Face the Music: Halley Elwell draws from stars of 60s and 70s for The Last of What I Know pressherald.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pressherald.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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In the past few weeks, 22 states have announced they would end federal pandemic unemployment benefits, which pay recipients $300 on top of state benefits and are scheduled to run into September. (New Hampshire is the latest.)
Many of the states’ governors, all Republicans, made statements similar to that of Gov. Henry McMaster of South Carolina, who said the expanded benefits are “incentivizing and paying workers to stay at home rather than encouraging them to return to the workplace.” The U.S. Chamber of Commerce said the same.
Businesses of all types report that they are having trouble hiring despite high unemployment. But are expanded unemployment benefits really to blame?
May 20, 2021 at 10:00 pm by Sean Crommelin
As interest in climate science has exploded with the looming threat of climate change, scientists around the world have sought to better understand how precipitation patterns may change in the future or have changed in the past due to corresponding changes in temperature.Â
RÃo Secreto, a cave system near Playa del Carmen in the Mexican state of Quintana Roo.
Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons
They do this by using both complex mathematical climate modeling and proxies found throughout Earth â like ice cores â to reconstruct paleoclimates found in Earthâs past.
âI think it is very valuable, societally, to understand climate change, climate variability and what drives this variability. Paleoclimate studies contribute significantly to this understanding,â Syee Weldeab, a professor in the Earth Science department at UC Santa Barbara who studies paleoclimate, said.