A small business that makes granola bars has moved from Green Bay to Milwaukee s Riverwest neighborhood.
OLV LLC, doing business as Olympia Granola, is leasing 3,900 square feet at 3950 N. Holton St., according to city Department of Neighborhood Services records.
A.J. Girard bought the business, which was in Green Bay, and recently relocated it to Milwaukee, where he lives.
Olympia makes granola bars that are sold mainly to backpackers and other outdoors enthusiasts, said Girard.
The business was launched in 2003 in the Olympic Mountain region of Washington and moved to Green Bay in 2010.
Girard, who grew up in the Fox Valley, has worked for other food companies and bought Olympia from a family friend in 2019.
Deseret News Brady McCombs
Spenser Heaps, Deseret News
A tour bus that crashed and killed four Chinese tourists near a national park in Utah in 2019 had problems earlier that day with the engine not starting, according to a new documents released Wednesday by U.S. authorities investigating the incident.
The driver of the bus had to do a video call from a gas station with his boss, who told him to crawl under the bus and give the starter “two good hits.” That worked, and the bus started, according to new documents released by the National Transportation Safety Board detailing the investigation.
A small business that makes granola bars has moved from Green Bay to Milwaukee s Riverwest neighborhood.
OLV LLC, doing business as Olympia Granola, is leasing 3,900 square feet at 3950 N. Holton St., according to city Department of Neighborhood Services records.
A.J. Girard bought the business, which was in Green Bay, and recently relocated it to Milwaukee, where he lives.
Olympia makes granola bars that are sold mainly to backpackers and other outdoors enthusiasts, said Girard.
The business was launched in 2003 in the Olympic Mountain region of Washington and moved to Green Bay in 2010.
Girard, who grew up in the Fox Valley, has worked for other food companies and bought Olympia from a family friend in 2019.
KSL TV
SALT LAKE CITY For the third time in five years, a U.S. Department of Interior secretary is visiting Utah amid a debate over two controversial national monument designations that will likely never fully be resolved.
In a release sent late Wednesday, the U.S. Department of Interior announced that Interior Secretary Deb Haaland received briefings from federal employees, visited the Bears Ears Education Center in Bluff, San Juan County, met with tribal leaders and was meeting with Utah Gov. Spencer Cox and members of Utah s congressional delegation.
On Thursday, she will be joined by tribal leaders in more tours of the Bears Ears region and will meet with stakeholders in San Juan County who include local elected officials, ranchers, conservation organizations, mining companies, paleontologists and archaeologists.