infrastructure back we ve lost with covid without quality care for children? because no parent is going to return to work and not know their children are well cared for. celeste carter, thank you so much for your time. jess morales, thank you. coming up, new shocking re-lations out of tennessee. police putting kids behind bars for crimes that they did not exist. it s a trend as a reporter who uncovered it will explain next. later, the global phenomenon that came about through word of mouth, shredding all pre-conceived notions of what it takes to make a hit. what does that mean for hollywood? iasis, or psoriatic arthritis, are rethinking the choices they make like the splash they create the way they exaggerate the surprises they initiate. otezla. it s a choice you can make. otezla is not an injection or a cream it s a pill that treats differently. for psoriasis, 75% clearer skin is achievable, with reduced redness, thickness, and scaliness of plaques.
moms, which is why so many dropped out of the workforce in the first place. to help, the president s $3.5 trillion spending plan includes three signature policies designed to help working parents, policies that two democratic senators put at risk of being cut from the bill. west virginia s joe manchin and arizona s kyrsten sinema who must support the plan for it to passe their own party needs to eliminate universal child care, paid family leave, or the extended child tax credit. a move that vice president of the national women s law center is calling out saying, quote, women are the caregivers for both ends of the generational divide who often don t have the choice between child care and attending to a sick or aging parent. women keep getting told to wait our turn. we ve been holding up this economy with unpaid care giving well before this pandemic. joining me now is celeste carter, single mom, whose children have special needs. also the director of civic engagement for the national
Coalition of State Bioscience Institutes Releases the 2021 Life Sciences Workforce Trends Report at BIO Digital
06/29/2021 | 05:53pm EDT
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The resilience of the life sciences industry is evidenced by continued job growth through 2020 despite the challenges arising from economic shutdowns and significant job losses in the overall private sector.
The Coalition of State Bioscience Institutes (CSBI) released the 2021 Life Sciences Workforce Trends Report with TEConomy Partners at this year’s global BIO Digital conference. The report provides a national snapshot of the most pressing current and anticipated talent needs of the nation’s dynamic life sciences industry. This year’s report also included key findings regarding the impact on talent and hiring dynamics of the global pandemic and the national focus on racial and social equity on the industry’s talent needs.
Today, the Louisiana Policy Institute for Children (LPIC) released results from âStruggling to Recover: The Impacts of COVID-19 on Louisiana Families with Young Childrenâ in partnership with Agenda for Children, Louisiana Department of Education, New Orleans Campaign for Grade-Level Reading, Urban League of Louisiana and Women United of Southeast Louisiana. The virtual press conference was moderated by Louisiana Parenting Education Network Director Lenell Young and featured first-hand perspectives from the following mothers of young children: Celeste Carter, Melissa Goudeau, Morgan Lamandre and State Representative Stephanie Hilferty.
âThere are many unknowns still ahead, but the report results emphasize the fact that the need for quality child care still exists for families and that the time to fund child care is now,â said Dr. Libbie Sonnier, executive director of LPIC. âWe must work to support the child care sector through public investments to increase t