Saturday, January 15, 2011
Dream A Little Designs
Welcome to Dream A Little Designs! Elegant art for those who adore beautiful things with a romantic, whimsical,or French flair.Goddess art, angel art...
My boutique contains hand painted wineglasses & coffee mugs (any theme can be done!), embellished wine vase bottles,angel art, jewelry, tea stained stationary, original custom portraits of icons (on request),original photography and prints, watercolor word art (poems/quotes/songs) fashion top hats or fedoras!
www.dreamalittledesigns.etsy.com/
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Bring it Kauai...your own bag that is...
http://www.kauai.gov/tabid/530/Default.aspxn October of 2009, the Kauai County Council adopted a new law that requires all retail establishments to provide only recyclable paper bags or reusable bags to their customers effective January 11, 2011. The purpose of the legislation is to reduce the significant impacts of plastic checkout bags on the environment, which include litter, an increasing burden on the landfill, and threats to marine life.
The ordinance encourages customers to bring their own reusable bags while shopping, and does not preclude retailers from offering checkout bags for sale to those customers who do not bring their own bags.
In October and November of 2010, public information meetings were held in order to discuss the legislation and draft rules. A public hearing to consider adoption of the draft rules will be held on January 11, 2011 at 1:00 at the County Moikeha Building, Meeting Room 1.If you have questions, please call Allison Fraley of the County Solid Waste Division at 241-4837.
The ordinance encourages customers to bring their own reusable bags while shopping, and does not preclude retailers from offering checkout bags for sale to those customers who do not bring their own bags.
In October and November of 2010, public information meetings were held in order to discuss the legislation and draft rules. A public hearing to consider adoption of the draft rules will be held on January 11, 2011 at 1:00 at the County Moikeha Building, Meeting Room 1.If you have questions, please call Allison Fraley of the County Solid Waste Division at 241-4837.
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
For Kauai Newspaper
http://www.forkauaionline.com/
From Joan Conrow...
I also think it’s good that there’s a brand new newspaper in town, called For Kauai. It has a print edition that initially will come out monthly, as well as an online version that will be updated regularly. The paper is still taking shape, in terms of content, but with reporting veterans like Anne O’Malley, Jan TenBruggencate and me contributing the articles, it promises to be a bit more solid than the competition.
And make no mistake, For Kauai is definitely out to compete with both TGI and MidWeek. It’s a freshened up, newsier, less fluffy reincarnation of Kauai People, the hugely successful weekly newspaper that made a lot of money for its previous owner, The Honolulu Advertiser. When the Star-Bulletin took over Tiser, it turned Kauai People into MidWeek and decided to milk that cash cow even harder, which meant cutting back on the Kauai copy (and thus freelancing fees) and replacing it with a lot of Honolulu-based content — the column by blowhard Bob Jones is a good example — that Kauai folks don’t care about.
Readers have rejected it, but most importantly, so have local advertisers. That’s why they’re abandoning MidWeek and going with For Kauai, which is published by Barbara Bennett, the woman who started Kauai People and went on to sell the ads for MidWeek. She was so upset by the loss of our community paper and the shabby treatment she received at the hands of MidWeek/Star-Advertiser management that she decided to launch her own publication.
And happily, since advertising pays the bills, her accounts eagerly followed.
The result is a publication that, unlike its competitors, can claim to be “100% Kauai news and information” — or as its name suggests, For Kauai.
So I hope you’ll take a look and spread the word and give us feedback, as well as time to build and smooth out the rough edges. It’s a work in progress, but finally, the Garden Island has a locally-owned alternative that's truly For Kauai.
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