What labor shortage? How SLO businesses are recovering from the pandemic staffing challenge
After struggling with labor shortage due to the pandemic, SLO businesses are finding various ways to solve this issue.
After struggling with labor shortage due to the pandemic, SLO businesses are finding various ways to solve this issue.
Erica Rojas Ericabrojas18@gmail.com Connor Morris struggles with the coffee jitters. He started adding CBD to
by Devan Spiegal The idea of Tastry came to Katerina Axelsson while she was
Fatigued after days of competition, animal science senior Helen Dubee stood anxiously with her teammates as the awards were announced at this year’s Sierra-Cascade logging conference.
“We were all so tired because it had been three days of just non-stop working and doing all the events,” she said. “When they told us we won, we kind of all freaked out like ‘oh my god, it actually worked.’”
When the sawdust settled, the Cal Poly logging team brought home their first championship title since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. The team now has its sights set on the Association of Western Forestry Clubs (AWFC) national conference in Montana this April.
By: Juliete Seo It all started with a plate of buttery noodles. On a
Nate Long, Cal Poly alum and SLO native, opens new contemporary-American restaurant in downtown San Luis Obispo. (Photo by Madison Bellah | One Foot Out)
Find out how one college student started a hard seltzer brand at 19.
By Cameryn Oakes On the night of Jan. 21, Tseten Wangyal didn’t get a second
California is the first state to make the removal of a condom without partner consent, commonly known as ‘stealthing,’ illegal. Victims can now sue in civil court for this form of abuse.