Bringing Mexico to Ted Cruz
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Yes, a BIDEN appointee as of January 21, 2021 !
“Tarak Shah to Serve as Chief of Staff, David G. Huizenga to Serve as Acting Secretary
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today announced new Biden-Harris Administration senior leadership appointees. These new leaders will direct policy at DOE, coordinate across the Administration, and enact President Joe Biden’s vision for bold action on the climate crisis and on safeguarding the Americans most affected by it. These experienced professionals reflect President Biden’s pledge to equip his Administration with a team that represents America’s diversity.
These funds would provide $350 billion to help states, counties, cities and tribal governments cover increased expenditures, replenish lost revenue and mitigate economic harm from the COVID-19 pandemic. | Intergovernmental Affairs, Tax & Finance
Marathon to fund projects in southwest Detroit to settle refinery emissions violations
The state Department of Environment, Great Lakes,
and Energy on Wednesday released the final terms of its agreement with the southwest Detroit refinery that includes an anticipated investment of $539,000 into environmental safeguards for the neighborhood in the 48217 ZIP code.
The agreement, signed Jan. 22, lays out costs that exceed what was an anticipated $360,000 investment in a tentative deal from August. The order was effective on Monday.
The majority of the supplemental funding or about $500,000 will go toward installing an air filtration system at Mark Twain School for Scholars in southwest Detroit. The school is located about two miles from the refinery in the community that ranks among the state s most polluted.
The Globe and Mail
MARTIN OESER Published February 8, 2010
This article was published more than 10 years ago. Some information in it may no longer be current.
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Competition Bureau challenges MLS rules
The Competition Bureau is trying to strike down rules governing the multiple listing service, or MLS, system that s used by most home sellers to list their properties. The MLS system includes information available only to members of the Canadian Real Estate Association, which is too restrictive, the bureau said in a statement today. The regulator also wants consumers to be able to pay a fee to list homes without being obliged to take a host of other services, which could lower the MLS fees, and negotiate property sales without using an agent. The bureau has filed an application to the Competition Tribunal, which will decide the matter. The watchdog said it attempted to strike a deal with CREA, but that failed and it will now seek to ki