Notification
Fighting homelessness, ferry heroes, advanced batteries, helping hurricane victims
- [登録者]State of Washington
- [言語]日本語
- [エリア]Olympia, WA
- 登録日 : 2024/10/11
- 掲載日 : 2024/10/11
- 変更日 : 2024/10/11
- 総閲覧数 : 55 人
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- 尔湾会计师事务所 - 美国和日本税务 ・ 20 多年的会计 ! 纳税申报、公司组...
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美国 ・ Hiromi K. Stanfield,注册会计师,在日本有20年的工作经验,拥有税务硕士学位,曾在四大税务审计公司工作,是加州注册会计师,协助个人・和小型企业・进行税务
会计工作。我们致力于通过详细的在线交流!,帮助您实现财务稳定和业务增长。 +1 (949) 281-1219Hiromi K. Stanfield, CPA Inc.
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享受夏威夷的乐趣多100倍 ! ! Wi-Fi路由器正成为国际旅行的必需品,有了Vision Mobile,您在夏威夷当天就能租到一个 ! ! 只需一个路由器就能高速连接您的智能手机、个人电脑或平板电脑互联网连接 ! ! 最多可连接 5 台设备 ! ! 租赁过程也非常简单 ~ ! 在威基基中心的威基基购物广场 3F 领取,在威基基中心的威基基购物广场 3F 归还。! ! 只需短短 5 ...
+1 (808) 922-1010Vision Mobile Hawaii Inc.
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浓郁的酱油拉面加入更多鸡汤,蒜香猪骨拉面加入更多背部脂肪,物美价廉的手工饺子和香脆炸鸡。
蒜香猪骨拉面加更多背油, 物美价廉的手工饺子和香酥炸鸡。 +1 (626) 587-0034Ramen Boiler Room
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我们专门为居住在国外的小学生、初中生和高中生提供高考在线辅导。 VARTEX EDUCATIONS 的教师拥有在美国教授理科和英语的丰富经验,可以为考虑以归国留学生身份申请难度较高的初中、高中和大学或参加普通高考的学生提供支持。 虽然近年来在纽约和洛杉矶等日本侨民家庭较多的大城市开设了日本补习学校,但在农村地区,乘车一两个小时才能找到补习学校,或者根本没有补习学校的情况仍然很普遍。特别是,...
+1 (347) 644-5968VARTEX EDUCATIONS
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- 这是深受当地人和游客喜爱的铁板烧餐厅 Yakiyaki Miwa 的夏威夷分店,...
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夏威夷为数不多的铁板烧特色餐厅之一。 在这里,您可以品尝到在夏威夷新鲜采摘的烧烤蔬菜和海鲜,以及在您眼前精心烹制的上等牛排,最后还可以品尝到许多三和独创的粉末菜肴。 主厨来自日本,会讲日语,您可以放心地在这里用餐。
+1 (808) 983-3838Yaki Yaki Miwa
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- 日语综合医学 ・ 消化内科、肝病科。如果您担心消化系统癌症、肠胃炎、溃疡、肝炎、...
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这是一家家庭医生诊所,您可以用日语轻松咨询任何问题。 ●特殊人群 食道癌、胃癌、大肠癌、肝癌、胰腺癌等消化系统恶性肿瘤患者。 乙型肝炎或丙型肝炎患者或对其有顾虑的人。 喉咙不适、口臭、吞咽困难、烧心、打嗝、腹部饱胀 ・腹胀、胃痛。全身腹痛,包括上腹痛、下腹痛、腋窝痛。背部 ・ 背痛、消化不良。体重异常减轻或增加、便秘、腹泻、吐血、下血、痔疮、肛门疼痛和瘙痒。 ● 除一般内科治疗外,还提供...
+1 (949) 654-8963オデッセイASC内視鏡センター・大原医院
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- タイ国内にある日系企业、また日系企业で働く人々を主な対象とし、共済事業を通じてコ...
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泰国Japanese Development Association (TJDA)は、タイ王国の首都バンコクに社団法人として、2011年4月、タイ王国政府内務省より認可を受けてされました。
+66 (02) 713-6656Thai Japanese Development Association
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- 我们在纽约和新泽西用日语提供精神・心身治疗、药物处方、心理治疗(和心理咨询)。无...
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他们中的许多人面临着各种压力,例如对外国的不熟悉、对新工作或新学校的不适应、文化和语言障碍以及与日本家人和朋友的分离。高度的压力会导致各种精神障碍。 您是否有这些症状 ? 情绪低落、疲劳、倦怠、失去乐趣、失去兴趣、孤独、易怒、内疚、空虚、食欲不振、食欲增加、焦虑、恐慌、恐惧症、压力、易怒、感觉模糊、愤怒、失眠、嗜睡、噩梦、注意力不集中、心烦意乱、坐立不安、失落、悲伤、厌食、暴饮暴食、头晕、麻...
+1 (201) 809-3508精神科・心療内科医 松木隆志
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- Roadside Station Furakusato Tomiyama 2F]...
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? 本店由近藤牧场直接管理,该牧场以游牧方式饲养日本稀有品种的奶牛 ! 还出售披萨、意大利面和牛奶等其他产品🐄 请在访问二津或馆山时顺便光顾。!
+81-470-57-3909近藤牧場 富楽里店
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- 从2011年!开始为日本人提供汽车服务,从高价购车、新车购买谈判、二手车销售、长...
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如果您对汽车有任何需求,请联系 Aloha Auto Depot 的 Koyama,他精通日语和英语,是夏威夷难得的双语人才。如果您想立即出售您的汽车,请立即联系我们。我们可以在您还车日期之前取车,并在当天以支票形式付款!洽谈并办理购买新车或出售二手车的手续,以满足您的需求。我们负责处理所有有关汽车买卖的繁琐手续。我们在日本拥有 7 年的汽车买卖经验和业绩,我们将倾听您的要求,以最合适的形式买卖您...
+1 (808) 304-6444アロハオートデポ | Aloha Auto Depot
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- 千叶县木更津的古典芭蕾舞学校,拥有 65 年的历史 !。
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自成立以来,我们每天都致力于让学生体验古典芭蕾舞这一综合艺术形式的原始舞台。 在温馨的空间里体验古典芭蕾,感受 65 年的经验和成就?。
+81-80-7883-4901山戸もと子バレエスタジオ
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- 库阿洛阿・牧场是位于夏威夷・欧胡岛东北部的一个野外活动・中心。它曾被夏威夷旅游业...
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库阿洛阿牧场(Kualoa ・ Ranch)是位于夏威夷东北部欧胡岛(Oahu)・的一个野外活动・中心。这里有大约 10 种不同的活动和海上运动可供选择,包括骑马、全地形车和电影外景地之旅。 库亚洛阿广袤的原野被陡峭的峡谷环绕,经常被用作好莱坞电影和电视剧的拍摄地,包括《侏罗纪・公园》、《哥斯拉》和《珍珠港》。在这里,您可以尽情享受各种活动和海上运动,感受与银幕上一模一样的风景。
+1 (808) 237-7321クアロア・ランチ
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- 日本托儿所 ! Park Slope 的日本托儿所
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幼儿园 ! 2015 年成立,布鲁克林 ・ 位于公园坡的日式托儿所。3个月大的儿童均可报名。 日语托儿所。孩子们可以体验和学习日本的活动、文化、艺术 ・ 音乐 ・ 烹饪和其他丰富的活动。我们提供温馨的环境,就像第二个家一样。
+1 (917) 428-5151Yoko's Daycare
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浅蓝色的大门是这家精选商店的标志。♪ 店内除了出售手工制品外,还有出售糖果、酒类和其他食品饮料的各种商店。在这里,不仅能与物邂逅,还能与人邂逅,是一个奇妙的空间。
+81-4-7092-4778Sola street
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这对夫妇正在为他们的关系苦苦挣扎,他们想修复关系,但又想找个人作为中间人,或者他们已经决定离婚,但又无法与伴侣商量。 我们可以帮助这类夫妇解决问题。由于是法务大臣认证的 ADR 机构,您可以放心使用这项服务。日本顾问和律师在您出国期间提供在线支持。
+81-3-6883-6177家族のためのADRセンター離婚テラス
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State homelessness efforts are working – and changing lives
Gov. Jay Inslee visits a tiny home village.
Gov. Jay Inslee and First Spouse Trudi Inslee tour a state-funded Tiny Home Village in Lacey.
Washington’s efforts to reduce homelessness are working [ https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/homeless/wa-found-a-better-way-to-remove-homeless-encampments-will-it-stick/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ]. The state’s Encampment Resolution Program brought more than 1,200 people inside from homelessness. State housing investments have yielded thousands of emergency housing units. Youth homelessness has fallen 40 percent statewide since 2015.
Ruth was a resident of Unity Commons Shelter in Olympia when Gov. Jay Inslee toured her apartment last year. It was small, but it was hers, she said. A framed folded flag stood on the mantle for her departed husband, a veteran. She and all her neighbors had formerly experienced chronic homelessness, but now had a roof overhead thanks to an investment from the state’s Housing Trust Fund.
James was a resident of Community House on Broadway [ https://medium.com/wagovernor/inslee-previews-budget-strategy-to-take-down-fentanyl-b1c247d53ef1?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ] in Longview when the governor stopped by. He’d spent the better part of his life battling addiction until he found stability and began recovery at CHOB. He’s been in recovery for five years now. A recent Rapid Capital Housing Acquisition grant will expand CHOB’s capacity so they can open their doors to more locals like James.
Marie, Phuong, Steve, and Nick [ https://kcrha.org/news-success-at-state-right-of-way-sites/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ] were each among the 1,200 people brought inside by the state’s Encampment Resolution Program. The program funded 46 encampment cleanups statewide and over 70 percent of encampment residents accepted offers for shelter. For Marie and Phoung, a roof overhead was a welcome change after several years spent living outdoors in a dangerous roadside encampment.
Donald Gene Castro was a Vietnam War veteran and a long-haul truck driver. When he lost his job, he lost his primary income. And when he lost that income, he lost stable housing. He spent his later years on the street until he died in 2020. In Auburn this year, a new emergency shelter opened in his name: ‘Don’s Place.’ [ https://www.compasshousingalliance.org/2024/02/a-sweet-celebration-dons-place-grand-opening/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ] The former motel was purchased and converted by King County through their Health Through Housing initiative. From now on, more people like Don will have a place to go.
State and local investments in emergency housing have soared in recent years. They are now paying off. Dangerous roadside encampments are disappearing. Their former occupants now live in tiny home villages and supportive housing financed by state and local programs. Many are moving on to permanent housing. They’re accessing treatment and supportive services. They’re graduating from job training programs [ https://wsdotblog.blogspot.com/2024/09/training-for-success-employment.html?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ]. Overdose death is starting to decline [ https://www.kiro7.com/news/local/overdose-deaths-declining-first-time-more-than-five-years/7MYRBEHCW5HW5PKZTCQZQNFFVU/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ]. At least 10,000 fewer youth are sheltered today who weren’t by 2016 measures. At the state level and the personal level, state investments in homelessness are making a difference.
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Ferry heroes recognized during ‘Life Ring Awards’
A group of Washington State Ferries workers stands on deck for a photo
Gov. Jay Inslee, WSF Assistant Secretary Steve Nevey, and WSDOT Secretary Roger Millar pose for a photo with WSF employees honored during the 'Life Ring Awards' this year.
More than 100 times last year, Washington State Ferries workers saved the day. They responded to medical emergencies. They assisted stranded vessels. They saved people, they saved cats [ https://www.youtube.com/watch?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery&v=x7qmxEJbMqQ ], and they saved dogs [ https://komonews.com/news/local/sinclair-inlet-rescue-washington-state-ferries-wsf-3-people-and-dog-pet-canine-walla-walla-vessel-united-states-coast-guard-passengers-registered-nurse-crewmembers?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ]. WSF honored several heroic employees Wednesday during their annual ‘Life Ring Awards’ ceremony [ https://youtu.be/nefXxFMPkes?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ].
The crew of the MV Suquamish launched a rescue boat in August to help struggling divers near the Mukilteo terminal. The crew of the MV Chelan assisted a man who suffered a seizure in January. The crew of the MV Kennewick performed lifesaving CPR on a man found unresponsive in the passenger cabin. The crew of the MV Samish collected passengers from a stranded vessel in March. And workers at the Colman Dock intervened to stop a man from jumping off a slip into Puget Sound.
“If you had to have a heart attack, the best place to do it would be a hospital. The second-best place, I guess, would be aboard a Washington State Ferry. Time and time again, they have been there to help in a moment of peril,” said Gov. Jay Inslee.
“Having served at sea for half of my life, I know there’s nothing more rewarding than sticking your hand out to help somebody in distress,” said U.S. Coast Guard Sector Puget Sound Commander Capt. Mark McDonnell.
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UW launches new “Testbed” for battery innovation
A woman operates scientific equipment in a laboratory at the University of Washington.
Gov. Jay Inslee suited up to tour the University of Washington Clean Energy Testbeds’ new battery development wing, equipped with a dry room and other specialized equipment for the iteration of pouch-cell batteries.
It’s been a good week for science at the University of Washington. One UW professor earned a Nobel Prize [ https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/science/the-nobel-prize-in-chemistry-is-being-awarded-in-stockholm/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ] in chemistry, and the UW Clean Energy Institute Friday unveiled its new plan [ https://www.geekwire.com/2024/uw-expands-battery-research/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ] to position itself at the fore of global battery development.
UW’s Washington Clean Energy Testbeds [ https://www.geekwire.com/2017/inside-uws-cutting-edge-clean-energy-testbeds-researchers-seek-breakthroughs-help-planet/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ] opened in 2017 to bring clean energy research to market faster. The program is an open-access model that affords small startups and big corporations space, unique instruments, and UW expertise to accelerate research and development of clean technologies. The Testbeds are supported by $7.5 million from the state's Climate Commitment Act.
Next year, the Testbeds facility will open a specialized wing for prototyping cutting-edge batteries.
Today, battery scientists can deliver a proof of concept in small coin cells. Testing a coin cell might prove the chemistry, but perhaps not the engineering required for scaled commercial applications. The new Testbeds wing will be equipped with a series of specialized machines necessary to produce ‘pouch cell’ batteries. They’re larger than a coin cell – about the size and shape of a Pop-Tart packet. And because a pouch cell is an authentic commercial format, it’s a more instructive proof of concept for curious investors.
“With a coin cell, you can write a paper, and maybe win a grant. But that’s not enough for a car company. You need to prove that your new technology performs at the scale of one of their batteries,” said Owen Freed, communications specialist at the UW Clean Energy Institute.
The gulf between a proof of concept and commercial viability is commonly referred to as the “valley of death” for new product development. The UW’s Clean Energy Testbeds work to bridge that gap so that more promising innovations can make the leap into our everyday lives.
“The beauty of these Testbeds is that they serve enterprise as a whole - it does the work that individual companies can't afford to do,” said Inslee. “It's a model of public investment that can help private enterprise blossom.”
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News you might have missed:
Washingtonians chip in for hurricane relief
Hurricanes Helene and Milton have taken turns battering the Southeast. Across the country, Americans are supporting the recovery effort [ https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-solutions/2024/10/10/hurricane-milton-help/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ]. Secretary of State Steve Hobbs recently opened a secure portal to accept donations [ https://www.sos.wa.gov/about-office/news/2024/washington-residents-employees-now-able-donate-toward-hurricane-helene-relief-efforts?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ] from Washington residents, public employees, and retirees. Washington Task Force One sent 80 volunteers [ https://www.kiro7.com/news/local/washington-task-force-one-red-cross-volunteers-head-coast-disaster-relief/76EMYWLXYNDAVIZH776MQDSSHA/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ] to prepare for Hurricane Milton’s landfall, bringing 90,000 pounds of equipment. The American Red Cross Northwest Region also sent more than 50 volunteers to help. The Washington Military Department sent a Type 3 All-Hazards Incident Management Team and at least two disaster reservists to South Carolina to assess damage.
“These are examples of people in our communities and our state who are raising their hand, seeing what’s happening on TV, and saying I need to be there and be able to help,” said American Red Cross Northwest Region Communications Director Betsy Robertson.
Husky chemist honored with Nobel Prize
Seattle-born University of Washington biochemist David Baker was awarded the Nobel Prize [ https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/science/the-nobel-prize-in-chemistry-is-being-awarded-in-stockholm/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ] in chemistry this week. His research decoding novel proteins “unraveled a grand challenge in chemistry,” according to Nobel Committee for Chemistry chair Heiner Linke.
Baker helped create a computer program, ‘RoseTTAFold [ https://www.bakerlab.org/2021/07/15/accurate-protein-structure-prediction-accessible/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ],’ that uses artificial intelligence deep learning to predict protein structures using only limited information. The protein structures decoded by the software may contribute to human health in areas such as cancer cell growth and inflammation disorders. RoseTTAFold’s code is openly available on GitHub, assisting the entire global research community.
DOH partners with local responders to address opioid crisis
The Washington State Department of Health is partnering with local first responders in several counties to launch a pilot program to administer buprenorphine [ https://doh.wa.gov/newsroom/department-health-partners-local-responders-tackle-opioid-crisis?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ] to treat opioid use disorder and reduce the risk of overdose. The medication alleviates the immediate symptoms of withdrawal so that patients can better engage with treatment and services. Through this program, first responders will be able to save more lives and help more people begin treatment.
"The Department of Health is determined to help Washingtonians live healthy and fulfilling lives, and to stop this opioid crisis from robbing those lives from our neighbors, friends, and family members," said Secretary of Health Umair A. Shah.
Commerce awards $3 million to boost housing production pipeline
Sixteen Washington cities and four counties are to receive a total of $3 million from the state Department of Commerce [ https://www.commerce.wa.gov/commerce-awards-3-million-to-boost-housing-production-pipeline/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ] to streamline local building permit review processes. Siting and permitting delays are often-cited contributors to slowed housing production. The new funds will help these localities digitize their permitting processes and reduce the time required to approve permits.
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