Alan Richard James passed away peacefully on December 11, 2020, at Billings Clinic in Billings, Montana due to complications of COVID-19.
He was surrounded by the Savior’s love and watched over by his wife and daughters, as they could not be in the room with him.
Alan was born on Mother’s Day, May 8, 1949, in Provo, Utah to Lorna Matkin and Richard James, he was the oldest of four children. He grew up in Rock Springs, Wyoming where he graduated from Rock Springs High School in 1967.
Alan worked as a carpenter, in the oil field, selling sporting goods on the road which brought him to Montana where he met Sandy Miller while working for Boss Office Supply. They were married on June 21, 1980, in Glendive, Montana.
With the exception of some notable cities, rent prices are growing even faster than they had been prior to the pandemic and point to a looming affordability crisis for tenants.
Rent for a single-family home in the United States grew by 3.1 percent in October. In the same month last year, that number was at 2.9 percent, according to the latest data from CoreLogic.
This is the first time since the coronavirus first hit the United States in the spring that rent price growth is higher than it was last year. With bustling job markets and high numbers of relocating professionals, cities like Phoenix and Tucson, Arizona, and Charlotte, North Carolina, have had such high rent growth that it slanted the mean in the rest of the country 8.9 percent, 7.6 percent and 5.2 percent, respectively.
That s a lot of cookies - Sweet treats for fire company fundraiser
Folks with the Franklin Township Volunteer Fire Company in Carbon County are hoping to raise some cash and brighten spirits this season. Author: Carmella Mataloni Updated: 5:33 PM EST December 11, 2020
CARBON COUNTY, Pa. There s a little bit of everything to satisfy your taste buds on these cookie trays chocolate chip cookies, sugar cookies, red and green cookies.
The assortments are being put together by the Franklin Township Volunteer Fire Company women s auxiliary. We expected maybe 80 orders, 100 orders. All of a sudden, it s 248. That s a lot of cookies, said women s auxiliary member Chris Lilly.
It was already a great year for IPOs, but this past week took things to an entirely new level.
DoorDash (ticker: DASH) and Airbnb (ABNB) started the week as private companies last valued at a combined $34 billion. They ended the week as public companies together worth nearly $170 billion. The initial public offerings capture how Covid-19 has fundamentally shifted the economy and the financial markets.
Here’s what we learned from the historic week.
Growth Is the New Value: Investors are desperate for growth, and they don’t care what it costs. Snowflake (SNOW) is growing 100% a year, a level it can’t possibly sustain. The data warehousing stock has tripled since its own IPO in September, and it’s trading at 100 times next year’s projected revenue, a figure that’s tough to justify.