| Hospitals / Health Care
Julie Boyd Damp, 32, now lives in the Green Hills area of Nashville, with her husband, Pete, who's an emergency room physician at St. Thomas Hospital. Their daughter, Anna Claire, will be a year old in two weeks. She was born at Vanderbilt, where her parents met... .
High American Gold Inc. Conditionally Settles Debt for Shares and ...
Am-Ves is a private corporation incorporated under the laws of the Province of Alberta on January 19, 2006. Am-Ves holds the right to earn up to a 100% interest in the Guayabito property, a gold exploration property located near Cisneros, Antioquia, Colombia, by making staged payments totaling US$1,600,000 by December 2009 and incurring US$2,000,000 in expenditures on the Guayabito Property required pursuant to the terms of the option agreement dated October 18, 2007 between Am-Ves and Mario de Jesus Ramirez Maya and Manuel Mejia Vallejo of Medellin. About the High American Gold Inc. The Company is a corporation incorporated under the laws of the Province of Ontario on November 12, 1996 under the name Stromatalite Resource Corp. Pursuant to an amalgamation agreement dated April 25, 1997, Intex Mining Company Limited and Stromatalite Resource Corp.
Ask the PCWA for water conservation rewards
Water costs are on the rise and the Placer County Water Agency can do more to empower customers to avoid future costs through economic incentives. Residents of Auburn have recently been faced with the increasing costs of water, both on the supply side (PCWA) and the wastewater disposal side (city of Auburn). While these cost increases may have shocked many, the inescapable fact is these costs primarily reflect what we, the customers, demand — sufficient quantity and quality of water supplied to our homes and sufficient capacity of our sewage treatment plant to treat wastewater flows. Objecting to proposed cost increases is too late in the game to avoid increased costs. Changing what we, the customers, demand is the more effective way of heading off the future shock of water costs.
Tribe banking on grant money to save chinook run
Chris Gregoire recently awarded, most of it tagged for habitat restoration in the Puget Sound region. The Stillaguamish River effort is expected to get $3.7 million, to be spent over two years, including $1.3 million for the south fork alone. The money comes from the state's Salmon Recovery Funding Board and an appropriation from the Legislature. So far, Snohomish County has received nearly $326,000 in grant money to build shelters made of giant stumps and logs to help the fish survive what can be a tough journey to sea. The county will use an additional $200,000 grant to figure out what more can be done to preserve chinook. Key needs include reducing the amount of sediment that flows into the river, which robs it of oxygen that the salmon and eggs need to survive.
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