Can you hear me . Can you hear me in the back okay . Good morning, im tom perez. Its an honor to be here. I see a bunch of serial activists in the audience so i know im in the right place. So thank you again to our members of congress who are here. Thank you to our other leaders who are here. This has been a great morning, and you heard from the boss here. And hes all in. And this is a joint venture. We have a great panel here. So i want to keep moving. You know, when i heard the president say there was a lot of focus on what i call the two ps, promoting access in the retirement space, and the president has been taking action on that. Hes directed us to take more action to facilitate that. The Treasury Department has already taken action on that. And the my ra space kl is diana grady here, by the way . Oh, youre in the way back. Wow. You got the uecker seat there. Okay. Diana is a Small Business owner who encouraged her employees to participate to help strengthen their retirement secur
PHIL DI VECE, News Contributor Tue, 03/02/2021 - 7:00am
The masthead of The Wiscasset Newspaper as it appeared in 1979.
My first look at the Wiscasset Newspaper came in the autumn of 1978. I was living in Fort Collins, Colorado finishing my senior year at Colorado State University where I majored in journalism. I was looking for a job as a newspaper reporter and some friends convinced me to come to Maine. They mailed me a package with copies of: the Portland Press Herald, Kennebec Journal, Times Record, Coastal Journal and The Wiscasset Newspaper.
Just a few months later, I started working as a reporter and photographer for The Wiscasset Newspaper. Dan DeRepentigny, the owner and publisher of the Boothbay Register, hired me. Dan in 1970 had started The Wiscasset Newspaper which began as a small, eight-page tabloid. It was printed on a letter press in the basement of the Boothbay Register on corner of Townsend Avenue and Union Street in Boothbay Harbor; the same small bu
Submit Release December 30, 2020 (PRLEAP.COM) Business News The Art of Giving Art (AOGA) is an online store featuring a growing community of artists and nonprofits. Bringing both together to support the arts while giving back, a donation is made to a nonprofit with every purchase.
These donations are especially critical during COVID-19. According to the Association of Fundraising Professionals, nonprofits have been hit by a 6% decline in giving due to COVID. In total throughout 2020, nonprofits stand to lose more than $25 Billion.
The Art of Giving Art (www.artofgivingart.com) is pleased to announce that San Diego Center for the Blind (www.sdcb.org) is now one of their nonprofit partners with an AOGA online art store embedded into SDCB s website. Each time someone visits the store and makes a purchase from the wide selection of artisan works including fine arts, jewelry, pottery, photography and more, 30% of the sale is donated straight to SDCB (www.sdcb.org/art-prod
How a Utah company won â then lost â a $26.5 million pandemic contract in Tennessee
The State of Utah has also paid nearly $10 million to the company
How a Utah company won â then lost â a $26.5 million pandemic contract in Tennessee
By: FOX 13 News
and last updated 2020-12-18 17:12:51-05
SALT LAKE CITY â Tennessee lawmakers are asking questions about millions paid to a Utah company who received a no-bid contract to provide COVID-19 testing and personal protective equipment at the start of the pandemic.
The Volunteer State paid $5.9 million to Nomi Health, which is based in Orem, Utah. It was supposed to be $26.5 million, but Tennessee terminated the contract early over concerns of whether Nomi could deliver what it had promised, according to an investigation by FOX 13âs sister station, WTVF in Nashville.