County road agencies list best scenic drives for fall colors fox17online.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from fox17online.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
ALEXANDRIA BAY â Itâs all about teamwork for village mayor Steven E. Jarvis, and he wants to highlight what he and the village Board of Trustees have done together as he runs for his third term.
âI want to emphasize the work of the board, not just me,â he said. âItâs the five of us.â
Mr. Jarvis has served as the village mayor since he was elected in 2017, and served on the village Board of Trustees for eight years before that.
The mayor said that as he runs for re-election, he is focused on infrastructure. He said he wants the village government to be a strong steward of the extensive water, sewer and road network it has built up.
Fresh new look for Aldi s Failsworth store Date published: 23 February 2021
Aldi s Project Fresh renovations have been ongoing since 2018
Aldi will reveal a fresh new look for its Failsworth store when it re-opens to customers on Thursday (February 25) at 8am.
Standing at 1,124 sqm of retail space, a more customer-focused layout allows for the products customers know and love to be found more easily, whilst browsing new ranges.
The transformation is part of Aldi’s £500m investment into further improving its stores and services across the UK, and is based on feedback from more than 50,000 customers.
The Project Fresh renovations have been ongoing since 2018.
Seawall Development s latest redevelopment vision in North Baltimore leaves questions for other neighborhoods bizjournals.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bizjournals.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
This article was first published on November 21, 2019. We thought this post was interesting and wanted to share it with you again.
A small trail running along some of Baltimore’s most notoriously oversized roads has proven to be incredibly popular, and could change how the city’s streets are shaped going forward. The multi-modal trail, called the Big Jump, provides people on foot, bicycle, and more with a way to cross over highways that have long served as a barrier between neighborhoods.
Last August, the Baltimore City Department of Transportation (BCDOT), working with a local bike advocacy group called Bikemore and a national group called PeopleForBikes, installed a rather unusual mobility path using only water-filled traffic barriers. It runs along a 1.4-mile stretch of Druid Park Lake Drive, 28th Street, and Sisson Street in North Baltimore, and crosses over part of I-83.