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UPDATE Wolf to let some COVID-19 lockdown measures expire on Monday
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Pennsylvania Gov Tom Wolf: Restaurants allowing indoor dining starting Monday
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York County restaurants band together to survive off takeout business
Small restaurants in York County, still struggling under operating restrictions in Pennsylvania, started a social media page to support and promote each other. Author: Harri Leigh (FOX43) Updated: 10:38 PM EST December 27, 2020
YORK, Pa. Small restaurants in York County, still struggling under operating restrictions in Pennsylvania, started a social media page to support and promote each other.
Many restaurants battered by this year’s capacity restrictions were hit again by the state’s indoor dining ban from Dec. 12 to Jan. 4.
Some Central Pennsylvania restaurants decided to open indoor dining rooms in violation of the state’s order.
By John Finnerty jfinnerty@cnhi.com Dec 24, 2020
Dec 24, 2020
Department of Agriculture inspectors visited 180 restaurants across the state that are still offering indoor dining in defiance of a statewide ban last week.
Inspectors issued 40 orders to close after the proprietors refused to voluntarily comply. If those orders are ignored, the state can go to Commonwealth Court to get a judge to order the restaurants to comply with the public health restriction, said Shannon Powers, a Department of Agriculture spokeswoman.
Inspectors are focused on using an âeducation-first modelâ aimed at getting business owners to voluntarily comply with the public health orders, the Department of Agriculture said in a statement.
Employers worry Pa. Gov. Wolf’s $145M pandemic relief plan could cause more problems than it solves
Updated Dec 23, 2020;
Posted Dec 23, 2020
Gov. Tom Wolf announced on Wednesday he is transferring $145 million from the Pennsylvania Workers Compensation Security Fund to the state s general fund for the General Assembly to make available to businesses hard hit by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Dec. 23, 2020
Screenshot from governor s website
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Gov. Tom Wolf’s latest proposal to ease some of the economic pain that the coronavirus has inflicted on businesses across Pennsylvania is not being widely accepted as the right medicine.
Wolf is proposing to transfer $145 million from Pennsylvania Workers’ Compensation Security Fund, a fund that ensures injured workers receive workers’ compensation benefits, and place it into the general fund for the General Assembly to decide how to distribute as either grants or loans to businesses.
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