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Millions of people in the U.S. who havent gotten the COVID-19 vaccine could soon have a new reason to roll up their sleeves: money in their pockets.President Joe Biden is calling on states and local governments to join those that are already handing out dollars for shots. New York, the nations biggest city, started doling out $100 awards on Friday.The president, health officials and state leaders are betting that the financial incentive will spur hesitant people to get the shot just as the highly contagious delta variant sweeps through parts of the country 鈥?particularly those with low vaccination rates 鈥?and as the number of daily inoculations falls sharply from its April high.Jay Vojno, getting his shot Friday in New York, said he figured some kind of incentive was coming, so he was willing to hold off on getting vaccinated until it did.Bradley Sharp was among those getting a shot Friday in Times Square. The soon-to-be college student had been putting it off, but knew he would have to get vaccinated because the school hes going to attend requires it. I thought Id come here and get it today and get my hundred dollars because Im going to get it anyway, Sharp said.Other states are beginning programs to hand out money too. New Mexico helped pioneer cash incentives in June and is starting another $100 handout for vaccinations on Monday. Ohio is offer <a href=https://www.cup-stanley-cup.pl>stanley cup ing $100 to state employees who get vaccinated.Minnesotas $100 incen
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CARACAS, Venezuela 鈥?Geraldine is tired of hearing that she should be grateful for the apartment the Venezuelan government gave her last year. With water leaking through the ceiling and no gas supplies, she wishes she had never moved in.The 31-year-old mother of two said she was given keys, but not ownership papers, for the apartment here after spending three years in a government shelter for those left homeless by torrentia <a href=https://www.stanleycups.pl>kubki stanley l rains in 2010. She now spends much of her day lining up for the few subsidized goods left in the shops, before climbing the eight floors to her flat and cooking on a small electric stove. I feel that for the past year, all we have done is survive, Geraldine said, asking that her last name not be published for fear of government reprisal. Conditio
stanley website ns were better in the shelter, even when we had to share a bathroom. A government spending boom in the two years to April 2013 provided Geraldine with her new home and secured election victories for then-President Hugo Chavez and, after his death last year, for President Nicolas Maduro. Since then, government spending has stalled, inflation has tripled to more than 60 percent and a lack of dollars has led to shortages of everything from toilet paper to drinking water. As poverty levels rise, people like Geraldine say they ar
stanley ca e losing faith in Maduro.Venezuelas poverty rate rose to 32 percent at the end of last year from a record low 25 percent in 2012, according to the National Statistics Institute, or INE. That