The broadband internet service provider is expanding its service to Chambersburg.
Funding
Do you really want to help the Milwaukee economy? Then make a commitment to shop small this holiday season. Our small business retailers need your help more than ever!
The House has passed legislation that would provide full Social Security benefits to millions of people, pushing it one step closer to becoming law.The Social Security bill on Tuesday won bipartisan support in the House, 327-75, in what is now the lame-duck period for Congress. The bill now heads to the Senate, where passage is not assured despite considerable support.Heres what to know about the legislation and what could happen next.What does the bill do?Decades in the making, the bill would repeal two federal policies the Windfall Elimination Provision and the Government Pension Offset that currently limit Social Security payouts for roughly 2.8 million people, according to reports from the Congressional Research Service.The policies broadly reduce payments to two groups of Social Security recipients: people who also receive a pension from a job that is not covered by Social Security and surviving spouses of Social Security recipients who receive a government pension of their own.People who worked in state, local and federal government jobs have been heavily affected by the policies, as have teachers, firefighters and police officers, according to lawmakers and advocates.Both provisions would be repealed by the bill, thereby increasing Social Security payments for many.What would be the cost of expanding the benefits?The budgetary effect of the legislation is considerable, adding an estimated $195 billion to federal deficits over 10 years, according to the Congressional Budget Office.That means more fiscal strain on the Social Security Trust funds, which were already estimated to be unable to pay out full benefits beginning in 2035. Some conservatives in the House attempted to block the legislation due to its cost.Supporters of the bill in the House acknowledged the fiscal impact but said it was a matter of fairness.For more than 40 years, the Social Security trust funds have been artificially propped up by stolen benefits that millions of Americans paid for and that their families deserve, said Reps. Garret Graves, R-La. and Abigail Spanberger, D-Va., the lead sponsors of the bill in the House.The time to put an end to this theft is now, they said.What happens next?The Social Security bill has 63 sponsors in the Senate a significant tally because 60 votes are needed to pass most legislation in the chamber.Sens. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, and Susan Collins, R-Maine, the lead sponsors, have urged colleagues to take up the bill as soon as possible.But the Senate has a jam-packed schedule in the remaining weeks of the year, with government funding, disaster relief and an annual must-pass defense bill likely to eat up considerable floor time.If passed by the Senate, the bill would go to President Joe Biden. If the bill is signed into law, the changes would be effective for benefits payable after December 2023.But if the bill doesnt pass the Senate by Jan. 3, when a new session of Congress begins, it would expire and supporters would have to start over.
The annual holiday market took place on Sunday with more than 80 small businesses in attendance the Columbia mall from 10am-3pm.
WE RECENTLY VISITED THE VILLAGE OF SARANAC LAKE FOR “WEATHER AT YOUR SCHOOL”. BUT WHILE WE WERE THERE… WE WANTED TO EXPLORE EVERYTHING THIS SMALL, SCENIC COMMUNITY HAS TO OFFER. TAKE A LOOK AT WHAT WE LEARNED… IN THIS WEEK’S “THIS IS OUR HOME”. IN THE HEART OF NEW YORK’S 6 MILLION ACRE PROTECTED PARK… YOU CAN EXPERIENCE SARANAC LAKE. FOR MORE THAN 100 YEARS, THE AREA HAS FORMED A LEGACY…OF OUTDOOR ADVENTURE. JOHN IS PRESIDENT OF THE ADIRONDACK RAIL TRAIL ASSOCIATION. THE VOLUNTEER GROUP RECENTLY FINISHED THE SECOND PHASE OF CONSTRUCTION. .. A 34-MILE PATH, LINKING THE TRI- LAKES. LOCALS ENJOY THE EXERCISE. AND THE SIGNIFICANCE OF WHAT THIS TRAIL USED TO BE. NOW, WITH FUNDING FROM THE STATE’S DOWNTOWN REVITALIZATION INITIATIVE, PENDRAGON IS PREPARING TO MOVE TO A BIGGER, STATE-OF-THE- ART BUILDING DOWNTOWN.
The annual holiday market took place Sunday with more than 80 small businesses in attendance at Columbia Mall.
The community enterprise sector has more than 18,600 full-time employees and is worth 1.8bn per year to the Irish economy, a new report from the Community
Walter Richburg died at the scene from injuries sustained in the fire on West Williams street Monday morning, Nov. 18.
The 35-year-old woman, Ashley Grayson, offered to hire the Memphis couple to kill 3 people in 2022.
Venture capital funding into Irish technology SMEs treaded waterin the third quarter of this year, finishing at 192.5m or just 1% ahead of the same
Like many markets across the state, the Lewiston Farmers’ Market has one more Sunday until it packs up until next spring.
A Milwaukee small business owner is trying to rebuild after a group of women broke into her salon near 85th Street and Capitol Drive Saturday.The break-in at “Aesthetics Setting” was caught on the salon owner’s surveillance camera. WISN 12 News is not naming the salon owner, or showing her face because she’s afraid for her safety. “I never even imagined experiencing something like this,” the owner said.She said an employee called her Friday night at about 6:30 p.m., panicked and hiding in a back room as the group broke in. She says the group shattered the front glass door. Video shows five women storm in while screaming and threatening violence. Two more women wait in the hallway.The group notices the camera and pulls it from the wall. The camera cuts off. Then, the salon owner said, the women trashed the lobby. She said the group broke tables and picture frames, and punched holes in the wall before leaving shortly after.”This is something that I worked so hard for. For someone to just come in and destroy my things like that? That’s not ok,” the salon owner said. She filed a police report and said Milwaukee police came to her salon Friday night to investigate. Now, she has to reschedule client appointments and pay for an estimated thousands of dollars of repairs to her salon. “Some people don’t recover from things like that,” said her friend Charese Gardner. Gardner owns a bar downtown and multiple other businesses.”The same passion that she had to start this, she’s going to need that same passion to finish strong,” Gardner said. “Whatever disagreement they were having, was it all worth it to break another woman down and have her start all over again? I don’t know.”The business owner is asking anyone with any information to give Milwaukee police a call. She has also started a GoFundMe to help recover costs. This is a developing story. WISN 12 News has reached out to Milwaukee Police and will update as more information becomes available.