Latest Breaking News On - Spain corporation - Page 9 : comparemela.com
Port of Spain Mayor to meet Finance Minister over Carnival $ mix-up
newsday.co.tt - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from newsday.co.tt Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
スペイン、年内閉鎖の日産工場を電池生産に転用検討 雇用維持で (2021年2月16日)
excite.co.jp - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from excite.co.jp Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
スペイン、年内閉鎖の日産工場を電池生産に転用検討 雇用維持で
reuters.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from reuters.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
City council to give devices to Port of Spain students
Thursday 28 January 2021
Alderman Wendell Stephen at the statutory meeting of the Port of Spain Corporation on Wednesday. The city council announced it would donate $150,000 in devices to Port of Spain students. PHOTO BY SUREASH CHOLAI -
Students in Port of Spain and environs will soon receive $149,800 worth of tables and laptops from the city council.
Alderman Wendell Stephen, during the first statutory meeting of the council on Wednesday, said the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Rural Development had approved the funds.
In October, last year, Stephens lambasted the council for not keeping its promise to deliver 314 devices to students in the area.
Termites ravage east Port of Spain school during covid19 closure
Stock photo source: Pixabay.com
The staff of St Martin Welfare Association Early Childhood Centre on St Paul Street, Port of Spain are facing tremendous damage to furniture and school supplies as termites have taken over the building while teachers and children worked from home.
Principal of the school Denyse Gibbs said the termites have eaten through everything from desks and cabinets to crayons, colour pencils and other resources. The damage done by the invasive insects will cost an estimated $25,000 to treat.
Gibbs said the staff first noticed the issue in April, when they returned to the school to check on it after schools closed and students were sent to work from home on March 13.