InsBank, Metro Government, Moldex, Second Harvest, tnAchieves, Truist, Wells Fargo announce updates
Metro Government has received $1.5 million in federal money to help improve traffic flow on Charlotte Avenue. The funding comes about a month after the Metro Council adopted a new transportation plan for the city.
Nashville was one of 10 U.S. cities to receive a grant for advanced transportation and congestion management technology. With the grant, Metro will design a project to use smart-city technology such as sensors and modernized traffic signals to keep buses, cars and trucks moving more steadily than otherwise.
The project will benefit an estimated 16,000 residents and 88,000 workers located within a half-mile of the Charlotte Avenue corridor. The Tennessee Department of Transportation has committed $1 million in state funding for the project, and an additional $500,000 is already included in Metro Public Works’ capital spending plan.
Cooperation Made the Vaccines, But Capitalism Will Extend the Pandemic 26/12/2020
A pedestrian walks past a Christmas-themed graffiti depicting an angel, in Berlin, December 17, 2020. Photo: Reuters/Fabrizio Bensch.
When nurse May Parsons administered the first injection in the world of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine to ninety-year-old British grandmother Margaret Keenan, applauded by dozens of moist-eyed medical staff at University Hospital Coventry, it was as glorious and moving a moment as any humanity has ever seen.
A jaw-dropping marvel of science, economic planning, and selfless, humanist cooperation by thousands of researchers around the globe, the development of this and other vaccines hot on Pfizer’s heels has taken a mere nine months since the discovery of the disease, rather than the years or even decades such medical research and development (R&D) normally takes. They offer a glimpse of how much more an egalitarian, rationalist world could produce a
The legislation would let banks postpone the start date of the Current Expected Credit Losses accounting standard and delay categorizing pandemic-related loan modifications as troubled debt restructurings.
Price: $50, $100
The Arkansas Bankers Association and the State Chamber/AIA are teaming up to host the 2021 Virtual Financial Forecast featuring Michael Pakko of the Arkansas Economic Development Institute, who will provide an Arkansas forecast, and Tyler Mondres of the American Bankers Association, who will provide a national forecast.
Learn how COVID-19 impacted our industries, cities and downtowns, the economy, consumer spending, the workforce and more. The speakers will also look at developing economic trends and early patterns to predict how Arkansas s economy will fare in 2021.
The cost for State Chamber/AIA members is $50. The cost for non-members is $100. To view a brochure that provides additional information on the Virtual Financial Forecast, click here. To register, click here.
Gov Little comments on passing of Dean Buffington idahopress.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from idahopress.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.