In addition to their prison sentences, the couple had been ordered to pay $14 million in restitution that they will no longer owe, attorney Alex Little told reporters Friday. He said the government had seized some money from the Chrisleys but he believes it was less than $100,000 and that it was unclear whether any of that would be returned.
She continued: “Congress has specifically set aside funding for FEMA to administer the Shelter and Services Program, ensuring that it does not pull any resources from FEMA’s other work.”Congress has authorized 140 times more funding for the Disaster Relief Fund than the Shelter and Services Program,
for the latter program have “strict cost requirements for how the money should be spent.”Four federal employees — FEMA’s chief financial officer, two program analysts and a grant specialist — were fired Tuesday over theofficials said. The workers are accused of circumventing leadership to make the transactions. Officials did not give details on how the four had violated any policies.
Cameron Hamilton, acting FEMA administrator, said, Hamilton said the administration yanked funding from the Shelter and Services Program because of concerns the money was “facilitating illegal activities” at a Manhattan hotel used to house migrants. Hamilton’s comments came as part of a lawsuit seeking to block the Trump administration’s freeze on federal grants and loans. The freeze, just days into the new administration, threw states, communities and organizations that rely on federal funding into mass confusion, and was rescinded two days later.
U.S. District Judge John McConnell in Rhode Island ruled on Wednesday that the
to house migrants was not subject to an order, still in effect, that’s aimed at preventingThe association recommends trying “fatigue-reducing techniques such as alternate propping one foot on a footstool, the use of anti-fatigue mats, using a sit-stand stool and wearing supportive footwear,” said Lisa Spruce, senior director of evidence-based perioperative practices at AORN.
require extended standing:, hairdressers, surgeons, restaurant cooks and
are just some of the people who perform their roles on their feet.Cecilia Ortiz, 43, used to work as an airport wheelchair attendant in Phoenix. “It takes a really hard toll on the knees,” she said. The break room had three or four chairs, which wasn’t enough for everyone, so workers often went to the hallway and sat on the floor, Ortiz said.