The Domestic Assault Review Team or DART has released their 2020 snapshot.
The data collected highlights things like crisis response, child welfare, policing and justice, education, support, and gaps.
Another area is poverty and housing which is a challenge according to DART’s co-chair Kate Underwood.
The snapshot reveals that 13 percent of people in Huron County are living in poverty including 3.8 % of children.
The data also includes that there are only 415 housing units available through the County BUT there are 489 people on the waiting list, as well as 52 women and children in shelters and another 88 in second stage housing.
Underwood says domestic violence is an issue in Huron County
Seventh-graders Maddie Murtha, Kate Underwood, Macie Vogel and Lucy Collins stood outside Cunha Intermediate School on Monday, fresh off their first day back at school after more than a year of learning online. Although masked, the smiles on their faces were evident.
One week into hybrid learning, Cabrillo Unified School District students are adjusting to a new normal of learning on campuses, surrounded by their peers, and with in-person access to their teachers again. For the four Cunha students, it was like a breath of fresh air.
âItâs so much easier to focus,â Murtha said. âAnd you get to see your friends.â
The Domestic Assault Review Team or DART has released their 2020 snapshot.
The data collected highlights things like crisis response, child welfare, policing and justice, education, support, and gaps.
Another area is poverty and housing which is a challenge according to DART’s co-chair Kate Underwood.
The snapshot reveals that 13 percent of people in Huron County are living in poverty including 3.8 % of children.
The data also includes that there are only 415 housing units available through the County BUT there are 489 people on the waiting list, as well as 52 women and children in shelters and another 88 in second stage housing.
Long COVID represents significant threat to workforce Published:
06 Apr 2021 New data from the Office for National Statistic (ONS) has found more than a million people in the UK were experiencing long COVID in February this year.
An estimated 674,000 people said their symptoms have negatively impacted on their ability to undertake their day-to-day activities, showing signs of a new way coronavirus may be impacting the workplace.
Kate Underwood, managing director of Kate Underwood HR and Training, said employers around the country need to start thinking about how they will deal with long COVID in the months and potentially years ahead.
She said: “Many of the people impacted by long COVID, with symptoms such as shortness of breath and fatigue, will still be working and they need understanding employers to help them get through.