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Lets talk, Sheboygan!What matters to you is important to us. Thats why TMJ4 is embarking on a series of listening sessions throughout the area. We ve held sessions in Kenosha, Waukesha, Racine, South Milwaukee, Milwaukee, and now we re coming to Sheboygan.Tell us whats going well, whats not, and anything else we should know about living in Sheboygan at Stefano s Slo Food Market on Wednesday, September 25th from 8-10 a.m.Come and share your stories with TMJ4 s morning team Tom Durian, Symone Woolridge, Sydni Eure, and Tyler Moore , along with Sheboygan reporter Mikenzie Hammel, a
stanley cups uk nd reporter Megan Lee.Dont have a story idea No problem! Come and mingle with our reporters and tell them what makes Sheboygan special, or what could use some improvement in a relaxed setting. TMJ4 News Today will be broadcasting live on location that morning, as well! The morning team had the chance to chat with the store s general manager Anna Ninkovic about the event. Watch that full interview here: Stefanos Slo Food Market store manager joins Tom and Symone for a chat Stefano s Slo Food Market is located at 731 Pennsylvania Ave. in Sheboygan. See you there! Talk to us: Hey there! At TMJ4 News, were all about listening to our audience and tackling the stuff that really matters to you. Got a story idea, tip, or just want to
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We started five years ago selling out of our house and now its expanded into this, Anahi Mendivil said. She works at Oasis Fresh Fruit More, along with her mother, Haydee Caraveo. When the whole COVID thing started, it was just me, my mom, and my sister who were running and working, No one else was working with us and that s how we were able to maintain a bit of a budget with this less of a profit, Mendivil said. Mendivil and her family members know the pains of running a business -- especially now during the pandemic. She helped translate for her mom. Now that people have been able to come back inside, it s been a little better but were just trying to adjust to all the new norms, Mendivil said. But sales have not been normal as they used to be. Their experience reflects what many Latinos are facing. A new study fr
stanley thermoskannen om Pew Research shows Hispanic businesses were hit especially hard by COVID-19. In May 2020, nearly six in 10 said they live in households that experienced job lo
stanley cup sses or pay cuts, compared to 43 percent of the overall U.S. population. Hispanic businesses however went from a 3.9 to nearly 20 percent unemployment, so it jumped a lot more than it did for whites and African Americans, Jack Strauss, an economist and professor at the University of Denver, said. Less than a year ago, he exp
stanley cup lained, Hispanic businesses in general and Hispanic unemployment nearly matched that of the overall U.S. He said one of the reasons this group was hit hard, is because so