The Greater Jacksonville Area USO s Healthy Military Family Initiative provides access to a food pantry as well as classes in healthy living and cooking, among other things. The USO also hosts
Greater Jacksonville Area USO s Healthy Military Family Initiative provides access to a food pantry as well as classes in healthy living and cooking, among other things
Ann Arbor Summer Festival to host private performances and spontaneous concerts
Updated Mar 11, 2021;
Posted Mar 11, 2021
A family sits and enjoys music at Ingalls Mall for the opening night of Top of the Park, part of the Ann Arbor Summer Festival on Friday, June 9, 2017. The opening night featured yoga, multiple live music acts and food and drinks for all ages. Matt Weigand | The Ann Arbor News ANN ARBOR NEWSANN ARBOR NEWS
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ANN ARBOR, MI The Ann Arbor Summer Festival announced their plans to bring another year of adapted activities to prevent the spread of COVID-19.
The Ann Arbor Summer Festival (A2SF) announced the first two anchor programs of the 2021 season that will take place between June 11 and July 3, 2021, and will not hold activities at Top of the Park on Ingalls Mall and indoor ticketed events due to COVID-19.
Donor Alliance Named Two-Time Peak Performance Award Winner
Share Article DENVER (PRWEB) January 28, 2021 Rocky Mountain Performance Excellence (RMPEx) today announced Donor Alliance as the sole winner of its 2020 Peak Performance Award, the highest-state level recognition for performance excellence.
This marks the second Peak Performance Award for Donor Alliance, and the first performance-excellence-related recognition since receiving the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award in 2018. Donor Alliance, the federally designated not-for-profit organization that facilitates organ and tissue donation in Colorado and most of Wyoming, is one of only 10 organizations recognized with a Peak Award twice since 1988, and joins Elevations Credit Union as the only two-time recipients in the non-profit category.
Community Health Care Clinic / Facebook
A growing immigrant group in Bloomington-Normal faces barriers to getting medical attention.
The non-profit Community Health Care Clinic in Normal says Congolese patients face inequities because of the language barrier.
The clinic is used to care for immigrant communities. Five staff members are bilingual in Spanish. Nearly three-quarters of the clinic patient base is Hispanic.
What the clinic didn t have was a French interpreter, said Executive Director Mike Romagnoli. It s kind of a chicken-or-the egg situation, Romagnoli said. We have been caring for some of the patients from Congo for a while, but we have not been meeting their needs very well and primarily, it s communication.