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Provincetown Town Meeting will center on projects, diversity, open space

Provincetown Town Meeting When and where: 10 a.m. Saturday in the parking lot of St. Peter the Apostle Church, 11 Prince St. Key issues 1. Capital improvements Among the 39 articles is $5.065 million in debt exclusions for town capital improvement projects. Those include $410,000 for stormwater drainage improvements; $530,000 in building maintenance; $3.5 million for Court Street drainage and repairs; and $650,000 for a Ryder Street stormwater outfall project. The projects are estimated to have a combined annual property tax impact of $87.81 for a median assessed property, according to Town Manager Alex Morse. 2. A diversity, equity and inclusion office Establishing this town office through Article 13 would require a $136,000 property tax override – an annual property tax impact of $32.75 for a median assessed property, according to Morse.

Who are the nine people who sit on our State Supreme Court?

This week allow me to share with you a sketch of the men and women who sit on our State Supreme Court. These nine Justices are all Republican, all conservative on both social and business issues. All are very devout in their faith and very connected to their church and their family. Chief Justice Tom Parker has been on the State Supreme Court since 2005. He was born and raised in Montgomery and went to Dartmouth College and Vanderbilt Law School. Chief Justice Parker and his wife the former Dottie James of Auburn have been married 39 years. Dottie was a supervisor of the governor’s mansion during the Fob James administration. They are Methodist.

Faithful Reminded on Easter That Christ Loves Us, Is With Us Forever

The Tablet April 6, 2021 Ann Torelli serves as an extraordinary minister of holy Communion during Easter Mass April 4, 2021, at St. Peter the Apostle Church in Islip Terrace, N.Y., amid the coronavirus pandemic. (Photo: CNS/Gregory A. Shemitz) NEW YORK (CNS) On Easter last year, New York Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan looked out on an empty St. Patrick’s Cathedral amid the pandemic and thought, “Oh my God, I don’t mind an empty tomb on Easter but an empty church?” “To see the folks back, even though we’re still limited to 50% capacity … sure means the world. Don’t tell anybody, I’m afraid we went a little over that today, but we were very careful,” he told the congregation April 4 in the cathedral that can hold about 2,000 worshippers.

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