Gov. Holcomb ends COVID-19 public emergency after nearly 2 years
Holcomb signed House Bill 1001 Thursday, which will let Indiana continue to draw federal dollars after the COVID-19 public health emergency expires.
Holcomb signed House Bill 1001 Thursday, which will let Indiana continue to draw federal dollars after the COVID-19 public health emergency expires.
Indiana has been home to many great writers like Gene Stratton-Porter, Booth Tarkington, Meredith Nicholson, Theodore Dreiser, Lew Wallace, George Ade, Dan Wakefield, Haven Kimmel, John Green, James Whitcomb Riley and Hammond’s Jean Shepherd.
A flyer promoting the protest said “If we don’t demand our basic needs, we’ll never receive it.”
Since April 2020, federal COVID-19 emergency funding has allowed thousands of Hoosiers enrolled in SNAP to receive additional benefits.
After 729 days, or one day shy of exactly two years, Indiana on Saturday no longer will be operating under a governor-declared statewide public health emergency due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Clue” opens March 4 at LaPorte Little Theatre Club.
The Tomfoolery Fun Club is celebrating its eighth anniversary by returning to where it all started.
Fitness Premier 24/7 Club will host a blood drive this Saturday in Crete.
The man told police he was leaving for work when a gunshot struck his vehicle and he accelerated in reverse, an official said.
Quintana coached past five seasons at Bishop Chatard and was assistant for four other programs