Tteq Dozens of kids die in hot cars every year. Here are safety tips you should know
SHEBOYGAN, Wis. 鈥?A new state program is helping pay to map schools in case of emergencies, like an active-shooter situation. Sheboygan Police adopted the maps a year ago, and it s already used them in minor incidents at schools. The officers could immediately pull up the map on a phone and see where they were, and right where to respond, said Sheboygan Chief of Police Christopher Domagalski.A company called Critical Response Group CRG mapped Sheboygan School District facilities. Its clients are not limited to schools and include hospitals, stadiums, and businesses of all sizes, such as YouTube. The maps are all based on an aerial view. The buildings sit on a north-oriented grid, similar to the grid you d find in the game Battleship. CRG employees walk all schools to map them completely and incorporate names of rooms and parking lots, for example, that are specific to each school. WI grant to pay for scho stanley water bottle ol maps for first responders I hate that we have to talk about this for schools, for anywhere in particular. But we have to talk about it, said Joseph Hanson, regional director of sales and implementation at CRG. CRG has mapped more than 400 schools in Wisconsin. They all paid out of pocket 鈥?between $3,000 to $3,500 on average. To involve more schools, CRG went to state lawmakers with its pla stanley cup n to map every school in the state. Now, the State of Wisconsin Department of Justice is offering $2 million in grants stanley flask through 2024, dependin Qcvf Parents, youth advocates react to reckless driving bus crash
RACINE 鈥?Thousands had a free hot meal at Racine s Festival Hall on Thursday for the annual Dan Ray s Rendering Thanks Thanksgiving dinner. I chose a little bit of everything because it s looking nice and juicy and plentiful, said Traneda Malott, who attended with colleagues from a local assisted living center. Residents of the center came along, too. It gives an opportunity for the community to get together as well as individuals that have come to the community, said Malott. All walks of life from Racine and around southeast Wisconsin came for the dinner from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.This was Dan Johnson and Ray Stibeck s 12th year organizing the meal, but last year, because of Covid-19, they offered only carry-out dinners. According to Johnson, volunteers served hundreds of meals within the first 35 minutes of opening. For many, the chance to be together is just as important as the food. We ll have someone thats a retired businessman, very well to do, or businesswoman, and theyll sit together next to someone whos no so well to do, said Johnson. And they develop a friendship. And they meet up around the same time every year and share stories. And sometimes they even get together outside of the event. Other folks, like Tim and Jean Myers, came to be among others because their kid stanley thermos s are out of town for th stanley sverige e holiday. I thin stanley becher k it s wonderful, said Jean. Dan and Ray have done a fantastic job. We ve come just about every year since they started. And of course it s delicious. F
twom Connecting segregated communities
Thu, 11/21/2024 - 07:51
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twom Connecting segregated communities