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Aug 12
2009
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Business ConfidencePosted by Bruce Robinson in technology , Sonoma County , nonprofit orgs , jobs , employment , economy , business |
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Sonoma County business leaders appear to feel the worst is over, economically speaking, and are beginning to express cautious optimism about the future.
Ben Stone, (left) Executive Director of the Sonoma County Business Development Board, cautions that significant challenges still face important sectors of the local economy, notably in commercial real estate, tourism and the wine industry.
The Business Confidence Index is compiled 2-3 times per year, and has been an ongoing project of the EDB for nearly 10 years. The most recent level is shown in the chart below, which tracks that history.
The current overall confidence reading of 4.6 (on a scale of 10) is a rebound from last winter’s low of 3.62. But the current figure is still below the 2001 trough recorded just after the 9-11 attacks, and well below the three-year readings around 6 from 2004 through 2006. That history is among the charts included in the most recent full report, which you can read here.
When native wildlife in the North Bay runs afoul of humankind, it’s almost always the animal that comes out second best. That’s when
Even after more than 25 years of doing this, there are still surprises, says Executive Director Doris Duncan, including two species that each appeared there for the first time earlier this year.
Although she has been caring for all kinds of native animals throughout the organization's 18 year history, Duncan says each one is different.
A new plan to bring baseball back to the North Bay envisions a short summer league with a dozen teams of mostly local players, and a rolling set-up to dress up existing ball fields in area parks.


Even though the exact courses and faculty positions that will be cut due to the budget shortfall will not be decided for weeks to come, SSU Political Science professor Andy Merrifield (who is also a Regional Vice President for the California Faculty Association) predicts that the campus will be a markedly difference place by the start of next spring semester.