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Federal jobs report shows slowdown in hiring in August

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Given the slowdown in the labor market, the Federal Reserve is expected to decrease interest rates later this month.

MINNEAPOLIS — For the second straight month, the federal jobs report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed slower than expected job growth across the U.S., as the Federal Reserve now prepares to lower interest rates this month.

According to the report, the U.S. added 142,000 jobs in August. Meanwhile, the unemployment rate dipped slightly to 4.3 percent.

The report is an indication of a slowdown in hiring compared to the post-COVID boom that began in 2021.

Paul DeBettignies, an expert in the job recruiting industry and founder of Minnesota Headhunter LLC, said the August jobs report was “just okay.”

“We are still producing jobs in this country. It’s just not as busy as it was,” DeBettignies said. “I think companies are doing a bit of wait-and-see. Wait and see what happens with the election, wait and see if the Federal Reserve is going to start lowering rates.”

In a speech at Notre Dame on Friday, Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller hinted at a decrease in the federal funds rate later this month and possibly more cuts in the future. The rates have remained unchanged since last summer, after the Fed steadily increased them in response to high inflation. 

“Determining the appropriate pace at which to reduce policy restrictiveness will be challenging. Choosing a slower pace of rate cuts gives time to gradually assess whether the neutral rate has in fact risen, but at the risk of moving too slowly and putting the labor market at risk,” Waller said. “Cutting the policy rate at a faster pace means a greater likelihood of achieving a soft landing but at the risk of overshooting on rate cuts if the neutral rate has in fact risen above its pre-pandemic level.”

Waller also said that “while I don’t see the recent data pointing to a recession, I do see some downside risk to employment that I will be watching closely.”

“But at this point,” he continued, “I believe there is substantial evidence that the economy retains the strength and momentum to keep growing, supported by an appropriate loosening of monetary policy.”

Most experts anticipate that the Fed could lower rates by a quarter-percentage point in September.

“Whether one says we’re going to be in a recession… we have been in a recession of momentum. We’ve been in a recession of emotions. We’re all a little scared, a little uncertain,” DeBettignies said. “The Fed reducing rates will give us some sense that borrowing becomes a little easier, both for consumers and for companies. If the Fed is going to give a series of these rate cuts, that does make borrowing less expensive, and does make it so employers have an easier time to grow.”

Given the job market, DeBettignies suggested that workers looking for job — or thinking about looking for one — should make sure they have updated resumes.

“This market isn’t going to last forever,” he said. “Be ready for those opportunities.”



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Union Gospel Mission Twin Cities responds to encampment complaint

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Union Gospel Mission Twin Cities is offering to help those living outside its doors.

ST PAUL, Minn. — Union Gospel Mission Twin Cities has long helped people experiencing homelessness and other problems.

Now, the nonprofit’s outreach team is ramping up efforts to reach people living in an encampment right outside its men’s campus in St. Paul. 

The encampment is located northwest of the building off of North John Street and University Avenue East. At least a couple dozen tents are stationed right next to a fence along UGMTC’s property line.

Community Relations Director Sarah Peterka says tents have been springing up for around a year-and-a-half now.

“It ebbs and flows based on the folks who kinda are leading the encampment,” Peterka said. “Weather also plays a factor in it.”

This month, UGMTC received an email from an individual concerned about the encampment, writing, “There is a recurring crisis of a tent city … No one feels safe going to and from the Mission. Please never stop and resolve the issue.”

Peterka made sure to respond.

“[The encampment is] not on our property, so we don’t have the ability to remove those folks or move them on,” she told KARE 11 on Wednesday. “It is Saint Paul public property.”

She went on to say UGMTC is in contact with the city and its Homeless Assistance Response Team.

“We wanna work with the city,” Peterka said, “and make sure everyone that happens to be outside is safe and has resources that they need – and – we wanna be able to swing our doors open and say, ‘Come in and have a meal and learn more about what we’re doing.'”

Union Gospel Mission Twin Cities is a Christian nonprofit that started helping people in 1902. With more than a century of services, the organization did not hesitate to offer help to those living right outside its doors today.

Peterka says an outreach team as well as chaplains have been visiting the encampment weekly, and some people receive the help.

“A handful of folks leave the encampment and come to our emergency services program and into our transitional housing program as well,” Peterka said. “So, sometimes it does work. Sometimes it works to have that invitation or hot meals, a shower, some clean clothes, a safe place to put your head under a roof which is a little safer than being outside.”

“There are a lot of folks who are shelter-adverse out in the encampments,” Peterka said.

The email wasn’t the nonprofit’s first complaint over the last year-and-a-half, as it’s also heard from several nearby businesses.

“Every so often, we receive some kind of comment or concern about the John Street encampment,” Peterka said. “This one complaint actually helped us get together with the city of Saint Paul and the HART team, and we’re working on a comprehensive plan.”

Peterka says in the next week or so, UGMTC plans to meet with the city and its HART team to work out the details of their comprehensive plan.

The nonprofit is also looking ahead to its annual Thanksgiving Day meal, asking the community to help stock its kitchen shelves by Monday, Sept. 30. UGMTC served and distributed 220,868 nutritious meals throughout 2023.



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Police investigating south Minneapolis homicide

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MPD says the homicide occurred near Bloomington Avenue and East 25th Street.

MINNEAPOLIS — Police are investigating a homicide Wednesday evening in south Minneapolis.

According to the Minneapolis Police Department, the homicide occurred near Bloomington Avenue and East 25th Street.

No other information has been released.

This is a developing story and will be updated as more information becomes available.



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How the Fed’s interest rate cut could affect you

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Economists say the rate cut will have positive and negative affects on American consumers.

SAINT PAUL, Minn. — The financial world is buzzing after the Fed announced plans to cut the federal interest rate by 0.5%.

The stock market reacted immediately after the announcement was made Wednesday afternoon, with many indexes jumping initially and then ending the day negative.

Economists say the rate cut will send shockwaves throughout the entire economy, but how will the rate cut affect the average American consumer?

Let’s start with credit cards.

University of Saint Thomas Economics Professor Tyler Schipper says the rate cut will have a significant impact on credit card interest rates.

“There are a couple of places where you’ll see the impact relatively early and one of those places will be with credit cards,” Schipper explains.

“Borrowers will see a lower rate on their bill very quickly, maybe a billing cycle or two, that you’ll actually start to see those credit card interest rates come down.”

It’s unclear how significant the interest rate cuts on credit cards will be, but Schipper says it’s very possible they will be close to matching the 0.5% cut on the federal rate.

“A half-percent drop may not seem like a big deal for some people, but if you have a lot of credit card debt, that can have a big impact on your ability to get on top of it,” Schipper says.

The Fed’s rate cut will also have an impact on auto loans.

Professor Schipper says there is a weaker correlation between the federal rate and the interest rates on car loans, but he suspects car buyers should see some relief in the coming months.

“Car loans are tricky,” Schipper says.

“My best guess would be they are responsive, but not as responsive as those credit card rates.”

The rate cut will also affect the housing market.

Schipper says mortgage rates were already going down heading into the Fed’s meeting this week, and we could see another drop slowly over the next few months.

But the immediate impact could be a rush of homebuyers coming back into the market.

“Because people have been sitting on the sideline for so long that they feel like it’s now time to start searching. So there very well might be a psychological effect to this,” Schipper says.

It’s not all good news for consumers.

Schipper says savers will see lower returns on their savings accounts, bonds and CDs, which could affect seniors who are depending on those higher returns to maintain their retirement.

“A lot of those interest rates that were rewarding savers are going to start to come down,” Schipper says.

“Where people might want to store their extra dollars is going to change again as these interest rates come down.”

The Fed will meet two more times before the end of the year, and many economists believe we could see another rate cut, maybe even two rate cuts, by the end of the year.

So, some good news for borrowers, but for savers, those high returns are going to come back down to a normal level.



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