The instacart strike is national but the amazon one is only at one warehouse on Staten Island, so most deliveries will probably be fine.
You're right, it'd be a real tragedy if they built too many homes and just anyone could afford to live in Vancouver.
> Sagarwala, according to the ruling in Washington, D.C. U.S. District Court, received an H-1B visa in 2012, but those visas are tied to specific employers. So when she sought to change jobs in August last year, the…
They've got an interesting definition of city... Seattle is all one city, but DC has Georgetown, Capitol Hill, and Dupont Circle in addition to a label for the entire city.
Probably because he went to Reed College there before dropping out.
> I often wonder why new highways / lanes of highway don't get assessed in economic terms, but I suspect much of the day-to-day work would not be justifiable in such terms. This is so frustrating. It feels like debate…
Jack is short for John.
Title is misleading--the article only discusses metro areas. I'm interested in seeing the stats within city limits.
The instacart strike is national but the amazon one is only at one warehouse on Staten Island, so most deliveries will probably be fine.
You're right, it'd be a real tragedy if they built too many homes and just anyone could afford to live in Vancouver.
> Sagarwala, according to the ruling in Washington, D.C. U.S. District Court, received an H-1B visa in 2012, but those visas are tied to specific employers. So when she sought to change jobs in August last year, the…
They've got an interesting definition of city... Seattle is all one city, but DC has Georgetown, Capitol Hill, and Dupont Circle in addition to a label for the entire city.
Probably because he went to Reed College there before dropping out.
> I often wonder why new highways / lanes of highway don't get assessed in economic terms, but I suspect much of the day-to-day work would not be justifiable in such terms. This is so frustrating. It feels like debate…
Jack is short for John.
Title is misleading--the article only discusses metro areas. I'm interested in seeing the stats within city limits.