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The Guide Your Connection to Spokane Public Radio Name(S) ______Volume 40 / No
Spokane Public Radio Membership and Donation Form Annual or additional contributions to Spokane Public Radio are always welcome. Mail to: Spokane Public Radio,1229 N. Monroe St., Spokane, WA 99201 THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT The Guide Your Connection to Spokane Public Radio Name(s) ___________________________________________________________________ Volume 40 / No. 2 April to June 2020 Address ___________________________________________________________________ SPR: The Information, News, & Entertainment Day Phone ( ) __________________ Evening Phone ( ) _____________________ You Need E-Mail ____________________________________________________________________ A note from Cary Boyce, President and General Manager Type of Gift/Pledge Dear Listeners, □ New membership □ Extra Gift □ Renewing Member □ Payment on Existing Pledge First, thank you for your ongoing support. These are unprecedented times Donation Amount $ ____________________________ in public radio as they are across the nation, and in our communities. At SPR we are doing our best to bring you news and information you can Payment Option rely on and use, in as timely a manner as possible. News from around the □ Sustaining Membership - ongoing monthly gift with automatic membership renewal nation, the state, and world—from NPR and BBC and our own reporters—is □ Credit/Debit card (see below) □ Auto Bill Pay from my bank brought to your cars and living rooms through SPR. It’s truly a great honor to Part of the NPR network □ Full payment enclosed □ First payment of $ ________________ enclosed work with such selfless and diligent colleagues here and around the world. The COVID-19 virus has changed the way SPR operates. Several staff □ Monthly: __________ months for $ ________________ per month □ EFT - for Sustaining monthly members are working from home as they can, even as others hold down the Pledge securely on-line: WA fort in our studios. -
URBAN EXPERIENCE COMMITTEE MEETING AGENDA for MONDAY May 10, 2021 1:15 Pm
URBAN EXPERIENCE COMMITTEE MEETING AGENDA FOR MONDAY May 10, 2021 1:15 p.m. — Streaming Live Online & Airing on City Cable 5 The Spokane City Council’s Urban Experience Committee meeting will be held at 1:15 p.m. on May10th, 2021 – Streaming Live Online & Airing on City Cable 5. Council members and presenters will be attending virtually and the meeting will be streamed live at https://my.spokanecity.org/citycable5/live and will also air on City Cable 5. The meeting will be conducted in a standing committee format. Because a quorum of the City Council may be present, the standing committee meeting will be conducted as a committee of the whole council. The physical meeting will not be open to the public and no public testimony will be taken. Discussion will be limited to appropriate officials, presenters, and staff. The public is encouraged to tune in live at the address above. AGENDA I. Call to Order II. Approval of Minutes from April 12th, 2021 III. Discussion Items A. Staff Requests a. City of Spokane Quarter 1 Economic Indicators- Dr. Patrick Jones (20 min) b. Resolution Supporting Hooptown USA Designation- Kirstin Davis (10 min) c. Natural Turf Management- Al Vorderbruggen and Carl Strong (10 min) B. Council Requests a. Amending the Regulations for the re-use of Historic Properties- Brian McClatchey (10 min) b. C.O.P.S. Update- Patrick Stricker (10 min) c. Housing Action Subcommittee Participation Stipends- Melissa Morrison and Alex Gibilisco (10 min) d. Downtown Restroom Presentation- CM Burke and Melissa Morrison (15 min) IV. Standing Topic Discussions A. -
Fairchild Air Force Base 2015-2016 Military Family Education Handbook
Fairchild Air Force Base 2015-2016 Military Family Education Handbook School Liaison Officer 4 W. Castle St. Fairchild AFB, WA. 99011 Com: 509-247-2246 DSN: 657-2246 E-mail: [email protected] DISCLAIMER: This Military Family Education Handbook is not intended to be exhaustive, but instead should serve as a tool for military parents and families assigned to Fairchild AFB. Contents are current as of September 2015. Written and Designed By Steve McMullen 1 Table of contents Welcome to Fairchild Air Force Base………………………………………………………..5 Section One: General Information………………………………………………………………..6 Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction…………….……………6 Interstate Compact……………………………………………………………………………6 School Locator………………………………………………………………………………….6 New Student Registration process…………………………………………………….6 Graduation requirements………………………………………………………………….7 Learning Standards……………………………………………………………………………7 Student Assessments’…………………………………………………………………..7 Compulsory Attendance……………………………………………………………………7 Running Start Program………………………………………………………………….8 Section Two: Public School Information……………………………………………………8 Medical Lake School District……………………………………………………………..8 Cheney School District………………………………………………………………….8 Spokane School District…………………………………………………………………9 Mead School District…………………………………………………………………….9 Reardan-Edwall School District………………………………………………………….9 Central Valley School District…………………………………………………………….9 West Valley School District………………………………………………………………10 East Valley School District……………………………………………………………….10 Nine Mile -
Policy Briefs Administration
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR THE NEW POLICY BRIEFS ADMINISTRATION These policy briefs outline a series of recommendations from the Baker Institute for the incoming president’s administration. RECOMMENDATIONS FOR THE NEW POLICY BRIEF ADMINISTRATION Five Major Challenges to the Beneficial Use of Non- Fresh Water, Including Oil- and Gas-Produced Water Linda Capuano, Ph.D., Fellow in Energy Technology Anna Mikulska, Ph.D., Nonresident Scholar in Energy Studies Unconventional shale oil and natural the nation’s total estimated water use of gas extraction are important elements 355 bgpd, produced water can represent of the U.S. energy revolution. Increased an important new water source, especially domestic production has improved energy for more arid states. State water plans are security while lower prices and more already beginning to include the use of affordable energy have supported industrial treated brackish and waste water. Treated expansion, created jobs, and fueled produced water would add to this supply and economic growth. Recent developments, further displace the use of fresh water, which however, have not been without would then be available for other purposes. challenges, two of which relate to water: The Center for Energy Studies (CES) has 1) the industry’s reliance on water as part actively engaged stakeholders, including of extraction by the method of hydraulic government, industry, and academia, in fracturing, and 2) the need to store, treat, this discussion. We have hosted workshops and/or dispose of the large amount of and conferences to clarify the challenges, “produced water” that is brought to the share successful practices, and overcome surface during production. At the same barriers in produced water treatment and time, many states are coming to realize use. -
In Re Openlane, Inc
EFiled: Sep 30 2011 7:25PM EDT Transaction ID 40135268 Case No. 6849-VCN IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE IN RE OPENLANE, INC. : Consolidated SHAREHOLDERS LITIGATION : C.A. No. 6849-VCN MEMORANDUM OPINION Date Submitted: September 26, 2011 Date Decided: September 30, 2011 Seth D. Rigrodsky, Esquire, Brian D. Long, Esquire, and Gina M. Serra, Esquire of Rigrodsky & Long, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Daniel Hume, Esquire, Mark A. Strauss, Esquire, and Sarah G. Lopez, Esquire of Kirby McInerney LLP, New York, New York; Konstantine Kyros, Esquire and George Pressly, Esquire of Kyros & Pressly LLP, Boston, Massachusetts; and Matthew J. Day, Esquire of The Law Office of Matthew J. Day, New York, New York, Attorneys for Plaintiff. William M. Lafferty, Esquire, Eric Scott Wilensky, Esquire, and D. McKinley Measley, Esquire of Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, and David J. Berger, Esquire, Steven Guggenheim, Esquire, Thomas J. Martin, Esquire, and Luke A. Liss, Esquire of Wilson, Sonsini, Goodrich & Rosati, P.C., Palo Alto, California, Attorneys for Defendants OPENLANE, Inc., Adam Boyden, Mark Bronder, Peter Kelly, Paul Madera, David Marquardt, R. Gary McCauley, L. David Sikes, and Michael Stein. Robert S. Saunders, Esquire, Jenness E. Parker, Esquire, and Christopher M. Foulds, Esquire of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Defendants KAR Auction Services, Inc., ADESA, Inc., and Riley Acquisition, Inc. NOBLE, Vice Chancellor I. INTRODUCTION This action arises out of the proposed merger WKH ³0HUJHU´ of Defendant 23(1/$1( ,QF ³23(1/$1(´ RU WKH ³&RPSDQ\´ with Defendant 5LOH\$FTXLVLWLRQ,QF ³5LOH\´ DZKROO\-owned subsidiary of Defendant ADESA, Inc. -
Meteorologia
MINISTÉRIO DA DEFESA COMANDO DA AERONÁUTICA METEOROLOGIA ICA 105-1 DIVULGAÇÃO DE INFORMAÇÕES METEOROLÓGICAS 2006 MINISTÉRIO DA DEFESA COMANDO DA AERONÁUTICA DEPARTAMENTO DE CONTROLE DO ESPAÇO AÉREO METEOROLOGIA ICA 105-1 DIVULGAÇÃO DE INFORMAÇÕES METEOROLÓGICAS 2006 MINISTÉRIO DA DEFESA COMANDO DA AERONÁUTICA DEPARTAMENTO DE CONTROLE DO ESPAÇO AÉREO PORTARIA DECEA N° 15/SDOP, DE 25 DE JULHO DE 2006. Aprova a reedição da Instrução sobre Divulgação de Informações Meteorológicas. O CHEFE DO SUBDEPARTAMENTO DE OPERAÇÕES DO DEPARTAMENTO DE CONTROLE DO ESPAÇO AÉREO, no uso das atribuições que lhe confere o Artigo 1°, inciso IV, da Portaria DECEA n°136-T/DGCEA, de 28 de novembro de 2005, RESOLVE: Art. 1o Aprovar a reedição da ICA 105-1 “Divulgação de Informações Meteorológicas”, que com esta baixa. Art. 2o Esta Instrução entra em vigor em 1º de setembro de 2006. Art. 3o Revoga-se a Portaria DECEA nº 131/SDOP, de 1º de julho de 2003, publicada no Boletim Interno do DECEA nº 124, de 08 de julho de 2003. (a) Brig Ar RICARDO DA SILVA SERVAN Chefe do Subdepartamento de Operações do DECEA (Publicada no BCA nº 146, de 07 de agosto de 2006) MINISTÉRIO DA DEFESA COMANDO DA AERONÁUTICA DEPARTAMENTO DE CONTROLE DO ESPAÇO AÉREO PORTARIA DECEA N° 33 /SDOP, DE 13 DE SETEMBRO DE 2007. Aprova a edição da emenda à Instrução sobre Divulgação de Informações Meteorológicas. O CHEFE DO SUBDEPARTAMENTO DE OPERAÇÕES DO DEPARTAMENTO DE CONTROLE DO ESPAÇO AÉREO, no uso das atribuições que lhe confere o Artigo 1°, alínea g, da Portaria DECEA n°34-T/DGCEA, de 15 de março de 2007, RESOLVE: Art. -
Washington Trust Bank 2017 Annual Report
2017 Annual Report Our Mission We will be the best at understanding and meeting the fnancial needs of our customers. We will focus our unique strengths as a community bank on serving those customers who perceive a distinct value in building long-term relationships with us. We will be empowered to act on behalf of Washington Trust to meet our customers’ needs and will have the competencies to fulfll this mission. We will conduct ourselves in accordance with our guiding principles. We will organize and manage to best support one another in these eforts and to ensure the long-term viability of the Bank. watrust.com 18-IVR-048 Annual Report ©2017 Washington Trust Bank Chairman’s Letter Dear Customers and Friends: Our objectives and expectations for 2017 were largely met and even exceeded in some ways. We had a strong growth year with increased customer deposits helping drive assets higher by nearly $570 million to over $6.2 billion. With deposit growth driving earning assets and margins widening, net interest revenue increased by nearly 14 percent to record levels. We maintained balance sheet strength, liquidity ended the year at signifcant levels and asset quality continued to be excellent. While we had considerable success against our own, internal performance markers, our team remained very focused on how innovation is reshaping our industry. With the continuous evolution of technology in fnancial services taking place, it is imperative that we keep pace with new opportunities to serve our customers in innovative ways. It seems apparent that there is a long runway for technology to continue transforming fnancial services, so we expect this crucial industry trend to continue to demand a substantial investment and resource commitment well into the future. -
Kendall Yards 2
Downtown Spokane Brownfields Walking Tour Snxw meneɂ Island (Canada Island) Riverfront Park Kendall Yards 2 4 1 3 The Gathering Place (Huntington Park) For many generations, Spokane Tribal families relied on river waterways for nourishment and medicinal and spiritual purposes, with the grand Spokane Falls serving as a gathering place for Spokane Tribal Ancestors. Now they share that gathering place—and the name of the tribe itself—with the modern, thriving City of Spokane. Through innovative redevelopment, areas that were once contaminated by industry have been revitalized into beneficial public spaces. Tribal history Native mythology ties humans to this place from the beginning of creation, though archeologists have evidence of human habitation reaching nearly to the end of the last Ice Age some 15,000 years ago. Successive waves of inhabitants developed one strand of what anthropologists call Columbia Plateau Culture, including the Spokane Tribe. Three major Spokane groups lived along the river—the Lower Spokanes, near the river’s connection with the Columbia River; and two other bands, the Middle and Upper Spokanes, who occupied lands along shorelines and tributaries as far east as Lake Coeur d’Alene. Spokane Tribal members hunted, fished, and collected roots and berries to feed their families throughout the year. Salmon ran up as far as the Spokane Falls and into the river’s tributaries. The Spokanes and other regional tribes gathered along the river annually to fish for salmon, a staple of their diet. They fished in several locations, including the Little Falls downstream near the Columbia, near the outflow of the Little Spokane River, at the mouth of Latah (Hangman) Creek, and at the Lower Spokane Falls, the last point at which the salmon could travel on the river. -
2020 Annual Report
Annual Report 2020 Chairman’s Letter Dear Customers and Friends: Here at the Bank, the team devotes a lot of effort to risk management and that includes thinking through a wide range of potential stress events and disaster scenarios. We take that work seriously, even if it sometimes seems hard to believe that some of the events we plan for could ever happen. What I generally take away from those exercises is that the future can be wildly unpredictable and the only real protection from a broad range of possible unforeseen stress events is balance sheet strength. This past year brought a very real stress test to all of us; one that we frankly did not see coming. But we know it is the nature of human events and the complex world that we live in to sometimes deliver the unexpected, and so we prepare. I am proud to report that we navigated through this most difficult year remarkably well. As the pandemic took hold last spring, we successfully shifted nearly the entire organization to remote working status, while barely skipping a beat in operating the Bank and delivering uninterrupted service to our customers. The Fed pushed rates down across the curve to record lows and the economy took a giant hit. The Small Business Administration (“SBA”) rolled out a relief plan called the Paycheck Protection Program (“PPP”) through which we delivered over $1.2 billion in financial relief to over 5,000 grateful business clients. We also worked with over 600 customers on payment deferrals covering more than $500 million in loans to help them work through the worst of the pandemic’s impact. -
Annual Report
Annual Report 2018 at a glance Community Partners 2nd Harvest Food Bank Meals on Wheels Spokane Valley Parks & Recreation 2018 Airway Heights Baptist Church Medical Lake School District Spokane Valley Partners Airway Heights Parks & Recreation Millwood Historical Society Starbucks Alzheimer’s Association Mobius Children’s Museum Startup Spokane 2,664,567 Inland Northwest Mobius Science Center Spokane Teachers Credit Union (STCU) Items checked out (physical and digital) Better Business Bureau Moran Prairie Grange The Gathering House Better Health Together naomi Thrive Washington of those, digital: Central Valley School District Neighborhoods Matter/Global Trailblazer After-School Program Cheney Free Press Neighborhood Turnbull National Wildlife Refuge 559,954 Cheney School District NEWESD 101 United Way Communities served Child Care Aware Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture University Elementary (21% of total) Children’s Home Society Numerica Credit Union Valleyfest City of Airway Heights/Kiwanis Club Orchard Crest Retirement Community Volunteer Coordinator Cheney Colville National Forest Partners Advancing Character Washington Department Community Colleges of Spokane Education (PACE) of Natural Resources Community-Minded Enterprises Riverside School District West Plains Chamber of Commerce 1,353,581 Deer Park School District Rockford Historical Society West Plains Support Network Visits to libraries Department of Children, Romance Writers of America West Valley School District Youth, and Families Salish School Whitworth University Department -
E-Skip Winds Down Tropo Picks
The Official Publication of the Worldwide TV-FM DX SEPTEMBER 2003 The Magazine For TV and FM Dxers GREG BARKER’S INDIANA ANTENNA SYSTEM! E-SKIP WINDS DOWN TROPO PICKS UP! COMPLETE COVERAGE OF FALL TROPO FALL E-SKIP MS,AU DTV AND IBOC AND EVERYTHING IN THE WORLD OF TV AND FM DXING TV AND FM DXING WAS NEVER SO MUCH FUN1 THE WORLDWIDE TV-FM DX ASSOCIATION Serving the UHF-VHF Enthusiast THE VHF-UHF DIGEST IS THE OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE WORLDWIDE TV-FM DX ASSOCIATION DEDICATED TO THE OBSERVATION AND STUDY OF THE PROPAGATION OF LONG DISTANCE TELEVISION AND FM BROADCASTING SIGNALS AT VHF AND UHF. WTFDA IS GOVERNED BY A BOARD OF DIRECTORS: TOM BRYANT, GREG CONIGLIO, BRUCE HALL, DAVE JANOWIAK AND MIKE BUGAJ. Editor and publisher: Mike Bugaj Treasurer: Dave Janowiak Webmaster: Tim McVey Editorial Staff: Steven Wiseblood, Victor Frank, George W. Jensen, Jeff Kruszka, Keith McGinnis, Fred Nordquist, Matt Sittel, Doug Smith, Thomas J. Yingling, Jr. and John Zondlo, Our website: www.anarc.org/wtfda ANARC Rep: Jim Thomas, Back Issues: Dave Nieman ELECTRONIC EDITION for SEPTEMBER 2003 _______________________________________________________________________________________ CONTENTS Page Two 2 Mailbox 3 Finally! For those of you online with an email TV News…Doug Smith 4 address, we now offer a quick, convenient Photo News…Jeff Kruszka 10 and secure way to join or renew your Eastern TV DX…Matt Sittel 12 membership in the WTFDA from our page at: Southern FM DX…John Zondlo 17 http://fmdx.usclargo.com/join.html Western TV DX…Victor Frank 23 Northern FM DX…Keith McGinnis 37 Dues are $25 if paid from our Paypal account. -
Facility Specifications
FACILITY SPECIFICATIONS CENTENNIAL PATIO RIVERSIDE PATIO 301 EXECUTIVE LOBBY 304 SPOKANE RIVER CENTENNIAL LOBBY RIVERSIDE 303 302 300C 300A RESTROOMS LAWN B A B A 300B SHOW OFFICE 300D CONCESSIONS SPOKANE RIVER LOWER LEVEL ELEVATOR PHONE LOWER LEVEL ENTRANCE ROOFDECK PEDESTRIAN PATIO LINK RIVERSIDE RIVERSIDE RIVERVIEW ADMIN. A B C A B C OFFICES RIVERSIDE TERRACE OVERLOOK 203 LOBBY 201 202 LAWN 401 402 WEST 111C PROMENADE TO BRIDGE EAST A B C A B C BRIDGE CONFERENCE SECOND FLOOR THEATER 111B D C B A 207 205 111A RIVERSIDE EXHIBIT HALLS 206 HOTEL LOBBY CONNECTOR (HALL D) A SECOND LEVEL DOUBLETREE FLOATING BY HILTON B1 STAGE A B C D 101 103 102 DIVISION ST MUSIC B2 ROOM BREEZEWAY EXHIBIT HALL LOADING AREA PARKING GARAGE C ENTRANCE LOADING 100A 100B 100C POINT LOBBY AREA INB LOBBY BALLROOM LOADING AREA PLAZA WEST SPOKANE FALLS BLVD WEST SPOKANE FALLS BLVD WEST SPOKANE FALLS BLVD SKY BRIDGE THE DAVENPORT GRAND BROWNE ST DIVISION ST BERNARD ST WASHINGTON ST WASHINGTON KEY: EXHIBIT HALLS BALLROOMS MEETING ROOMS BOARDROOM THEATERS LOBBIES OUTSIDE SPACE EXHIBIT HALLS ROOM SQUARE CEILING 10X10 DIMENSIONS BANQUET THEATER CLASSROOM RECEPTION NUMBER FOOTAGE HEIGHT BOOTHS HALL A 53,470 210 x 247 30 3,508 4,463 3,000 4,463 283 HALL B 21,790 120 x 180 30 1,430 3,063 1,200 3,063 117 HALL B1 10,529 80 x 116 30 715 1,531 600 1,531 51 HALL B2 11,240 80 x 116 30 715 1,531 600 1,531 51 HALL C 27,510 130 x 210 30 1,817 3,894 1,600 3,894 130 HALL D 20,000 - 22 954 - - 2,045 - (RIVERSIDE) HALL ABCD 120,000 - 30 7,709 9,750 5,800 12,556 515 LIGHTING LOADING AND ACCESS CONTINUED • Luminaries are low bay type with reflectors HALL C • Roll-up Door #10: 20’0” W x 15’5” H • Clustered with (2) 750W metal-halide and (1) 750W incandescent ACCESS RAMP • Roll-up Door #14: 30’0” W x 14’6” H (LOADING DOCK) • Metal-halide are NOT instant ‘on’ (5 minute warm-up) BAYS(LOADING • Roll-up Door #16-23: 9’0” W x 10’0” H • Controls allow ‘dim’ to ‘off’ positions DOCK) • Dock Height: 4’0” • Max.