On Wednesday, the Wexford County Board of Commissioners voted to approve the location of the human resources department s office and money to fund equipping the office with furniture and technology,
CADILLAC â The Wexford County Board of Commissioners voted unanimously to approve the 2022 child care budget, but one commissioner opposed the 2022 fee increases for dog licenses.
Joe Hurlburt was the lone dissenting vote as the commissioners voted 8-1 to pass increases to both one-year licenses and three-year licenses for both spay/neutered and intact animals. Hurlburt said he opposed the new fees based simply on it being an increase.
The new fees for one-year licenses are $10 (December to February) or $20 (delinquent months) for spay/neutered animals and $15 (December to February) or $30 (delinquent months) for intact animals
The new fees for three-year licenses are $25 (December to February) or $50 (delinquent months) for spay/neutered animals and $40 (December to February) or $80 (delinquent months) for intact animals.
Wexford commissioners approve ARPA payments to employees cadillacnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cadillacnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Cam Heide and Taison Chatman are arguably the top two high school basketball prospects in their respective classes in the state of Minnesota.
They ve also teamed up for the first time in AAU basketball this spring with D1 Minnesota s top 17U squad making its local debut Saturday and Sunday in the Battle at the Lakes tournament at Wayzata High School and other area locations.
Heide, a 6-foot-6 junior wing at Wayzata, will be playing his first local AAU tournament in more than a year after an injury kept him sidelined last summer. Chatman, a 6-4 sophomore point guard from Totino-Grace, is hoping to take his stock and game to another level after playing on D1MN s 16U team last year.
CADILLAC â Although all nine Wexford County Board of Commissioners were present at Wednesday s meeting, only five were able to vote.
Per the March 31 Michigan Department of Health and Human Services Gathering and Face Mask Order Amendment, the public may participate in person in government meetings if social distancing guidelines are followed. That also meant the virtual meetings no longer were an option of the Open Meetings Act unless certain action was taken such as a municipality declaring a state of emergency.
What that meant Wednesday is the four commissioners who attended the meeting via Zoom, Joe Hurlburt, Michael Musta, Julie Theobald and Brian Potter, were not able to vote on any action item.