Councillors debate Sheffield s Pinstone Street for hours – but still no decision made sheffieldtelegraph.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sheffieldtelegraph.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Thereâs a glassy new walkway spanning Eagle Valley Creek, joining two Carson Tahoe Health buildings: the Regional Medical Center and Sierra Surgery.
For the first time since CTH acquired Sierra Surgery in 2015, staff and patients no longer have to walk or drive several minutes to get from one building to the other. Now, on average, a 2-minute, 15-second stroll across the Carson Tahoe Walkway gets folks where they need to be.
âItâs exciting to see this all come together,â said Michelle Joy, CTH vice president and CEO, during her grand opening speech for the bridge on Wednesday. â(We) look forward to seeing the difference itâs going to make for our patients, for our staff, for our physicians, and the community.â
When: Quarryville Borough Council meeting, April 5.
What happened: Borough Council decided not to support a local initiative calling for Lancaster County to establish its own public health department. Council President Joy Kemper was absent. Board members Diane Hastings, Jim Kreider and Brian Braightmeyer said they are satisfied with the current state health and emergency management services and could not justify forming another department.
Background: Manheim Township Board of Commissioners passed a resolution March 8 calling on county officials âto immediately initiate a working group to evaluate and recommend establishing a county health department by the end of 2021, if not before.â Manheim Township shared that resolution with other municipalities, hoping that would happen.
Attorney Richard Schwartz, community working to rebuild Booneville home wtva.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wtva.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
BOONEVILLE ⢠For 74-year-old Diane Hastings, being able to reside in her community means everything to her.
The Booneville native had been living in her Cedar Street home for over 20 years when it was damaged by a storm in September of last year.
Now, community leaders are coming together to help build Hastings a new home. On Wednesday, a group of local volunteers, city leaders and businesses gathered outside the remains of her former home to help clear the property and make way for a new house.
âYou donât know how much I missed this house,â Hastings said. âHow much Iâve missed this community because this is my community right here and I love it. On days after church, I would go by my house and just look at it and say to myself, âLord, I asked you for a new house, so I know youâre going to give it to me.ââ