Program will begin June 7 at multiple sites in community
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WORTHINGTON Independent School District 518 will be operating its summer food service program beginning June 7.
The program offers lunch and breakfast meals to anyone 18 years old or younger at no cost, Monday through Friday. Meal distribution will take place from 11 a.m. to noon for lunch meals at all sites unless otherwise specified. One location, Pirtles Park, will begin distribution at noon.
The locations for meal distribution in Worthington for the Summer Food Service Program are:
Learning Center, 825 N. Crailsheim Road (through July 1); Worthington Middle School, 1401 N. Crailsheim Road (through June 25); Worthington YMCA, 1501 Collegeway; Prairie Elementary, 1700 First Ave. S.W. (through June 25); West Learning Center, 117 11th Ave.; and Worthington High School, 1211 Clary St.; Millard Walker Park, Dover Street; Pirtles Park, East Avenue; U.S. Army Reserve Center, 1021 Milton Ave.;
A national medical marijuana company is moving its Texas headquarters from Austin to San Marcos, where it s building a $25 million cultivation and retail facility to serve the state’s small but growing market.
Goodblend Texas formerly known as Surterra Texas broke ground on the planned 63,000-square-foot San Marcos facility last month and said it will employ over 100 people. Future expansions of the project will add to its workforce, the company said.
Goodblend is a subsidiary of Parallel, an Atlanta-based cannabis venture headed by chewing gum heir William “Beau” Wrigley Jr. Parallel has operations in a number of states where marijuana is legal either for medical or adult recreational uses, including Florida, Massachusetts and Nevada.
Demolition of the former U.S. Army Reserve Center is nearly complete with construction of the new Fayette County Prison slated to begin this month.
âWeâve been doing a lot of work behind the scenes, from acquiring the property, to working with the architects and engineers to come up with a viable plan that meets the needs of inmates and staff, all while staying within our budget for the project,â said Commissioner Dave Lohr. âDemolition is the first phase that will really be a visible sign to the public of the project moving forward, and itâs an exciting step to finally see something tangible happening at the site.â
Stavatti Niagara and its parent company, Stavatti Aerospace Ltd., have invested nearly $2.3 million in the project.
Credit: PETER OSTAPCHENKO/STAVATTI Author: Business First /Bizjournals.com, James Fink Published: 5:42 PM EDT May 3, 2021 Updated: 5:42 PM EDT May 3, 2021
NIAGARA COUNTY, N.Y. Work has started to turn a former U.S. Army Reserve Center into an airplane R&D and prototype construction center in the Town of Niagara.
Stavatti Niagara and its parent company, Stavatti Aerospace Ltd., have invested nearly $2.3 million in the project and expect to spend more than $30 million in the next three years.
“If anyone has any skepticism about this and thinks we are not spending any money on this, they should walk around and see what we’ve done,” said John Simon, a Stavatti Aerospace director and Stavatti Niagara president and CEO.