Wjeh Experts recommend taking down bird feeders as mystery illness kills birds in multiple states
La Dallas Mitchell is working overtime to care for her daughter. It s just been nonstop, Mitchell said. She s probably been sick like five times. At the same time, parentin
stanley termohrnek g means working around that sickness.The U.S. is the only developed country that does not guarantee any paid sick leave, according to theCenter for Economic Policy and Research, though some states like New York, New Jersey and California have laws with requirements.Medical experts say the surge of viruses right now highlights the need for paid sick time off. WithRSV,COVIDand theflu, this is very taxing to the health care system but also taxing to our families, said Dr. Willie Underwood, with the American Medical Association. People get sick and ill; they can t work. They have increased health care costs. It s detrimental to us. In October, a record high 104,000 Americans missed work due to childcare problems, according to theBureau of Labor Statistics.A recentRobert Wood Johnson Foundation reportfound workers lost $28 billion in wages during 2020 to 2022. Women, Latino, and Black workers felt the brunt of it. It also found people making less than $25,000 a year were about 2.5 times more likely to not have paid sick leave compared to someone making $100,000.Epidemiologist and research director Mona Shah worked on the foundation report. For a family member who had to take off a week of work to take care of themselves or their child, that meant they lost an average of $815
stanley taza in wages, Shah said.
stanley cup That wou Ignp Milwaukee Common Council passes resolution that would create unarmed first responder program
WASHINGTON, D.C. - You may have gotten one in the mail or a knock on the door: for months, the Census Bureau has counted every person living in the United States.Even the homeless in a rural state like Montana get counted. In the last month, we finished and submitted a census for 70 homeless people, said Carley Tuss, with St. Vincent de Paul homeless services in Great Falls, Montana.This year, though, an accurate census count could be in jeopardy. The census is not a dry statistical exercise, said Thomas Wolf of the Brennan Center for Justice, pushing in court for an accurate census cou
stanley thermoskannen nt.Because of the coronavirus, the Census Bureau extended the deadline for in-person counting, setting it for the end of October. Then, things changed. Suddenly, then, on August 3, the Commerce Department and t
stanley cup he Census Bureau abruptly and without explanation said that they were going to go back to the original timeline, Wolf said.The Census Bureau now plans to stop counting at the end of September, a full month earlier than planned.What s more, the deadline for processing those tens of millions of census responses, set for the spring of next year, got pushed up to the end of this year.However, a federal judge tempora
stanley thermos rily halted the plan, until there can be a court hearing later this month. If you cut the time short, you don t have enough time to collect the data. You don t have enough time to process the data, Wolf said, and then you end up with real problems. Those problems could include