Feb 13, 2021
Ohio Southeast Economic Development, in partnership with Bricker and Eckler LLP, announced five communities in southeast Ohio were selected to participate in the Prepared Communities Program: The village of Greenfield in Highland County, the village of Chauncey in Athens County, the village of New Concord in Muskingum County, Jefferson County and Noble County.
Facilitated by OhioSE and Bricker and Eckler LLP, the Prepared Communities Program recognizes the unique challenges faced within the southeast Ohio region and that there is no blanket approach that will work across the region’s diverse economic landscape. Through engaging with local communities, listening to their challenges, and providing resources and economic development tools, the program aims to prepare each community with a strategic plan that addresses their unique needs.
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For centuries, we have treated our physical health needs with ever-growing awareness of how to do so effectively. Mental health has also slowly entered the mainstream purview. But we still have a painfully long way to go in our understanding of its impact on overall health and how to support those with mental health struggles.
The pandemic and the public health strategies chosen to address it will, hopefully, illuminate the need to include another essential component in our understanding of overall health: Social health.
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Zanesville Times Recorder
NELSONVILLE - Five communities in Southeast Ohio have been selected to take part in Ohio Southeast Economic Development s Prepared Communities Program, including the Village of New Concord and Noble County.
The program is a series of five sessions with Ohio Southeast and Bricker and Eckler, a Columbus legal firm. The goal is to help communities plan short-term economic projects that can be implemented in 2021 or 2022.
The sessions are a small step to start talking about what all of the myriad of things that make up economic development in our region, Ohio Southeast Vice President Katy Farber said.
Report on COVID-19 impact on B.C. care homes calls for greater gov t oversight of sector
A report on the impact of COVID-19 on B.C. s long term care homes calls for greater government oversight of a sector that contains both privately run businesses and homes operated by health authorities.
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CBC News ·
Posted: Jan 25, 2021 10:50 AM PT | Last Updated: January 26
More than 650 people have died of COVID-19 in B.C. s long-term care facilities since the pandemic began.(Ben Nelms/CBC)
Now that B.C. has rolled out its COVID-19 vaccine plan, health care professionals are wondering why a report on the fatal spread of COVID-19 in long-term homes has yet to be made public. Of the . . .