Monthly Archives: May 2012

30 Dogs have 8 Days to be Adopted Out

30 dogs have eight days to find a home or they will face euthanasia. Macon Animal Control will close the first week of June for pest control treatment.

There is a new countdown sign right in front of the shelter that marks the remaining days left, as well as the number of dogs. Those still left range from medium to big-sized.

Animal Control Officer, Van VanDeWalker, says there’s nothing wrong with dogs still at the shelter. It’s not that they’re left behind, it’s that they’re waiting for their friend to show up.

Contact MAC at (478) 751-9200. The shelter is located on 1010 11th St., downtown Macon.

Written by

Judy Le

13WMAZ.COM


THOUGHT OF THE DAY

THOUGHT OF THE DAY:

“Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson


FACT OF THE DAY

FACT OF THE DAY:

According to the Oxford Dictionary of Quotations, Shakespeare wrote about one-tenth of the most quotable quotations ever written or spoken in English. – Provided by RandomHistory.com


7 day forecast for Warner Robins

Today… Mostly cloudy with scattered rain and storms and highs in the mid 80s.  Expect heaviest rain in southeastern counties.

Tonight… Isolated showers possible in the evening with gradually clearing skies.  Lows in the mid-to-upper 60s.

Wednesday… Partly cloudy with a slight chance for afternoon storms and highs in the lower 90s.

Wednesday Night… Partly cloudy with a slight chance for an evening t’storm and lows in the mid-to-upper 60s.

Thursday… Partly cloudy with a chance for afternoon storms.  Highs in the lower 90s.

Thursday Night… Mostly cloudy with a chance for an evening t’storm and lows in the mid-to-upper 60s.

Friday… Mostly cloudy with a chance for storms.  Highs in the mid-to-upper 80s.

Friday Night… Mostly cloudy with a chance for showers and storms.   Lows in the mid-to-upper 60s.

Saturday… Showers possible in the morning, then mostly sunny with highs in the mid 80s.

Saturday Night… Mainly clear with lows in the lower 60s.

Sunday… Mostly sunny with highs in the upper 80s.

Sunday Night… Mainly clear with lows around 60.

Monday… Mostly sunny with highs in the lower 90s.

Monday Night… Mainly clear with lows in the mid 60s.


Job Expectations Raise Consumer Confidence in May

BY: TORY BARRINGER

DSNEWS.com

Consumer confidence is at a level that hasn’t been seen for years, according to the results of Thomson Reuters and the University of Michigan’s Survey of Consumers for May.

Thomson Reuters and UM released the findings of the consumer survey, revealing that the consumer sentiment index improved to 79.3 percent in the month of May, an increase of 3.8 percent from April and 6.7 percent from May 2011. Consumer confidence has improved in each survey for the past nine months, but May’s level is the highest since October 2007.

While falling gas prices helped calm worried consumers and restored confidence, the survey indicated that consumers were mostly encouraged by news of favorable employment trends despite the fact that the Labor Department recently reported a jobs slowdown. The survey also showed that fewer consumers reported of hearing about job losses in May than in any other monthly survey since mid-2007. It is speculated that continued growth in consumer confidence is going to depend largely on job growth.

In the past three surveys, a majority of consumers reported an improved economy, and many more said they expected conditions will improve, if only a modest amount. Despite this optimism, 41 percent of consumers said they have faith in the government’s economic policies.
Few consumers expressed any concern about the impact of the European debt crisis on the United States’ economy.

Survey of Consumers chief economist Richard Curtin said that he expects these kinds of results to continue for a few more months.

“The upbeat consumer reports on jobs could mean that more positive numbers will soon be reported by the government, or that consumers have yet again pushed their expectations beyond the likely performance of the economy,” Curtin said. “The most likely prospect is that job growth resumes at a modest pace and that confidence remains largely unchanged until after the November election and decisions about tax policy are made.”

Views on buying conditions for household durables (such as cars or home appliances) were also very positive, with 63% of consumers expressing a positive attitude toward new purchases. This result, the highest percentage in more than a year, was achieved with the increased availability of discounts on items. More households with incomes of $75,000 or higher-those most likely to purchase new vehicles-held a favorable view of purchasing a vehicle than last month or last year.

Yinbin Li, principal economist at IHS Global Insight, said that while the growth of consumer confidence is a positive thing, consumers aren’t out of the woods yet.

“This is a good report,” Li said. “Consumer mood is slowly coming out of the ditch. However, there are still strong headwinds facing many American households such as rising student loan debt, a poor housing market, and weak wage growth.”


THOUGHT OF THE DAY

THOUGHT OF THE DAY:

“Courage is not the absence of fear, but rather the judgment that something else is more important than fear.” – James Neil Hollingworth


FACT OF THE DAY

FACT OF THE DAY:

A dog most likely interprets a smiling person as baring their teeth, which is an act of aggression. – Provided by RandomHistory.com


Zillow: Home Values See Highest Monthly Increase Since 2006

TORY BARRINGER

DSNEWS.com

Zillow issued a released Friday reporting that both national home values and rents rose in the month of April.

According to the April Zillow Real Estate Market Reports, national home values rose 0.7 percent in April to a Zillow Home Value Index of $147,300. This is the largest monthly increase in home values since January 2006, and it makes April the second month in a row in which home values climbed up.

Zillow also reported that rents rose from March to April, increasing by 1.6 percent, according to the Zillow Rent Index. Of the 178 markets covered by Zillow, 78 percent experienced a rise in rents.

The Miami-Fort Lauderdale and Phoenix metro areas saw the biggest increases in home values, rising 1.6 and 1.9 percent, respectively. Values continued to decrease in hard-hit markets like Atlanta, where home values fell 0.7 percent.

“The housing market continues to show positive signs, with home values increasing significantly in April,” said Dr. Stan Humphries, chief economist at Zillow. “The recovery is moving in the right direction, but we caution that negative equity will cast a long shadow over the housing market. With almost one-third of homeowners with mortgages underwater and unable to sell their homes, inventory is having a hard time keeping up with increasing demand in many areas. We’ll continue to watch this signal as increasing home values turn from a blip into a trend.”

Foreclosures also continued to decline in April, with 6.8 out of every 10,000 homes being foreclosed across the U.S. That figure was down from 8 out of every 10,000 in March.


Home Prices Show Strongest Gain in 6 Years: NAR

MARK LIEBERMAN, FIVE STAR INSTITUTE ECONOMIST

DSNEWS.com

Existing-home sales rose to 4.62 million (seasonally adjusted annualized rate) in April from a downwardly revised March rate of 4.47 million, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) reported Tuesday. Economists had forecast the April sales pace would be 4.66 million.

The median price of an existing home climbed 10.1 percent to $177,400 from $161,100 in April 2011, the strongest year-to-year gain since January 2006. The median price in April reached its highest level since July 2010 when it was $182,100.

The inventory of homes for sale in April rose to 2.54 million, the highest level since last November, bringing the months’ supply of homes on the market to 6.6.

The 10.0 percent yearly gain in the sales rate was the strongest since October when sales were up 14.0 percent year-over-year.

Distressed homes – foreclosures and short sales sold at deep discounts – accounted for 28 percent of April sales (17 percent were foreclosures and 11 percent were short sales), down from 29 percent in March and 37 percent in April 2011, the NAR said. Foreclosures sold for an average discount of 21 percent below market value in April (compared with an average discount of 19 percent in March), while short sales were discounted 14 percent in April compared with 16 percent in March.

The months’ supply of existing homes for sale remains well below the July 2010 cyclical peak of 12.4 which had been the highest level since 1982. Inventories as tracked by theNAR are 20.3 percent below their year ago level. However, anecdotal evidence suggests there is still a large “shadow” inventory of homes available for sale, especially bank-owned properties.

Regionally, existing-home sales rose in April in every region of the country led by a 5.1 percent month-to-month increase in the Northeast where sales were up19.2 percent over April 2011. Sales rose 4.4 percent over March in the West (a 7.3 percent year-year gain), 3.5 percent in the South (6.5 percent year-year) and 1.0 percent in the Midwest (14.4 percent year over year).

The median price of an existing home rose month-to-month and year-to-year in all four regions. At $256,600, the median price of an existing home reached its highest level since August 2010. The median price of an existing home in the South rose to $153,400, the highest level since July 2010 and the median price of an existing home in the West rose to $221,700, also the highest since July 2010.

The year-to-year price gain in the West, 15.9 percent, was the strongest since November 2005. The year-to-year price increase in the Northeast was the first since last June.


Frank Malloy Celebrates 30 Years at 13WMAZ

For 30 years, Frank Malloy has been a presence in homes all across Central Georgia.

From high school football on Friday nights to being at the heart of news that matters most to viewers, Frank Malloy has been there.

Congratulations on Frank Malloy’s 30th year at 13WMAZ.

BY CODY RHODES