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31 result(s) for "Bean, Heather"
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Building Integrated Connections for Children, their Families and Communities
Research and practice shows that many vulnerable children and families face more than one challenge and require more than one intervention. However our service system has evolved historically to deal with one thing at a time or to provide services from multiple sources. This lack of integration can have a devastating effect on some families where key information or warning signs are missed. Coronial and judicial inquiries constantly stress the negative impact of a ‘siloed’ approach to service.
Greeley distillery gets grains from Colorado sources
  \"We've become so disconnected in our personal lives,\" he said. \"We don't know the person who makes our shoes.\" \"I thought, 'Oh, this market looks a lot newer and kind of like what craft brewing did in the late '80s and early '90s. It looks like you can get in small. It looks kind of unheard of yet,'\" [Heather Bean] said. \"The highest score I've seen for a craft whisky was 90 points,\" Bean said. \"I don't know what the difference is in that one point, but it's really solid.\"
Greeley in a bottle
\"It's immensely gratifying to see it work every day,\" she said. Future plans [Heather Bean] hopes the distillery will one day be large enough to run itself. That is, she would like to add staff to the team of three so she can actually take some time off. Asked about expanding, she said she'd like to one day open a second tasting room in downtown Greeley, or perhaps Loveland, where other craft distilleries are up and running. She sees Syntax staying in the industrial area where it began. There is one advantage to its rural location: Syntax can have that appealing, converted industrial space look without the big city markup. And it's small enough for spontaneity. Last year, a friend dropped off a batch of potatoes, from which they made potato vodka. People are starting to notice Syntax. [Ryne Sherman], whom she hired away from Crabtree Brewing not long after Syntax opened so she could spend more time on the business, is now a better distiller than she ever was, she said. He developed a bourbon recipe for Syntax. That bourbon recently scored 89 points at the Beverage Tasting Institute. \"The highest score I've seen for a craft whiskey was 90 points,\" Bean said. \"I don't know what the difference is in that one point, but it's really solid.\" Last year, the distillery moved a total of 500 cases of spirits. Even though this is a small operation, Bean said that's still too small. She chalked it up to distribution problems. \"Big distributors get a lot of perks from big alcohol, so they won't push your stuff,\" she said. It's not just microbrews fueling the enthusiasm for small-batch sprits. This is part of a general backlash against the Walmart mentality, said Cobey Williamson, publisher of MicroShiner Magazine, which is devoted to craft spirits. \"We've become so disconnected in our personal lives,\" he said. \"We don't know the person who makes our shoes.\" But if you go to a place like Syntax, you can meet the people who made your bourbon, buy a bottle and serve it to your friends, regaling them with your experience. The bourbon is not only delicious and unique, it has a story. \"People are really attracted to that at the moment,\" Williamson said. The making of Syntax Bean, who is 39, is not unlike the type of craft distillers that [Bill Owens] talked about. For many who get into the business, it's a second career. She grew up in Northglenn, a suburb of Denver. When she was 6, she started helping her mother make wine. \"She would pick every piece of fruit in the yard, commandeer every trash can in the house - she would wash them very well - and she would make wine every year.\" And, she adds, with a big hit of dry humor, \"I'm not saying it was delicious. I'm just saying it happened.\" But it planted this idea in a factory food world that you could, if you wanted to, make it yourself.
Austerity haunts tradition of annual Pumpkin Parade
Officials said organizers of the individual Pumpkin Parades at various parks around the city will have to be responsible cleaning up their own Halloween leftovers.
Teen driver to be cited
Heather Bean, 17, of 80 Holden Road, Shirley, was treated at HealthAlliance Leominster Hospital Tuesday night after the 1999 Hyundai Sonata she was driving hit a tree stump and rolled over four times before bursting into flames. The car came to rest 28 feet from the road's surface, Chief Lamb said. Alberto Ramos, 17, 206 Central St., Gardner, told emergency medical technicians he had been thrown from the car. He complained of pain in his right arm and also suffered internal injuries, Chief [Kevin D. Lamb] said. His condition was not known yesterday afternoon.
4 injured in Lancaster crash Teens rescued from burning car
Stephen S. Spofford, a Lorden Oil Co. driver, said he was pulling his oil truck out of the driveway of 95 Old Union Turnpike when the crash occurred. \"I heard a loud bang, like an explosion,\" Mr. Spofford said. One of the teen-agers, who had been thrown from the car, stepped out of the woods and told him he needed help. His friends were trapped in the car, the teen said. Mr. Spofford saw the car, only 20 feet away, barely visible in the woods. He ran over and helped Ms. [Heather Bean], who was crawling out the back window. Ms. Bean appeared to be in shock, Mr. Spofford said.
150 rally against racism : Kitchener marchers protest Heritage Front
[Bob Wismer] was one of about 150 protesters who marched peacefully Saturday morning through downtown Kitchener to protest the Heritage Front and to speak out against racism in the community. From Speaker's Corner, the group of youngsters, families, and seniors trekked right past the European Sound Imports where the Heritage Front gathered May 15. Monna Zentner, a Kitchener-Waterloo activist for equality, agrees that actions speak louder than words - especially actions taken by the Heritage Front. She told the marchers that Heritage Front members have been calling her up in the middle of night, making anonymous death threats. This story incorrectly stated that Monna Zentner, a speaker at a Kitchener rally to promote racial tolerance, said she told the group she had received calls from members of the Heritage Front in the middle of the night. - 930604/cm
Blog: Dissecting Bubba the Love Sponge's Divorce Agreement
[Heather Dawn Cole] also gets a raft of cooking utensils and equipment, plus the couple's Chevrolet Suburban and Chevy Silverado. That leaves Bubba with just a Harley and a 2001 and a 2003 Daewoo to get around. Two Daewoos? Really? At least he has three jet skis, too. In fact, Bubba also has $200,000 in rock 'n' roll and sports memorabilia, contributing to assets worth $2.9 million. Bubba reported current business income of $30,000 per month. He owns or has invested in companies like Clem Racing, Inc.; Bubba Bean's Iron Works, which he co-owns with manager Thomas Bean; and BRN Travel. The 45-year-old already has to pay $4,500 a month in child support for a son, Tyler, from a previous relationship. Heather, 37, has a daughter named Julia from a prior relationship, too, but she and Bubba have no children of their own.
Squirts win two: Miller pitches 12 strikeouts
In regular season play, The Cooperators Squirt 1 Guelph Gators won both their games this week, beating Mississauga North II 8-3 and Mississauga North I outs. [Heather Miller] and teammate Kaitlyn Douglas both had doubles, while Kyla Bunnaman contributed with a triple. The Guelph Gateway Gators lost 12-5 to