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Small Business Funding

8-year-old raises money for hurricane relief on his birthday [Video]

WANTED TO TAKE HIS SPECIAL DAY AND MAKE IT ABOUT OTHERS WHO ARE RECOVERING FROM HURRICANE HELENE. RASHAD WILLIAMS HAS THE STORY OF A SMALL IDEA TURNING INTO A LARGE CONTRIBUTION. YOULL ONLY SEE IT HERE ON WYFF NEWS FOUR. ITS A FUN. THIS IS WHAT YOUD EXPECT OUT OF AN EIGHT YEAR OLD. SWINGS, TRAMPOLINE. TOYS. WERE GOING TO GO UP THE LADDER. YOU KNOW THE IMPORTANT THINGS IN LIFE FOR GRANT ACEVEDO. HES CELEBRATING HIS EIGHTH TRIP AROUND THE SUN AND THE GIFT HE ASKED HIS PARENTS FOR. WAS ANYTHING BUT TYPICAL FOR SOMEONE. HIS AGE. WERE WATCHING THE NEWS AND REALIZED WHAT DEVASTATION HAD HAPPENED AROUND OUR AREA AND IN WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA. TONIGHT, RESCUE AND RECOVERY OPERATIONS AND GRANT CAME UP WITH THE IDEA TO, INSTEAD OF GET BIRTHDAY PRESENTS FOR HIS BIRTHDAY. THIS YEAR TO DONATE FUNDS TO THE RED CROSS TO HELP PEOPLE TO KNOW THAT THOSE THINGS ARE GOING ON. IN HIS MIND AND IN HIS HEART. AND THATS THATS KIND OF PRICELESS THAT SOME PEOPLE OUT THERE NEEDED WATER, FOOD, BUT THEY DIDNT HAVE THAT RIGHT NOW. SO WITH THE HELP OF HIS MOM, BLAKELY GRANT STARTED A GO FUND ME. I TOLD MY FRIENDS AND MY NEIGHBORS, TURNING AN IDEA INTO REALITY. A LOT OF PEOPLE DONATED. APPARENTLY, GRANT HAS COME UP WITH ANOTHER GOOD IDEA. HE WANTS TO GIVE THE AMERICAN RED CROSS THE MONEY HIMSELF IN PERSON WITH ONE OF THOSE BIG CHECKS THAT REALLY CATCHES YOUR ATTENTION. LITTLE DOES HE KNOW, IVE MADE A PHONE CALL. WERE ABOUT TO MAKE THAT SURPRISE HAPPEN, RIGHT NOW. WE GOT HERE BEFORE THE ACEVEDO FAMILY. A LITTLE PHILANTHROPIST IN THE MAKING. SO IM SUPER EXCITED ABOUT THIS. AS APRIL DILLON WITH THE RED CROSS PUT THE FINISHING TOUCHES ON THIS BIRTHDAY SURPRISE. GREAT. COME ON IN. I HEAR ITS YOUR BIRTHDAY TODAY. EITHER A NICE POKER FACE OR A BIT OF SHOCK. LOOK AT THIS. THIS IS WHAT YOU COLLECTED FOR US. $2,130 ALL ON YOUR OWN. A MOMENT IN TIME. ONE. TWO. THREE. HAPPY BIRTHDAY. CAPTURING A

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Small Business Funding

Former New Hampshire State Senator arrested and charged with theft Boston 25 News [Video]

Sandborn is the owner of the Win, Win, Win casino in Concord. His arrest alleges that the casino and Sandborn received additional grant monies from the state Main Street Relief Fund 1.0 by distorting the gross receipts of the business by $1 million.

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Small Business Funding

Mobile home community celebrates becoming resident-owned [Video]

Residents of Linnhaven Mobile Home Park in Brunswick celebrated officially becoming a resident-owned community on Tuesday.The acquisition of the park was led by the Blueberry Fields Cooperative, a board made up of Linnhaven residents.In a first-of-its-kind acquisition, the group purchased the park directly from the previous owners for $26.3 million.The purchase makes Linnhaven the largest resident-owned mobile home community in the state.The co-op relied on several different lenders to make the acquisition possible.M&T Bank financed us. Genesis Loan Fund financed us, we got a grant from the state, said co-op board member Melissa McCarthy.Leading up to the purchase, some residents were worried that the high price of the acquisition would mean a steep increase in rent prices.However, the co-op says rent for residents is only expected to rise around $100, due in large part to them using a state grant specifically intended for mobile home communities.This is a low-income community,” said board member Celeste Yakawonis. “That was prime on the lenders agenda, that we couldn’t raise the rent a large amount.”Maintaining the standard that we all moved here for is the biggest challenge,” said McCarthy. “But we’re working really hard to make sure that we keep that.”

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Small Business Funding

US warns Israel to boost humanitarian aid into Gaza or risk losing weapons funding [Video]

The Biden administration has warned Israel that it must increase the amount of humanitarian aid it is allowing into Gaza within the next 30 days or it could risk losing access to U.S. weapons funding.Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin warned their Israeli counterparts in a letter dated Sunday that the changes must occur. The letter, which restates U.S. policy toward humanitarian aid and arms transfers, was sent amid deteriorating conditions in northern Gaza and an Israeli airstrike on a hospital tent site in central Gaza that killed at least four people and burned others.A similar letter that Blinken sent to Israeli officials in April led to more humanitarian assistance getting to the Palestinian territory, State Department spokesman Matthew Miller said Tuesday. But that has not lasted.In fact, its fallen by over 50% from where it was at its peak,” Miller said at a briefing. “So the secretary, along with Secretary Austin, thought it was appropriate to make clear to the government of Israel that there are changes that they need to make again, to see that the level of assistance making it into Gaza comes back up from the very, very low levels that it is at today.For Israel to continue qualifying for foreign military financing, the level of aid getting into Gaza must increase to at least 350 trucks a day, Israel must institute additional humanitarian pauses and provide increased security for humanitarian sites, Austin and Blinken said in their letter. They said Israel had 30 days to respond to the requirements.The letter was not meant as a threat,” White House national security spokesman John Kirby told reporters. “The letter was simply meant to reiterate the sense of urgency we feel and the seriousness with which we feel it, about the need for an increase, a dramatic increase in humanitarian assistance.An Israeli official confirmed a letter had been delivered but did not discuss the contents. That official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss a diplomatic matter, confirmed the U.S. had raised humanitarian concerns and was putting pressure on Israel to speed up the flow of aid into Gaza.The letter, which an Axios reporter posted a copy of online, was sent during a period of growing frustration in the administration that despite repeated and increasingly vocal requests to scale back offensive operations against Hamas, Israels bombardment has led to unnecessary civilian deaths and risks plunging the region into a much wider war.We are particularly concerned that recent actions by the Israeli government, including halting commercial imports, denying or impeding 90 percent of humanitarian movements and other restrictions have kept aid from flowing, Blinken and Austin said.The Biden administration is increasing its calls for its ally and biggest recipient of U.S. military aid to ease the humanitarian crisis in Gaza while assuring that America’s support for Israel is unwavering just before the U.S. presidential election in three weeks.Funding for Israel has long carried weight in U.S. politics, and Biden said this month that no administration has helped Israel more than I have.Humanitarian aid groups fear that Israeli leaders may approve a plan to seal off humanitarian aid to northern Gaza in an attempt to starve out Hamas, which could trap hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who are unwilling or unable to leave their homes without food, water, medicine and fuel.U.N. humanitarian officials said last week that aid entering Gaza is at its lowest level in months. About 80 trucks carrying aid have entered through crossings in Gazas north since Oct. 1, down from roughly 60 trucks a day previously, according to the U.N. website tracking deliveries.COGAT, the Israeli body facilitating aid crossings into Gaza, denied that crossings to the north have been closed.U.S. officials said the letter was sent to remind Israel of both its obligations under international humanitarian law and of the Biden administrations legal obligation to ensure that the delivery of American humanitarian assistance should not be hindered, diverted or held up by a recipient of U.S. military aid.Israels retaliatory offensive since the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks by Hamas has killed over 42,000 people in Gaza, according to the territorys Health Ministry, which does not distinguish between civilians and combatants in its count. The Hamas attacks that launched the war killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and militants abducted another 250.The United States has spent a record of at least $17.9 billion on military aid to Israel since the war in Gaza began and led to escalating conflict around the Middle East, according to a report for Brown Universitys Costs of War project.That aid has enabled Israel to purchase billions of dollars worth of munitions it has used in its operations against Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon. However, many of those strikes also have killed civilians in both areas.