Live Breaking News & Updates on ஸ்டேஸீ தௌஊகெர்த்தி
Stay updated with breaking news from ஸ்டேஸீ தௌஊகெர்த்தி. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
Lee Yager and Donna Yager are again scheduled to appear before the Lake County Commission on Tuesday morning to ask that a conditional use permit be amended. The hearing is scheduled for 11 a.m. as the final item on the agenda for a regular meeting that begins at 9 a.m. in the commission meeting room of the Lake County Courthouse. The Yagers d/b/a The Gravel Pit have appeared before the commission at least three times in the last two years with the same request. Neighbor Janet Weber has opposed each request, saying it would affect her ability to board horses. The existing gravel pit is on 457th Avenue north of SD-34. ....
The Lake County Commission will meet at 9 a.m. on Tuesday in the commission meeting room of the Lake County Courthouse. In addition to conducting routine business, the commission will approve a budget supplement for the jail/public safety building for security improvement, recognize employees for National County Government Month, approve a 4-H rental agreement with Mike and Peggy Clarke, approve a 4-H rental agreement with Feeding South Dakota, approve a resolution transferring property to parole services with the state Department of Corrections, and declare a patrol vehicle surplus for trade-in purposes. The commission will receive quarterly reports from Buildings and Grounds Superintendent Dave Hare, Emergency Management Director Kody Keefer and County Highway Superintendent Nels Nelson. Nelson will also ask the commission to award the contract for weed spraying and riprap, consider a weed and pest grant, and receive a committee update from the road and bridge advisory c ....
February 23, 2021 For 10 years prior to the Covid-19 pandemic, each weekday morning, Jeremy Wilhelm walked from his house in Grant Park to the King Memorial MARTA station. There, he caught a train to Five Points and then walked another few blocks to his job in a Marietta Street office tower. In fact, when he and his wife were shopping for a house, their top requirement was being within walking distance of MARTA, says Wilhelm, a project manager and analyst at Westat. Then, the coronavirus showed up, and Wilhelm’s office shut down. He’s been working out of his living room since March 2020 and expects to do so indefinitely. His wife, Holly, used to commute by MARTA, too, riding the train up to Buckhead. Her job as an aptitude consultant for the Johnson O’Connor Research Foundation requires her to be in the office a couple of days a week, but these days, she prefers to drive. ....