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Roanoke Fire-EMS names new deputy chief

Roanoke Fire-EMS names new deputy chief Sarah Irby © Provided by Roanoke-Lynchburg WDBJ-TV Roanoke Fire-EMS named Battalion Chief David Guynn as its new deputy chief. ROANOKE, Va. (WDBJ) - Roanoke Fire-EMS announced Monday the promotion of Battalion Chief David Guynn to deputy chief. Guynn is a Roanoke native who first got involved with Fire-EMS in 2004 as a volunteer for Back Creek Fire & Rescue. During his time as a volunteer for Roanoke County, Guynn decided to make emergency services into a career. In 2005, he worked for the City of Roanoke as a telecommunicator trainee in the E-911 Center, before joining Roanoke Fire-EMS Recruit Class #9 in 2007.

Albemarle Announces New Human Resources Leadership

Albemarle Announces New Human Resources Leadership News provided by Share this article Share this article CHARLOTTE, N.C., Jan. 11, 2021 /PRNewswire/  Albemarle Corporation (NYSE: ALB), a leader in the global specialty chemicals industry, announced today that Melissa Anderson has joined the company as Senior Vice President, Chief Human Resources Officer, effective January 11, 2021. Melissa Anderson, Albemarle Senior Vice President, Chief Human Resources Officer Anderson joins Albemarle from Duke Energy, an American electric power holding company based in North Carolina, where she served as Executive Vice President, Administration and Chief Human Resources Officer. Prior to this, she held the role of Senior Vice President, Human Resources, for Domtar Corporation in South Carolina. Her previous experience also includes 17 years with IBM in progressive Human Resources leadership roles.

Jails and prisons were hit hard by Covid-19 and experts say they need to be prioritized for the vaccines

Jails and prisons were hit hard by Covid-19 and experts say they need to be prioritized for the vaccines Yesenia Lara spoke to her uncle on the phone nearly every day until May 1. Raul Rodriguez, 61, who was in a Texas county jail after a DUI conviction, had struggled with alcoholism but was a loving man who was “outgoing, always laughing,” she said. He told her there were about 15 to 20 other inmates in his cell and that they cut up shirts to use as face masks. He mentioned his throat hurt. And then she didn’t hear from him again. A little more than two weeks after their last conversation, she said authorities notified her family he had died of Covid-19.

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