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Voice of the Rapid City Rush, Mark Binetti, leaving after eight seasons
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In a fragmented travel landscape with entry restrictions and shifting public health protocols, will travelers be able to navigate this new maze on their own?
Until now, it was largely anecdotal that Americans would increasingly seek expert travel advice when booking trips. Now, the numbers are proving it, and it’s good news for one of travel’s most sidelined and hard-hit industries.
Nearly half of U.S. travelers or 44 percent who rarely or sometimes used travel advisors in the past said they were now more likely to use one post-pandemic, according to a newly released, first-ever joint research study conducted by the American Society of Travel Advisors (ASTA) and Sandals Resorts.
Mar 11, 2021
ALPENA The Alpena County George N. Fletcher Public Library is pleased to share that last April’s canceled Michigan Humanities Council Great Michigan Read event has been rescheduled.
The library is pleased to welcome Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha for a virtual visit to Alpena at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 6 to discuss her book “What the Eyes Don’t See,” a powerful first-hand account of the Flint water crisis, the signature environmental disaster of our time, and a riveting narrative of personal advocacy.
Selected as the 2019-20 Great Michigan Read title, “What the Eyes Don’t See” is also the story of how science and determination helped expose the severity of the situation, forcing the government to address the damage being done to the residents of Flint.
LA City Council votes to move forward with hero pay plan for grocery workers
LA City Council votes to move forward with hazard pay plan for grocery workers
LA City Council unanimously voted to move forward with a proposed emergency ordinance requiring large grocery and pharmacy retailers to pay employees an extra $5 per hour during the pandemic.
LOS ANGELES - The Los Angeles City Council unanimously voted to move forward with a proposed emergency ordinance requiring large grocery and pharmacy retailers to pay employees an extra $5 per hour during the pandemic.
The City Attorney is now preparing the ordinance.
The President of the LA City Council, Nury Martinez, believes the hazard pay is necessary.
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