The Globe and Mail Published April 15, 2021 Bookmark
Prototyping and experiments have become increasingly common the past decade in business ventures and decision-making. Canadian-born entrepreneur Jennifer Turliuk feels those same techniques can help you find the perfect career. It worked for her.
Unhappy with her career path after Queen’s University, she realized that like most people she had put more effort into getting a job than figuring out whether it was something she actually wanted and would enjoy. “There’s plenty of research and advice out there on how to write the perfect resume and ace the interview. But when it comes to figuring out what you want to do with your life, the strategies aren’t so clear,” she notes in her book
By CLAUDINE SCHNEIDER
The impacts of climate change are in the news nearly every day. In Colorado, residents are painfully familiar with record wildfires, drought and extreme weather events induced by our warming climate.
Decades ago, scientists warned that continued over-reliance on fossil fuels would accelerate the process of global warming â or climate change, making extreme weather events more common and jeopardizing our economy and way of life.
They were right.
Now, the president and corporate leaders are working to reduce greenhouse gases, and reduce future catastrophic disasters.
Meanwhile, cities, counties and states around the country have already been left holding the bag to pay for costly remediation due to climate change, while the largest drivers â oil and gas companies â avoid paying for the harm theyâve caused.
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Written by Andrew-Rossi on April 15, 2021
The ranching industry gets beefier in the Bighorn Basin, as another regional facility gets the stamp of approval from the Wyoming Department of Agriculture.
307 Processing and Sausage is now the latest meat processing plant in the Bighorn Basin with the state’s full seal of approval. Effective April 1, 2021, the Byron-based plant received a grant of inspection from the Wyoming Department of Agriculture.
It is now the third facility in the Bighorn Basin to operate as a state-inspected meat plant and the tenth in Wyoming.
The other two Bighorn Basin state-inspected meat plants are Paintrock Processing in Hyattville and Rogers Meat Processing in Powell.