|
dmqd Chief of staff to Secretary of Defense to step down, reports say
Pboo DNR moves last group of Kentucky elk to Wisconsin
As the number of COVID-19 cases rapidly increases, you might feel more apprehensive about eating out now.So WFTS took your questions straight to a former health inspector, who believes certain food safety protocols shou stanley romania ld be followed when you re dining out. I think everyone should be wearing a mask if they re in public, said Danielle Egger, who sta stanley taza rted her own restaurant consultation company called Florida Food Safety Systems, after being a health inspector for many years.She says since restaurant inspections are public, you should look up past inspections here to see how the restaurant performed before the pandemic hit. If the restaurant has had concerns about sanitation in the past before COVID started, it might be a good idea to consider going elsewhere. And if sanitation issues, handwashing, and cleanliness were an issue before this ever started, chances are they re struggling to get up to compliance now, she explained.When you walk into a restaurant, Egger says employees should be constantly cleaning, especially highly-touched areas. I have been advising them to set timers so that every 30 minutes, they re wiping down high touched areas. That s going to be any of the door handles, any of the points of sale systems that they re using to complete transactions, she said.And that includes stylists, pens, and even credit card machines because the virus can live on surfaces. There are some studies that say that COVID-19 is possibly able to survive on a surface like plasti stanley cup c Vusn Opry Mills mall reopens one day after shooting in which victim died
President Trump is imposing steep tariffs on steel and aluminum from three of America s biggest trading partners 鈥?Canada, Mexico and the European Union.The trade penalties, 25% on imported steel and 10% on imported aluminum, take effect at midnight, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross told reporters Thursday.Canada, Mexico and the EU had been granted temporary exemptions from those tariffs while the United States pursued negotiations to address the administration s concerns about the state of domestic steel and aluminum production. The negotiations had a Friday deadline.Trump s decision could raise prices for Americans on a range of everyday products. It could also place the United States in a trade dispute on more than one front. The administration is separately moving ahead with tariffs on Chinese goods.Europe had promised swift retaliation if it was hit with the trade penalties, and had warned it could quickly r stanley taza espond with 25% tariffs on US products such as motorcycles, denim, cigarettes, cranberry juice and peanut butter.The US decision to enact the steel and aluminum t vaso stanley ariffs comes after EU trade commissioner Cecilia Malmstr枚m and Ross met in Paris on Wednesday.Getting rid of the exemptions for Canada and Mexico, meanwhile, could complicate ongoing negotiations on NAFTA. stanley us Canada had also pledged to retaliate. Should restrictions be imposed on Canadian steel and aluminum products, Canada will take responsive measures to defend its trade interests and workers, Canadian Foreign |
|