Their eligibility will then be assessed by the council revenues team. Toby Morris, cabinet member for resources at WODC, said: “We know how worried businesses have been about these grants as they face having little or no income. “We have made the applications process as simple and as easy as possible for businesses so these applications are not another worry in a challenging time. “We will do our very best to process these grants as quickly as possible and get this financial lifeline out to our communities. “I would urge business owners to respond to their emails swiftly to help us speed up the payment process or act quickly to fill in an application form if they haven’t previously done so.”
The new variants of the virus can spread like wildfire, and all of us have a role to play in keeping them out of the community.
I have to admit, when I first heard UK prime minister Boris Johnson talking about a new, more transmissible strain of SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for Covid-19, par
millsy 2.2
Muldoon refused to devalue the NZ Dollar under the instructions of the incoming Labour government, instead proposing a joint statement ruling out devaluation. However he backed down after his cabinet or caucus threatened to, in the case of the former, resign en masse/ask the GovGen to sack him and in the case of the latter, remove him as leader of the National Party. There are conflicting rumours. He was fine with going, he just didnt want to devalue.
Adrian 3
I very much doubt that Trump has the codes. In his last unhinged weeks Nixon’s red button or phone ( I can’t remember which ) was apparently hooked up to a cupboard in the WH kitchen, it could ring but nobody could hear it. As I recall it was in a book or interview with a senior military person about 20 years ago. The American military might be a lot of things but the very senior people are not stupid.
BUSINESSES are being urged to be patient with regards to Covid-19 grants. To date, West Oxfordshire District Council (WODC) has paid £1,059,264 to 642 businesses from the mandatory and discretionary schemes for the lockdown ending on December 2. Meanwhile, a further £38,340 has gone to 45 pubs which remained closed or which could serve drinks only over the Christmas period. The council finance team is now reviewing fresh Government guidance for the new lockdown with a one-off top up grant for retail, hospitality and leisure businesses worth up to £9,000 per property to help businesses through to the spring, depending on rateable value. Toby Morris, WODC’s cabinet member for resources, said: “We appreciate business concerns and our team is working incredibly hard to process applications as quickly as possible.