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Planning a wedding during a pandemic means navigating the unknown

For bride-to-be Vanessa Gilbert, planning a wedding during a pandemic means sleep-deprived nights and four different guest lists. It means holding off as long as possible on hiring a caterer to avoid the possibility of losing a big deposit. Gilbert, 32, and her boyfriend, Mike Moura, 34, got engaged last February, just as word of a strange new virus was starting to spread. It s been a wild ride ever since,  said Gilbert, who s a nurse. I m trying against all odds to plan a wonderful day. In normal years, brides spend a lot of time fretting about the weather. In this pandemic, they have to deal with an even greater unknown: the spread of COVID-19. Will cases continue to drop or will new strains trigger another surge? How will restrictions on crowds and venues affect plans?

Mock wedding at OceanCliff latest effort to ask governor for looser restrictions

Newport Daily News NEWPORT Although the staff at OceanCliff Resort had decorated the ballroom with white table cloths, delicate flower bouquets, ornate dining chairs and a marble wedding cake, no one on Tuesday was getting married. Instead, the setup is a part of an ongoing effort to reopen Rhode Island’s struggling wedding industry. “The biggest thing is keeping people safe, but letting people be able to celebrate again, and also putting people back to work,” said Luke Renchan, a spokesman for The Rhode Island Coalition of Wedding and Event Professionals. “Some of these couples have postponed their wedding three times because of a lot of these heavy restrictions. It s just a matter of showing what we can do to keep people safe and keep them in a structured environment.”

Local DJ unsure how much new stimulus bill will help those in wedding and event industry

Local DJ unsure how much new stimulus bill will help those in wedding and event industry Within the $900 billion dollar coronavirus aid package is a re-invigoration of funds to the Paycheck Protection Program of almost $300 billion dollars. December 21, 2020 11:24 pm PROVIDENCE, R.I. (WLNE) – Congress is poised to pass another round of Covid relief Monday night, which will include direct payments of $600, extended unemployment benefits, and increased funding for the Paycheck Protection Program. It’s unclear just how long Rhode Island businesses will have to wait to receive that aid, but one business owner in the entertainment industry says he’s not sure how much the PPP funding will help people in his line of work.

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