Rfmk Governor talks tough numbers; 114 new cases, seven deaths; grocery employees now essential
Ky. coal miner dies at Bell County surface mineOctober 10, 2020 Associated Press, FRANKFORT, Ky. AP Kentucky officials say a coal miner was killed while working at a surface mine in Bell County.The state Energy and Environment Ca
stanley cup binet says Douglas Slusher died Friday after being struck in the chest when a coupling failed on a hydro gun he was operating.Officials say he was working at the Double Mountain Mining 3 Strata mine.The 48-year-old Slusher, of Calvin, Kentucky, was given CPR but died on site.Officials say operations at the mine were shut down after the death and will
stanley cup becher be suspended while an investigation continues. The state sent investigators to the mine.Categories: Featured, Local News, NewsTags: Coal Miner, Death, Double mountain mining, kentucky coalFacebookPinterestTwitterLinkedin Leave a Reply Cancel reply .clt-73 .thumb-wrap display: block;float: none;.clt-73 .inner-thumb-wrap padding: 56.25% 0 0 0;.content-primary-cat a font-size: 13px; Related
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The Legislature delivered a $101 million proposal to Gov. Charlie Baker Thursday that invests in COVID-19 rapid testing, high-quality masks, and vaccination equity for publi
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stanley cup re facilities, health care workers, and homeless shelters.The bill also includes extensions to COVID-19-era emergency rules allowing remote notary services, public meetings, and reverse-mortgage c
stanley cup ounseling. And it schedules the statewide primary election on Tuesday, Sept. 6.The legislation H 4430 grew by $46 million since it first emerged in the Legislature with additional dollars now targeted towards replenishing the COVID-19 Paid Sick Leave Program and to support education campaigns about an unemployment overpayment waiver process. With this agreement, we support our ongoing pandemic response efforts by including $75 million for masks, rapid tests and vaccine equity efforts that support children, educators, front-line health care workers, small businesses, our most vulnerable populations and communities disproportionately impacted by this pandemic, Ways and Means Co-Chairs Sen. Michael Rodrigues and Rep. Aaron Michlewitz announced at 10:46 a.m.With just a few members on hand at Thursdays 11 a.m. sessions, the House and Senate quickly signed off on the bill and shuttled it to Baker by mid-afternoon.The governors office had nothing to say about the bill other than that Baker would review it. Baker now has 10 days to sign the bill, offer a veto, or return the bill to the Legislatu