jwhittaker@post-journal.com
Jamestown Community College is pictured Friday morning during a COVID-19 vaccination clinic. A state Senator wants to see a clinic be established in every county by the state Health Department.
Photo by Anthony Dolce
State Sen. Michelle Hinchey, D-Kingston, wants to see the state Health Department locate a COVID-19 vaccination clinic in every county.
Hinchey introduced S.5398 in the state Senate on Wednesday. Counties would be allowed to choose not to participate in a state-run clinic. Hinchey’s legislation also would require the state Health Department to establish an enrollment portal so residents can be notified when they are eligible for a vaccine and the location of vaccination sites closest to them.
George Simmons
DUNKIRK The Fredonia Technology Incubator continues its Entrepreneurial Education Program with a virtual workshop on how entrepreneurs with early stage companies sell.
The workshop, Selling for Startups, will be presented by George Simmons, a Senior Partner at Derby Management, a Boston, Mass., based sales and marketing consulting firm. During the workshop, Simmons will cover how entrepreneurs and startups sell effectively. In particular, he will discuss how strong value propositions positively impact sales.
“While interesting sales tools come and go, the need to deliver a strong value proposition has been a constant in the sales world throughout my career,” said Simmons.
Thousands of Chautauqua County residents want to get COVID-19 a COVID-19 vaccine judging from the response to two items in the news last week. The first was
Mar 1, 2021
Insight into how decisions made by the administration of President Joe Biden may play out in higher education will be offered by three State University at Fredonia faculty members in a virtual panel discussion held on Tuesday, March 2, at 2 p.m.
The panelists Department of Biology Associate Professor Courtney Wigdahl-Perry, Department of Sociocultural and Justice Sciences Assistant Professor Jessica Finkeldey and College of Education Lecturer Gregory Geer will discuss, from their own perspectives, how Fredonia students, faculty and staff are likely to be impacted by decisions made by the new administration.
“The 2020 election is over now what?” asks Angela McGowan-Kirsch, American Democracy Project Committee Chair and Department of Communication assistant professor. “We wanted to offer a space for people to discuss the potential impact of the Biden Administration’s reversal of Trump-era policies and efforts to reimpose regulations that the former presiden
Christina Witters in a Science Center lab at the State University at Fredonia.
Christina Witters of Webster is getting an early start on pursuing a career in geriatric medicine by working as a nursing aide while progressing through the Early Acceptance program that the Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine (LECOM) offers in conjunction with the State University at Fredonia.
For the last two years, Witters has been a nursing aide at St. Ann’s Care Center, a skilled nursing facility in Webster, where she assists residents with activities of daily living, such as bathing, serving meals and household chores. Witters’ interest in geriatric medicine began in high school when she was a server at an independent living facility.