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Pine Street roundabout work starts - Ceres Courier
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Homes selling like hotcakes in Hughson
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Government funds to help low-income pay rent, utilities because of COVID-19 This income chart is used to determine eligibility for assistance.
Low-income residents of Stanislaus County who are struggling with paying rents and utility payments due to the COVID-19 pandemic can receive taxpayer-funded assistance through a local Emergency Rental Assistance Program (ERAP).
“This provides a wonderful opportunity for some of our Ceres residents to get assistance as a result of being impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic,” said Ceres City Manager Tom Westbrook.
Stanislaus County, the City of Modesto, and the Stanislaus Regional Housing Authority have partnered to implement ERAP which is funded by the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the state of California. The ERAP will assist households unable to pay rental and utility arrears accrued due to the COVID-19 pandemic between April 1, 2020 and March 31, 2021.
COVID-19 may be delaying OK’d projects The Whitmore Towers project has been temporarily stalled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
For some time it has seemed like once a project is approved in Ceres it gets sucked into a black hole and never sees the light of day. But some of the more recent projects could be stymied because of uncertainties associated with COVID-19 pandemic.
The periodic government shutdowns of sections of the economy particularly have a chilling effect on plans for new eateries. Excitement spread in the community last year when the Ceres Planning Commission and City Council approved plans to build Whitmore Towers, a 7,280-square-foot retail building focused on eating establishments on the triangle-shaped lot across the street from Ceres High School.