There aren't many farmers — dairy or not — anywhere south of Boston, never mind Norwell, an affluent bedroom community where the median household income is in the six figures and the median home value is over a half-million dollars. Real estate is an …
“Non-need” instead of “merit” is the term used by the U.S. Department of Education because such assistance can be given for any number of reasons — not only for recognizing academic achievement and community service but also for recruiting athletes …
The company began providing aircraft management services to aircraft owners and on-demand charter for a large base of both corporate and private travelers. The Hamptons attract many wealthy and famous people…and their aircraft. However, there was a …
Others, particularly those representing more affluent areas with fewer needs for social services, use the rollover money for big-ticket capital improvements such as road paving. Council members can freely transfer their NDF money to capital improvement …
"Most people think the district is working hard," said John Wells, who arrived in 1979 as a mining engineer and now runs a financial services company. "But then you're confronted with the testing numbers — and they tell us we're … Amendment 66 would …
Others, particularly those representing more affluent areas with fewer needs for social services, use the rollover money for big-ticket capital improvements such as road paving. Council members can freely transfer their NDF money to capital improvement …
The first is that the cost of health care is larger than the reach of our entire income tax system. The second is that however the dollars are sliced, the cost of health care is more than all but the most affluent people can afford. It's also more than …
The onetime hospital executive, who moved to Detroit from the affluent, mostly white suburb of Livonia, was kicked off the Aug. 6 primary ballot after opponents raised a court challenge questioning whether he met residency requirements. A frustrated …
Physicians will continue to tuck away an ever larger chunk of the Canadian health care dollar in 2013 as the rate of growth in spending on doctors will again rise faster (3.6 per cent), than it does for drugs (2.4 per cent) or hospitals (2.6 per cent …