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Rapidly, the Mets’ rotation is becoming whole again. Trade acquisition Rich Hill should be at Citi Field by Saturday. Carlos Carrasco could return from the injured list within days, with Jacob deGrom perhaps also on the short-term horizon. The Mets have nearly survived a weeks-long stretch in which they often didn’t know who would be starting the next day’s game.
They could not have done it without Tylor Megill.
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The Voice of Indiana County
INDIANA NATIVE HIRED AS NEW WEALTH ADVISOR FOR FIRST COMMONWEALTH By Hometown2
Apr 24, 2021 7:24 AM
An IUP Graduate and a woman with Indiana connections has been named a new wealth advisor for First Commonwealth Bank.
The bank announced the recent hiring of Laura Leach-Joos as the new wealth advisor for Western and Central Pennsylvania. Leach-Joos, a native of Indiana and the daughter of the owner of The Finery, Terry Leach, will join First Commonwealth Advisors with over ten years of experience in high net worth financial planning and investment management. She had served in a similar role at PNC Bank. She is also a graduate of the IUP Cook Honors College with a Bachelor’s degree in Marketing and a minor in economics, and has studied business internationally in India, China, Cyprus and Turkey.
mgreier@salemnews.net
SALEM Residents in the city’s gas aggregation program paid more than expected for both February and March after supplier Volunteer Energy increased the locked-in rate without warning.
“It was a shock to all of us at city hall,” Mayor John Berlin said.
Under the new two-year contract with Volunteer Energy, the city had agreed to a locked-in rate of 41 cents per one hundred cubic feet (Ccf) for the natural gas aggregation program, which allows the city to gain buying power by banding everyone together to buy gas from a certified supplier, such as Volunteer Energy.
The new price was to go into effect with the February billing cycle, so when Berlin received his gas bill, he was surprised to see the rate was 49 cents per Ccf. In March, it shot up even higher, to 57 cents per Ccf. He asked city Service/Safety Director Joe Cappuzzello to check with the supplier and with AMPO Inc., who represented the city’s interests in the program.