Live Breaking News & Updates on ஆரஞ்சு கவுண்டி வாழும் ஊதியம்
Stay updated with breaking news from ஆரஞ்சு கவுண்டி வாழும் ஊதியம். Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
Across the country, the pandemic wiped out 2.5 million restaurant jobs and forced more than 100,000 eateries to shutter. Now, with easing restrictions and the ability to reopen, some restaurants that did make it through 2020 can’t find enough staffers. Amanda Wickline is a server and bartender at the Outback Steakhouse in Durham. She is one of the few who was able to keep working throughout the pandemic and initial restaurant shutdowns, taking to-go orders and helping managers. With more and more restaurants opening back up and indoor capacity limits increasing, however, Wickline said she is being overwhelmed at work especially as the restaurant faces a shortage of employees. ....
Letters to the editor: Unpaid internships and living wages dailytarheel.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailytarheel.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Durham Council Struggles to Define Living Wage and Incentive Priorities Durham City Council at a virtual January meeting. Things were going pretty well during a city council meeting this month for Ian Bracken, who requested a $102,000 economic incentive grant to help open a modest sandwich shop and grocery with a rooftop garden in east Durham. Bracken, who purchased the late 1940s red-brick building for $130,000 last May, envisions a place where the facade remains unchanged. He wants to replace the awning at the entrance to protect his patrons from the elements. In an area that s pretty much a food desert, he wants to teach neighborhood youngsters how to grow and cook their own food. ....
Orange County s Cost of Living Continues to Rise as COVID Affects Local Business S haina Holman anticipated a broken arm or a burned down office, but she never anticipated a pandemic. The Chapel Hill dentist has had her own practice for three years. She was committed to paying her hygienists, office workers, and assistants a living wage from the jump. If an emergency were to happen, she wanted to be able to continue paying them for up to three weeks, while they looked for other jobs. So she saved. In March 2020, an emergency happened. Despite North Carolina never shutting down dentistsâ offices, Holman decided that closing would be the safest option as the country learned more about COVID-19. She told her employees sheâd continue paying them for three weeks while they signed up for unemployment. She also informed her clients. ....