Free webinar on low-waste practices
I Love A Clean San Diego is partnering with Wells Fargo to host a free Green Business Solutions Webinar at 4 p.m. Wednesday. Join an informational and interactive presentation focusing on zero-waste business practices. Whether you work in an office, a restaurant or in retail, there will be valuable information for all business models. Bring your workplace’s sustainability challenges to the optional brainstorming session and work with professionals across varied industries to identify solutions. Register at bit.ly/3u8lwFW. Learn more at cleansd.org or call (619) 291-0103.
Goodwill helping set vaccine appointments
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Shortage of Sleds Just A Few At Holden! Feb 16, 2021 at 03:43 pm by WGNS
(MURFREESBORO) The Boro is being hit with a SLED SHORTAGE . Haynes Hardware has sold out of sleds, but Holden Hardware had been building their inventory and they are almost all out.
Haynes Hardware s Assistant Manager Jerry Sanders told NewsRadio WGNS . . .
Holden Hardware reportedly had been stocking-up, but Rollie Holden told WGNS that they only had a few left.
Schools are closed again and there s more snow in the forecast.
Rollie said, We re having a run on sleds, and there are just a few remaining. Remember, if there are sleds in our window you re in luck.
Harry Ward started the track and field program and coached basketball at Dooly County High from 1966-1992. Author: Pepper Baker Updated: 7:19 AM EST February 16, 2021
DOOLY COUNTY, Ga. Retired educators and members of Dooly County are remembering the life of their beloved former Coach Harry Ward who died last month.
David Barron played basketball for Coach Harry Ward at Dooly County High in the 70s. I lived in Byronville and I had no way home and what Coach Ward said was, I can see something in you. He said, What Imma do is, I ll take you home , Barron said.
Ward began teaching in 1961. In 1966, he came to Dooly County High, which then was Vienna High School, and impacted students and athletes lives for over 20 years.
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Mayor Todd Gloria last week made what seemed to be a straightforward comment on a news story about more homeless people moving into housing at two converted hotels that were purchased by the city of San Diego.
“Permanent supportive housing is how we end homelessness,” he wrote on Twitter. “Hundreds of new homes purchased with State funds are being filled by those sheltering at the Convention Center. We’ll need thousands of more homes to solve this urgent problem.”
There’s actually a lot going on in that statement, but with help of my trusty political decoder ring, we can get right to the point: Emphasizing that state money was involved translates into “Way to go, Gavin Newsom.”
FAIRFIELD-SUISUN, CALIFORNIA
A $5 billion water project could drill through Anza-Borrego park. Is it a pipe dream? [The San Diego Union-Tribune :: BC-CALIF-PARK-WATERPROJECT:SD]
SAN DIEGO It would be arguably the most ambitious public works project in San Diego history.
The envisioned pipeline would carry Colorado River water more than 130 miles from the Imperial Valley through the Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, tunneling under the Cuyamaca Mountains, and passing through the Cleveland National Forest to eventually connect with a water-treatment plant in San Marcos.
An alternative route would run through the desert to the south, boring under Mount Laguna before emptying into the San Vicente Reservoir in Lakeside.