Live Breaking News & Updates on டன்னான் ப்ராஜெக்ட்|Page 2
Stay updated with breaking news from டன்னான் ப்ராஜெக்ட். Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
Tuscaloosa County Alternative Sentencing helps non-profits hurt financially by COVID19 West Alabama charities get financial help By Kelvin Reynolds | March 4, 2021 at 5:37 PM CST - Updated March 4 at 5:37 PM TUSCALOOSA CO., Ala. (WBRC) - Tuscaloosa County Alternative Sentencing awarded more than $150,000 in grants to more than a dozen non-profits. The leader of one of those groups explained how badly the financial help was needed. “We had two fundraisers that had been cancelled and then one of our fundraisers we were able to hold, but it was not a normal format and basically we raised half of what we normally do,” said Ellen Potts, Executive Director of Habitat of Humanity for Tuscaloosa. ....
Jefferson County Jail expanding reentry and ready-to-work program Updated Mar 03, 2021; A program aimed at making Jefferson County Jail inmates employable once they are released will be expanded, Sheriff Mark Pettway announced Wednesday. The program is implemented through three phases: Ready to Work, Training to Work, and finally Graduation and Release. Inmates eligible for the program are those who are being held on non-violent offenses. Program officials will work with judges to identify those best suited for the program and Renewed for Reentry may also be used as a sentencing alternative. All instruction, training and even job interviews will be done on site at the county jail. ....
Tamika Palmer, the mother of Breonna Taylor, right, listens to a news conference, Friday, Sept. 25, 2020, in Louisville, Ky. Family attorney Ben Crump is calling for the Kentucky attorney general to release the transcripts from the grand jury that decided not to charge any of the officers involved in the Black woman s death. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings) By Erica Wright The Birmingham Times What’s left to say about 2020 except that it’s over. But what a year with the well-chronicled coronavirus pandemic that killed more than 300,000; racial unrest that created division in across many communities and a presidential election that was over until it wasn’t. And there was plenty of more to a year that goes down as one of the most memorable in recent history. Here’s some of what happened. ....