FAIRMONT â The Claudio Corporation is renovating two buildings in downtown Fairmont that have been vacant for several years.
Tim Liebrecht, the companyâs chief operations officer and executive director of Main Street Fairmont, said it is the goal of both organizations to promote the growth of the Fairmont area, and renovating defunct buildings is one way of breathing new life into the city.
âWeâre taking buildings that are basically blight; buildings that have no visible value, no visible beauty, and turning them into functional spaces,â Liebrecht said. âThat produces income, that produces jobs, that salvages our history and makes that history usable and accessible for future generations.â
(MENAFN - Khaleej Times) Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola said it would be easy to feel overwhelmed by the packed fixture schedule but called on his players to embrace the beautiful challenge as they compete for four trophies.
City moved a step closer to a third Premier League title in four seasons on Wednesday after their 3-1 over Everton put them 10 points clear.
They remain on course for four trophies this season, and next visit Arsenal in the league on Sunday before resuming their Champions League campaign with the first leg of their last-16 tie against Borussia Moenchengladbach on Feb. 24.
Young man jailed for unprovoked attacks on five women. Judge says women should be able to feel safe alone in public and they don t
17 Feb, 2021 03:15 AM
4 minutes to read
The young man was sentenced to a term of imprisonment today in the Auckland District Court. Photo / File
The young man was sentenced to a term of imprisonment today in the Auckland District Court. Photo / File
A young man has been jailed for five violent attacks that hurt unsuspecting women out exercising alone in Auckland.
Today, Judge Nevin Dawson sentenced the offender - who cannot be legally named - to two years and nine months imprisonment.
Climate Change Report: How farmers in the South feel about stock reduction figure
14 Feb, 2021 11:15 PM
5 minutes to read
By: Hamish MacLean
Pastoral farms occupy almost 40 per cent of New Zealand s landscape and the farming sector underpins the nation s economy. So when the Climate Change Commission suggested in its draft advice fewer animals on farms could be required to meet our greenhouse gas emissions obligations, people worried. The Otago Daily Times Hamish MacLean takes the temperature of the issue in the South.
A possible 15 per cent reduction in livestock numbers on red meat and dairy farms by 2030 could break New Zealand s under-pressure agriculture industry, some farmers fear.