7 minutes

Arquitectos y promotores defienden la densificación de los nuevos barrios como salida a la falta de inmuebles.

7 minutes
Arquitectos y promotores defienden la densificación de los nuevos barrios como salida a la falta de inmuebles.
8 minutes
В Пакистан в пятницу вечером, 24 апреля, прибывает с визитом министр иностранных дел Ирана Аббас Арагчи. О начале дипломатической поездки министра, который также побывает в Омане и России, сообщило иранское информационное агентство IRNA. Вслед за этим сообщением администрация президента США объявила, что в субботу в Пакистан отправятся спецпосланники Дональда Трампа Стив Виткофф и Джаред Кушнер. Агентство France-Presse полагает, что в выходные в Исламабаде возможно проведение нового раунда переговоров между США и Ираном.
В Пакистан в пятницу вечером, 24 апреля, прибывает с визитом министр иностранных дел Ирана Аббас Арагчи. О начале дипломатической поездки министра, который также побывает в Омане и России, сообщило иранское информационное агентство IRNA. Вслед за этим сообщением администрация президента США объявила, что в субботу в Пакистан отправятся спецпосланники Дональда Трампа Стив Виткофф и Джаред Кушнер. Агентство France-Presse полагает, что в выходные в Исламабаде возможно проведение нового раунда переговоров между США и Ираном.
8 minutes
Curta será exibido em João Pessoa (27/04) e debate apagamentos históricos de populações negras e indígenas Fonte
Curta será exibido em João Pessoa (27/04) e debate apagamentos históricos de populações negras e indígenas Fonte
9 minutes

ST PETERSBURG — Although officials say there’s no “silver bullet” to cure Florida’s affordable housing crisis, an argument that smaller lot sizes can be a significant part of the solution was the topic of a panel discussion this week at the Florida Housing Solutions Summit in St. Petersburg. The day-long forum was organized by the […]

ST PETERSBURG — Although officials say there’s no “silver bullet” to cure Florida’s affordable housing crisis, an argument that smaller lot sizes can be a significant part of the solution was the topic of a panel discussion this week at the Florida Housing Solutions Summit in St. Petersburg. The day-long forum was organized by the […]
10 minutes

Rhode Island Department of Corrections Director Wayne T. Salisbury Jr. is resigning from his post after three years overseeing the state’s prison system to take a job in New York. In an email to correctional staff Friday morning, Salisbury said he accepted a position with the receiver appointed by the U.S. District Court for the […]

Rhode Island Department of Corrections Director Wayne T. Salisbury Jr. is resigning from his post after three years overseeing the state’s prison system to take a job in New York. In an email to correctional staff Friday morning, Salisbury said he accepted a position with the receiver appointed by the U.S. District Court for the […]
12 minutes
На Костянтинівському напрямку російські війська 23 рази штурмували українські позиції, чотири бої тривають
На Костянтинівському напрямку російські війська 23 рази штурмували українські позиції, чотири бої тривають
16 minutes
Estudantes e professores da Universidade do Distrito Federal (UnDF), que estão em greve desde o dia 20 de março, realizaram, nesta sexta-feira (24), um ato na W3 Norte, região do Plano Piloto em Brasília, em frente à Escola Superior de Ciências da Saúde (ESCS), para cobrar o cumprimento de compromissos assumidos pelo Governo do Distrito […] Fonte
Estudantes e professores da Universidade do Distrito Federal (UnDF), que estão em greve desde o dia 20 de março, realizaram, nesta sexta-feira (24), um ato na W3 Norte, região do Plano Piloto em Brasília, em frente à Escola Superior de Ciências da Saúde (ESCS), para cobrar o cumprimento de compromissos assumidos pelo Governo do Distrito […] Fonte
16 minutes
Em meio às negociações pela delação premiada do banqueiro Daniel Vorcaro e pelo menos outros três investigados por suspeita de participação no esquema de fraude financeira envolvendo o Banco Master, o ministro do Supremo Tribunal Federal (STF) Gilmar Mendes saiu em defesa da Corte. Nesta quinta-feira (23), o magistrado disse que o Master “tem endereço […] Fonte
16 minutes
Em meio às negociações pela delação premiada do banqueiro Daniel Vorcaro e pelo menos outros três investigados por suspeita de participação no esquema de fraude financeira envolvendo o Banco Master, o ministro do Supremo Tribunal Federal (STF) Gilmar Mendes saiu em defesa da Corte. Nesta quinta-feira (23), o magistrado disse que o Master “tem endereço […] Fonte
16 minutes

After the Montana State Auditor’s office suspended the licenses of Mr. Bail’s Billings location and its manager, Anna Yarbro, the company’s attorney requested a hearing to appeal the decision. The auditor’s office has now scheduled that hearing for Aug. 14 The post License hearing set for bail bond company following fatal shooting appeared first on Montana Free Press.

After the Montana State Auditor’s office suspended the licenses of Mr. Bail’s Billings location and its manager, Anna Yarbro, the company’s attorney requested a hearing to appeal the decision. The auditor’s office has now scheduled that hearing for Aug. 14 The post License hearing set for bail bond company following fatal shooting appeared first on Montana Free Press.
17 minutes
(The Center Square) – Parish leaders have yet to act on Department of Justice recommendations to reduce Caddo Correctional Center overcrowding, and based on the most recent population data, the problem has since worsened. A major contributor to overcrowding, the report revealed, is the length of time pretrial inmates wait. The detention period for those awaiting trial or court appearance has doubled in the past decade, the report states. In response to overcrowding, Caddo Parish introduced an electronic monitoring program at Thursday’s commission meeting that will not necessarily ease the problem. “Do you think it will reduce the numbers in the jail?” asked parish Commissioner John-Paul Young. “It possibly could, but with our vetting process, it’s going to be strenuous,” said Rick Farris, a Sheriff’s Office chief deputy. “They may be in jail for a nonviolent crime right now, but if they have a previous crime of violence, then they’re automatically disqualified." The commission unanimously passed a resolution in favor of the program that allows select nonviolent misdemeanor inmates to serve home incarceration instead of remaining in custody. It applies to inmates serving short-term sentences. But none of the correctional center’s 22 parish inmates would qualify for the program, Farris said. The correctional center is a detention facility in Shreveport that handles pretrial detainees and convicted inmates. In summer 2024, Sheriff Henry Whitehorn told local media viable solutions to address overcrowding were about a year away. His office operates the correctional center. Three years ago, the facility’s population was 31% over its capacity of 1,070 inmates. Today, with nearly 1,600 inmates, it’s approaching 50% beyond capacity, according to parish data released this month. As overcrowding reached a crisis point, the previous sheriff, who left office in 2023, collaborated with a crime task force made up of federal and local law enforcement officials and local criminal justice agencies, called the Caddo Parish Criminal Justice Task Force. It reviewed a decade of parish data to form policy solutions. The task force released a Justice Department report in November 2023 to the media and public as an exhibit of solutions to overcrowding. Two key points emerged – there is no single change that can address the problem, and stakeholders need to continue working collaboratively. It’s unclear if any Justice Department recommendation was adopted or is being considered by the sheriff’s office, but it’s clear the task force is no longer working. While active, it included Caddo Parish and Shreveport government leadership, law enforcement, courts, corrections, healthcare providers and nonprofits. The report outlined 16 recommendations that would, among other things, expand or speed up programs for pretrial inmates and processing at the court and district attorney levels. Surging population is overwhelmingly driven by pretrial population – those arrested and booked but not yet convicted – which rose 42% between 2012 and 2022, accounting for 72% of the jail population. The Center Square was unsuccessful prior to publication getting the sheriff's office to supply additional details. Local officials confirmed that the task force no longer meets. Whitehorn “decided to go in another direction,” the district attorney's office said. At the midpoint of Whitehorn’s term, electronic monitoring is the first major initiative identified in The Center Square’s investigation. Solving the overcrowding crisis was among the most important issues for voters. Results of nationwide Justice Department studies about ankle monitors are mixed – they work when properly implemented and fail when used as a standalone solution. Electronic monitoring was not one of the report’s 16 recommendations. “Right now, it’s to try to provide a short-term fix,” said Erica Bryant, Caddo Parish administrator. “I know the current inmates may not have met the vetting process, but we believe that if we can allow some of those folks that have already been sentenced to a short-term stay, to have home incarceration, then we would see a cost savings.” Because cases are taking longer to move through the district attorney’s office and court system, streamlining the discovery process was among the recommendations. The median time between case opening and disposition increased 144% between 2012 and 2022. The average number of days between the first court date and disposition grew from 84.5 days to 388 days, the report revealed. Shreveport police did adopt in 2025 a cloud-based system that provides the district attorney's office with instant access to evidence. Axon Evidence is a cloud-based digital evidence management system that allows law enforcement to store and share body camera footage, audio and documents. Police spokesman Chris Bordelon said he is not aware of anyone meeting with the sheriff’s department to address jail overcrowding. According to the report, the Bureau of Justice Assistance provided funding. Similar initiatives helped numerous states reduce their prison populations and adopt more efficient systems. They identify “points of congestion within the system” and suggest short- and long-term solutions.
(The Center Square) – Parish leaders have yet to act on Department of Justice recommendations to reduce Caddo Correctional Center overcrowding, and based on the most recent population data, the problem has since worsened. A major contributor to overcrowding, the report revealed, is the length of time pretrial inmates wait. The detention period for those awaiting trial or court appearance has doubled in the past decade, the report states. In response to overcrowding, Caddo Parish introduced an electronic monitoring program at Thursday’s commission meeting that will not necessarily ease the problem. “Do you think it will reduce the numbers in the jail?” asked parish Commissioner John-Paul Young. “It possibly could, but with our vetting process, it’s going to be strenuous,” said Rick Farris, a Sheriff’s Office chief deputy. “They may be in jail for a nonviolent crime right now, but if they have a previous crime of violence, then they’re automatically disqualified." The commission unanimously passed a resolution in favor of the program that allows select nonviolent misdemeanor inmates to serve home incarceration instead of remaining in custody. It applies to inmates serving short-term sentences. But none of the correctional center’s 22 parish inmates would qualify for the program, Farris said. The correctional center is a detention facility in Shreveport that handles pretrial detainees and convicted inmates. In summer 2024, Sheriff Henry Whitehorn told local media viable solutions to address overcrowding were about a year away. His office operates the correctional center. Three years ago, the facility’s population was 31% over its capacity of 1,070 inmates. Today, with nearly 1,600 inmates, it’s approaching 50% beyond capacity, according to parish data released this month. As overcrowding reached a crisis point, the previous sheriff, who left office in 2023, collaborated with a crime task force made up of federal and local law enforcement officials and local criminal justice agencies, called the Caddo Parish Criminal Justice Task Force. It reviewed a decade of parish data to form policy solutions. The task force released a Justice Department report in November 2023 to the media and public as an exhibit of solutions to overcrowding. Two key points emerged – there is no single change that can address the problem, and stakeholders need to continue working collaboratively. It’s unclear if any Justice Department recommendation was adopted or is being considered by the sheriff’s office, but it’s clear the task force is no longer working. While active, it included Caddo Parish and Shreveport government leadership, law enforcement, courts, corrections, healthcare providers and nonprofits. The report outlined 16 recommendations that would, among other things, expand or speed up programs for pretrial inmates and processing at the court and district attorney levels. Surging population is overwhelmingly driven by pretrial population – those arrested and booked but not yet convicted – which rose 42% between 2012 and 2022, accounting for 72% of the jail population. The Center Square was unsuccessful prior to publication getting the sheriff's office to supply additional details. Local officials confirmed that the task force no longer meets. Whitehorn “decided to go in another direction,” the district attorney's office said. At the midpoint of Whitehorn’s term, electronic monitoring is the first major initiative identified in The Center Square’s investigation. Solving the overcrowding crisis was among the most important issues for voters. Results of nationwide Justice Department studies about ankle monitors are mixed – they work when properly implemented and fail when used as a standalone solution. Electronic monitoring was not one of the report’s 16 recommendations. “Right now, it’s to try to provide a short-term fix,” said Erica Bryant, Caddo Parish administrator. “I know the current inmates may not have met the vetting process, but we believe that if we can allow some of those folks that have already been sentenced to a short-term stay, to have home incarceration, then we would see a cost savings.” Because cases are taking longer to move through the district attorney’s office and court system, streamlining the discovery process was among the recommendations. The median time between case opening and disposition increased 144% between 2012 and 2022. The average number of days between the first court date and disposition grew from 84.5 days to 388 days, the report revealed. Shreveport police did adopt in 2025 a cloud-based system that provides the district attorney's office with instant access to evidence. Axon Evidence is a cloud-based digital evidence management system that allows law enforcement to store and share body camera footage, audio and documents. Police spokesman Chris Bordelon said he is not aware of anyone meeting with the sheriff’s department to address jail overcrowding. According to the report, the Bureau of Justice Assistance provided funding. Similar initiatives helped numerous states reduce their prison populations and adopt more efficient systems. They identify “points of congestion within the system” and suggest short- and long-term solutions.
19 minutes
اعلام آمادگی بریتانیا برای اعزام جنگندههای تایفون به تنگه هرمز در شرایط صلح
اعلام آمادگی بریتانیا برای اعزام جنگندههای تایفون به تنگه هرمز در شرایط صلح
20 minutes
Soon after the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency released a plan to revoke its legal authority to regulate climate pollutants last summer, the nation’s most respected scientific organization fast-tracked a review of the latest evidence on whether greenhouse gas emissions endanger public health and welfare. Now Republican leaders of the House science committee—who have received generous […]
Soon after the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency released a plan to revoke its legal authority to regulate climate pollutants last summer, the nation’s most respected scientific organization fast-tracked a review of the latest evidence on whether greenhouse gas emissions endanger public health and welfare. Now Republican leaders of the House science committee—who have received generous […]
22 minutes
El Tribunal de Apelaciones del Noveno Circuito falló a favor de la administración Trump y anuló un requisito de California que obligaba a los agentes de inmigración a mostrar una identificación visible mientras están de servicio.
22 minutes
El Tribunal de Apelaciones del Noveno Circuito falló a favor de la administración Trump y anuló un requisito de California que obligaba a los agentes de inmigración a mostrar una identificación visible mientras están de servicio.
23 minutes
O ministro do Desenvolvimento, Indústria, Comércio e Serviços, Márcio Elias Rosa, defendeu nesta sexta-feira (24) a urgência da aprovação de regras claras para a exploração de minerais críticos em território brasileiro. Para o ministro, a criação de uma legislação específica é fundamental para minimizar dúvidas quanto ao destino dos ativos, considerados estratégicos, e garantir o […] Fonte
O ministro do Desenvolvimento, Indústria, Comércio e Serviços, Márcio Elias Rosa, defendeu nesta sexta-feira (24) a urgência da aprovação de regras claras para a exploração de minerais críticos em território brasileiro. Para o ministro, a criação de uma legislação específica é fundamental para minimizar dúvidas quanto ao destino dos ativos, considerados estratégicos, e garantir o […] Fonte
25 minutes
This story will be updated. Gov. Janet Mills on Friday vetoed a bill that would have banned data centers larger than 20 megawatts until November, 2027 — which would have been the first such moratorium in the nation. The bill, LD 307, saw significant debate in the Maine Legislature, as lawmakers attempted to add an […]
This story will be updated. Gov. Janet Mills on Friday vetoed a bill that would have banned data centers larger than 20 megawatts until November, 2027 — which would have been the first such moratorium in the nation. The bill, LD 307, saw significant debate in the Maine Legislature, as lawmakers attempted to add an […]
26 minutes
Public health, explained: Sign up to receive Healthbeat’s free New York City newsletter here.As New York City moves to offer 2,000 free child care seats by September, it falls to the health department to clear background checks for new providers. Concerned by a history of backlogs, the City Council this week held an oversight hearing and heard two proposals seeking to improve the process.“If our city’s goal is universal child care, then we must ensure that the administration of that care, including the background check process, is as streamlined as possible, and that new facilities and employees don’t get held up in red tape,” City Council Health Committee Chair Lynn Schulman said at the Wednesday meeting. “We must also ensure the relevant city agencies have the necessary bandwidth to complete these background checks and screenings in a timely manner. Unfortunately, it appears that DOHMH has struggled to keep up since the implementation of these comprehensive background checks,” she said of the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene’s work to comply with federal requirements updated in 2019.Expanding child care is among Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s priorities, and the city is in the process of issuing contracts to private child care providers who will get city funding to offer the initial 2,000 seats for 2-year-olds this fall. Officials are rolling out the program in five school districts, covering areas in Manhattan, Queens, Brooklyn, and the Bronx. Extensive background checks of the providers applying for licenses are required by law. Once a facility is open, the health department conducts unannounced inspections to promote compliance with health and safety mandates. Inspection results are posted on the health department’s website.The permitting and inspections of the child care facilities are perhaps among of the lesser-known duties of the health department.NYC’s new 2-K program will offer free child care 10 hours a day, 260 days a year, Mamdani saysNew York City Council Majority Leader Shaun Abreu proposed a bill Wednesday to no longer require the health department to mandate a background check for a prospective child care provider, employee, or volunteer if they have already had one in the past five years and have been employed by a child care provider for more than 180 consecutive days. A second bill, proposed by Council Member Tiffany Cabán, would require the health department to sooner notify parents and others of child care centers that close because of health hazards. The proposal would also require the health department to post a summary of child care service inspection reports no later than 24 hours after an inspection. The first bill stems from general concerns that the health department has struggled to process background checks in a timely fashion, with some background checks taking up to a year to be processed. In 2019, when new federal requirements were implemented statewide, a backlog of background checks stretched into the tens of thousands, according to a committee report submitted with the bill. Some applicants looked for jobs elsewhere as the process lagged, taking an average of 36 days. The bill highlighted a day care center in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, as an example. The facility could have served up to 170 children but closed its doors in August 2023 because of the lack of approved staff. It was waiting for staff clearance that had been submitted nearly five months earlier. Families with children enrolled in the program were left without child care for two months, while the provider lost over $250,000. Advocates said that such delays were not uncommon.The health department created an online portal in May 2023 to improve background check processing. The agency testified in October 2023 that it had cleared some 5,000 backlogged applications since the portal was launched and whittled the number of applications to 140. “Background checks are a critical safety requirement in most jobs, especially when it comes to safeguarding young children,” Council Member Jennifer Gutierrez, chair of the subcommittee on early childhood education, said Wednesday in prepared remarks. “Yet the current process has felt burdensome rather than an important step in safety. State, federal, and city requirements are layered on top of one another in ways that are not always well coordinated.”Emmy Liss, executive director of the Mayor’s Office of Child Care, said the city was planning to work first with existing child care providers as part of the expansion; they already have a license and staffing. “We anticipate there will be some new hiring to support 2-K and 3-K as there always is in the lead-up to the first day of school, but we do not expect a huge rush,” Liss said. “We are continuing to monitor what the staffing patterns will look like with our partners at New York City public schools and with the health department to make sure that we are prepared.”Liss added: “As we prepare for the fall of 2027, when we will be bringing many more 2-K seats online, we’ll be planning ahead with the Department of Health and New York City public schools to ensure that there is sufficient staff capacity for onboarding those providers.”Corinne Schiff, deputy commissioner for environmental health at the health department, said the agency has hired 60 people in recent years who work solely on background clearances. Other improvements include an online portal for providers, new access to a Department of Education fingerprint system, and a policy change allowing staff to move between child care centers within a 5-year renewal period without a full new background check, as long as they notify the health department.The current median processing time is about 30 days, Schiff said, with several hundred applications exceeding the 45-day mark, the deadline as required under federal law. “Do you have plans in terms of lowering those?” Schulman said. “Five hundred is a lot.”Schiff said the department was “continuing to make upgrades to the to the portal.” She pushed back on “backlog” characterization, noting that some background checks require working with agencies out of state.Trenton Daniel is a reporter covering public health in New York for Healthbeat. Contact Trenton at tdaniel@healthbeat.org or on the messaging app Signal at trentondaniel.88.
Public health, explained: Sign up to receive Healthbeat’s free New York City newsletter here.As New York City moves to offer 2,000 free child care seats by September, it falls to the health department to clear background checks for new providers. Concerned by a history of backlogs, the City Council this week held an oversight hearing and heard two proposals seeking to improve the process.“If our city’s goal is universal child care, then we must ensure that the administration of that care, including the background check process, is as streamlined as possible, and that new facilities and employees don’t get held up in red tape,” City Council Health Committee Chair Lynn Schulman said at the Wednesday meeting. “We must also ensure the relevant city agencies have the necessary bandwidth to complete these background checks and screenings in a timely manner. Unfortunately, it appears that DOHMH has struggled to keep up since the implementation of these comprehensive background checks,” she said of the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene’s work to comply with federal requirements updated in 2019.Expanding child care is among Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s priorities, and the city is in the process of issuing contracts to private child care providers who will get city funding to offer the initial 2,000 seats for 2-year-olds this fall. Officials are rolling out the program in five school districts, covering areas in Manhattan, Queens, Brooklyn, and the Bronx. Extensive background checks of the providers applying for licenses are required by law. Once a facility is open, the health department conducts unannounced inspections to promote compliance with health and safety mandates. Inspection results are posted on the health department’s website.The permitting and inspections of the child care facilities are perhaps among of the lesser-known duties of the health department.NYC’s new 2-K program will offer free child care 10 hours a day, 260 days a year, Mamdani saysNew York City Council Majority Leader Shaun Abreu proposed a bill Wednesday to no longer require the health department to mandate a background check for a prospective child care provider, employee, or volunteer if they have already had one in the past five years and have been employed by a child care provider for more than 180 consecutive days. A second bill, proposed by Council Member Tiffany Cabán, would require the health department to sooner notify parents and others of child care centers that close because of health hazards. The proposal would also require the health department to post a summary of child care service inspection reports no later than 24 hours after an inspection. The first bill stems from general concerns that the health department has struggled to process background checks in a timely fashion, with some background checks taking up to a year to be processed. In 2019, when new federal requirements were implemented statewide, a backlog of background checks stretched into the tens of thousands, according to a committee report submitted with the bill. Some applicants looked for jobs elsewhere as the process lagged, taking an average of 36 days. The bill highlighted a day care center in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, as an example. The facility could have served up to 170 children but closed its doors in August 2023 because of the lack of approved staff. It was waiting for staff clearance that had been submitted nearly five months earlier. Families with children enrolled in the program were left without child care for two months, while the provider lost over $250,000. Advocates said that such delays were not uncommon.The health department created an online portal in May 2023 to improve background check processing. The agency testified in October 2023 that it had cleared some 5,000 backlogged applications since the portal was launched and whittled the number of applications to 140. “Background checks are a critical safety requirement in most jobs, especially when it comes to safeguarding young children,” Council Member Jennifer Gutierrez, chair of the subcommittee on early childhood education, said Wednesday in prepared remarks. “Yet the current process has felt burdensome rather than an important step in safety. State, federal, and city requirements are layered on top of one another in ways that are not always well coordinated.”Emmy Liss, executive director of the Mayor’s Office of Child Care, said the city was planning to work first with existing child care providers as part of the expansion; they already have a license and staffing. “We anticipate there will be some new hiring to support 2-K and 3-K as there always is in the lead-up to the first day of school, but we do not expect a huge rush,” Liss said. “We are continuing to monitor what the staffing patterns will look like with our partners at New York City public schools and with the health department to make sure that we are prepared.”Liss added: “As we prepare for the fall of 2027, when we will be bringing many more 2-K seats online, we’ll be planning ahead with the Department of Health and New York City public schools to ensure that there is sufficient staff capacity for onboarding those providers.”Corinne Schiff, deputy commissioner for environmental health at the health department, said the agency has hired 60 people in recent years who work solely on background clearances. Other improvements include an online portal for providers, new access to a Department of Education fingerprint system, and a policy change allowing staff to move between child care centers within a 5-year renewal period without a full new background check, as long as they notify the health department.The current median processing time is about 30 days, Schiff said, with several hundred applications exceeding the 45-day mark, the deadline as required under federal law. “Do you have plans in terms of lowering those?” Schulman said. “Five hundred is a lot.”Schiff said the department was “continuing to make upgrades to the to the portal.” She pushed back on “backlog” characterization, noting that some background checks require working with agencies out of state.Trenton Daniel is a reporter covering public health in New York for Healthbeat. Contact Trenton at tdaniel@healthbeat.org or on the messaging app Signal at trentondaniel.88.
26 minutes
La marea nera non appare più inevitabile, mentre il 25 aprile interroga sempre più le nostre stesse comunità.
26 minutes
La marea nera non appare più inevitabile, mentre il 25 aprile interroga sempre più le nostre stesse comunità.
29 minutes
Commissioners hired a new full‑time finance director, a position required under the county’s agreement with Machias Savings Bank to complete the 2023 and 2024 audits.
Commissioners hired a new full‑time finance director, a position required under the county’s agreement with Machias Savings Bank to complete the 2023 and 2024 audits.
29 minutes
د ملګرو ملتونو په سازمان کې د اصلاحاتو پلې کول دا اونۍ یوه ګرمه موضوع وه. ددغه سازمان د سرمنشي د څوکۍ لپاره څلورو نوماندانو د دغه سازمان غړو هېوادونو ته خپل پلانونه څرګند کړي چې څنګه به اصلاحات پلې کوي.
د ملګرو ملتونو په سازمان کې د اصلاحاتو پلې کول دا اونۍ یوه ګرمه موضوع وه. ددغه سازمان د سرمنشي د څوکۍ لپاره څلورو نوماندانو د دغه سازمان غړو هېوادونو ته خپل پلانونه څرګند کړي چې څنګه به اصلاحات پلې کوي.
30 minutes
A través de un oficio, el Ministerio de Hacienda sugirió descontinuar o aplicar un ajuste presupuestario a una serie de...
30 minutes
A través de un oficio, el Ministerio de Hacienda sugirió descontinuar o aplicar un ajuste presupuestario a una serie de...