ncis MS-13 Gang Leader in San Francisco Convicted of Racketeering Charges By www.justice.gov Published On :: Tue, 29 Nov 2011 16:43:58 EST A federal jury today convicted Danilo Velasquez, aka “Triste,” a local leader of La Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13, in federal court in San Francisco of racketeering conspiracy and related charges. Full Article OPA Press Releases
ncis Five San Francisco MS-13 Members Sentenced to Life in Prison By www.justice.gov Published On :: Fri, 2 Dec 2011 19:13:25 EST Marvin Carcamo, aka “Cyco,” 31; Angel Guevara, aka “Peloncito,” 30; Moris Flores, 22; Jonathan Cruz-Ramirez, 22; and Erick Lopez, aka “Spooky,” 23, were sentenced by U.S. District Judge William Alsup in the Northern District of California. Full Article OPA Press Releases
ncis Sixth San Francisco MS-13 Member Sentenced to Life in Prison By www.justice.gov Published On :: Thu, 8 Dec 2011 18:26:51 EST The sixth San Francisco-area member of La Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13) convicted in August 2011 on racketeering related charges was sentenced today to life in prison. Full Article OPA Press Releases
ncis South San Francisco Food Processing Factory Will Pay Nearly $700,000 in Penalties, Spend $6 Million to Update Refrigeration System Safety By www.justice.gov Published On :: Tue, 31 Jan 2012 13:15:37 EST Columbus Manufacturing Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Columbus Foods LLC, has agreed to pay a penalty and make significant upgrades to settle Clean Air Act violations. Full Article OPA Press Releases
ncis MS-13 Gang Leader in San Francisco Sentenced to Life in Prison By www.justice.gov Published On :: Thu, 16 Feb 2012 18:50:17 EST Danilo Velasquez, aka “Triste,” a local leader of La Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13, was sentenced yesterday in federal court in San Francisco by U.S. District Judge William H. Alsup to life in prison. Full Article OPA Press Releases
ncis Bay Area Woman Indicted in San Francisco for Tax Evasion and Bank Fraud By www.justice.gov Published On :: Thu, 17 May 2012 17:37:34 EDT A federal grand jury in San Francisco has returned an indictment charging Crystal Ann Poole with evading income taxes for over eight years and for defrauding a federally insured bank in Mississippi, the Justice Department and Internal Revenue Service (IRS) announced today. Full Article OPA Press Releases
ncis United States Joins Lawsuit Against San Francisco Area’s North East Medical Services By www.justice.gov Published On :: Tue, 7 Aug 2012 12:06:20 EDT The United States has joined a whistleblower action pending in the Northern District of California against the federally-qualified health center (FQHC), North East Medical Services (NEMS), alleging that the center under-reported income it received from a managed care organization in order to artificially inflate reimbursements it received from the California Medicaid program, the Justice Department announced today. North East serves the San Francisco Bay area. Full Article OPA Press Releases
ncis Former Investment Banker and His Associate Plead Guilty in San Francisco to Insider Trading Scheme By www.justice.gov Published On :: Tue, 16 Apr 2013 19:03:08 EDT A former San Francisco investment banker and his college friend both pleaded guilty today for their roles in an insider trading scheme involving two impending corporate mergers. Full Article OPA Press Releases
ncis Justice Department and San Francisco Restaurant Settle Immigration-Related Discrimination Claim By www.justice.gov Published On :: Fri, 15 Nov 2013 11:03:14 EST The Justice Department today reached an agreement with Kim Hoang Coffee and Fast Food, a restaurant in San Francisco, resolving claims that the company violated the anti-discrimination provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). Full Article OPA Press Releases
ncis NCIS Agent Pleads Guilty in International Navy Bribery Scandal By www.justice.gov Published On :: Tue, 17 Dec 2013 18:39:43 EST A special agent with the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) pleaded guilty today to participating in a massive international fraud and bribery scheme Full Article OPA Press Releases
ncis Historic Clean Water Act Settlement Will Prevent Millions of Gallons of Sewage Discharges into San Francisco Bay By www.justice.gov Published On :: Fri, 29 Aug 2014 15:01:54 EDT The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency today announced a Clean Water Act settlement requiring the East Bay Municipal Utility District (EBMUD) and seven East Bay communities to conduct extensive system repairs aimed at eliminating millions of gallons of sewage discharges into San Francisco Bay. Under today’s agreement, EBMUD and the communities will assess and upgrade their 1,500 mile-long sewer system infrastructure over a 21-year period Full Article OPA Press Releases
ncis Day Three Notes – JP Morgan Healthcare Conference, San Francisco By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 15 Jan 2016 18:12:24 +0000 Yesterday’s conference sessions surfaced interesting questions and approaches regarding the post-acute sector, bundled payment, emergency medicine and anesthesia. Post-Acute Focus: With more and more focus on the need to rationalize and re-organize the post-acute sector, we have seen multiple industry leaders start to evolve their strategies. I blogged yesterday about AccentCare’s interesting strategy in the...… Continue Reading Full Article Healthcare
ncis San Francisco will allow certain businesses to reopen beginning May 18 By www.latimes.com Published On :: Thu, 7 May 2020 18:51:16 -0400 San Francisco will allow certain businesses to reopen beginning May 18 as it eases its stay-at-home orders. But officials warn that they will keep track to make coronavirus infections don't spike. Full Article
ncis Why Pope Francis is visiting Myanmar By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Thu, 30 Nov 2017 16:01:01 +0000 Full Article
ncis How to boost startups if you’re not San Francisco By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Tue, 02 Feb 2016 09:51:00 -0500 Last week, we showed how the share of the nation’s venture capital going to the Bay Area has actually increased over the last decade and posed the question: Are San Francisco and Silicon Valley good models for most cities to imitate? And with the answer being “no,” what strategies should cities employ to bolster local capital networks? The answer depends upon regions’ technical strengths—different technologies imply different venture capital strategies. A common assumption is that most cities look like Silicon Valley with software monopolizing venture funding, but in many places a mix of different technologies are far more important. Metropolitan level venture capital data from 2005 to 2015 from Pitchbook illustrates how different cities require different strategies. In Cleveland, for example, more than three-quarters of deals are in clinical care services and medical devices driven by Cleveland Clinic’s world-renowned success in identifying and funding companies creating novel health care technologies. However, software and medical technologies require very different venture capital strategies. Software companies need upfront funding but can scale quickly with few additional funding rounds. Medical technologies require FDA approval and clinical trials, costly and lengthy processes, implying the need to consider whether regional venture capital efforts can provide not only seed funding but multiple rounds. If not, promising health care companies may flame out or relocated elsewhere. Pittsburgh, on the other hand, has a far more mixed portfolio than either Cleveland or the Bay Area, one of the most diverse in the country. Pittsburgh’s top 10 technologies funded over the last decade include laboratory services, energy exploration, battery storage, medical devices, software, and electronic equipment—with none making up more than one-fifth the metro area’s portfolio. Pittsburgh’s mix of educational and non-profit institutions like Carnegie Mellon University, University of Pittsburgh and UPMC support research in engineering, software, medical technologies, and therapeutics. In addition private companies like Google, Alcoa, and the shale gas boom have provided the region with a blend of market opportunities that are extremely different than that of the Bay Area. Equally important to the type of technologies funded is how venture capital deals are funded. In the Bay Area private venture capital firms represent the vast majority of funding both in terms of numbers of deals and overall value. Deals from accelerators and universities together equal less than one-tenth of what is invested by private venture capital firms. Given the many private investment firms in the Bay Area, universities and accelerators are better at creating and incubating technologies instead of funding them. Unfortunately, other markets lack such private sector assets and try to jumpstart investments through other methods. Over the last decade, Pittsburgh made just 3 percent as many total venture deals as the Bay Area, but breaking that figure down by the funding source, universities outperformed in Pittsburgh. There they funded nearly 30 percent as many deals as universities did in San Francisco and Silicon Valley, a rate 10 times as high as would be expected based the Bay Area “norm.” One reason for this is Pittsburgh is relatively new to venture funding and may have more research assets than private venture capital firms. Therefore, university funds could fill an important capital gap. A common worry is these non-private sector deals are poor investments that private firms, with superior market intelligence, simply refused to make. This argument is most persuasive in regions like the Bay Area where there is no shortage of private capital to fund good ideas. However in other regions these investments can prove to be smart precursors to private funding. Also, rarely do public institutions make investment decisions. Instead, public dollars are funneled through private investment firms to kick start regional activity. For example, Philadelphia’s new StartUp PHL fund is paid for by taxpayer dollars but investment decisions are made by First Capital, the city’s largest private venture capital fund. The fund requires recipients to stay in the city for at least six months after funding, with the hope to increase the number of growing technology companies in Philadelphia. Cleveland and Pittsburgh are specific examples of a general point. Cities have unique technology competencies and pathways to venture capital. Economic strategies to attract outside, and bolster local capital, should reflect those attributes and not simply default to what seems to have worked in the Bay Area. Authors Scott AndesJesus Leal TrujilloNick Marchio Image Source: © David Denoma / Reuters Full Article
ncis How to boost startups if you’re not San Francisco By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Tue, 02 Feb 2016 09:51:00 -0500 Last week, we showed how the share of the nation’s venture capital going to the Bay Area has actually increased over the last decade and posed the question: Are San Francisco and Silicon Valley good models for most cities to imitate? And with the answer being “no,” what strategies should cities employ to bolster local capital networks? The answer depends upon regions’ technical strengths—different technologies imply different venture capital strategies. A common assumption is that most cities look like Silicon Valley with software monopolizing venture funding, but in many places a mix of different technologies are far more important. Metropolitan level venture capital data from 2005 to 2015 from Pitchbook illustrates how different cities require different strategies. In Cleveland, for example, more than three-quarters of deals are in clinical care services and medical devices driven by Cleveland Clinic’s world-renowned success in identifying and funding companies creating novel health care technologies. However, software and medical technologies require very different venture capital strategies. Software companies need upfront funding but can scale quickly with few additional funding rounds. Medical technologies require FDA approval and clinical trials, costly and lengthy processes, implying the need to consider whether regional venture capital efforts can provide not only seed funding but multiple rounds. If not, promising health care companies may flame out or relocated elsewhere. Pittsburgh, on the other hand, has a far more mixed portfolio than either Cleveland or the Bay Area, one of the most diverse in the country. Pittsburgh’s top 10 technologies funded over the last decade include laboratory services, energy exploration, battery storage, medical devices, software, and electronic equipment—with none making up more than one-fifth the metro area’s portfolio. Pittsburgh’s mix of educational and non-profit institutions like Carnegie Mellon University, University of Pittsburgh and UPMC support research in engineering, software, medical technologies, and therapeutics. In addition private companies like Google, Alcoa, and the shale gas boom have provided the region with a blend of market opportunities that are extremely different than that of the Bay Area. Equally important to the type of technologies funded is how venture capital deals are funded. In the Bay Area private venture capital firms represent the vast majority of funding both in terms of numbers of deals and overall value. Deals from accelerators and universities together equal less than one-tenth of what is invested by private venture capital firms. Given the many private investment firms in the Bay Area, universities and accelerators are better at creating and incubating technologies instead of funding them. Unfortunately, other markets lack such private sector assets and try to jumpstart investments through other methods. Over the last decade, Pittsburgh made just 3 percent as many total venture deals as the Bay Area, but breaking that figure down by the funding source, universities outperformed in Pittsburgh. There they funded nearly 30 percent as many deals as universities did in San Francisco and Silicon Valley, a rate 10 times as high as would be expected based the Bay Area “norm.” One reason for this is Pittsburgh is relatively new to venture funding and may have more research assets than private venture capital firms. Therefore, university funds could fill an important capital gap. A common worry is these non-private sector deals are poor investments that private firms, with superior market intelligence, simply refused to make. This argument is most persuasive in regions like the Bay Area where there is no shortage of private capital to fund good ideas. However in other regions these investments can prove to be smart precursors to private funding. Also, rarely do public institutions make investment decisions. Instead, public dollars are funneled through private investment firms to kick start regional activity. For example, Philadelphia’s new StartUp PHL fund is paid for by taxpayer dollars but investment decisions are made by First Capital, the city’s largest private venture capital fund. The fund requires recipients to stay in the city for at least six months after funding, with the hope to increase the number of growing technology companies in Philadelphia. Cleveland and Pittsburgh are specific examples of a general point. Cities have unique technology competencies and pathways to venture capital. Economic strategies to attract outside, and bolster local capital, should reflect those attributes and not simply default to what seems to have worked in the Bay Area. Authors Scott AndesJesus Leal TrujilloNick Marchio Image Source: © David Denoma / Reuters Full Article
ncis How to boost startups if you’re not San Francisco By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Tue, 02 Feb 2016 09:51:00 -0500 Last week, we showed how the share of the nation’s venture capital going to the Bay Area has actually increased over the last decade and posed the question: Are San Francisco and Silicon Valley good models for most cities to imitate? And with the answer being “no,” what strategies should cities employ to bolster local capital networks? The answer depends upon regions’ technical strengths—different technologies imply different venture capital strategies. A common assumption is that most cities look like Silicon Valley with software monopolizing venture funding, but in many places a mix of different technologies are far more important. Metropolitan level venture capital data from 2005 to 2015 from Pitchbook illustrates how different cities require different strategies. In Cleveland, for example, more than three-quarters of deals are in clinical care services and medical devices driven by Cleveland Clinic’s world-renowned success in identifying and funding companies creating novel health care technologies. However, software and medical technologies require very different venture capital strategies. Software companies need upfront funding but can scale quickly with few additional funding rounds. Medical technologies require FDA approval and clinical trials, costly and lengthy processes, implying the need to consider whether regional venture capital efforts can provide not only seed funding but multiple rounds. If not, promising health care companies may flame out or relocated elsewhere. Pittsburgh, on the other hand, has a far more mixed portfolio than either Cleveland or the Bay Area, one of the most diverse in the country. Pittsburgh’s top 10 technologies funded over the last decade include laboratory services, energy exploration, battery storage, medical devices, software, and electronic equipment—with none making up more than one-fifth the metro area’s portfolio. Pittsburgh’s mix of educational and non-profit institutions like Carnegie Mellon University, University of Pittsburgh and UPMC support research in engineering, software, medical technologies, and therapeutics. In addition private companies like Google, Alcoa, and the shale gas boom have provided the region with a blend of market opportunities that are extremely different than that of the Bay Area. Equally important to the type of technologies funded is how venture capital deals are funded. In the Bay Area private venture capital firms represent the vast majority of funding both in terms of numbers of deals and overall value. Deals from accelerators and universities together equal less than one-tenth of what is invested by private venture capital firms. Given the many private investment firms in the Bay Area, universities and accelerators are better at creating and incubating technologies instead of funding them. Unfortunately, other markets lack such private sector assets and try to jumpstart investments through other methods. Over the last decade, Pittsburgh made just 3 percent as many total venture deals as the Bay Area, but breaking that figure down by the funding source, universities outperformed in Pittsburgh. There they funded nearly 30 percent as many deals as universities did in San Francisco and Silicon Valley, a rate 10 times as high as would be expected based the Bay Area “norm.” One reason for this is Pittsburgh is relatively new to venture funding and may have more research assets than private venture capital firms. Therefore, university funds could fill an important capital gap. A common worry is these non-private sector deals are poor investments that private firms, with superior market intelligence, simply refused to make. This argument is most persuasive in regions like the Bay Area where there is no shortage of private capital to fund good ideas. However in other regions these investments can prove to be smart precursors to private funding. Also, rarely do public institutions make investment decisions. Instead, public dollars are funneled through private investment firms to kick start regional activity. For example, Philadelphia’s new StartUp PHL fund is paid for by taxpayer dollars but investment decisions are made by First Capital, the city’s largest private venture capital fund. The fund requires recipients to stay in the city for at least six months after funding, with the hope to increase the number of growing technology companies in Philadelphia. Cleveland and Pittsburgh are specific examples of a general point. Cities have unique technology competencies and pathways to venture capital. Economic strategies to attract outside, and bolster local capital, should reflect those attributes and not simply default to what seems to have worked in the Bay Area. Authors Scott AndesJesus Leal TrujilloNick Marchio Image Source: © David Denoma / Reuters Full Article
ncis How to boost startups if you’re not San Francisco By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Tue, 02 Feb 2016 09:51:00 -0500 Last week, we showed how the share of the nation’s venture capital going to the Bay Area has actually increased over the last decade and posed the question: Are San Francisco and Silicon Valley good models for most cities to imitate? And with the answer being “no,” what strategies should cities employ to bolster local capital networks? The answer depends upon regions’ technical strengths—different technologies imply different venture capital strategies. A common assumption is that most cities look like Silicon Valley with software monopolizing venture funding, but in many places a mix of different technologies are far more important. Metropolitan level venture capital data from 2005 to 2015 from Pitchbook illustrates how different cities require different strategies. In Cleveland, for example, more than three-quarters of deals are in clinical care services and medical devices driven by Cleveland Clinic’s world-renowned success in identifying and funding companies creating novel health care technologies. However, software and medical technologies require very different venture capital strategies. Software companies need upfront funding but can scale quickly with few additional funding rounds. Medical technologies require FDA approval and clinical trials, costly and lengthy processes, implying the need to consider whether regional venture capital efforts can provide not only seed funding but multiple rounds. If not, promising health care companies may flame out or relocated elsewhere. Pittsburgh, on the other hand, has a far more mixed portfolio than either Cleveland or the Bay Area, one of the most diverse in the country. Pittsburgh’s top 10 technologies funded over the last decade include laboratory services, energy exploration, battery storage, medical devices, software, and electronic equipment—with none making up more than one-fifth the metro area’s portfolio. Pittsburgh’s mix of educational and non-profit institutions like Carnegie Mellon University, University of Pittsburgh and UPMC support research in engineering, software, medical technologies, and therapeutics. In addition private companies like Google, Alcoa, and the shale gas boom have provided the region with a blend of market opportunities that are extremely different than that of the Bay Area. Equally important to the type of technologies funded is how venture capital deals are funded. In the Bay Area private venture capital firms represent the vast majority of funding both in terms of numbers of deals and overall value. Deals from accelerators and universities together equal less than one-tenth of what is invested by private venture capital firms. Given the many private investment firms in the Bay Area, universities and accelerators are better at creating and incubating technologies instead of funding them. Unfortunately, other markets lack such private sector assets and try to jumpstart investments through other methods. Over the last decade, Pittsburgh made just 3 percent as many total venture deals as the Bay Area, but breaking that figure down by the funding source, universities outperformed in Pittsburgh. There they funded nearly 30 percent as many deals as universities did in San Francisco and Silicon Valley, a rate 10 times as high as would be expected based the Bay Area “norm.” One reason for this is Pittsburgh is relatively new to venture funding and may have more research assets than private venture capital firms. Therefore, university funds could fill an important capital gap. A common worry is these non-private sector deals are poor investments that private firms, with superior market intelligence, simply refused to make. This argument is most persuasive in regions like the Bay Area where there is no shortage of private capital to fund good ideas. However in other regions these investments can prove to be smart precursors to private funding. Also, rarely do public institutions make investment decisions. Instead, public dollars are funneled through private investment firms to kick start regional activity. For example, Philadelphia’s new StartUp PHL fund is paid for by taxpayer dollars but investment decisions are made by First Capital, the city’s largest private venture capital fund. The fund requires recipients to stay in the city for at least six months after funding, with the hope to increase the number of growing technology companies in Philadelphia. Cleveland and Pittsburgh are specific examples of a general point. Cities have unique technology competencies and pathways to venture capital. Economic strategies to attract outside, and bolster local capital, should reflect those attributes and not simply default to what seems to have worked in the Bay Area. Authors Scott AndesJesus Leal TrujilloNick Marchio Image Source: © David Denoma / Reuters Full Article
ncis Coronavirus lessons from New York and San Francisco By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Tue, 07 Apr 2020 15:23:23 +0000 Since the first novel coronavirus case in the United States was registered on January 19, 2020, we have learned one thing about the discipline of public health: It has been masquerading as medicine but it is at best a social science, and not an especially sophisticated one. Public health experts in the U.S. and the… Full Article
ncis Bay Area Bike Share getting ready to launch in San Francisco on August 29th By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 20 Aug 2013 16:10:11 -0400 Bay Area Bike Share is about to launch in San Francisco, with plans for 700 bikes and 70 stations around San Francisco, Redwood City, Mountain View, Palo Alto, and San Jose. Full Article Transportation
ncis San Francisco Bay could become chemical soup without new regulations By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 30 Oct 2013 13:05:48 -0400 An annual water-monitoring report focuses on "contaminants of emerging concern." Full Article Science
ncis SOAK in a shipping container spa in San Francisco By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 13 Dec 2013 13:02:00 -0500 It's all about healthy hedonism, where sustainability meets socialbility. Full Article Design
ncis Eco-conscious clothing maker opens brick-and-mortar shop in San Francisco By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 01 Jul 2014 11:51:32 -0400 San Francisco readers can now find local and green clothes at Amour Vert’s new shop in Hayes Valley. Full Article Living
ncis Infographic shows why San Francisco is a food lover's dream By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 25 Nov 2015 08:00:00 -0500 San Francisco is admirably progressive when it comes to reducing food waste and keeping food local and seasonal. Full Article Living
ncis Multifunctional loft system expands small San Francisco apartment By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 29 Jan 2016 07:00:00 -0500 A custom-made addition to this small condo packs in extra features and functionality, creating more spaces in one. Full Article Design
ncis Man lives in tiny 8 ft. box to avoid paying San Francisco's high rents By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 08 Apr 2016 12:00:00 -0400 One man gets creative about the affordable housing shortage in San Francisco, and pays only $400 a month to live in this sleeping pod he built in a friend's apartment. Full Article Design
ncis San Francisco becomes first major US city to mandate rooftop solar on new buildings By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 20 Apr 2016 16:54:37 -0400 In which the City requires new buildings to go from 'solar ready' rooftops to solar actual. Full Article Energy
ncis One man's DIY conservation effort helps rare butterfly rebound in San Francisco By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 30 Aug 2016 13:43:49 -0400 Using a bit of research and lots of careful gardening, this man was able to help reestablish a population of rare butterflies in his backyard. Full Article Science
ncis San Francisco may ban delivery robots. Good for them. By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 01 Jun 2017 14:55:14 -0400 Pick up your Marbles and go home Full Article Technology
ncis San Francisco introduces "Vision Zero" fire trucks By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Mon, 06 Nov 2017 11:25:31 -0500 Finally, fire departments are buying equipment designed for the city instead of designing the city to fit the equipment. Full Article Design
ncis San Francisco refuses bioplastic straws By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 16 Aug 2018 10:20:00 -0400 By next year at this time, all straws in SF will be made from paper, bamboo, wood, metal or fiber. Full Article Science
ncis Rich people in San Francisco mad that they have to look at people living on boats By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 16 May 2019 12:44:44 -0400 The Wall Street Journal calls them "homeless" but they look "landless" to me. Full Article Design
ncis San Francisco Solar Map Lets You Spy on Your Neighbor By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 20 Aug 2008 21:00:00 -0400 This cool, interactive solar map put out by the San Francisco Department of the Environment lets you identify exactly where and how many solar panels are on houses in San Fran. Even better than that, the site has a search Full Article Technology
ncis Pope Francis asks oil companies for a 'radical energy transition' By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Mon, 17 Jun 2019 06:43:00 -0400 The leader of the Catholic Church used his strongest language yet to call for 'decisive action, here and now.' Full Article Business
ncis Yes, that's Pope Francis aka Jorge Mario Bergoglio on the subway By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Mar 2013 15:59:19 -0400 It remains to be seen how green (or not) new Pope Francis aka Jorge Mario Bergoglio will be, but this photo of him riding the subway in Buenos Aires, Argentina, certainly makes a good ad for public transportation. Full Article Transportation
ncis Hangar One makes vodka from San Francisco fog By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 07 Jun 2016 06:58:40 -0400 It might cost $125 a bottle, but it tells a cool story about sustainability. Full Article Business
ncis Airbnb to Owe City Hotel Tax in San Francisco By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 05 Apr 2012 06:45:07 -0400 The pioneering site that brokers accommodation in private homes must now pay city hotel tax in San Francisco, according to a new ruling. What does this mean for collaborative consumption? Full Article Business
ncis San Francisco targets May 18 for some businesses to resume as California unveils reopening guidelines By www.cnbc.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 01:00:57 GMT Covid-19 has infected 3.7 million people globally, and killed at least 264,111 as of Thursday. Full Article
ncis San Francisco targets May 18 for some businesses to resume By www.cnbc.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 21:56:15 GMT CNBC's Dominic Chu reports that San Francisco is targeting May 18 to reopen some businesses. Full Article
ncis Smiths Night in San Francisco (Saturday Jan. 29) By www.morrissey-solo.com Published On :: 2011-01-28T20:00:05+00:00 Full Article
ncis San Francisco Becomes First US City to Ban E-cigarettes By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: San Francisco is the first U.S city that bans the sale of e-cigarettes, a measure that affects both brick-and-mortar stores and online retailers. The Full Article
ncis Fortnite's Party Royale Premiere to Feature Live Shows By Dillon Francis, Deadmau5, Steve Aoki By in.ign.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 06:43:50 +0000 Fortnite is hosting Party Royale Premiere with live shows from Dillon Francis, Steve Aoki, and deadmau5. Full Article News pc ps4 nintendo-switch xbox-one mac IGNdia android iphone Fortnite
ncis Jancis Robinson’s stunning white wines for the festive season By www.ft.com Published On :: Fri, 06 Dec 2019 10:16:03 GMT From a delicate Muscadet to a powerful Meursault, 26 wines of excellent value Full Article
ncis Jancis Robinson’s top 20 sweet and strong wines for Christmas By www.ft.com Published On :: Fri, 13 Dec 2019 11:39:27 GMT From Muscat to Madeira, the best — and best-value — tipples for the festive season Full Article
ncis Tips from the Top: Jancis Robinson’s best wine addresses in London By www.ft.com Published On :: Mon, 24 Feb 2020 05:00:49 GMT The FT’s wine columnist reveals her favourite clubs, cellars and bars in the capital Full Article
ncis Jancis Robinson on the new wave of Spanish wines By www.ft.com Published On :: Fri, 13 Mar 2020 10:50:12 GMT There is a new-found confidence in what Spain, and Spain alone, can offer Full Article
ncis Jancis Robinson on Anderson Valley, California By www.ft.com Published On :: Fri, 20 Mar 2020 10:50:40 GMT It was only when champagne producer Louis Roederer arrived in the early 1980s that this hippy hideout was put on the international wine map Full Article
ncis Jancis Robinson on how to invest in wine, part one By www.ft.com Published On :: Fri, 27 Mar 2020 10:38:41 GMT A Marie Kondo-style approach is best, according to serious collectors – if it doesn’t spark joy, sell it Full Article
ncis Jancis Robinson on the best ways to sell your wine collection By www.ft.com Published On :: Fri, 03 Apr 2020 09:27:24 GMT The most popular method is through the outfit you bought it from Full Article
ncis Jancis Robinson on where to buy wine online By www.ft.com Published On :: Fri, 03 Apr 2020 10:01:15 GMT Join a live discussion with our wine columnist on Sunday April 5 at 12pm and 5pm UK time Full Article