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  #221  
Old Posted Dec 12, 2013, 1:40 AM
thistleclub thistleclub is offline
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Lack of educated workers costs local economy $1 billion a year
(Hamilton Spectator, Steve Arnold, Dec 11 2013)

Hamilton is losing $1 billion a year in economic activity because of a growing mismatch between workers looking for jobs and jobs looking for workers.

A new effort by Workforce Planning Hamilton seeks to bridge that gap by finding where the jobs are in Hamilton and what skills are in demand.

Dubbed the "Hire Learning Initiative," the program seeks to find current openings while also gazing into the future to understand trends in the local labour market.

Judy Travis, executive director of Workforce Planning Hamilton, said this level of data isn't captured by Statistics Canada's regular Labour Force Survey and understanding it will help fine-tune efforts aimed at growing the local economy.

"It's to get that real time local labour market information," she said. "We get asked time and time again 'What are employers hiring today, what are they hiring next week' and we honestly don't have the answer to that," she said.

"Those broader projections around Ontario probably apply to industries here at home, but for a job seeker or employer, they want to know what's happening right now."
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  #222  
Old Posted Jan 17, 2014, 1:27 PM
CaptainKirk CaptainKirk is offline
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Construction boosting Hamilton's economy, with more to come

Construction is leading Hamilton’s economic growth, and the city is in store for a sunny 2014, shows a new report from economists and business leaders on the state of the city's economy.

Non-residential construction was a major economic driver in 2013, creating jobs and keeping Hamilton’s unemployment rate below the provincial average, shows a new outlook compiled by Credit 1 Credit Union and the Ontario and Hamilton chambers of commerce. The construction was driven by projects such as the Pan Am Stadium or McMaster’s new downtown campus.

The city issued more than a billion dollars worth of building permits in 2013. As it stands, that won’t slow down in 2014, said Neil Everson, head of the city's economic development department. But this time, it will be residential properties.

“We have 15 condos on tap for 2014,” he said.

That’s 15 new buildings, mostly in the lower city and downtown core, that developers have applied to the urban renewal branch for, he said. That accounts for upwards to 1,400 new condo units.

“Migration from the GTA toward Hamilton is driving this,” Everson said
.


With new transit infrastructure expected, Everson believes filling those units won’t be an issue.

With a 1.3 per cent industrial building vacancy rate – what he describes as very low – the city also needs new space for commercial and industry ventures, while keeping costs affordable.

“Industry is mobile,” he said. “They’re looking for the most cost effective location.”

The new Maple Leaf Foods and Canada Bread plants in Stoney Creek are some examples of that, the report says. It also cites agri-food industry as another significant driver for the area.

On a broader scale, Hamilton had a “moderate to modest growth outlook” in 2013, said Helmut Pastrick, Central 1 Credit Union's chief economist.

The Regional Economic Outlook includes Hamilton and the Niagara Peninsula. It sites employment growth of 15,000 new jobs over the next two years in the region.

Agribusiness and construction were the main economic drivers in 2013.

Average housing prices are expected to rise to $343,000 by 2015.

“Hamilton ranks reasonably well” compared to similar-sized cities such as Windsor, Ottawa or London, he said.

“With Hamilton in near proximity to Toronto, a strong performer since the recession, it could benefit from the spin-off.”

That’s increased migration from residents of the GTA looking to take advantage of affordable real estate in Hamilton but choosing commute to Toronto for work, he said.

Manufacturing: Hamilton’s long-standing industry

While the manufacturing industry contracted in 2013, Pastrick said there is a “base for optimism in the future.” Economists predict the declining Canadian dollar will boost our gross domestic product (GDP).

“That’s going to help move manufacturing back to Hamilton,” agreed Keanin Loomis, CEO of the Hamilton Chamber of Commerce. “If [manufacturing] is going to stay in Canada, it will be in southern Ontario.”

But a shift to a knowledge-based economy, which is happening in Hamilton with McMaster’s Innovation Park and growth in the life sciences, will no doubt continue, Everson said. Diversification of industry has been a focus for the city’s economic development department since amalgamation in 2001.

Loomis believes a good indicator of further economic growth is the private versus public investment around the city.

“I’m seeing all these cranes downtown from my office and they’re all associated with private sector investment,” Loomis said. “That’s where we have a tipping point.”

But Loomis is cautiously optimistic. Even with seemingly positive gains around the city, he said, Hamilton still hasn’t hit its maximum potential yet.

“I’m not declaring victory,” he said.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/hamilt...come-1.2499154
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  #223  
Old Posted Jan 17, 2014, 3:14 PM
HillStreetBlues HillStreetBlues is offline
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Originally Posted by CaptainKirk View Post
With new transit infrastructure expected, Everson believes filling those units won’t be an issue.
This is great news to hear, and I don’t doubt that the condo units he’s referring to can indeed be filled…but to what transit infrastructure is Mr. Everson referring? Even if LRT does happen, it will likely take six or seven years from approval for it to be launched, and approval is not certain or soon right now.

If the condo buildings they’re talking about are in the lower city, they’re on the B Line corridor, which does not have enough capacity for its current ridership, let alone any increased ridership. Are there any plans to buy more articulated buses or increase service in any way?

I only bring this up because I’m happy that they would mention transit in an article about Hamilton’s economy. I wish, though, that more people would talk about how the overburdened B Line buses are probably holding our city back from even greater economic potential.
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  #224  
Old Posted Jan 17, 2014, 3:34 PM
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^^^

I'm guessing he means expanded GO service to James N, and maybe even thebus lane.
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  #225  
Old Posted Jan 17, 2014, 3:46 PM
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I'm sure its a reference to the "all-day, 2-way" GO service that Bob has trumpeted so proudly... which in reality will be a couple of trains that occasionally stop at James North on the way to Niagara Falls. Sometimes. In a few years.

And yes, probably the bus lane which has created traffic chaos and is killing business downtown.
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  #226  
Old Posted Jan 17, 2014, 3:47 PM
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Peninsular Thinking

Chamber predicts 15,000 more jobs
(Hamilton Spectator, Meredith MacLeod, Jan 17 2014)

More jobs, moderating home prices and an economy "on the upswing" led by construction and agriculture are among the highlights of a 2014 forecast issued by the Hamilton Chamber of Commerce Thursday.

The chamber predicts what it calls the Hamilton-Niagara Peninsula — which also includes Brantford, Haldimand and Norfolk — will add 15,000 jobs over the next two years. That comes after a labour force contraction of 1.5 per cent in 2013....

The report predicts employment will grow by 0.9 per cent this year and 1.3 per cent in 2015 to a total of 720,000 jobs.

That growth rate falls under the provincial growth rate of 1.4 per cent in 2014 and 1.6 per cent next year but comes after a loss of 10,000 jobs in 2013….

The report points to ongoing negative employment trends in information, culture and recreation, finance, insurance and real estate, health care and social services and public administration.

But strong construction numbers — especially thanks to big projects such as the Pan Am stadium, the downtown health campus and a performing arts centre and new retail outlet in Niagara — are helping to offset declines.

The unemployment rate in the local region is expected to remain steady this year at 7.1 per cent and fall to 6.6 per cent in 2015. Those rates put Hamilton slightly below the provincial average for both years….

The chamber forecast calls for homes sales to remain steady at about 20,500 and average price growth to fall to 2 per cent this year and 1.5 per cent next year (coming in at $343,000) due to higher interest rates and tougher mortgage rules. Prices had climbed 12 per cent since 2011.

The Hamilton-Niagara region is the second-most expensive place to buy a home in Ontario, with average prices about $235,000 less than those in Toronto.

Residential building permits are expected to climb a little over 2013 but have dropped off about 13 per cent from 2012 numbers.




Derived from the provincial comparatives in the Chamber’s 2014 Regional Economic Outlook:

Share of Ontario's Total Employment, Hamilton-Niagara Peninsula

2011: 709,200 of 6,731,000 jobs (10.5%)
2012: 715,000 of 6,783,000 jobs (10.5%)
2013: 705,000 of 6,887,400 jobs (10.2%)
2014: 711,000 of 6,986,000 jobs (10.2%)
2015: 720,000 of 7,099,000 jobs (10.1%)
+10,800 jobs, 2011-2015

Share of Ontario's Total Employment, Toronto

2011: 3,118,300 of 6,731,000 jobs (46.3%)
2012: 3,164,300 of 6,783,000 jobs (46.6%)
2013: 3,287,700 of 6,887,400 jobs (47.7%)
2014: 3,347,400 of 6,986,000 jobs (47.9%)
2015: 3,417,700 of 7,099,000 jobs (48.1%)
+299,400 jobs, 2011-2015
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Last edited by thistleclub; Jan 20, 2014 at 4:00 PM.
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  #227  
Old Posted Jan 21, 2014, 12:09 PM
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Grain keeps port afloat
(Hamilton Spectator, Steve Arnold, Jan 21 2014)

Grains and trains are setting the pace for cargo volume through the Port of Hamilton last year.

The Hamilton Port Authority said in a news release Monday while overall volume through the port was essentially flat last year, grain and the volume of cargo moved in and out of the port by train continue to grow as steel volume slumps.

"Last year was fairly flat for us in terms of volume," said Ian Hamilton, the authority's vice-president for marketing. "We've lost 3 to 4 million tonnes of U.S. Steel cargo over the last five years but we're delighted we've been able to replace almost half of that."

Hamilton said grain volume through the port rose 13 per cent last year while fertilizer tonnage was up 2 per cent.

Total cargo through the Port of Hamilton during the 2013 shipping season was more than 10 million tonnes, essentially flat compared to 10.3 million tonnes in 2012 and 10 million in 2011.

The grain handled at Hamilton's port terminal includes more than 1.3 million tonnes of soybeans, canola, wheat and corn, most of it grown by southern Ontario farmers for export to global markets. Grain handling facilities in Hamilton include investments in port facilities by companies such as Sylvite Agri-Services Ltd., Parrish and Heimbecker and Richardson International. Last year Sylvite opened two new liquid fertilizer storage tanks worth $4 million. Together, they hold the equivalent of four Olympic-sized swimming pools of fertilizer. Parrish and Heimbecker spent more than $30 million to inflate two storage bubbles at the foot of Wentworth Street to hold 56,000 tonnes of grain.

Increases were also noted last year in such cargo as iron ore, salt and gasoline, offsetting decreases in steel-related freight such as coal, coke and finished steel.



Read it in full here.
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  #228  
Old Posted Jan 21, 2014, 1:55 PM
coalminecanary coalminecanary is offline
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Go Harbourtropolis!
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  #229  
Old Posted Feb 12, 2014, 2:39 AM
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Emerging Stonger 2014, the latest annual report from the Ontario Chamber of Commerce and The Mowat Centre, shows surveyed businesses in the Hamilton-Niagara Peninsula expressing the highest measure of business confidence province-wide, and fourth-greatest ease in filling jobs. (In spite of this, the OCC recently forecast that the region is forecast to fall below the provincial average in job creation and see its share of the provincial labour market erode, while less optimistic regions like Toronto are projected to experience phenomenal economic growth.)

The "Regional Confidence Index" in ES14 is a hybrid yardstick that merges the more granular confidence measures described in Emerging Stronger 2013. That report found business owners expressing considerably higher confidence in their own operations (72%) than the province as a whole (41%). Those numbers now stand at 74% and 42% respectively.

Compared to last year:

• 1 percent fewer respondents believe Ontario is going in the right direction in terms of fostering a culture of innovation and smart-risk taking;
• 1 percent fewer respondents believe Ontario is going in the right direction in terms of building a 21st century workforce;
• 7 percent fewer respondents believe Ontario is going in the right direction in terms of restoring fiscal balance;
• no change in terms of respondents’ views on whether Ontario is going in the right direction in terms of taking advantage of new opportunities in the global economy; and
• 4 percent fewer respondents believe Ontario is going in the right direction in terms of identifying, championing, and strategically investing in our competitive advantages in the global economy.
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Last edited by thistleclub; Feb 12, 2014 at 2:01 PM.
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  #230  
Old Posted Feb 12, 2014, 2:00 PM
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Mexico’s Grupo Bimbo buying Canada Bread for $1.83-billion
(Globe & Mail, Eric Atkins, Feb 12 2014)

Mexico’s Grupo Bimbo is paying $1.83-billion for Canada Bread Co. Ltd., the bakery division of Maple Leaf Foods Inc.

Maple Leaf said last year it was reviewing options for its 90-per-cent owned bakery division, including a sale of the company whose sales have been falling. Publicly traded Canada Bread’s brands include Dempster’s, Sunshine and Villagio, as well as a line of frozen baked goods.

Michael McCain, Maple Leaf Foods chief executive officer, said the deal lets the company focus on its packaged meats business while maximizing its investment in Canada Bread.

The $72-per-share price is slightly higher than Canada Bread’s most recent close of $67.26 on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

“This is an excellent outcome for our bakery businesses and shareholders,” said Richard Lan, Canada Bread’s president and CEO. “Becoming part of Grupo Bimbo, the world’s leading bakery company and benefiting from its focus, expertise and resources, will create new opportunities for our people, customers and business partners.”

Canada Bread employs 5,400 people in Canada, the United States and United Kingdom and had 2013 estimated sales of $1.6-billion. Its Canadian operations are focused on fresh products from 22 bakeries.

Sales of Canada Bread’s frozen food have fallen by almost 5 per cent over the past three years while fresh goods have slipped by almost 2 per cent.

Bimbo is based in Mexico City has 144 plants in 19 countries, including Mexico, Latin and South America, the United States, Europe and Asia.

“Grupo Bimbo is an excellent company with strong values and a global leadership position, with little overlap in our geographic markets,” said McCain, who owns 33 per cent of Maple Leaf Foods. “This makes for a highly complementary fit with our bakery operations and is expected to provide exciting opportunities for Canada Bread employees, customers and other business partners.”

Maple Leaf Foods, whose brands include Shopsy’s and Schneiders prepared meats, is nearing the end of a five-year, $575-million restructuring in which it has closed old plants and opened new ones and streamlined its distribution system. It has also sold its Olivieri pasta business, a meat rendering company and a turkey farming operation.

The agreement is subject to approval under Canada’s Competition Act and Investment Canada Act, in addition to U.S. laws.
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  #231  
Old Posted Feb 26, 2014, 1:55 PM
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Hamilton’s economy to grow dramatically in 2014, Conference Board says

http://www.thespec.com/news-story/43...ce-board-says/

Hamilton's economy is forecast to grow by 2.5 per cent this year, a big improvement over the near stand-still performance of 2013, the Conference Board of Canada says in a report released Monday.

The opening of Maple Leaf's new processing plant will help lift manufacturing output and, in turn, support a turnaround in transportation and warehousing this year, the board said in its once-a-year analysis of 28 Canadian metropolitan areas.

Last year's lacklustre growth of only 0.7 per cent in Hamilton was due to slowing of the city's traditional manufacturing – a sector expected to power ahead in 2014.

The outlook for construction in Hamilton is not as optimistic. The report says lower housing starts and the completion of some non-residential projects will keep that sector weak.
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  #232  
Old Posted Feb 26, 2014, 2:18 PM
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The Hamilton CMA shows well relative to Ontario peers in the CBoC's Winter 2014 Metropolitan Outlooks:

Kitchener–Cambridge–Waterloo: 2.9%
Toronto: 2.8%
Oshawa: 2.6%

Hamilton: 2.5%
London: 2.0%
St. Catharines–Niagara: 1.9%
Kingston: 1.8%
Windsor: 1.6%
Thunder Bay: 1.5%


The CBoC credits the bump in Kitchener–Cambridge–Waterloo GDP to the start of construction on the Ion LRT.
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  #233  
Old Posted Feb 27, 2014, 1:03 AM
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If we built an LRT and made it an ongoing part of our local economy (i.e. start manufacturing trains and other LRT-related items), watch out! We could dive in head first and emulate the Portland model but we need someone to champion such a move. It's not gonna happen the way things stand now. It would be a tremendous boon to our economy but most politicians and their short-sightedness would kill such an endeavour.
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  #234  
Old Posted Feb 28, 2014, 1:03 AM
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Originally Posted by Dr Awesomesauce View Post
If we built an LRT and made it an ongoing part of our local economy (i.e. start manufacturing trains and other LRT-related items), watch out! We could dive in head first and emulate the Portland model but we need someone to champion such a move. It's not gonna happen the way things stand now. It would be a tremendous boon to our economy but most politicians and their short-sightedness would kill such an endeavour.
stop yr thinkin and get back to drag racing. main street ain't gonna tear itself up!
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  #235  
Old Posted Mar 1, 2014, 6:00 AM
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Via Hamilton Hive:


Young Entrepreneurs Night
March 6, 2014 / 7-10pm

The Globe and Mail invites you to a night of food, wine, and networking with fellow students, young entrepreneurs and professionals.

Report on Small Business, in partnership with Hamilton Hive, invites you to the next Young Entrepreneurs Night in Hamilton on Thursday, March 6 from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.

The event will take place at 100 King St. West on the 21st floor.

Join us for food, wine, and networking (hashtag: #youngtreps), with a mix of students who aspire to be entrepreneurs, and established small-business owners who can talk about their successes and challenges.

As part of the evening, we’ll host a live photo blog on The Globe and Mail’s website and shoot video with attendees. We'll also be unveiling our new Young Entrepreneurs Night logo designed by Kait Bos.

There’s no charge to register, but there’s a limited amount of space, so register early to avoid disappointment. Please note there will be a cash bar. And don’t forget your business cards. We look forward to seeing you!



UPDATE: The Globe & Mail has posted a ScribbleLive "photo blog" of the evening.
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Last edited by thistleclub; Mar 9, 2014 at 3:55 PM.
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  #236  
Old Posted Mar 18, 2014, 4:39 PM
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Brantford Wants GO Service to Hamilton

This I see as something good about the economy of Hamilton.

The City of Brantford and Brantford Transit commissioned a GO Transit Business Case report with the goal of bringing GO Transit connections to that city. The report, which was released on February 20th, 2014, was done by IBI Group, who also did the HSR’s study a few years ago.

The report recommends two different route connections (1A – Hamilton GO Centre via McMaster University and and 1B Hamilton GO Centre via Mohawk College) be endorsed as the preferred inter-municipal service links for Brantford. McMaster is a large generator of transit trips and has connections to Toronto Union express bus. Many Mohawk College students live in Brantford and the college also has a campus in Brantford.

The report cites several different service options. Included is peak-only service of three morning and four afternoon round trips, Monday to Friday, Monday-Friday service with 13 daily round trips departing between 6 am and 6 pm and Monday-Saturday service, which would be the same as Monday-Friday service but with the addition of 13 round trips on Saturday

GO Transit has suggested Brantford could operate the service to expedite service implementation, which could be either run by Brantford Transit or contracted out by the city. It would cost less for the municipality to operate the service (than GO), though it would require purchasing suitable highway coach buses.

According 2011 TTS data, Hamilton is a primary destination for residents of Brantford, and shows increased travel to Hamilton, with less to Toronto.

There only other travel option currently available between the two cities is Greyhound where there are currently about five to six trips between the cities on weekdays, with three on Saturday and Sunday.
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  #237  
Old Posted Mar 18, 2014, 4:44 PM
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this is why we shouldn't be focussed on building parking lots at hunter or building new go stations to get hamiltonians to toronto. we should be focussed on making downtown hamilton a destination for the GHA instead of a suburb of gta.

this is great news and hopefully the start of big changes
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  #238  
Old Posted Mar 18, 2014, 4:58 PM
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I wonder what the break even number of riders is required per GO bus trip? And also what the cost would be. Hamilton to Oakville is $7.60.
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  #239  
Old Posted Mar 18, 2014, 5:06 PM
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I wonder what the break even number of riders is required per GO bus trip? And also what the cost would be. Hamilton to Oakville is $7.60.
These were the assumed adult cash fares in the business case:

1A: Hamilton via McMaster $7.25
1B: Hamilton via Mohawk $7.25
2: Aldershot via McMaster $7.70
3: Cambridge (Ainslie Street) $5.65

90 daily riders were estimated (in year one) on option 1A.
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  #240  
Old Posted Mar 18, 2014, 5:35 PM
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Quote:
The City of Brantford and Brantford Transit commissioned a GO Transit Business Case report with the goal of bringing GO Transit connections to that city.... GO Transit has suggested Brantford could operate the service to expedite service implementation, which could be either run by Brantford Transit or contracted out by the city. It would cost less for the municipality to operate the service (than GO), though it would require purchasing suitable highway coach buses.
GO Transit's diplomatic deferral seems telling. This reads like they're saying that they'll be interested in exploring the option at a later date but if the City of Brantford would like something in the near-term, they would do well to expand Brantford Transit's repertoire or enlist the services of a third-party player.

Here's the report.
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