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Category Archives: Progress

Kiener Plaza reopening in May; Gateway Arch renovations continue progress – STLtoday.com

Posted: February 6, 2017 at 3:10 pm

All work on the Gateway Arch grounds renovation project is expected to be finished by late this year, CityArchRiver officials said Monday.

Kiener Plaza west of the Old Courthouse will reopen in May, CityArchRiver spokesman Ryan McClure said. A more precise date for the reopening of the Museum of Westward Expansion this year is expected to be known next month, McClure said.

Much of the work remaining on Kiener Plaza is landscaping.

"You'll see a lot of planting in the next few months," McClure said.

The $380 million Arch project will finish about two years behind schedule.The project began in 2013 and originally was to finish in 2015.

Visitors can begin going to the top of the Arch again sometime in late March, using the south tram. The north tram will reopen by the end of April, officials said.

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Market Recon: There’s Progress on the Deregulation Front – TheStreet.com

Posted: at 3:10 pm

The Way It Is

At first glance, the mission seemed simple enough. There was an easily identifiable economic agenda laid out by the most pro-business president in a generation. His party had control over both of the nation's legislative bodies. Not only that, but his party also had the support on the local level of the vast majority of the nation. Things would surely get done now.

Well, things are certainly moving, but as far as the defined agenda goes, is it fast enough? Kind of, sort of ... in some cases. Both the president's bombastic style, and the partisan nature of Washington itself will be distractions that you, the trader, must learn to work around. This, my colleagues, is just the way it is.

Reason to Love

Speaking of progress, that is exactly what we saw on the deregulatory front this past Friday. The president signed an Executive Order (as if you didn't know) that really gets the ball rolling toward gutting Dodd-Frank. Relaxing this law could unleash a wave of increased dividends, and share buybacks across the financial sector. Bang! bank stocks took off for the day. Not to mention, capital markets and consumer finance names that also moved in lock-step with the KBW Bank Index.

According to an RBC Capital Markets graphic posted last night by the Wall Street Journal, Citigroup (C) , JP Morgan (JPM) , Wells Fargo (WFC) , Bank of America (BAC) , Goldman Sachs (GS) , and Morgan Stanley (MS) all have between $10 billion and $28 billion worth of estimated excess (trapped) capital. For me, this prospect for deregulation is as much of a reason for holding on to bank stocks as is the prospect for higher interest rates.

That prospect for a higher fed funds rate really did not change all that much after the release of January jobs data by the Bureau of Labor Statistics on Friday. The headline print for job creation was undeniably strong, yet came with nasty revisions going back two months that nearly wiped out the entire measure of that statistical beat. On top of that, the number of persons working part-time for economic reasons actually grew by more individuals than did that headline number.

Then, there's wage growth, or rather the lack thereof. How disappointing is that 0.1% m/m wage growth that came in a month when 19 of the 50 states implemented mandatory increases in their state minimum wages? The next rate hike remains priced in for the June meeting as it was prior to Friday. The odds of an increase in March remain very low, at 13%.

Reason to Watch

Healthcare stocks have underperformed the general marketplace since the end of summer. I have avoided the space myself for some time now, as the entire sector had become an apparent political football. Regardless of who had won the presidential election, something would have had to have been done in the space, as the ACA had become unaffordable, and the quality of coverage withered for those forced to buy in.

Now, the president indicates that replacing the ACA could take all year, and possibly not until next year. So, what seemed like the new administration's "job one" moves toward the end of the line. I do get it. If health care reform were an easy puzzle to solve, it simply would not still be the controversial issue that it is. For the marketplace, our issue is: What does this mean for stocks in the space?

As I have always been gun-shy when it comes to biotech, and I think it likely that big pharma will remain under intense scrutiny, (especially if repealing, and/or replacing the national law takes longer than expected), then I think that for anything other short-term technical trading, I remain on the outside looking in for these stocks.

Macro

10:00 -- Labor Market Conditions Index (January): Expecting 1.0, December -0.3. This particular item will not move the marketplace upon release. I do, however, find it very interesting. For those not exactly sure what we are talking about here, this is a still-experimental tool that was first released in October of 2014. Just what is it? This item is a broad index of 19 (already released) labor market-related sub-components that the Federal Reserve Bank uses to track overall labor market progress. You may or may not be surprised to learn that this index has illustrated a labor market that has been in overall contraction for eight of the first eleven months of 2016. Expansion is expected for December, but this should be a close call, given that strong headline number for job creation that contrasted with a bevy of sloppy underlying numbers.

16:30 - Fed Speaker: Philadelphia Fed Pres. Patrick Harker is set to speak from San Diego, California. This will be the second public appearance by a sitting member of the FOMC since last week's policy decision. Chicago Fed Pres. Charles Evans was predictably dovish Friday morning. It will be interesting to get Harker's (Harker is seen as somewhat hawkish) take on the jobs data. Harker has also been a proponent of reducing the Fed's principal reinvestment program as a way of tightening policy once the fed funds rate hits 1%. This is something that I can get on board with, though I would like to see this as the next step (prior to further rate increases) if policy direction were to retain its current implied trajectory.

Sarge's Trading Levels

These are my levels to watch today for where I think that the S&P 500, and the Russell 2000 might either pause or turn.

SPX: 2323, 2312, 2299, 2293, 2282, 2272 RUT: 1394, 1388, 1383, 1375, 1371, 1364

Monday's Earnings Highlights (Consensus EPS Expectations)

Before the Open: (DO) ($0.11), (HAS) ($1.29), (L) ($0.63), (NWL) ($0.80), (SYY) ($0.54), (TSN) ($1.25)

After the Close: (FMC) ($0.88), (TSO) ($0.47)

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Assignment Helps Students Assess Their Progress – Faculty Focus (blog)

Posted: at 3:10 pm

Midterm evaluations bring a host of institutional measures to reach out to underachieving students. However, what might make the most difference to students success in their courses is to enable them to assess their own performance and set goals as well as to ask questions of and provide feedback to the instructor. Instructors can give students this reflective opportunity through an online journal assignment in which students do the following:

It is best to implement this progress report assignment about a third of the way through a course so that underperforming students can change trajectory before the midterm.

My experience with the assignmentSince I make all grades available on our universitys learning management system, students can always see their grades, but they often dont check or acknowledge that these grades are available. Further, because not all professors provide grades automatically, students may not fully understand their progress even when grades are available.

Students take anywhere from 50 to 400 words to complete this journal assignment, based on their needs. Their posts range from brief conclusions that they are exactly where they want to be to detailed descriptions of all kinds of problems and questions about how to move forward. This process allows me to respond quickly to the positive reports (Sounds great! Looking forward to the rest of the semester!) and to dedicate more attention to those who are struggling. This journal assignment is not graded, but students are required to complete it before submitting any subsequent assignments.

Although I am always open to student feedback, students often interpret this assignment as their first opportunity to reflect on the course and ask questions. Some will provide context for their content knowledge and other school responsibilities, which is often very enlightening for me. Students generally express gratitude at the official opportunity to assess their progress in the course (even more so when they are doing poorly or not as well as they expected) because it is early enough in the semester to turn things around.

Even in the case of students who are negative and critical, the assignment provides an opportunity for me to show empathy and clear up any misunderstandings they may have about course procedures and requirements. Thats a much-preferred alternative to letting their discontent silently fester and then show up on end-of-semester evaluations. In some cases, it also uncovers opportunities to improve the course and correct mistakes. Colleagues from my discipline and others have received the same positive results I have and continue to use this assignment semester after semester.

Tips for getting startedHeres what you need to know before you implement the progress report assignment in your courses.

This small activity can have a big impact on students and on your teaching. It also builds strong rapport at critical points early in the semester.

Christina Moore is a special instructor of writing and rhetoric at Oakland University in Rochester, Michigan. She also works in OUs Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning.

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Think Progress Editor Mocks Audi for Equal Pay Super Bowl Ad – Breitbart News

Posted: at 3:10 pm

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Audi, new champion of womens equity at work, has no women on their board, editor Judd Legum wrote on Twitter:

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No women sit on Audis Management Board, but its 14-person team of American executives includes two women.

Legum was not alone in his criticism of the ad; 25 percent of the comments on the ad across social media were negative, Business Insider reports.

The ad begins with a father watching his daughter in a race, asking himself, What do I tell my daughter?

Do I tell her that her grandpa is worth more than her grandma? That her dad is worth more than her mom? the narrator asks.

The father wonders how he can tell his daughter that despite her education, her drive, her skills, her intelligence, she still runs the risk of being valued less than every man she ever meets.

At the end, his daughter wins the race, and she and her father walk to an Audi right before the slogan progress is for everyone flashes across the screen.

The company decided to make a statement about gender pay equality on Twitter by saying, At Audi, we are committed to equal pay for equal work.

Despite what Audi claims in the ad, the gender pay gap is not wide.

According to the Daily Beast, the 23-cent gender pay gap is merely the difference between the average earnings of all men and women working fulltime.

The statistic does not take into account factors such asdifferences in occupations, positions, education, job tenure, or hours worked per week.

Once those factors are included, the wage gap is only a five-cent difference, and no one knows whether the cause is discrimination or some other hard-to-measure difference between the genders.

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Penguins injuries: Hagelin has concussion; Malkin still out, but making progress – NBCSports.com

Posted: at 3:10 pm

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The Pittsburgh Penguins will be without forwards Carl Hagelin and Evgeni Malkin tomorrow at home to Calgary.

Head coach Mike Sullivan said today that Hagelin has been diagnosed with a concussion after being forced to leave Saturdays victory over St. Louis. The 28-year-old winger was well enough to skate by himself this morning, so it seems unlikely that hell be out for too long. Hagelin was reportedly injured after taking a hit to the headfrom Blues forward Alex Steen.

Malkin has not played since Jan. 24 due to a lower-body injury, but he too shouldnt be out for much longer.

Geno will not play tomorrow, said Sullivan. He was in a non-contact jersey today, but we are very encouraged with his progress.

Tomorrow will be the fifth straight game that Malkin has missed. The Penguins have gone 3-1-0 without him.

The Pens are also missing forward Conor Sheary, and they will for a while longer.Sheary is on IR with an upper-body injury.

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The Arizona Coyotes said it would be different this time. They said their ownership group was comprised ofpeople that can get this done.

And yet,who was surprised to hear Friday that the teamsplans to build a new arena in Tempe were dead?

The answer is, nobody was surprised. Friday was just the latest setback on a long list. Once again, there is no plan for a new arena to replace the one in Glendale, and the Coyotes have made it crystal clear thatthey arent staying in Glendale.

Unfortunately, it appears the ASU deal will not being moving forward, said Coyotes president and CEO Anthony LeBlanc. We will continue to explore other options that will ensure a successful future for the team and our fans. Were a determined bunch on the ice and off the ice. We intend to do everything we can to keep NHL hockey here in Arizona.

Perhaps the Coyotes will now pursue an arena in Scottsdale. Maybe theyll see about sharing one with the Suns in downtown Phoenix. There are reportedly other options.

But according to TSNs Darren Dreger, the Coyotes were shocked that ASU backed out. And thats not a good look for ownership.

Its not a good look for the NHL either. This drama has been going on for years now. One day, the situation in the desert looks dire. The next, a plan comes together and theres great optimism. The next, the plan falls apart and its back to dire.

Regarding possible relocation, there is still no hard-and-fast arena plan in Seattle. That being said, there is a concerted push, with some big names attached, to get one built. The NHL has made no secret that the Pacific Northwest is on their radar. Theres an arena inPortland, Oregon, which could be an option as well.

As for Quebec City, it is unlikely that the NHL would want the Coyotes to move there, as that would only worsen the leagues geographic imbalance.

But the NHL cannot allow this situation to exist for much longer. It is beyond embarrassing now. Just recall what the commissioner, Gary Bettman, said after the now-dead Tempe deal was announced in November.

I think first and foremost itll stop all the speculation as to what may or may not happen to the franchise, Bettman said.

Nope!

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Its been total silence from Ken Hitchcock since he was fired as Blues head coach last week but on Monday, Hitchcock finally spoke.

Well, sort of.

Though hes turned out repeated interview requests from the Post-Dispatch, Hitchcock did release a statement to the paper. Here it is, in full:

When I reflect on my time in St. Louis, I remember it as some of the best years of my career. I would like to thank Tom Stillman and the entire ownership group, Doug (Armstrong) and the rest of the Blues management for giving me the opportunity to be part of such a storied franchise.

I am very proud of our record on the ice over my time in St. Louis and would like to thank all of the coaches that I have had the pleasure of sharing the bench with: Gary Agnew, Ray Bennett, Danny Brooks, Jim Corsi, Sean Ferrell, Corey Hirsch, Scott Masters, Scott Mellanby, Kirk Muller, Brad Shaw, Steve Thomas and Rick Wilson and the Blues equipment and medical staffs for all of their support during my tenure. Without their hard work and dedication, we could not have had the success we achieved. A special thanks and good luck also goes to Mike Yeo. Mike was a true professional and an incredible source of knowledge and support as an associate coach. The Blues are in good and capable hands going forward with Mike.

I was very fortunate to coach many wonderful players during my tenure and I truly appreciate your dedication over the years as we tried to make our goal a reality. I have made some special friends with many of you and I know our paths will cross again soon.

I also want to recognize the front office staff in St. Louis. Their commitment and passion for connecting the team with the community is inspiring and did not go unnoticed. They continue to play an important role in keeping the organization moving in a positive direction.

Finally, to the St. Louis Blues fans, I want to thank you for your unwavering support. I have received countless notes of appreciation over the last few days and it truly means the world to me. St. Louis is an amazing sports town with some of the most knowledgeable fans in the world. I am eternally grateful to have been part of the Blues organization and to have made St. Louis my home over the last six years. The friendships Ive developed and the memories I have made here will last me a lifetime.

Its a nice gesture from Hitch who, as Armstrong put it, paid the price for all our failures, including mine. One gets the sense this was a heartbreaking conclusion to his time in St. Louis, something made evident by Armstrong choking back tears in announcing the dismissal.

Related: The challenge for Yeo? Make better use of Blues speed

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If Melker Karlsson and Joonas Donskoi have shown anything, its that San Jose GM Doug Wilson knows how to find NHL talent in Europe.

Now, well see if that applies to Marcus Sorensen.

Sorensen, the speedy 24-year-old forward signed out of the Swedish League last summer, has been recalled by San Jose and could make his NHL debut tomorrow when the Sharks take on the Sabres.

Sorensens recall comes after he scored 13 goals and 27 points in 39 games for the AHL Barracuda, in what is his first professional season in North America.

Previously, the former Ottawa draftee (fourth round, 2010) had spent the better part of his career with SHL outfit Djurgardens IF.

As mentioned above, Wilson and the Sharks are hopeful Sorensen can follow in the footsteps of Karlsson and Donskoi. The former was signed out of Sweden in 2014 age the age of 23 and the undrafted forward spent a short time in the AHL before transitioning to the Sharks that same year.

Karlsson has since become a lineup fixture for the Sharks, and has six goals and 13 points through 46 games this year.

Donskoi, a former Florida draftee, signed with San Jose in 2015 after capturing Finnish League MVP honors. Like Karlsson, he was 23 at the time of singing and, like Karlsson, wasted little time making an impact in San Jose. Donskoi jumped straight to the NHL and had a solid rookie campaign, with 11 goals and 36 points in 72 games.

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Kenny Agostino could not ask for a better chance to prove he can produce in the NHL.

Tonight in Philadelphia, the 24-year-old winger will take Robby Fabbris spot in the St. Louis Blues lineup. Fabbri, of course, isdone for the season with an ACL injury.

Agostino has been a prolific scorer in the AHL. This season, he leads the league with 60 points (18G, 42A) in 48 games for the Chicago Wolves.

Against the Flyers, hes expected to skate on a line with Jori Lehtera and David Perron.

(Agostino) has been having a great deal of success down there and I want him to come up and show us what he can do, said Blues head coach Mike Yeo, per NHL.com. I dont want him thinking about too much or worried one mistake will take him out of the lineup. I want to see what he can bring us and well give him a good chance tonight.

It will be Agostinos first real game with the Blues. Signed as a free agent this past summer, he had a five-point game in the preseason, but it wasnt enough to make the opening-night roster under coach Ken Hitchcock.

Agostino has one goal and one assist in 10 career NHL games, all with the Calgary Flames.

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Patel: Syria progress at risk without new push in 2017 – ReliefWeb

Posted: at 3:10 pm

After visiting Jordan and Lebanon, Priti Patel welcomed progress for Syrian refugees but warned that more intrenational help was needed.

International Development Secretary Priti Patel today warned that international efforts must be redoubled if the much needed humanitarian pledges made at last years London Syria Conference are to be delivered. Her call came as the UK published the latest data tracking the progress of all major donors against their promises. Following a 2 day visit to Lebanon and Jordan, Ms Patel welcomed the progress made in getting children into school and Syrian refugees into work the focus of the 2016 Conference.

That includes new training and job opportunities for tens of thousands of Syrian refugees and more than 75,000 children enrolled in schools in Lebanon and Jordan. New funding has also significantly exceeded the $6 billion total promised for 2016 at the Syria Conference, with $8 billion allocated last year. International Development Secretary Priti Patel said:

This time last year, the world came together in the face of a relentlessly brutal conflict and agreed to actions that would give hope to Syrian refugees. Alongside the life-saving emergency support UK aid provides we have prioritised opportunities for refugees to work and ensure a generation of Syria children were not denied an education.

I have seen for myself in Lebanon and Jordan how that approach is working. UK aid is saving and transforming lives while giving refugees a reason to remain close to home rather than risking their lives in the crossing to Europe.

But the job is only half done. It is now critical that donors deliver on their long-term funding pledges. The protracted crisis in Syria is the defining humanitarian challenge of our time and history will judge us if the international community does not deliver on the support Syrian refugees and the region needs.

The International Development Secretary made clear that donors and host countries must significantly step up their efforts in 2017 to deliver on promises to create more than one million jobs and to ensure every child affected by the Syria crisis has the chance of an education. She has called for:

donors to deliver predictable, multi-year funding so host countries can plan their long term response that means ensuring the 2017 UN appeals are funded, but also providing new loans to support jobs and growth in the region

governments in the region to work with key international financial institutions and UN agencies to develop a credible pipeline of job-creating projects

host countries to complete the reform of their economies to support business creation, remove remaining legislative restrictions on work, and attract investment

donors, NGOs and education providers to work with regional governments to improve the quality of education through support to teacher training, school management and standards

more support to non-formal education, so children who have been out of school can catch up quickly before joining formal school

the international community and host countries to jointly tackle barriers that are stopping children attending school, including child labour and adolescent marriage.

The Syria Conference was held in London on February 4th 2016 and co-hosted by the UK. Over the last year, the UK has pushed other donors to keep pace in responding to the crisis and to deliver on their promises. That includes the publication today of the second edition of the Pledge Tracker Report, produced by the UK and designed to hold donors to account for the financial promises they made at the Syria Conference.

Although the report shows that total funding pledges made at the Syria Conference have been exceed, it also highlights that more than a fifth of donors have either not delivered on their promises or are spending the money but not reporting back in a co-ordinated way. The Pledge Tracker Report is intended to highlight such failings and bring pressure on non-compliant donors to address them.

Along with new funding exceeding the $6 billion pledged, other key results in the 12 months since the Syria Conference took place on 4 February 2016 include:

work permits issued to 37,000 Syrians in Jordan, nearly a tenfold increase in the last year

an innovative pilot programme with SMEs in Lebanon to deliver jobs for refugees and the poorest Lebanese

a UK-supported trade deal that will allow Jordanian exporters easier access to the EU market

more than 75,000 children enrolled in schools in Jordan and Lebanon in 2016, as well as teacher training and an increase in school places

more than half a million children inside Syria receiving formal primary or secondary education thanks to UK support

loans and grants to help set up Special Economic Zones and provide refugees with training and job opportunities in Jordan.

Notes to editors

The new figures set out in todays report show that both the UKs own pledge of 510 million as well as the total $6 billion promised by the international community as a whole for 2016 have been exceeded. The UK has spent 550 million and Conference donors have now allocated $8 billion, $6.2 billion of which has already been spent. The report can be seen on the London Conference website.

The London Conference on Syria and the region took place on 4 February 2016 and was co-hosted by the UK, along with Germany, Kuwait, Norway and the United Nations. It brought together more than 60 countries and organisations, including 33 heads of state and Governments. In excess of $12 billion was pledged by the international community more than has ever been committed for a humanitarian crisis in a single day.

Historic Compact agreements with Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan aimed to create at least 1.1 million jobs so that refugees have a livelihood closer to home, as well as creating jobs for local people and fuelling economic growth in the region. Refugee hosting countries agreed to ensure that no child missed out on the chance of an education as a result of the conflict, including a pledge to deliver education to all refugee and host community children in countries neighbouring Syria.

The UN has launched an $8 billion appeal to meet humanitarian needs inside Syria and across the region in 2017, highlighting that the conflict in Syria remains one of the worlds biggest humanitarian crises. It is vital that all donors not only fully deliver on their pledges to date, but step up with the new funding needed for 2017.

General media queries

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Progress Announces ProgressNEXT 2017 Partner Conference – Business Wire (press release)

Posted: at 3:10 pm

BEDFORD, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Progress (NASDAQ: PRGS) today announced that ProgressNEXT, its premier event for Progress partners, will be held in Orlando, FL February 8-11, 2017. Attendees will hear directly from Progress executives, solution experts, industry innovators and partners benefiting from Progress offerings and will learn best practices for building the business applications of tomorrow.

In todays competitive technology market, its more important than ever to provide channel partners with exceptional value, innovation and access to expertise that position them for long-term success. We take great pride in the fact that thousands of customers and partners rely on our solutions to build mission-critical applications, said Kimberly King, Vice President, Global Partners and Channels, Progress. Our vision and focus on enterprise business application development is core to our future - our goal for the conference is to share our vision and collaborate with our partners on how together we can deliver the most compelling and valuable solutions for the market.

Event sponsors include ConnectPlaza, DataPA, ISCORP, Raybiztech, Servoy and Kingslake.

For more information about ProgressNEXT, please visit: https://www.progress.com/partners/next.

Additional Resources

About Progress Progress(NASDAQ: PRGS) is a global leaderin application development, empowering enterprises to build mission-critical business applications to succeed in an evolving business environment.With offerings spanning web, mobile and data for on-premise and cloud environments, Progress powers businesses worldwide, promoting success one application at a time. Learn aboutProgress atwww.progress.com or 1-781-280-4000.

Progress is a trademark or registered trademark of Progress Software Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries or affiliates in the US and other countries. Any other trademarks contained herein are the property of their respective owners.

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National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)

Posted: October 11, 2016 at 12:48 am

The National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) is the largest nationally representative and continuing assessment of what America's students know and can do in various subject areas. Learnmore...

Now Available - 2015 Mathematics in Puerto Rico Take a look atthe results of the 2015 Spanish-language NAEP mathematics assessment administered to public school students in Puerto Rico. Learn more ...

Story Map of NAEP data on MapED 2015 NAEP data has been added to MapED - a dynamic data mapping tool that provides geographic context to NCES, Census and other education demographic datasets. Learn more ...

Now Available - 2016 DBA Tutorial VideosThe 2016 Digitally Based Assessment (DBA) interactive tutorial videos are designed to teach students about the system and the tools they use to take the NAEP assessments.Learn more ...

Check out our blogNAEP Plus! We invite you to engage in conversations with us as we examine NAEP results more deeply, share developments in our assessments, and keep you up-to-date on our activities. Learn more ...

May 17, 2016: The Nation's Report Card: 2014 Technology and Engineering Literacy Assessment

April 27, 2016: The Nation's Report Card: 2015 Mathematics and Reading at Grade 12

NAEP Results on Your Mobile Device! Now available for download through the Apple App Store and Google Play. Be sure to download the latest report: 2013 Mathematics and Reading. Learnmore...

Share NAEP by Social Media and Email! Want to share NAEP content, news, or data on Facebook, Twitter, or by email? Now you can by using the social media icons located in the top right corner of each page.

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Contact Us – Progress Energy

Posted: July 27, 2016 at 11:35 am

Please select the appropriate contact information:

Email Customer Service

Email Customer Service

Email Customer Service

Phone Customer Service 919.508.5400 Raleigh 800.452.2777 Other

Customer Service Specialists are available by phone Monday through Friday 7am to 9pm

Phone Customer Service 866.582.6345

Customer Service Specialists are available by phone Monday through Friday 7am to 6pm

Phone Customer Service 866.582.6345

Customer Service Specialists are available by phone Monday through Friday 7am to 6pm

For added convenience, you can get information anytime using our automated systems.

Report a power outage: 800.419.6356

Mailing address:

Bill Payments Duke Energy Progress P.O. Box 1003 Charlotte, N.C. 28201-1003

Overnight or Express Mail Duke Energy 10101 Claude Freeman Dr. 225N Charlotte, N.C. 28262

General correspondence/corporate Duke Energy Progress P.O. Box 1771 Raleigh, N.C. 27602

Additional contact information:

Unauthorized uses and theft of electricity is illegal and extremely dangerous. To confidentially report suspicious activities involving electrical equipment, please call us at 800.452.2777.

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Center for American Progress

Posted: July 18, 2016 at 3:32 pm

As bipartisan momentum around criminal justice reform continues to grow in Congress and across the United States, policymakers must include disability as a critical component of reform. Read more

By Rebecca Vallas | Monday, July 18, 2016

At each stage of our national development, the federal government has made major investments in infrastructure to accommodate future population growth and facilitate economic prosperity. The time has come once again to make sustained investments across sectors to ensure the United States is poised to thrive in the 21st century.

By Kevin DeGood, Christian E. Weller, Andrew Schwartz | Thursday, July 14, 2016

State policymakers are debating net energy metering in the context of electricity rates, the growing solar market, and reducing carbon emissions.

By Luke Bassett | Thursday, July 14, 2016

Practical policy reformsnot just more conversationare needed to address the recent violence between police and the African American community.

by Sam Fulwood III | Thursday, July 14, 2016

Issue Brief For Turkey and Iran to move away from their destructive regional confrontation and toward stability, they need to return to their previous policy of selective cooperation, compartmentalization, and mediation.

by Blent Aras and Emirhan Yorulmazlar | Monday, July 11, 2016

Issue Brief By taking steps to strengthen their unemployment insurance programs, states can better protect working families against joblessness, increase workforce participation, and prepare their economies to face the next recession.

by Rachel West, Indivar Dutta-Gupta, Kali Grant, Melissa Boteach, Claire McKenna, Judy Conti | Thursday, July 7, 2016

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