Tullytown Borough will hold a hearing on whether a referendum to increase the fire tax will be on the ballot during the primary election.
Tullytown Borough Council started investigating last year whether they would seeking public input through a referendum on whether the fire tax should increase from two mills to four mills.
At the public hearing, the Council could approve placing the referendum on the ballot for the April 28 primary election, but they could not vote to increase the tax. Any decision on increasing the fire tax would have to come later this year at budget season.
Not to change the topic here:
The Tories claim austerity is over: this budget will prove it isn't | Polly Toynbee | Opinion |
Imagine the Conservatives really meant it. Look what they could do on a honeymoon bounce, with an 80-seat majority won on a splurging promise to end austerity. The opposition is in leaderless disarray, Brexit is done (for now), and the Tory press still crows in adulation: see those "Baby joy for Boris" and cuddly Dilyn the dog stories.
The darkening clouds give the government authority for action – there's no better time for boldness. The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) charts how every government at the height of its powers raises taxes in its first post-election budget. Next week's needs to make the most of that tradition, or austerity will be baked into this government almost as severely as the last.
New budgeting process to 'give more certainty' to Winnipeggers - chvnradio.com
TUI plans for budget cuts, hiring freeze due to coronavirus outbreak
March 2 (Reuters) - European holiday company TUI said on Monday it plans to cut administrative budget, freeze hiring and postpone non-critical projects, following weaker bookings last week due to the coronavirus outbreak.
"At this point in time, we only see a marginal effect on our operations," the company said. (Reporting by Rishika Chatterjee in Bengaluru; Editing by Shounak Dasgupta)
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What’s the Best Approach to Data Analytics?
By observing the different approaches to data analytics taken by a wide range of companies, we can see some best practices for connecting data to real business value. Data science can’t happen in a silo. It must be tightly integrated into the business organization, operations, and processes. Business leaders and data scientists should jointly decide which business problems to focus on. If there is any question about priority, the final call should go the business heads.
In practicing data analytics for more than 30 years, and leading, advising, interviewing and teaching executives in many industries on data analytics for five years, I've observed that their approaches generally fall into one of five scenarios: two that typically fail, two that sometimes work partially, and one that has emerged as best. Let's take a look at each:
NDIA Policy Points: Brexit Provides Opportunities for U.S. Companies
Britain’s separation from the European Union on Jan. 1, 2021 will have rippling effects on the U.S. defense industrial base. If Congress acts now, it can solidify defense trade and security cooperation with the United Kingdom, garnering significant gains for U.S. defense manufacturing.
Brexit presents an opportunity for the United States to improve integration of the national technology industrial base, making defense trade less burdensome for allies, expanding coproduction to increase joint military preparedness and ensuring access to critical defense technologies and materials from trusted nations.
Tabacks On Budget 2020 - Tax - South Africa
The week building up to Minister Tito Mboweni's budget speech was filled with rumours about an increase in the VAT rate and a new proposed wealth tax on assets. This time round sanity prevailed and Mr. Mboweni passed a major test in very difficult economic circumstances. This article will briefly touch on why the non-introduction of the above-mentioned taxes is a good thing and discuss the key highlights from Mr. Mboweni's speech.
Why Budget 2020 may reduce your dividend income - Moneycontrol.com
Much has already been said about Budget 2020, which has had mixed reactions from experts as well as the financial markets. After crashing more than 1.5 per cent on Budget Day, the markets gained almost five per cent in subsequent three weeks.
From the perspective of the stock markets, the alternative simple income-tax structure, the continuance of LTCG, and the potential listing of LIC were the main talking points. Compared to these, the removal of Dividend Distribution Tax (DDT) and its impact weren't discussed as extensively.
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