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July 1, 2021
During the pandemic, her staff had to come up with new ways to bring in business.
“We learned a lot from the pandemic and we were always just putting our values forward and I think that helped us really come through it,” said Hayden.
So Hayden sat down with brothers Nick and Chris Loud who are working to highlight small businesses through their magazine, The Boardman Review.
“I think Michigan has been concerned about having a brain drain so a lot of our young creatives are going to other states in the U.S and I think organizations like The Boardman Review are trying to bring people back and celebrate all the great things about living in our area here in Traverse City,” says Hayden.
FROM ECUADOR WITH LOVE: EMPIRE’S GROCER’S DAUGHTER
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Chocolatiers in Northwest Michigan survive COVID with special local lending support and a delicious partnership with Ecuadorian experts. EMPIRE, MICHIGAN, UNITED STATES, May 25, 2021 /EINPresswire.com/ Ecuador’s history seems shrouded in a foggy jungle tangle as confusing as the trails of their rain forests that are shouldered by the Andes Mountains. It is thought that Asian nomads reached the South American continent around 12,000 BC, joined by Polynesian colonization followed by a Duchicela lineage for 150 years, then Spaniards and Pizzaro and the spread of terror among the Indians. The history of this vibrant, beautiful country has been marked by fierce rivalry, occasional warfare and political instability. Today, though, Ecuador is peaceful and a safe country to visit.
With his back to the wall, Albanese comes out swinging with target seats, slogan, IR policy plan
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Under pressure Labor leader Anthony Albanese is promising Australian families the party is âon your sideâ while reassuring his MPs of an ambitious plan to target 18 seats and claim government at the next election.
In an exclusive interview with the
Sun-Herald and
The Sunday Age after a tumultuous week in which he brought forward a larger than expected frontbench reshuffle â amid mutterings about whether Labor can win the next poll â Mr Albanese also revealed the party would release a new industrial relations policy in the next fortnight.
Anthony Albanese is a man under pressure.
The leader of the opposition is behind in the two-party-preferred vote in published opinion polls, though not by much and well behind Scott Morrison as preferred prime minister.
There is chatter in the caucus about his leadership, though no clear alternative has yet emerged - depending on who you talk to, Tanya Plibersek, Jim Chalmers, Chris Bowen and Bill Shorten are all mentioned, though not seriously.
Labor leader Anthony Albaneseâs car was badly damaged in an accident on January 8.
Thursdayâs reshuffle of his frontbench has not quieted the more restive elements of the caucus, who fear that the deck is simply stacked against Labor, which could be facing a fourth straight election defeat by the Coalition.