teenagers testing the perimeters of their independence. It has since acquired additional applications: In basketball, the NBA’s statistics glossary defines defense on the “perimeter” as happening “more than 20 feet from the basket;” in ophthalmology, it’s an instrument that measures a patient’s field of vision.

In presidential security parlance, the “perimeter” is a protective barrier guarded by the Secret Service that secures the area around the commander-in-chief. But the boundary separating the president from the general public is more fluid than the word suggests — the perimeter can expand or contract depending on the particulars of the event, the location and the people requiring access to the president at a given time, says Robert McDonald, who worked for the Secret Service spanning the presidential administrations of Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama.

The Hilton may have been the venue for the event, but that doesn’t mean the hotel itself counted as a perimeter. “When we say a hard perimeter, I’m not sure that’s a fair definition with respect to this venue and this event, with this size ballroom,” McDonald says. “The secure perimeter is basically the inside there. And then there are other rings of security, but with a lot more porousness. It’s not like there’s a chain link fence for four blocks around the venue.”

The physical considerations of a space play a big role in setting the perimeter, says Bill Gage, who spent 12 years as a Secret Service special agent. The Washington Hilton is f

Presribed Burning In Los Padres National Forest Scheduled Through Friday

Kraig Pakulski 0 25 Article rating: No rating

LOS PADRES NATIONAL FOREST, Calif. (KEYT) – A portion of the Camino Cielo Ridge Area inside Los Padres National Forest has been sectioned off for prescribed burning until Friday.

From April 29th - May 1st, burning for a combined 27 acres of land will take place in the Camino Cielo Ridge Area near Painted Cave Road and Highway 154, known as Unit 6.

The U.S. Forest Service says goal of the burn is to reduce hazardous materials to reduce the risk of wildfires. The burn will depend on weather and air quality conditions – if conditions are not favorable, the burn will be rescheduled.

The burning is a collaboration between multiple agencies including Santa Barbara County Air Pollution Control District, San Luis Obispo County Air Pollution Control District, CAL FIRE, and The Nature Conservancy.

To view a statewide prescribed burn map and other features, visit the Prescribed Fire Information Reporting System (PFIRS) website: https://ssl.arb.ca.gov/pfirs/firm/firm.php

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