Hosts at Six Senses Fiji, many returning to their previous roles, are ready to welcome guests back to their little corner of paradise from April 1. Their familiar friendly faces will serve as the perfect antidote to months of lockdowns and travel bans as new arrivals step off the speedboat.Picture-perfect Backdrop for Every SmileLocated on Malolo Island, the largest of the Mamanuca Islands, Six Senses Fiji is surrounded by gently shelving crystal-clear waters accessed from a palm-fringed white sand beach. The re-opening is timely, with the Easter holidays and short breaks on the horizon, as well as prime conditions for surfing and diving starting from April onwards. With pent-up demand at a premium, the resort has been humbled by the reaction and interest to its opening. It is already full for the entire first month and operating on a waitlist-only basis.Multi-bedroom Residences for Celebrating Special MomentsThe past two years have forced many families and groups of friends to miss ou
Hosts at Six Senses Fiji, many returning to their previous roles, are ready to welcome guests back to their little corner of paradise from April 1. Their familiar friendly faces will serve as the perfect antidote to months of lockdowns and travel bans as new arrivals step off the speedboat.Picture-perfect Backdrop for Every SmileLocated on Malolo Island, the largest of the Mamanuca Islands, Six Senses Fiji is surrounded by gently shelving crystal-clear waters accessed from a palm-fringed white sand beach. The re-opening is timely, with the Easter holidays and short breaks on the horizon, as well as prime conditions for surfing and diving starting from April onwards. With pent-up demand at a premium, the resort has been humbled by the reaction and interest to its opening. It is already full for the entire first month and operating on a waitlist-only basis.Multi-bedroom Residences for Celebrating Special MomentsThe past two years have forced many families and groups of friends to miss ou
this adds a little bit of excitement, makes things different heading forward. sestak s win would be an upset at this point with specter leading in the polls, but if specter does win the primary and heads off against toomy, that would be a rematch of sorts. in 2004 he faced toomey in the republican primary and beat him by a very, very narrow margin. it would be one to watch. there s a lot of money at stake, a lot of money that could be put forward into advertising, so we ll likely see a lot of that on the airwaves heading into november. jane: molly line in philly for us. thanks. jon: one area in the pacific northwest is in desperate need of jobs, and a proposed water bottling plant could provide them. but one group is trying to block the plant from ever being opened. we ll tell you why on the job hunt next.
plans to file charges against him in a central georgia sexual assault case. jane: we are on the job hunt, and one project is generating quite a bit of controversy. necessary he wants to build a water bottling plant in an area of govern in separate oregon in desperate need of jobs, but some environmentalists are trying to stop it. this isn t the first attack on a bottle water, on bottled water as being bad for the environment. is that what the fight is over? reporter: we have seen this before, they have gone after environmentalists, that is plants all over the country most recently in california and michigan. at the core of this is fight over control over water, a natural resource, a public resource. in this case it s over a spring that right now is producing about 8,000 gallons per minute. nestle wants to build a plan there, bottle the water, about 225 gallons per minute is what they re after. and the bottle is a big issue.
no such luck for small to medium-sized businesses, companies with assets of 50, to 100 million saw the audioo audit rate drop 1 percent, something to think about as tax day approaches. gregg: fox news is on the job hunt, of course, and in cascade, oregon, nestle is looking to build a wart bottling plant, bringing much needed jobs to the area. wait a minute. environmentalists are putting up a fight there. dan spring ser covering it, he joins us from our seattle bureau. what kind of an impact, dan, an economic comact, would a water bottling plant have in cas calade lox? yeah, gregg, it would be huge, it would be a $50 million plant that nestle would build and that would of course bring construction jobs but beyond that there would be 50 permanent full-time jobs at that bottling plant and that may not sound like a lot but it would instantly be cascade lox s largest