CuraeSoft Launches New Platform coAmplifi to manage a hybrid workforce

Published Sun, 01 Dec 2024 03:32:50 GMT

CuraeSoft Launches New Platform coAmplifi to manage a hybrid workforce The California-based software development firm, CuraeSoft, announces the launch of its new platform, coAmplifi, designed to manage hybrid workforces. The launch is scheduled for April 2023. coAmplifi is a workforce utilization and productivity management platform that enhances hybrid and remote work. The new SaaS platform fosters a dynamic workgroup environment, allowing organizations to manage remote workforces, including international workforces.CuraeSoft CEO, Mark Parinas stated that, “The pandemic has drastically changed the way people work, many are not keen on returning to traditional workspaces. CuraeSoft’s coAmplifi is an innovative solution that creates a virtual building where remote workers can collaborate, communicate and work together, regardless of their locations. This platform will help organizations overcome the challenges of managing a hybrid workforce, including wage and hour disputes, productivity management, and communication gaps.”According to a study by Upwork...

SF Giants’ Alex Cobb ‘honored’ by No. 2 nod, plans to debut new pitches vs. Yankees

Published Sun, 01 Dec 2024 03:32:50 GMT

SF Giants’ Alex Cobb ‘honored’ by No. 2 nod, plans to debut new pitches vs. Yankees PEORIA, Ariz. — Alex Cobb began 2022 in the fifth and final spot in the Giants’ No. 5 starter, an indication of tough road that preceded his signing in San Francisco. This year, he earned quite the promotion: Cobb, 35, will slot in behind Logan Webb as the Giants’ No. 2 starter, a statement of how far he’s come.“I feel honored to get the ball that game, really just with where my career has been,” Cobb said after his latest and most effective spring outing, tossing five scoreless innings against the Mariners in a 0-0 tie on Thursday. “Early in my career, I definitely felt like I was a top-of-the-rotation type of pitcher. I had some tough surgeries that I had to battle back from. … I’m just thankful that I’ve had that ability to come back, because there were some dark times in the mind trying to figure out what I was doing wrong.”The Giants open the season March 30 in the Bronx against the Yankees.While their Opening Day star...

Three generations celebrate Bellarmine Barber Shop’s 70th anniversary

Published Sun, 01 Dec 2024 03:32:50 GMT

Three generations celebrate Bellarmine Barber Shop’s 70th anniversary When Gabe Gonzales opened Bellarmine Barber Shop in 1953, he wasn’t thinking about starting a business that would last seven decades. He just wanted to stop working 16-hour days for another barber shop so he could spend more time with his young and growing family.“My wife decided it. She said, ‘you’re not going to any of the kids’ games or taking us out on Sundays or weekends’,” Gonzales, now 96, told me as we sat in the shop this week.The decision paid off in ways Gonzales couldn’t have foreseen. He spent more time with his wife, Lupe, and their four children, and eventually took them on vacations to Europe and South America. And he built a business with deep roots in Santa Clara County, cutting hair for mayors, judges, CEOs and athletes.Retired barber Gabe Gonzales, 96, left, visits Bellarmine Barber Shop, Thursday, March 16, 2023, now run by his daughter Esther Faria, center, and granddaughter, Stacey Gonzales. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area...

Concord starting fresh — again — in search for Naval Weapons Station master developer

Published Sun, 01 Dec 2024 03:32:50 GMT

Concord starting fresh — again — in search for Naval Weapons Station master developer CONCORD — The largest development project in the Bay Area needs a new master developer — again.Concord City Council members this week discussed next steps in finding a new team to develop the Naval Weapons Station, a massive project 20 years in the making and which is expected to take four decades to complete.The new suitor will be Concord’s third in less than three years. In late January, the council voted 3-2 to cut ties with Concord First Partners following revelations of internal strife and legal battles within the Seeno family, troubles first reported by this news organization.Council members said they had lost faith and trust in the Seenos, a powerful family who operate an East Bay building empire. The family’s Discovery Builders Inc. led the Concord First Partners consortium, along with Lewis Management and Oakland developer Phil Tagami’s California Capital & Investment Group.Abandoned by the U.S. Navy in the late 1990s, the 5,200-acre weapons station of...

Feds charge San Jose man in deadly fentanyl overdose in Fremont

Published Sun, 01 Dec 2024 03:32:50 GMT

Feds charge San Jose man in deadly fentanyl overdose in Fremont FREMONT — A San Jose man was jailed on a federal drug charge after the FBI alleged he sold pills secretly laced with fentanyl to an unsuspecting bar patron in Fremont, who died minutes after taking the drugs.The U.S. Attorney’s Office for Northern California announced Thursday that Ian Edward Parrish, 28, has been charged with one felony count of illegally distributing fentanyl. He made his initial court appearance in an Oakland courtroom Thursday and was remanded to federal jail custody by Magistrate Judge Kandis Westmore, according to court records.According to an FBI investigation underpinning the criminal charge, Parrish was at a Fremont bar Aug. 16 when he approached the reported victim, a 46-year-old man from Cambridge, Ohio, and offered to get them drugs.Parrish showed them a clear plastic baggie, which he told the Ohio man and his friend contained Adderall pills and Percocet pills he referred to as “Perc 30’s,” the FBI stated in an affidavit acc...

San Jose restaurant owner accused of forcing waiter to house co-workers, threatening deportation

Published Sun, 01 Dec 2024 03:32:50 GMT

San Jose restaurant owner accused of forcing waiter to house co-workers, threatening deportation A former San Jose restaurant worker has filed a lawsuit accusing his previous boss of forcing him to house two fellow employees in his small one-bedroom apartment, threatening to get him deported and saying he would “destroy him and his family” for disobedience.Afwan Mohammed claims his boss’s actions left him with panic attacks, dreams that someone was suffocating him, and “severe depression and anxiety” that put him in the hospital for a week under medication. He is still taking depression medication, the lawsuit alleges.“I was just hopeless,” Mohammed, 23, said by phone, adding that while working at Karimi Restaurant he failed two courses at De Anza College, where he’s studying business while employed full time now in a bank. “I couldn’t focus on my studies, I couldn’t do anything.”He said he quit his job as a waiter for a position as a bank teller and moved out of the apartment, but remains as the lease hold...

Thousands of PG&E customers remain without power across Bay Area

Published Sun, 01 Dec 2024 03:32:50 GMT

Thousands of PG&E customers remain without power across Bay Area (KRON) -- Around the Bay Area, PG&E says thousands of customers remain without power following Tuesday's atmospheric river storm. Many of the outages are in the South Bay and along the Peninsula.PG&E reduced further the number of Bay Area customers without power to 43,794 as of Thursday morning, according to a company announcement. More than half of the total are still in the South Bay, where 22,415 are without power. 2 dead, traffic snarled following multiple Bay Bridge incidents Elsewhere those without power include 14,006 customers on the Peninsula, 7,249 in the East Bay, 41 in the North Bay and 83 in San Francisco. The total is down from nearly 160,000 as of 8 a.m. Wednesday. On Peach Hill Road in Saratoga, PG&E crews were replacing a high voltage power pole that was damaged during Wednesday's storm. "We're on day three of restoration efforts here in Santa Clara," said PG&E spokesperson Myra Tostado, who said installing a power pole in soil saturated by se...

Evacuation orders lifted for parts of Monterey County

Published Sun, 01 Dec 2024 03:32:50 GMT

Evacuation orders lifted for parts of Monterey County Monterey County officials have lifted evacuation orders for the Arroyo Seco area west of Greenfield and for the town of San Ardo, according to an announcement issued late Wednesday night. The Monterey County Sheriff's Office lifted the orders, according to the announcement. When will it stop raining in California? Here’s what meteorologists are saying "Evacuation Orders remain in effect for homes west of the slide (Jorgenson Flats) and south of the river from Sycamore Flats (Grandma Flats) until further notice." To view an evacuation map, see the Monterey County Emergency Information App. Copyright © 2023 Bay City News, Inc.

Accused San Jose drug dealer linked to deadly overdose appears in court

Published Sun, 01 Dec 2024 03:32:50 GMT

Accused San Jose drug dealer linked to deadly overdose appears in court (KRON) -- A San Jose man accused of selling fake "M30" pills that killed one of his buyers in Fremont was taken into custody on Thursday. Ian Edward Parrish, 28, of San Jose, made his first court appearance in Oakland before U.S. Judge Kandis Westmore. The judge remanded Parrish into custody. According to a criminal complaint, Parrish sold two counterfeit Percocet pills to a person in a bar in Fremont. "The counterfeit pills were, in fact, laced with fentanyl," prosecutors wrote.After consuming just one pill, the person overdosed and died. Parrish was later arrested and charged with distributing fentanyl. If convicted, he faces up to 20 years in prison. The rise of fentanyl in San Francisco The DEA has an ongoing anti-drug campaign, "One Pill Can Kill." Fentanyl, a highly potent opiate, if often diluted by drug dealers with cutting agents to create counterfeit pills that purport to mimic the effects of Oxycodone, Percocet, and other drugs. However, very small variations in the am...

What’s next for Alaska’s Willow oil project? AP explains

Published Sun, 01 Dec 2024 03:32:50 GMT

What’s next for Alaska’s Willow oil project? AP explains JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) — The Biden administration’s approval earlier this week of the largest new oil project in years on Alaska’s petroleum-rich North Slope was immediately met by lawsuits seeking to stop the Willow project. Lawsuits filed by environmental groups and an Alaska Native organization seek to overturn Monday’s approval of three drill sites and up to 199 total wells for the ConocoPhillips Alaska project. The lawsuits allege the U.S. government failed to adequately consider alternatives to greenlighting development.WHAT IS THE WILLOW PROJECT?The 30-year project could produce up to 180,000 barrels of oil a day. That is significant because Alaska’s economic fortunes are tied to the boom-and-bust cycles of oil. The flow of oil through the trans-Alaska pipeline is a fraction of what it was at its height in the late 1980s. Willow also is currently the largest proposed oil project on federal lands. WHERE IS WILLOW?Willow is on Alaska’s remote North Sl...