‘Let’s do our part, River Falls,’ community orgs say as pandemic effects continue
Nine community members are releasing a series of video testimonials as part of “Let’s Do Our Part, River Falls,” a coalition of local organizations with the goal of presenting a unified message about COVID-19 prevention. Written By: Michael Brun | ×
Dr. Ben Morgan delivers a COVID-19 video testimonial as part of a campaign from the Let s Do Our Part, River Falls coalition. The group is releasing a series of videos from community members sharing their pandemic stories. YouTube screenshot
RIVER FALLS The data can be harrowing and hard to comprehend as the number of COVID-19 infections and deaths continue to grow. Nearly a year into the pandemic, the daily tallies can be easy to ignore.
CVTC President Barker Announces Retirement chippewa.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from chippewa.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
EAU CLAIRE â The U.S. was on the cusp of the Great Recession when Bruce Barker became president of Chippewa Valley Technical College in 2008.
Retraining workers who had lost their old jobs occupied the first few years that heâd led the local two-year college.
âDuring the recession we had waiting lists for most of our programs,â Barker recalled. âWe had all we could handle for a few years.â
Enrollment hit a high-water mark in 2011, then declined for a few years before the college bucked the normal trend of lower student numbers during economic good times.
Marketing through social media, updating its selection of programs and other efforts helped the college grow its student body while peers saw their enrollments fall.
Barker announces retirement from CVTC leadertelegram.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from leadertelegram.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
EAU CLAIRE â Members of a new task force on local communicable disease ordinances were announced Tuesday.
Nineteen people from a variety of backgrounds will constitute the task force, which is charged with reviewing current communicable disease ordinances and recommending potential changes to the Eau Claire City Council and County Board. The County Board approved the task force members during its meeting Tuesday night.
Eight people will also form a non-voting advisory group, which can provide information to the task force. The task force also will likely have a non-voting facilitator, but a person has not been named yet.
The task force is a cooperative effort between Eau Claire County, the city of Eau Claire and the City-County Board of Health. Its first meeting will likely occur in January.