LIKE TAKING ANTS TO A PICNIC! (Thanks and H/T to the late David Brian Wallace -- "like taking ants to a picnic" this was one of his favorite clichés in rural American English.,

In secret, behind locked gates, our Nation's Oldest City dumped a landfill in a lake (Old City Reservoir), while emitting sewage in our rivers and salt marsh. Organized citizens exposed and defeated pollution, racism and cronyism. We elected a new Mayor. We're transforming our City -- advanced citizenship. Ask questions. Make disclosures. Demand answers. Be involved. Expect democracy. Report and expose corruption. Smile! Help enact a St. Augustine National Park and Seashore. We shall overcome!
LIKE TAKING ANTS TO A PICNIC! (Thanks and H/T to the late David Brian Wallace -- "like taking ants to a picnic" this was one of his favorite clichés in rural American English.,

From The New York Times:
The Consumer Price Index rose 3.8 percent in April from a year earlier, as increasing energy costs replaced tariffs as the driver of higher prices for Americans.
Consumer prices in the United States rose last month at the fastest rate since May 2023, as sharp increases in energy costs caused by war in the Middle East made life more expensive for American consumers.
The Consumer Price Index rose 3.8 percent in April from a year earlier, the Labor Department reported on Tuesday, up from a 2.4 percent annual increase before the conflict started in February and a 3.3 percent increase in March.
The increase was driven largely by energy prices, up 3.8 percent since the previous month. But the “core” index, stripping out volatile food and energy prices, also rose 2.8 percent over the year in April, up from 2.6 percent in March.
Here’s what else to know about the report:
Fuel costs:Higher energy costs are bleeding into prices for transportation including airline fares, which rose 2.8 percent in April, as well as goods that get to market in a truck or on a boat. Follow oil prices here.
Food prices:Grocery costs rose 2.9 percent since last April, driven largely by the price of beef, which has been rising because of smaller cattle herds. Tomatoes have risen nearly 40 percentsince a year ago because of a combination of tariffs, severe weather and higher fuel costs. And steel tariffs are raising the prices of canned foods.
Political fallout:The report spells bad political news for President Trump, who has struggled recently to sell his economic agenda to voters, with majorities saying in poll after poll that they are frustrated with the rising cost of living. A White House statement acknowledged the consequences of the war with Iran, but pointed to actions in areas like drug pricing, arguing that those costs have fallen and saying the president’s agenda “continues to deliver.”
Fed outlook:Although the Federal Reserve has said it looks past swings in energy costs, as they are generally expected to recede before translating into underlying inflation, the hotter-than-expected measure will weaken the case for cutting interest rates this year. With the strong jobs report last week, many analysts had already moved back their forecasts for cuts into 2027.
Statistical quirks:Unable to collect housing data on its normal schedule because of the government shutdown last fall, the Bureau of Labor Statistics had to wait until April, masking what might have been a swifter deceleration given cooling rents and home prices. Rents and the measure of costs for people who own their home both rose 3.3 percent over the year, up from an annual increase of 3 percent for the previous three months.
The economics team at RSM, a consulting firm that specializes in forecasting, projects that as the supply shock from the war in the Middle East works its way through the U.S. economy, inflation will peak “at or above” 4.5% on annual basis sometime this summer.
The jump in prices means that workers’ wages are, once again, failing to keep up with inflation. The cooling labor market means that average hourly earnings have been rising more slowly, up 3.6 percent over the past year, and 0.2 percent over the past month. That slowdown, combined with the spike in energy prices, means that hourly earnings, adjusted for inflation, fell 0.5 percent in April, the second straight monthly decline. Real wages fell sharply during the peak of the post-pandemic inflation surge, but had been rising steadily in recent years.
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