Google, St. Louis-based Ascension teamed up in secret project to gather health data of millions of Americans
https://www.stltoday.com/lifestyles/hea ... the-latest
https://www.stltoday.com/lifestyles/hea ... the-latest
For what it's worth, this wasn't actually a secret plan. Google even mentioned it during their last earnings call.sc4mayor wrote: ↑Nov 11, 2019Google, St. Louis-based Ascension teamed up in secret project to gather health data of millions of Americans
https://www.stltoday.com/lifestyles/hea ... the-latest
I used interesting as in if anyone would be interested in reading about it is all. It’s highly discouraging that our region is this inept in working together as one. This will forever hold us back if nothing ever changesEbsy wrote:Not an interesting read in the slightest. There is not going to be demand for construction without regional population growth/redistribution, "mindset" seems to be an ephemeral concept at best.
Truer words have never been spoken. The leaders of the little kingdom's will never change. They like the "power".Wolfpaw wrote: ↑Dec 03, 2019I used interesting as in if anyone would be interested in reading about it is all. It’s highly discouraging that our region is this inept in working together as one. This will forever hold us back if nothing ever changesEbsy wrote:Not an interesting read in the slightest. There is not going to be demand for construction without regional population growth/redistribution, "mindset" seems to be an ephemeral concept at best.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
That headline is somewhat misleading. They adressed your comments directly in the article:Ebsy wrote: ↑Dec 03, 2019Not an interesting read in the slightest. There is not going to be demand for construction without regional population growth/redistribution, "mindset" seems to be an ephemeral concept at best.
St. Louis, they concurred, has a strong construction workforce and experienced set of subcontracting firms. It falls short in areas that are beyond the industry’s control, including population growth that drives demand for new apartments, offices and shopping centers.
As for the 'mindset' part, it's more about the political leaders not being in lock-step:“Part of the problem in St. Louis is there has been no growth here for 30 years,” said Bob Clark, founder and chairman of Clayco. “Increased density creates an increase in value across industrial, office and retail, and that’s what attracts capital.”
^ On that I agree. However he chose absolutely the worst possible example to support that argument:Jeff Cook, president and chief executive of Arco Construction, said places like Dallas, Denver and Nashville succeeded because “they got out and told their story. The cities that are pro-business, they will communicate and let you know that.”
In St. Louis, Clark added, key groups can’t agree on what story they want to tell. “Our community and civic leaders and our political leaders are not on the same page,” he said. “There’s too much disagreement about what progress really looks like.”
I mean... just... wow. That's like saying 'we incarcerate way too many people unnecessarily. For example, that Jeffrey Dahmer should *not* have been put in jail!'He cited the NorthSide Regeneration project area, where city officials have tried to cancel Paul McKee’s development rights, as an example of a project where “everybody needs to put their swords down and get the toxicity out of the conversation.” Clayco affiliates sold some property to McKee for the development in 2011 and 2012.
Well, obviously you can just look 300 miles to the north to know that is not true. Neither the city of Chicago, nor the region are growing in terms of raw population, yet as Bob noted, there are 62 tower cranes on their skyline...Ebsy wrote: ↑Dec 03, 2019Not an interesting read in the slightest. There is not going to be demand for construction without regional population growth/redistribution, "mindset" seems to be an ephemeral concept at best.
Thats what happens when 10 million people realize its cool to move DT or the North Lake Front.urbanitas wrote: ↑Dec 03, 2019Well, obviously you can just look 300 miles to the north to know that is not true. Neither the city of Chicago, nor the region are growing in terms of raw population, yet as Bob noted, there are 62 tower cranes on their skyline...Ebsy wrote: ↑Dec 03, 2019Not an interesting read in the slightest. There is not going to be demand for construction without regional population growth/redistribution, "mindset" seems to be an ephemeral concept at best.