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Small Business Lifestyle

Jackson County, Missouri legislators push for property tax relief [Video]

Theres a new push to give Jackson County homeowners some relief on their upcoming property tax bills.Legislators Sean Smith and Manny Abarca are working on a plan to cut the countys levy or tax rate.It comes after tens of thousands of homeowners challenged their property valuations last year.One of them is Paul Rojas, a Korean War veteran and former Missouri state lawmaker.Last year, Jackson County claimed the value of Rojas 135-year-old home in Kansas Citys west side increased two and a half times from the previous assessment.The effort they claimed to have looked at the property as its true value was a farce; it was an insult to us, Rojas said.”If you’re over 60, you are twice as likely to get an increase of 50 percent or more; theres some sort of problem with that, Smith said.Rojas is one of the lucky ones.He was part of a group of people in his neighborhood able to successfully challenge their assessments.They can afford to pay their tax bills.Not everyone can.On Monday, the Jackson County Legislature heard input from the public on the countys levy or tax rates.Legislators Smith and Abarca would like to cut that rate to give Jackson County homeowners some relief on their tax bills, including seniors.People who didn’t expect to receive these 200 or 100 percent increases consistently for six years that’s a pretty big challenge; it’s driving people out of the county, Abarca said.”They have to choose between taxes and bread; especially in today’s times, it’s a burden that shouldn’t be there, Rojas said.Smith and Abarca are still working on the tax cut details.Theyll need to get it figured out and passed at the next meeting of the legislature on Sept. 30 to beat the Oct. 1 deadline.Smith said there are likely five votes to pass the tax levy reduction and possibly a sixth vote to override a likely veto from Jackson County Executive Frank White.

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Small Business Lifestyle

Boeing Starliner astronauts will cast their votes from space [Video]

When NASA’s Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams launched to the International Space Station in June on the first crewed test flight of Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft, they were supposed to return to Earth roughly a week later, nearly five months before the U.S. presidential election. But after the space agency deemed the capsule too risky to take them home and decided Wilmore and Williams would stay in space until 2025 the two veteran astronauts will now be floating more than 200 miles above their nearest polling place on Election Day in November.As with so many things in the fickle world of spaceflight, NASA already had a contingency plan in place for this exact scenario. Thanks to a special Texas law, the two astronauts will still be able to perform their civic duty, voting absentee from low-Earth orbit.”It’s a very important duty that we have as citizens and I’m looking forward to being able to vote from space, which is pretty cool,” Williams told reporters during a September 13 news conference from the space station.”I sent down my request for a ballot today,” Wilmore said at the news conference. “It’s a very important role that we all play as citizens to be included in those elections, and NASA makes it very easy for us to do that.”American astronauts have been able to cast ballots from space ever since the Texas Legislature passed a bill in 1997, expanding the Texas Election Code to include “a person who meets the eligibility requirements of a voter but who will be on a space flight during the early-voting period and on election day.”That year, NASA astronaut David Wolf became the first American to “vote while you float” during his four-month mission aboard Russia’s Mir Space Station.Since then, multiple astronauts have cast ballots from space, including now-retired NASA astronaut Leroy Chiao in 2004.”When I left to go launch on my mission in October, I suddenly realized I hadn’t put in for an absentee ballot and I hadn’t made any arrangements. So I quickly asked NASA, ‘Hey, can I vote from the station?’ And they said ‘Oh yeah, we have a process in place. No problem,'” Chiao told CNN. “And it turned into a great kind of public service announcement, for me to send down messages encouraging people to go out and vote.”Ballots cast in space get beamed to Earth the same way most data is transmitted between the space station and mission control through NASA’s Near Space Network, a constellation of satellites in space that communicate with antennas on our planet.”It’s actually pretty simple,” Chiao said. “Basically, an encrypted word document will be sent up to their email addresses and they can then open the document with their password.”After Wilmore and Williams fill out their electronic absentee ballots, the forms “will be encrypted and uploaded into the space station’s on-board computer system,” according to NASA. From there, the ballots will flow through a tracking and data relay satellite to a ground antenna at the NASA White Sands Test Facility in Las Cruces, New Mexico. The space agency will then transfer the ballot to mission control in Houston and then to the county clerk responsible for processing the ballots.Like most U.S. astronauts, Wilmore and Williams live near NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Texas’ Harris County, where election officials confirmed to CNN that they are working with the space agency to send the astronauts their ballots on Saturday.”Before sending the astronauts their ballot, a test ballot with a unique password is sent first,” said Rosio Torres-Segura, a spokesperson for the Harris County clerk. “Crew member-specific credentials allow the astronauts access to a secure ballot. After a successful test, the secured ballot is sent as a fillable document so the astronauts can make their selections, save them, and send them back. Once the astronauts vote their live ballot, it is returned, printed, and processed with other ballots.”Wilmore and Williams’ ballots will arrive on Earth about five months before they do. The two astronauts will hitch a ride home on SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft in February 2025.

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Small Business Lifestyle

Chris Columbus Says Macaulay Culkins Shaky Family Life Amidst Home Alone Fame Influenced His Harry Potter Casting: Parents Had To Be A Big Part Of It [Video]

Director Chris Columbus explained to Demi Lovato in ‘Child Star’ how Macaulay Culkin’s sudden ‘Home Alone’ fame influenced his casting of ‘Harry Potter’.