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Auckland public health service calls for crack-down on liquor industry

Public health service calls for crack-down on liquor industry

ARPHS medical officer of health Dr Nick Eichler. Photo: Supplied The Auckland Regional Public Health Service is calling on the government and Auckland Council to make the necessary changes. It will soon release a report in the New Zealand Medical Journal looking at liquor outlets in South Auckland and their failure to comply with council regulations. The council s 2015 signage bylaw controls the signs that can be displayed at shops and other businesses and limits the number, size, coverage, and placement of them, including window signs and sandwich boards. There are different rules for signs in town centres and industrial areas, but there is no distinction made for bottle stores and liquor outlets.

City inc offers helping hand to admn | Ludhiana News

Ludhiana: With coronavirus cases not slowing down and fatalities rising in the district, business associations have come forward to help the administration and the government. Several businessmen are already providing oxygen free of cost in huge quantities and during the past few days they have also deposited with the administration hundreds of cylinders lying in their factories. Besides, many vaccination camps have been organised by the industry in which not only workers and businessmen, but the public was also immunised. To overcome shortage of beds in hospitals, Chamber of Industrial and Commercial Undertakings (CICU) has pledged to support the initiative of the administration to set up a 50-bed makeshift hospital at the Meritorious School in Civil Lines. Upkar Singh Ahuja, CICU president, said, “Recently, a meeting was held with DC Varinder Sharma, councillor Mamta Ashu, Dr Bishav Mohan and other senior officials of the district administration to help the community by settin

Subchapter V s Impact On Small Business Reorganization - Insolvency/Bankruptcy/Re-structuring

To print this article, all you need is to be registered or login on Mondaq.com. A little over one year ago, just as the country was heading into a period of unprecedented turbulence caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, the Small Business Reorganization Act (SBRA) went into effect on February 19, 2020. Before SBRA, struggling businesses considering bankruptcy had two options: Chapter 7 or Chapter 11. SBRA provides an additional option to businesses seeking to reorganize by adding Subchapter V to the Bankruptcy Code, which affords small business debtors the option of pursuing Chapter 11 restructuring under laws and rules of (a) traditional Chapter 11, or (b) Subchapter V.

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