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Industry leaders, Facebook discuss tech talent pipelines at Vol State
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GRFT101 Is The First Ever Tertiary-Level Grifting Course
Otago Universe-City LTD has released a new product to the North Dunedin market. The limited liability company said in a press release that it was “excited” and “thrilled” to be offering the southern hemisphere’s first class on grifting as a first step in establishing the prestigious and long awaited Otago Buinesslike School.
GRFT101: Remarkable Rackets is expected to cover an “introduction to tricks and techniques of grift”, although the school’s founding coordinator, Jeff Fields says the class is suitable for “all and any fee-paying students … from the absolute novice to the journeyman, there’s bound to be something for everyone”.
Bucks County issues eviction stay for tenants seeking rental assistance
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CHARLESTOWN â Jeff Fields, President of the Charlestown Board of Town Commissioners, announced that he was tenuring his resignation from the Board on Thursday morning.
âI basically resigned for health and personal reasons,â Fields told the Cecil Whig late Thursday afternoon, declining to elaborate further on his reasons.
Fields, who started serving as Board President in March 2020, was more than halfway through his second two-year term when he resigned. The next election for Fieldsâ position would have been in March 2022, had he remained in office.
With a population of approximately 1,500 residents, Charlestown does not have a mayor. In general terms, Fields and others who have held the president-of-the-town-board position have functioned as de-facto mayors for the town.
A cactus rests by the windowsill, perched above eight large plastic bins packed with most of Karen McDonald s belongings.
The plant, McDonald said, brings her peace as she moves through a revolving door of homes. It s a symbol of survival in the transient and often unforgiving world of navigating homelessness in the Philadelphia suburbs.
In February, hope for a more permanent home came in a Housing Choice Voucher, what many consider the holy grail of subsidized housing. McDonald felt her days drifting through shelters, friends’ homes and cars would soon come to an end.
Yet, like many holding the same document, she soon learned that the federal safety net created to rescue people from homelessness and serve as a springboard to independent living holds little value in a competitive housing market, where landlords are not required to accept vouchers and, when they do, bureaucracy often stalls or derails their chances.
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