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    BC Back Deck DJ Party – Wave of Long Island - April 10, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Local DJ lifts spirits during stay-at-home orders

    By The Wave | on April 09, 2020

    On April 1, the sun was shining warmly in Broad Channel as the dampness of a few days of heavy rain began to burn off. Unfortunately, due to government-directed stay at home orders, few were outside to enjoy the spring morning.

    DJ Paddy Tubz is here for the partyAt exactly 9:00 am that morning, a Facebook post was launched by Broad Channel native known as DJ Paddy Tubz. The post read Ill be DJing off my back deck, from 6 pm 8:30 pm on Thursday.. It will be an evening of fun, sing-alongs and dance grooves.

    DJ Paddy Tubz giving a shout out during his back deck party

    Hundreds of Facebook likes/loves, shares, and comments later, it was apparent the little island of Broad Channel was in need of a good party and Paddy Tubz was just the right DJ to deliver the tunes.

    The next day, albeit a bit chillier and windier, Tubz stayed true to his promise, setting up his gear on the deck of his home located on West 11th Road in BC.

    At 6:30, the veteran DJ fired up a FB Live from The CoronaVirus Quarantine Virtual Bar a page created by locals to kick off virtual happy hours, display musical talent, and provide a place for a few light-hearted laughs during these strange times.

    Donning his best pirate costume the perfect attire for an outdoor Coronacation party Tubz began spinning tunes and entertaining the crowds.

    DJ Paddy Tubz giving a shout out during his back deck party.

    Hundreds watched online, while Tubzs local canal block neighbors camped out on their adjacent decks with cocktails in hand to take in the performance. Both audiences took selfies of themselves and their families watching the spectacle and posted those pictures on social media.

    As the sun went down, the winds were gusting, but Tubz continued to play with his neighbors cheering him on, singing along and some were even dancing on their decks. Friend and neighbor, Ruth Truden-Nocerino shared her enthusiasm and appreciation for Tubz on Facebook by posting For those that dont live in BC the wind was whipping off the bay and he still killed it!

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    BC Back Deck DJ Party - Wave of Long Island

    How Tarot Helped This Writer-Artist Find a Brighter Future – North Bay Bohemian - April 10, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Petaluma-native Kary Hess new endeavor, the SparkTarot deck, could not have come at a better time. As the world seemingly unwinds minute by the minute and navigating the phantasmagoria of coronavirus, climate change and social unrest becomes ever more chaotic amidst the town criers and unhinged madmen, our days are harrowing at best.

    Some have asked me if the tarot can predict the outcome of the current pandemic, says Hess, a regular Bohemian contributor known for her community and social-issue-themed features, who is also the life partner of its editor Daedalus Howell. Tarot can show you how you can approach the situation, creating an outcome for you. And as I always say, its not set in stoneif you dont see a desirable outcome, you can always consider what you can do differently now to evoke a different outcome later.

    Often dismissed as New Age or occult, the tarot is not as old as one might think. Tarot first appeared as a deck of playing cards in 15th-century Europe, becoming trendier in later centuries when used for divination. The suits associated with contemporary playing cardsspades, clubs, hearts and diamondsvaried significantly by region. The modern tarot includes five suits: triumphs, cups, wands, swords and pentacles. The SparkTarot replaces swords with serpents, and pentacles with stones.

    Hess figures are mostly female, and intentionally represent racial diversity, making the deck not only more inclusive but opening up new possibilities for interpretations.

    Traditional tarot decks are pretty medieval; white and male oriented, Hess says. I wanted this deck to be diverse and feminine, so most of the cards are women, even those that are traditionally male. That said, there are a couple of potentially male characters in the deck.

    Hess has a degree in fine arts and has worked as a website and graphic designer as well as a journalist. She first became interested in creating cards as a child.

    Ive always loved card decks, she says. When I was a kid, I made a deck of playing cards with different art than the usual plain hearts, diamonds, clubs and spades. I remember thinking that the simple imagery on the playing card deck was a missed opportunity for art.

    Over the years she began creating several tarot decks but never painted more than a few cards each time.

    With this one I accidentally tricked myself into creating it, Hess says. My partner and I had just made a feature-length art film and one night we were watching an Agns Varda movie, Clo from 5 to 7, to get inspiration for the next film. The opening sequence was a tarot reading. I said, We need a tarot scene in the next film.

    As the films production designer, she very practically decided she only needed to make nine cards for the shot.

    After creating the nine cards, I was on a roll, she says. After seven months, Id painted the entire tarot deck, posted the cards on Instagram as I went, wrote a corresponding guidebook and started a business around it.

    Hence, the Spark.

    Her art supplies all fit into a portable bag, so she was able to paint most of the cards at cafs around the Bay Area.

    I painted each card very deliberately and with absolute focus on the meaning behind it, Hess says. I considered older decks, looked at the imagery, decided what the core experience needed to be and began sketching. After one to three sketches, Id have my image. Then I drew it into a watercolor sketchbook and painted it. Id listen to inspiring music or podcasts while painting.

    In the conception phase of SparkTarot, Hess sought to create a deck that leaned towards lifes potential and away from ominous foreboding.

    The imagery on the SparkTarot deck isnt created to be scary, so it doesnt cause troubling readings visually, which some decks can do, Hess says, addressing doubters and those afraid of what a reading will reveal. As far as the readings themselves, when I read tarot I help guide people to see how they can approach an issue based on their current situation, so they are always in control of how they choose to react.

    Hess cards connect phantom threads that stitch together imagery, intention and the latest theories in physics.

    The Tarot has long been considered woo-woo or magic, but it might also be a perfect example of the quantum concept of collapse, she writes in her blog. Wave function collapseknown as the Copenhagen interpretationwas discovered by Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg, and is the proposal that all outcomes of a situation exist simultaneouslyalso called superpositionuntil an observer takes action by observing, which then collapses the possibilities into one state or another.

    Hess, who radiates a youthful glow in her late 40s, believes learning how to take spiritual guidance into ones own hands is needed now more than ever.

    It has been so fulfilling to use my skills of painting, writing and graphic design with a spiritual project that is also really helpful to people looking for their next steps in life, she says.

    Hess believes tarot can both deepen and heal ones broken connections to others and the natural world by simply helping them tune into their own process, using imagery with the universe as a guide.

    What is great about tarot is that it is a simple, personal way to see your next step, Hess says. Sometimes life can be overwhelming or confusing, and its great to have the path illuminated, even just a little bit.

    Hess explains how when one reads tarot, intentions infuse the cards, which informs how their imagery is interpreted. Because the cards represent aspects of life, its as if the universe participates in making sense of themand by extension, ones own life.

    Maybe someday science will really explain what seems like magic to us now, Hess says. Malleable time, possibilities manifested with intention. But for now, we have tarot.

    And what better way to re-enchant the psychic forest in these trying times, than with a little magic?

    To learn more, visit SparkTarot.com.

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    How Tarot Helped This Writer-Artist Find a Brighter Future - North Bay Bohemian

    Amid COVID-19, why hospital staff are praying on flight decks, before shifts and in parking lots – Tennessean - April 10, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    TriStar Skyline Medical Center hosted a "Park and Pray" event to bring people together during the coronavirus outbreak. Nashville Tennessean

    Labor and delivery nurse Sarah Kremer thinks it might have been the Holy Spirit.

    She feltthis overwhelming urge to invite a few of her colleagues up to the Vanderbilt University Medical Centerflight deck to pray over the Nashville hospital, which is on the front lineof the state's battle against the deadly COVID-19 virus.

    "I just couldn't shake the feeling," Kremer said.

    OnMonday morning,she bowed her head, clasped her hands and crouched down on the worn markings of a hospital helipad. Four of her coworkers in matchinglight blue scrubs prayed with her as the Nashvilleskyline stretched behind them.

    "It was very peaceful," said Kremer, who celebrated her 38th birthdayMonday. "It's one of the few things I feel like we have some control over in the midst of everything that's going on in our world."

    From left, Vanderbilt staff members Tanya Dixon, ORT; Beth Tiesler, ORT; Sarah Kremer, RN; Angela Gleaves, RN; and McKenzie Gibson, RN, pray on the hospital's helipad. Kremer asked her group of nursing friends to celebrate her birthday by praying with her.(Photo: Submitted )

    Hospitals keepers of the living and the dying have long inspired prayer.

    But as the life-threatening pandemic spreads,many of the faithful are focusing more of their appeals to Godon these mighty medical institutions andasking their higher power to protect the people inside who aretrying to heal and survive.

    It is an anxious time in the U.S. The novel coronavirus andattempts to slow its spread are upending nearly every facet of Americanlife. The future feels unstableas public health experts and elected officials warn the worst is still to come.

    Stay informed: Sign up for the Coronavirus Watch newsletter to get the latest updates.

    Manyare looking for light in this time of darkness, including medical professionals who are risking their own health to care for those who are sick from the disease.

    "I think a lot of people during stressful times lean on their faith," said Christine Lunger, a 36-year-old nurse andclinical director of critical care servicesat TriStar Skyline Medical Center in Nashville.

    "I think there is just a comfort in knowing that there's a higher power with us, supporting us doing what we're doing."

    Nurses onteams Lunger oversees started praying togetheras more coronavirus patients came intothe hospital.

    After the7 a.m.and 7 p.m. pre-shift meetings,those who want to participate gather in the break room and spend a few minutes asking God for good patient outcomes and giving thanks for their own health, Lungersaid.

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    They pray God will protect them so they can continue to serve as many patients as they can for as long as they are needed, she said.

    "It's been a good thing for the staff," Lunger said. "It really has a level-setting for the day that God is with us through this."

    In an attempt to mitigate the spread of COVID-19, hospitals are severely limiting the number of people who cancome into theirbuildings. This means many patients are in the hospital alone.

    Not only are health care workers addressing medical needs, but they are filling in as their patients'de facto family members and taking care of their spiritual needs, too.

    Kim Fitzgerald, a nurse at Skyline, prays during a park and pray event at TriStar Skyline Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn., Thursday, April 2, 2020. Participants parked outside of the medical center and prayed at their cars while practicing social distancing. (Photo: Andrew Nelles / The Tennessean)

    That dynamic is what inspired another Skyline nurse, Kim Fitzgerald, to organize the park and pray event held outside the hospital on Thursday evening. Fitzgerald, 47, works in Skyline'sspecial procedures department.

    Fitzgerald said she and her colleagues were recently prepping a sweet but scared 76-year-old patient for a procedure.

    "She said, 'Will y'all just be my family for the day because my family is not allowed to be here.' She just broke down in tears," Fitzgerald said. "We started crying with her because I work with a bunch of softies here and everybody's like, 'Absolutely, we'll be your family for today.' We just loved on her."

    Fitzgerald could not stop thinking about the patient.

    Inspired by similar events happening elsewhere and what she believes was a nudge from God, she startedseeking permission and making plans for asocial distancing-friendly prayer event just outside of Skyline.

    People want to help. They want to do something right now, something for the greater good, something that's bigger.

    Vehicles streamed into the hospital's parking lot Thursday evening. Fitzgerald scheduled the park and pray eventfor 7:14 p.m. a nod to a Bible verse, 2 Chronicles 7:14:

    "If my people, who are called by my name,will humblethemselves and pray and seek my faceand turnfrom their wicked ways, then I will hearfrom heaven, and I will forgivetheir sin and will healtheir land."

    Together, they prayed and sang while keeping theirdistance.

    "People want to help. They want to do something right now, something for the greater good, something that's bigger," said Fitzgerald, in a Thursday interview before the event. "This is something they can do to help to show love to our patients that are here alone to show love to our health care workers."

    The Vanderbilt staff who found peace in prayer on the flight deck of the hospital are also inspiring others. A photo of the moment they asked God for comfort and protection for all who are a part of the medical center's community spread quickly on social media.

    The positive response they have received totheir vulnerable moment is overwhelming. Kremer, the nurse who organized the prayer over the Nashville hospital, is normally aprivate person, but agreed to share the photo with the thought that it could offer people hope and turn them toward God.

    The prayer calmed 46-year-old labor and delivery nurse Angela Gleaves. As a small breeze blew Monday morning,tears started to fall from her eyes.

    "I just felt like that wind was God loving us and pushing us forward to go and do what we're supposed to do," Gleaves said. "We just want people to know that we're here, trained to do whatwe're doing and we want them to be as comfortable as possible."

    Reach Holly Meyer at hmeyer@tennessean.com or 615-259-8241 and on Twitter @HollyAMeyer.

    Read or Share this story: https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/religion/2020/04/03/covid-19-hospital-staff-pray-flight-deck-parking-lot/5115539002/

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    All hands should be on deck key quotes from leaders on the fight against COVID-19 – The European Sting - April 10, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    (Credit: Unsplash)

    This article is brought to you thanks to the collaboration ofThe European Stingwith theWorld Economic Forum.

    Author: Christopher Alessi, Digital Editor, World Economic Forum

    As the world wrestles with the unprecedented implications of the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic, we are facing a human crisis unlike any we have experienced and our social fabric and cohesion is under stress.

    That was the assessment of UN Deputy-Secretary-General Amina J. Mohammed during a digital meeting of the Forums COVID Action Platform on 8 April.

    Launched last month, the platform aims to convene the business community for collective action to protect peoples livelihoods, facilitate business continuity and mobilize support for the global response to the virus. To date, more than 1,300 companies, organizations and individuals have joined the platform.

    In addition to Deputy-Secretary-General Mohammed, participants on this weeks digital meeting included Christine Lagarde, President of the European Central Bank and Member of the Forums Board of Trustees; Jeremy Farrar, Director of the Wellcome Trust; Brian Moynihan, CEO of Bank of America and Chair of the World Economic Forums International Business Council; and Andr Hoffmann, Vice Chairman of Roche and Member of the Forums Board of Trustees.

    Here are some of the key quotes from the call:

    On the economic impact of the crisis:

    We have moved to a recession that will be worse than the one we experienced in 2008, said Mohammed.

    Given the nature of the crisis, all hands should be on deck, all available tools should be used, said Lagarde. We are providing support, as attractively as we can, so that from the household to the large big corporate account, all economic players can access financing through their banks, she added.

    Moynihan noted: As a result of central bank actions across the globe, markets have been flooded with liquidity that has been able to stabilize markets to a certain degree across the board.

    Image: World Economic Forum

    What is the World Economic Forum doing about the coronavirus outbreak?

    A new strain of Coronavirus, COVID 19, is spreading around the world, causing deaths and major disruption to the global economy.

    Responding to this crisis requires global cooperation among governments, international organizations and the business community, which is at the centre of the World Economic Forums mission as the International Organization for Public-Private Cooperation.

    The Forum has created the COVID Action Platform, a global platform to convene the business community for collective action, protect peoples livelihoods and facilitate business continuity, and mobilize support for the COVID-19 response. The platform is created with the support of the World Health Organization and is open to all businesses and industry groups, as well as other stakeholders, aiming to integrate and inform joint action.

    As an organization, the Forum has a track record of supporting efforts to contain epidemics. In 2017, at our Annual Meeting, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) was launched bringing together experts from government, business, health, academia and civil society to accelerate the development of vaccines. CEPI is currently supporting the race to develop a vaccine against this strand of the coronavirus.

    The number one thing is to focus on is employees and customers, Moynihan said on how companies should set priorities and manage the ongoing crisis. When it comes to taking care of employees, he added, the goals should be: keep them well, keep them employed and keep them mentally healthy.

    Moynihan also encouraged businesses of all sizes to adopt the Stakeholder Principles endorsed by the World Economic Forum and businesses on 1 April: to keep employees safe; to secure shared business continuity with suppliers and customers; to ensure fair prices for essential supplies for end consumers; to offer full support to governments and society; to maintain the long-term viability of companies for shareholders; and to continue sustainability efforts, including to fight climate change.

    Mohammed, meanwhile, said companies should focus on scaling up production, making sure supply chains are alive and reliable, retaining workforce and and engaging young people.

    On the need to find a vaccine:

    This infection is not going to disappearwithout science leading us to vaccines, we will get second and third waves of this, said Farrar on the long-term destructive damage the coronavirus could wreak on the globe.

    Unless we do produce drugs and vaccines we are not going to have an exit strategy, he added.

    Similarly, Hoffmann said: There is no solution to this crisis without a properly functioning vaccine.

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    All hands should be on deck key quotes from leaders on the fight against COVID-19 - The European Sting

    ‘All hands on deck:’ Middle East embassies inundated with citizens stranded in US – Al-Monitor - April 10, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Diplomats in Washington are working overtime to repatriate stranded citizens worried about the accelerating coronavirus pandemic in the United States.

    Its frantic, said Gabriel Issa, Lebanons ambassador to the United States. His embassy in Washington, DC, has set up hotlines to collect the names of Lebanese citizens who want to return home, and a skeleton staff is manning the phones.

    A lot of times we cant even answer all the phones at the same time, Issa said. We are overloaded but trying to do our best.

    Amid tightening restrictions on travel in their home countries and the continued cancellation of flights in the United States, the phone lines at many Middle East embassies in DC are ringing off the hook with expats desperate for the latest information on possible return flights. Staff who are typically assigned to nonconsular services are pitching in, answering calls and facilitating travel.

    We see all hands on deck, said Elad Strohmayer, spokesperson for the Israeli Embassy in DC. There are people who on a regular basis dont deal with these issues and now theyre helping if needed.

    The only remaining direct flight to Israel is operated by United Airlines out of Newark, New Jersey. Strohmayer saidhis embassy is encouraging any Israelis who wish to leave to do so while they still can.

    Those from elsewhere in the region are caught in travel limbo with passenger flights to their countries canceled entirely.

    Its just endless, the stories, said a Jordanian official not authorized to speak to the media. Some of them you really want to help out, but you dont know how because theyre stuck.

    With 364,000 cases of COVID-19 and a death toll exceeding 10,000, the United States surpassed China and Italy to lead the world in coronavirus infections.

    New York City, which is home to a number of Middle Eastern immigrant communities, is now the epicenter of the US outbreak with more than 5,400 dead. On Tuesday, New York Gov.Andrew Cuomo announced 731 more patients died in what marked the biggest single-day increase in deaths since the virus emerged in the state last month.

    At the Embassy of Oman, the worsening pandemic prompted diplomats to pull an all-nighter last month, staying overnight at the embassy to coordinate returntrips for hundreds of citizens. On March 30 and 31, two government-chartered planes picked up 660 Omanis who wanted to fly back.

    Weve been working around the clock, said Qusai al-Mahrouqi, the embassys assistant information attache. It wasnt easy because we have thousands of Omanis all around the United States.

    Of particular concern for many embassies are the international students unsure whether to leave the United States in the middle of their schooling. Some students fear they will be unable to return to their schools once travel restrictions are lifted. Others worry they will be penalized if they overstay their visas while waiting out the virus in the United States.

    They are panicking and they are calling us every day with the same question: I want to leave, but what about my I-20?, said Hamad al-Muftah, deputy chief of mission at the Embassy of Qatar in DC.

    Muftah said the Qatari Embassy has sent anxiety-ridden students an email reminding them if they want to leave to first check with their sponsor and the overseas office at their universities.

    At the Lebanese Embassy, Issa said hes directed his staff to start calling US officials to see what the formal guidance is for students and other travelers whose visas may expire during quarantine.

    A spokesperson for USCitizenship and Immigration Services told Al-Monitor it can extend the stay of those impacted by circumstances out of their control, as well as provide special consideration or expedited processing for those who may need it on a case-by-case basis.

    Embassies are in the meantime trying to alert all remaining citizens of changes via email, phone and social media. At the Jordanian Embassy, staff have compiled a database with the names of hundreds of students and other travelers who wish to go home.

    Diplomats are dealing with issues as they arise, but so much is out of their hands, the Jordanian official said.

    We say in Arabic hta esh'ear akhr: until further notice. Its a common thingthats being said.

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    'All hands on deck:' Middle East embassies inundated with citizens stranded in US - Al-Monitor

    ‘Below Deck’: Josiah Carter Shares His Special Gin and Tonic Recipe – Showbiz Cheat Sheet - April 10, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Josiah Carter from Below Deck offered a special cocktail recipe so quarantine can be a little more like being on a yacht. Well sort of.

    Carter was often seen whipping up special drinks for charter guests when he was on the show. So he decided to treat Instagram fans to an ultra-refreshing version of a gin and tonic. He called the drink the Summer Gin and Tonic that includes fruit and lots of ice.

    He posted a video that offers a demonstration and also the special recipe. Carter also told fans that they could make more cocktail requests. Hes been dishing about some special yachting insider secrets, such as how to clean and disinfect surfaces. So how do you make Carters special cocktail?

    Instead of just gin, tonic and lime, Carter likes to infuse his cocktail with some fresh or frozen berries. You will need gin, tonic, limes and frozen fruit. You can use fresh fruit, he adds.

    First, he rolls one lime to release the juices. He cuts the lime in half and then cuts the halves into threes. This move allows you to create evenly sliced lime wedges. He deposits one of the wedges directly into his tall glass.

    Next, he adds that fruit. He doesnt have any fresh fruit left. But you can use fresh fruit, frozen fruit or fruit liqueur, he advises. Carter also has a rolling pin nearby. You would normally muddle it, Im not gonna muddle it, he says. So I just got a little rolling pin. He smashes the fruit to get all the juices going. He then shows the camera the end of the rolling pin too. Nice color, he remarks.

    Carter adds huge handfuls of ice to the glass. I like to fill it to the top, he says of the ice. The ice melts less and it makes it just a bit tastier. He then adds two shots of gin. He prefers Tanqueray. And a little more for good luck, he says pouring a little more from the bottle into his glass.

    And then simply top it off with tonic water, he says pouring a can of tonic into his glass. Its a bit summery, its a bit nicer, he says. He then uses a spoon to mix it and he is ready to enjoy his cocktail. Carter also shared the specific recipe on his Instagram story too.

    Fans loved the cocktail tutorial and begged for more. One person asked for his version of the old fashioned. He made an old fashioned for the final group of charter guests when he was on Below Deck. Chief stew Kate Chastain asks Carter to make the group one of his famous old fashioned cocktails. He delivers but the primary charter guest complains he made the drink with an orange instead of a lemon. This is not a lemon rind, she says to him. I said, No orange! Well get there eventually. Although the primary didnt want an orange, it seems as though fans are craving that drink.

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    'Below Deck': Josiah Carter Shares His Special Gin and Tonic Recipe - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

    ‘All hands on deck’: Grocery store executives get a taste of the hard life on coronavirus front lines – Financial Post - April 10, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Loblaw Cos. Ltd. sent an email to its head office staff in early March, asking for volunteers to leave their jobs and work in grocery stores instead.

    Angie Kim, a senior director of finance, used to be a store manager years ago, so she knows how they work. She volunteered and has since been working 12-hour days at Toronto-area stores, cleaning carts, stocking shelves and assembling online orders for curbside pickups.

    In the middle of the coronavirus crisis, grocery chains are scrambling to bolster their ranks as demand spikes, hiring thousands of people and redeploying hundreds of corporate-office volunteers to pitch in on the front lines, despite the increased risks of getting the virus and being hassled by customers.

    I do struggle every day when I wake up, like, Can I do it again? Kim said. Because Im scared. Right? The pandemic is real. I see hundreds of customers every day. I get selfish sometimes thinking, I dont have to do it. I volunteered. No ones expecting me to show up. Can I do it again?

    Still, she continues to do it, remembering the words of a colleague who told her that all well remember when the crisis is over is how we treated each other.

    I know Ill regret it if I take the easy way out, Kim said. I want to be proud of myself looking back.

    Even the chief executive of Longos, an Ontario chain of supermarkets, has made a point of working in the store.

    Everyone in our business is all hands on deck, said Anthony Longo, who regularly visits stores and distribution centres, helping to stock shelves if new shipments come in, or bagging groceries when check-out lines are long.

    Longos chief financial officer has also jumped in at the call centre to help with a surge in online grocery orders.

    Part of the reason Longo and his fellow executives do it is to calm the jitters that are growing in his labour force. About seven or eight per cent of his store staff are healthy, but wont come in.

    I do struggle every day when I wake up, like, Can I do it again? Because I'm scared

    Angie Kim

    We do have quite a number of people who dont feel safe, and thats an issue in the industry, he said. We want people to know that it is safe. Im out there.

    At Loblaw, roughly 400 corporate-level staff now work at stores. Walmart Canada said it asked its head-office employees to shift to in-store work in mid-March and has since had dozens of volunteers. And, late last month, Empire Co. Ltd., parent company of the Sobeys, Safeway and FreshCo chains, sent a note asking interested corporate staff to fill out a survey about their relevant experience, so they could be placed in the right job.

    Not only can you feel proud of stepping up during this crucial time, youll gain valuable visibility and insight into a different part of the business, the emailed note said.

    Ryan Skelton was one of more than 200 employees who, as of Friday, had answered Empires survey. He usually works as a chef, designing take-home meals at head office.

    I have so many friends and colleagues currently working at the stores now, he said, so I dont see why I shouldnt also step forward and take those chances.

    The transition into the store can be startling.

    Kim, the Loblaw finance director, was in charge of the lineup outside a No Frills in downtown Toronto last week. The store only allows 30 customers inside at a time now, so she was doing crowd control, only letting someone in when someone else left.

    A woman at the front of the line, who had waited maybe 10 or 15 minutes in the cold, didnt look well and was coughing, Kim said. As a result, she had to stop the woman from coming in.

    She offered to take the womans grocery list and shop for her. But the woman started cursing, Kim recalled. She was in a motorized scooter and started trying to push past.

    Standing there by myself Im 52, 100 lbs Im not the most intimidating person, Kim said. I had to get a little bit of back up because she refused to leave Those interactions leave an impression. It stays with you throughout the day.

    What concerns Kim is how often those flare-ups are happening. Customers will be mean or inconsiderate dozens of times a day, upset about the inconvenience of the new rules or angry about a missing product or a long wait to get in. Some ignore social distancing protocols and lean in too close to ask questions of a clerk.

    Im used to showing up to work at the head office where everybody is super kind and polite and respectful, she said. Theres zero tolerance of abuse or harassment of any kind.

    Kim, concerned about the full-time clerks who seem too used to the cruelty to complain, wrote a post on LinkedIn that asked shoppers to speak up if they see clerks being mistreated.

    I am not hiding any stock in the back room, she wrote. I am not making you wait outside the store for fun. Im trying to protect everyone.

    Galen Weston, Loblaws executive chairman, is apparently concerned, too. In one of his regular missives to customers last month, he scolded those who were reportedly ignoring requests to keep their distance, or making uncomfortable jokes about being COVID-19 positive while leaning around protective screens.

    Fortunately, most customers are just grateful they can still shop.

    Theres going to be the odd customer comment or behaviour that may weigh you down, but there are so many more customers who tell us were doing a good job, Kim said.

    Last week at a No Frills on Parliament Street in Toronto, a customer gave the store $50 to buy lunch for the staff, just as a thank you. Kim went out and bought pizzas.

    There is definitely a sense of fear,Kimsaid. But there is more a sense of pride.

    Financial Post

    Email: jedmiston@nationalpost.com | Twitter:

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    'All hands on deck': Grocery store executives get a taste of the hard life on coronavirus front lines - Financial Post

    UConn Health Testing Site Setup Was An All-Hands-On-Deck Effort – UConn Today - April 10, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    UConn Health opened a drive-thru COVID-19 sampling site on its Farmington campus on Monday, March 23. Patients with appointments are able to drive into the testing area and usually within seven minutes, they are on their way.

    This type of efficiency is the result of hours of planning and preparation by the entire staff at UConn Health. Virtually every organization area played a role in the establishment of the testing area.

    As a state institution, part of our mission is to take care of the community and its citizens and we knew we need to have a sampling center, says Dr. Scott Allen, the interim chief medical officer of UConn John Dempsey Hospital and a professor in medicine. We had an organizational meeting about a week before we opened. We worked with our facilities and campus planning folks and the first hurdle was where to put this thing. We didnt know how long the lines would be and how it would impact our other traffic flow.

    The decision was made to set up in Parking Lot 3, which is in a quiet part of the Farmington campus, but that provided other challenges.

    During disasters like this, I really believe it brings out the best in people and this is certainly a case where so many people were willing to do whatever was need to make it work, says Deb Abromaitis, the director of the Office of Accreditation and Regulatory Affairs, who worked with the Department of Public Health to make sure the testing site was approved. People came out very early in morning, late at night, working on the weekends, just be able to deliver whatever was needed to make this happen.

    The areas of UConn Health involved in the process seem endless: police, fire, nursing, facilities operations, telecommunications and IT, laboratories, parking services, and food services just to name a few.

    Allen says that, as UConn Health has cut back on outpatient services during the crisis, staff from that area has volunteered to get trained and be part of the process, whether that means greeting patients in the first tent or getting samples in the second.

    Every day another area steps up, says Abromaitis. Its been an unbelievable multidisciplinary effort. Parking, people that do signage, and on and on. Earlier this week, the nurses were having problems breaking the sampling swabs to get them into tubes. Our facilities people were right coming up with shears to make that better.

    Abromaitis gave the examples of a nurse who stayed outside after being covered in snow that fell from a tent and of the UConn fire department stepping up.

    We realized we needed more heat for our sample takers because they are not able to wear coats with their protective gear, says Abromaitis. We got heaters that had gas tanks, but we need to put barriers up to protect the gas tanks in case a care went into them. The barriers needed to be filled with water and our fire department was there right away to fill the barriers. It has just been one great thing after another from our people.

    She also remembers the feeling when the first test case when through the center and the mobile unit staff were all staring out the window; it was just a great positive feeling of how we all worked together.

    **

    The COVID-19 sampling site is located on the Farmington campus of UConn Health at 263 Farmington Avenue. The site is open from 10 a.m. 2 p.m. Monday through Friday and is by appointment only. To be tested, patients must make an appointment by calling 860-679-1869 Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

    Those who plan on coming to the test site must have an appointment and be aware of the following:

    UConn Health also has a COVID-19 Call Center to help the community through this ever-changing situation at 860-679-3199, Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. to answer questions about the virus.

    Read the original:
    UConn Health Testing Site Setup Was An All-Hands-On-Deck Effort - UConn Today

    The Case for Further Gains in Texas Capital Bancshares (TCBI), On Deck Capital (ONDK) – US Post News - April 10, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The recent performance of Texas Capital Bancshares (NASDAQ:TCBI) stock in the market spoke loud and clear to investors as TCBI saw more than 680.87K shares in trading volumes in the last trading session, way higher than the average trading volume of 680.87K shares by far recorded in the movement of Texas Capital Bancshares (TCBI). At the time the stock opened at the value of $25.17, making it a high for the given period, the value of the stock jumped by 5.03%. After the increase, TCBI touched a low price of $24.06, calling it a day with a closing price of $24.66, which means that the price of TCBI went 0.73 below the opening price on the mentioned day.

    Given the most recent momentum in the market in the price movement of TCBI stock, some strong opinions on the matter of investing in the companys stock started to take shape, which is how analysts are predicting an estimated price of $39.30 for TCBI within consensus. The estimated price would demand a set of gains in total of -105241.25%, which goes higher than the most recent closing price, indicating that the stock is in for bullish trends. Other indicators are hinting that the stock could reach an outstanding figure in the market share, which is currently set at 50.13M in the public float and 1.30B US dollars in market capitalization.

    When it comes to the technical analysis of TCBI stock, there are more than several important indicators on the companys success in the market, one of those being the Relative Strength Indicator (RSI), which can show, just as Stochastic measures, what is going on with the value of the stock beneath the data. This value may also indicate that the stock will go sideways rather than up or down, also indicating that the price could stay where it is for quite some time. When it comes to Stochastic reading, TCBI stock are showing 73.31% in results, indicating that the stock is neither overbought or oversold at the moment, providing it with a neutral within Stochastic reading as well. Additionally, TCBI with the present state of 200 MA appear to be indicating bearish trends within the movement of the stock in the market. While other metrics within the technical analysis are due to provide an outline into the value of TCBI, the general sentiment in the market is inclined toward negative trends.

    With the previous 100-day trading volume average of 631074 shares, On Deck Capital (ONDK) recorded a trading volume of 1.31 million shares, as the stock started the trading session at the value of $1.02, in the end touching the price of $1.09 after jumping by 6.86%.

    ONDK stock seem to be going ahead the lowest price in the last 52 weeks with the latest change of 101.85%.Then price of ONDK also went backward in oppose to its average movements recorded in the previous 20 days. The price volatility of ONDK stock during the period of the last months recorded 36.45%, whilst it changed for the week, now showing 23.81% of volatility in the last seven days. The trading distance for this period is set at -9.69% and is presently away from its moving average by -60.32% in the last 50 days. During the period of the last 5 days, ONDK stock lost around -6.84% of its value, now recording a dip by -69.40% reaching an average $3.5475 in the period of the last 200 days.During the period of the last 12 months, On Deck Capital (ONDK) dropped by -73.67%.

    According to the Barcharts scale, the companys consensus rating was unchanged to 3.75 from 3.75, showing an overall improvement during the course of a single month.

    ONDK shares recorded a trading volume of 1.24 million shares, compared to the volume of 761.42K shares before the last close, presented as its trading average. With the approaching 23.81% during the last seven days, the volatility of ONDK stock remained at 36.45%. During the last trading session, the lost value that ONDK stock recorded was set at the price of $1.09, while the lowest value in the last 52 weeks was set at $0.54. The recovery of the stock in the market has notably added 101.85% of gains since its low value, also recording -56.05% in the period of the last 1 month.

    Go here to see the original:
    The Case for Further Gains in Texas Capital Bancshares (TCBI), On Deck Capital (ONDK) - US Post News

    "All hands on deck": City of Buffalo responds to influx of COVID-19 on Upper East Side – WKBW-TV - April 10, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    BUFFALO, N.Y. (WKBW) Mayor Byron Brown said the City of Buffalo was concerned about certain areas that might be hit hard even before the novel coronavirus came to Western New York.

    We were concerned there would be communities that would be heavily impacted by this, he said on a call with 7 Eyewitness News.

    We have been providing information to community groups, stressing social distancing, removed basketball rims, closed playgrounds, had calls with clergy and block clubs, launched the good neighbors network to help people stay connected.

    Brown says he has seen the sharp rise in cases in the 14215 zip code which includes a large portion of the citys Upper East Side, and plans to put every resource available towards helping combat the spread in that neighborhood.

    There are things we can do clearly, there are resources we can provide, The City is going to act as a facilitator to do that. It will be all hands on deck to provide resources and we want to be there for our residents, our job is to be there for our residents, and we will do everything we possibly can to do that.

    The County Executive and Mayor talk daily, sometimes twice a day, said Brown. And he credits Mark Poloncarz with listening to the needs of trusted voices in the community to help provide more information.

    And in any crises, people in Black and impoverished neighborhoods arent necessarily looking to elected leaders, said Brown. Theyre looking to their block club leaders and religious leaders in the community for information.

    Brown said its critical to get these people accessible information to disseminate to their neighborhoods.

    As we've gotten information from the federal government, state government, county government we've tried to synthesize that information. Make it easier to understand; and we've provided that information in the City of Buffalo in a variety of ways to our residents(we are) certainly doing that in the most impacted areas in the city.

    View original post here:
    "All hands on deck": City of Buffalo responds to influx of COVID-19 on Upper East Side - WKBW-TV

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