The only Republican candidate for Lancaster County judge who is running without the support of the local GOP raised nearly $81,000 in the run-up to Tuesday’s primary, more than all
Denise Reyes took Parkesburg Borough Council to task over the condition of North Street during the May 17 meeting on Zoom.
Reyes, who has been a Parkesburg resident since 2006, said the beginning of North Street up to Octorara Avenue was paved. However, the road in front of her neighborâs home on 325 North St. to Culvert Street, is in disrepair.
âI usually donât ask for anything, but itâs a mess,â Reyes said.
She told borough officials the unpaved road had knocked her car out of alignment, and her neighbor experienced a cracked oil pan. She has seen garbage disposal trucks maneuver slowly around humps on the road.
Chamber’s economic forecast sees brighter days ahead, if COVID-19 is contained
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BIRMINGHAM It was a year ago that Paul Traub, a senior business economist with the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago/Detroit, stood before members of the Birmingham Bloomfield Chamber of Commerce with an ominous projection: 2020 could bring about an economic recession.
Traub wasn’t reading tea leaves, but rather a yield curve inversion that showed long-term bonds had lower earnings than short-term bonds. He said 9 out of 10 times, that inversion is an indicator of a coming recession but only if an external shock occurs to trigger a crisis.