York County mass vaccination site begins COVID-19 shots with plans to inoculate 5,000 a week ldnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ldnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
In 2011, Steven Reid recalled, he was in a dark place.
Reid was running the streets, getting into trouble and planning on harming himself. He said he “didn’t want to be here anymore.” So he started dropping subtle hints in text messages.
Next, without warning, his friend, Erik Miranda, came banging on the door. He then spent the next couple of weeks looking after him.
“He kind of just showed up,” said Reid, now 28, a corrections officer who lives in York. “Literally, dragged me outside.”
Miranda was an intelligent young man, family members and friends said, and wise beyond his years. He initially aspired to become an entrepreneur but later moved toward becoming a leader in the Jehovah’s Witnesses.
York City Fire Chief Chad Deardorff to leave post
York Dispatch
York City Fire Chief Chad Deardorff is set to retire after 26 years with the department and be replaced by an acting chief later this month, the city announced Wednesday.
Deputy Chief William Sleeger will be named acting chief on March 26, according the news release. The city does not intend to advertise the open chief position, said Philip Given, Mayor Michael Helfrich s chief of staff.
Deardorff first began his career with the department in 1995. He has worked with the department ever since and was appointed as chief in 2019.
“It has been an honor and a privilege to serve the residents and visitors of the City of York, Deardorff said. I have had the distinct pleasure of working with some of the best firefighters this profession has ever seen.
York mayor announces retirement of fire chief Chad Deardorff fox43.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from fox43.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
York City avoids government shutdown, passes budget
York Dispatch
York City avoided tax hikes, job cuts and a potential government shutdown Wednesday afternoon after council member Edquina Washington relented and supported a 2021 budget that assumes the sale of the city s wastewater treatment system.
Washington has for a week been a critic of the plan, first put forth by Mayor Michael Helfrich, that would fund the city s $116.8 million budget without tax increases and job cuts. The alternative to selling the wastewater system, Helfrich has said, was a budget that would have hiked property taxes by 48% and eliminated more than two dozen jobs.