Scotts Valley bank hosts art show
Santa County Bank’s Scotts Valley branch is currently hosting the art exhibition “Quintessential Santa Cruz County.” The ongoing event displays 19 local professional artists and members of The Santa Cruz Oil Painters to celebrate the landscape and lifestyle of Santa Cruz County.
Forty years of Santa’s Shelves
Events of the past few weeks force everyone to ask – What can we do? Who do you call if you have an emergency? How safe are we?
Datebook
- Submit Datebook items to [email protected] or drop off press releases or photos at 5215 Scotts Valley Drive, Ste. F, Scotts Valley 95066. Deadline is 5 p.m. Tuesday. Entries are subject to editing, and publication is not guaranteed.
Letter: Perpetual Felton “Stuff Sale” is an eyesore and needs to end
Enough "Stuff" I love a good yard sale, and I have to admit that when I first saw the Stuff Sale sign in the parking lot of the furniture store at 6185 Graham Hill Road, I thought "oh boy!" and immediately stopped to check it out.
Your Health: Don’t be a fall guy
Falls are the leading cause of injury-related emergency-room visits for those older than 65. The risk of falling increases with age and is greater for women than men. Falls are also the leading cause of death from injury among the elderly. Almost 10,000 deaths in older Americans are associated with falls every year.
Wine Lover: The rise of Rhone wines
Rhone wines are a unique bunch. They can be bottled as single varietal wines or as a blend. They seem to do well all over the world (especially Syrah) with few exceptions, and they have made huge gains in popularity in California during the past couple of decades.
Roaring Camp still chugging along at 60
When Jonathan Hawkins got the late-breaking news that Roaring Camp Railroads would be dropping its tourist train ticket price to the historical rate of 90 cents for its 60th anniversary, April 6, he suddenly had a new plan for the day.
He and his 6-year-old...
Mr. Money
Interest rates are the lowest they’ve been in human history, and they’ve been this low for almost seven years. On September 17, the Federal Reserve Bank, at long last, might raise its rate for overnight loans to banks – the Fed funds rate – from approximately zero to slightly above zero.They’ve been itching to raise rates for over a year now. Just last week, Federal Reserve board member, Dennis Lockhart said “the central bank is ready to hike.”I’m not convinced it will happen, but if it does, what effect will the increase have on residents of Scotts Valley and San Lorenzo Valley?Rising interest rates would be good news for savers, who would receive more interest on their savings. They would be bad for homeowners with adjustable-rate mortgages, because their monthly payments would rise. They also might be bad for home prices, as higher borrowing costs make it harder for buyers to qualify for a loan.The current ultra-low rates are the result of emergency measures taken by the Fed during the financial crisis of 2008. In an effort to prevent a depression like the 1930s, the Fed cut short-term rates to near zero to spur economic activity.That move was led by “Helicopter Ben” Bernanke, then chair of the Fed and so nicknamed because he once quipped that, if necessary, he would drop hundred-dollar bills from a helicopter to prevent another depression.Emergency measures aren’t supposed to last seven years. So Fed officials want to raise rates now, partly to show that their policy has worked.But has it?Well, the plan was to provide easy money to lift inflation – not too much, just enough to prevent deflation, or falling prices, like the U.S. experienced in the 1930s. However, low rates have had unexpected consequences:Inflation: The cycle is supposed to work this way: When the economy slows down, companies make less money and weak ones go out of business. When the economy heats up, the surviving companies can raise prices because of less competition. So inflation rises.But this long stretch of easy money has kept afloat weak companies that in a normal economic cycle wouldn’t survive, so they keep churning out supply and reducing inflation pressures. We’ve seen this in such industries as energy, mining and agriculture.Jobs: Easy money is supposed to encourage companies to hire. However, partly because of uncertainty about taxes and health care costs, companies have been reluctant to hire, instead they borrow cheap money to buy back their own stock and the stock of other companies. When companies merge, they lay off workers.The very low jobless rate of 5.3 percent reported a week ago doesn’t count people who have stopped looking for work or are not working as many hours as they want. The percentage of adults in the workforce remained very low at 62.6 percent.But the main reason interest rates aren’t likely to rise much in the near future is that the economy can’t handle it. In the last seven years, the federal debt has ballooned from $10 trillion to $18 trillion. The U.S. is paying an average interest rate of 1.5 percent on that debt.If the average rate rose by 1 percent to 2.5 percent, still very low historically, that would add $180 billion a year in borrowing cost. The government nearly shut itself down twice in recent years because lawmakers couldn’t find $30 billion in spending cuts. How on earth could we afford an extra $180 billion?My guess is that interest rates will stay low, at least for now.Mark Rosenberg is a financial adviser with Financial West Group in Scotts Valley, a member of FINRA and SIPC. He can be reached at 831-439-9910 or [email protected]
Hitchcock Festival gets ready to thrill Scotts Valley
The suspense thriller is a movie genre synonymous with Sir Alfred Joseph Hitchcock, and for him and his fans, they were a way of life.
Born in 1899 on the outskirts of East London, the man who came to be known as “The Master of...
News Briefs | Published Sept. 26, 2025
Music at Skypark wraps up 16th season this Sunday
The free outdoor Music at Skypark concert series concludes its 16th season this Sunday, Sept. 28,...