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May 6, 2021 at 8:20 pm by Asumi Shuda
The UC Santa Barbara library began phase 2 of its reopening on April 26, allowing students to access an increasing number of limited study spaces as public health guidelines allow them to increase indoor capacity in a four-phase plan.Â
The first-floor Mountain Side Paseo Commons and the first-floor Mountain Side North and South areas are now open at 25% capacity.Â
Because of social distancing, all of the seats currently available are for individual study only, Hannah Rael, the libraryâs communications and marketing manager, said.Â
Nexus file photo
The first phase of opening began March 29 when the Mountain Side Learning Commons on the first and second floors reopened at 25% seating capacity, in accordance with the County of Santa Barbaraâs red tier status at the time. Santa Barbara County is now in the orange tier in the COVID-19 reopening framework, allowing for greater seating capacity.Â
Akerna Nominates Pharmaceutical and Cannabis Industry Expert to Board of Directors
The enterprise software company nominates Barry Fishman to their board
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DENVER, April 27, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Akerna (Nasdaq: KERN) ( Akerna or the Company ), an enterprise software company, leading compliance technology provider, and developer of the cannabis industry s first seed-to-sale enterprise resource planning (ERP) software technology (MJ Platform®), today announces an intended transition to their Board of Directors.
At the Company s upcoming annual stockholders meeting on June 7, 2021, Mark D. Iwanowski, an experienced executive veteran in the global technology sector, will be concluding his time with the Board of Directors after two years of tremendous service. Iwanowski joined Akerna s Board of Directors as the Company went public, providing strategic guidance and leading high growth for the business with his deep background
ACT Chief Minister Andrew Barr, left, with energy and emissions reduction minister Shane Rattenbury. Picture: Nathan Schmidt
ENERGY retailers will be forced to inform their customers if there is a better deal available when new legislation, introduced in the ACT Legislative Assembly today (April 20), comes into effect later this year, says ACT Chief Minister Andrew Barr.
“These new rules will require energy retailers to tell you about a ‘reference price’ – a common benchmark that your deal will be compared against – and to tell you if a better deal is available, without you having to ask,” he says.
“We know the difference between a standing offer price and the best market price can be up to $400 a year. We also know that around 40 per cent of Canberrans are on standing offer contracts.”