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CAMDEN PROPERTY TRUST T.CPT


Primary Symbol: CPT

Camden Property Trust is a real estate investment trust (REIT). The Company and its subsidiaries are primarily engaged in the ownership, management, development, reposition, redevelopment, acquisition, and construction of multifamily apartment communities. It owns interests in, operates and develops 176 multifamily properties comprised of 59,800 apartment homes across the United States. Its four properties were under construction and consist of a total of 1,166 apartment homes. The Company’s properties consist of mid-rise buildings or two- and three-story buildings in a landscaped setting, as well as high-rise buildings, and provide residents with a variety of amenities common to multifamily rental properties. The Company's properties include Camden Chandler, Camden Copper Square, Camden Foothills, Camden Legacy, and others. Its properties are located in Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Washington District of Columbia (DC) Metro and Texas, among others.


NYSE:CPT - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Post by chanelleon Jan 09, 2004 6:39pm
161 Views
Post# 6870193

China's Different SARS Approach

China's Different SARS Approachhttps://www.globeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20040109.wsars0109/BNStory/International/ China adopts different SARS approach Associated Press Beijing — Last year, when what would become SARS first appeared, you couldn't pry information loose from China's secretive government. Now, as the virus edges back into the spotlight, the country's leadership has a different message: Operators are standing by. A Health Ministry hotline that opened this week is one extraordinary indication of a usually unresponsive government's starkly different public approach as it marshals forces for Round 2 of the fight against severe acute respiratory syndrome. This time, the government has worked hard to appear swift and decisive — and make frequent statements that sound open and informative. The response reflects an evolution in the way China, long accustomed to burying bad news, is dealing with the press and the public — a change quite probably driven by the blistering overseas reaction to the way it handled things last time. "During the first SARS outbreak last year, the lesson was quite grave. During that struggle, we improved our system and structures," Kong Quan, a spokesman for China's Foreign Ministry, said Thursday. Few things are more important to the Chinese government than maintaining a good reputation abroad. Anything less threatens foreign investment, tourism dollars and the country's deep hunger for international respect. For weeks last year, leaders simply denied the problem, accusing the international media of alarmism and suppressing reports in the state-controlled press. One official bristled at questions about what would be christened SARS, saying: "You can see that atypical pneumonia is not a very serious disease." Only in late April, after one American newspaper called for a quarantine on China and rumours about the disease were reaching a crescendo, did China fire its health minister and promise a new openness and aggressiveness. But the damage was done. The southern province of Guangdong was labelled the birthplace of severe acute respiratory syndrome last year. The disease killed 58 people in the province and spread worldwide, claiming 774 lives, including 44 in the Toronto area, before subsiding in July. Some officials now acknowledge privately that the government's first response to SARS last year was wanting — an unusual admission for members of a leadership that rarely admits missteps. And those speaking publicly say it too, although less directly. "The government's reaction to SARS this time is much better than the last time. It has made real progress in its crisis management," said Wu Aiming, a professor of public administration at People's University in Beijing. In the latest anti-SARS effort, authorities in the Guangdong threatened fines of up to $15,000 Cdn for merchants who try to hide civet cats ahead of a Saturday deadline to slaughter thousands of the animals. Many believe civets are responsible for the virus' jump to humans, although that remains unproven. The World Health Organization suggested further tests and requested more information about the outbreak's second suspected case, a 20-year-old waitress in Guangdong. The government's new openness isn't limited to SARS, although it may have been the impetus. The new leadership under President Hu Jintao has promised at various junctures to conduct its business more openly and protect public safety more aggressively. The government has been unusually swift in investigating a lethal gas explosion last month and assigning blame. New regulations unveiled this month promise monthly news conferences by national and local security bureaus "to promote transparency of police affairs." And earlier this week, the State Council, China's cabinet, announced plans to increase the number of government spokesmen and "ease news flow." "We hope to better address the needs of the domestic and foreign media," said Zhao Qizheng, the minister in charge of the State Council Information Office, quoted in the state-controlled newspaper China Daily. "The global demand for Chinese information has increased greatly." The new attitude toward the press has not extended everywhere, however. Earlier this week, an editor in southern China whose newspaper broke the news of China's first new SARS case was detained and questioned by prosecutors, a human-rights centre reported. Cheng Yizhong, editor-in-chief of the Southern Metropolitan Daily, was taken from his office Tuesday in the southern city of Guangzhou by three members of the municipal prosecutor's office, the Hong Kong-based Information Centre for Human Rights and Democracy said. It said he was released eight hours later. For the most part, though, officials seem less defensive as the new battle against SARS begins. "Last year, we were at our wit's end. We didn't understand or recognize this illness. We didn't have a lot of knowledge about it, especially when it first emerged," said Tang Xiaoping, president of Guangzhou's No. 8 People's Hospital, where suspected SARS cases are transferred. "This year," he said, "we were prepared to fight this war."
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