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ALISON BOLOGNA TO SPEAK AT APRIL 10TH MEETING OF THE RI EXECUTIVES ASSOCIATION

ALISON BOLOGNA TO SPEAK AT RI EXECUTIVES ASSOCIATION APRIL 10TH
The RI Executives Association will host Alison Bologna at their Tuesday, April 10th meeting, from noon to 1:30pm at the Greenwood Inn in Warwick, RI.
Bologna is a news anchor at NBC 10 and the founder of Shri, a yoga outreach organization which serves more than 8,000 students each year including adults living with developmental disabilities, veterans, children in schools, men and women in shelters, and those in recovery.  More than half of Shri’s programs are fully, self-funded through the non-profit organization Bologna founded in 2012, Shri Service Corps.
She is a graduate of the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University, with advanced degrees from Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism and from Harvard University.
The luncheon meeting is open at no charge to those interested in membership in “Execs”, whose business category is not already represented.  For more information go to www.RIExecs.com. Or contact Nancy Thomas at nthomas@tapestrycommunications.com.

GALA 2018

Walk the Red Carpet and be prepared to be dazzled at the GALA 2018 Event where you will enjoy dinner, live entertainment, dancing, door prizes and so much more, while supporting your community Chamber. The Tri-Town Chamber Annual Auction will be held at Lakeview Pavilion in Foxboro on Thursday April 12 from 6:00pm – 10:30pm.

 

What you can expect at our “GALA;  Fabulous Dinner, Live Entertainment by Occasional Brass & Strings, Door Prizes, Back Stage Photo, Wine & Craft Beer Wall, Silent Auction, Live Auction and more. The Dress for this event is Cocktail Attire / Black Tie Optional, great excuse to dress up and shine!

 

Silent Auction tables are building with a variety of items from; Overnights from local to Florida, sporting event tickets from Patriots, Red Sox to the Dell Championship, concert experiences and shows at Xfinity, Gillette, Fenway, MMAS and the Wang to name a few, gift baskets galore, gorgeous jewelry… There will be plenty to choose from!

 

The GALA Sponsors: Title Partner is Mansfield Bank, the Presenting Partners are; Xfinity Center, Dell Technologies Championship, Mansfield Crossing & North Easton Savings Bank, the Wine Wall partner is Horizon Beverage, The Silver Partners are;  Barrows Insurance Agency, Hockomock YMCA, New England Ice Cream and Walpole Co-Operative, the Bronze Partner is Massachusetts Golf Association and the Partners are; Betro & Company, PC and the Workbar at the Norwood Staples

 

Tickets for the event are $75 or Buy 2 Tickets for $140, so you can bring your friends. For ticket information call 508-339-5655 and speak to Ruthie or Kara. Or purchase online at our website www.tri-townchamber.org   Support the Chamber who supports the Communities of Foxborough, Mansfield and Norton! Any questions please call, Kara Griffin, Executive Director of the Tri-Town Chamber of Commerce.

 

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About Us:  The Tri-Town Chamber of Commerce promotes and champion’s business growth and vitality for those who live, visit and work in our community. The Chamber focuses on; creating a strong local economy, promoting the community, providing networking opportunities, representing the interest of business with legislative action. We are governed by a volunteer Board of Directors representing a cross-section of the business community.

Tri-Town Chamber of Commerce celebrates Moe’s Southwest Grill with a Ribbon Cutting.

We congratulate Moe’s Southwest Grill on the opening of their second location in Foxborough at Forbes Crossing. Supporting Moe’s at the event were State and Local Town officials as well as Tri-Town Chamber of Commerce members.   “The new location is bright and beautiful, the Southwest fair is amazing!  Kara Griffin, Executive Director of the Tri-Town Chamber of Commerce.

 

From the second you walk into a Moe’s, you’ll notice there’s something different. You actually feel welcomed. Ever since our employees at the first location in Atlanta, GA in the year 2000 shouted “Welcome to Moe’s!” – Which probably scared the bejesus out of those first guests – that phrase has embodied our entire culture. Everybody is welcome at Moe’s. Except, of course, fugitives.

 

4 Foxborough Blvd  Foxborough, MA, 02035 (774) 215-5449

[DATA SPOTLIGHT] Walmart and Dick’s Raise Minimum Age for Gun Buyers to 21

Two of the nation’s leading gun sellers, Walmart and Dick’s Sporting Goods, took steps on Wednesday to limit their sales of firearms, thrusting themselves into the middle of the polarizing national debate over gun control.

Walmart, the biggest gun seller, announced late in the afternoon that it would not sell any gun to anyone under 21 years of age. It also said it would no longer sell items resembling assault-style rifles, including toys and air guns.

Early in the day, Dick’s said it was immediately ending sales of all assault-style rifles in its stores. The retailer also said that it would no longer sell high-capacity magazines and would also require any gun buyer to be at least 21, regardless of local laws.

Under federal law, a person must be at least 21 to buy a handgun from a firearms dealer. But 18-year-olds can buy semiautomatic rifles and other firearms.

The dual announcements, made two weeks after 17 students and staff members were killed in the school shooting in Parkland, Fla., were among the most significant actions taken on guns by corporate America. Both retailers said their decision were a response to the shooting.

Continue reading the main story

Earlier, President Trump met at the White House with a bipartisan group of lawmakers and called for a series of gun control measures, some of which the National Rifle Association has vigorously opposed.

Walmart and Dick’s acted after a number of major companies moved last week to dissociate themselves from the N.R.A. Hertz car rental, MetLife insurance and Delta Air Lines, among others, publicly ended their relationships with the organization.

In a news release late Wednesday, Walmart noted that in 2015 it discontinued the sale of high-powered rifles, including AR-15-style weapons, in its stores in the United States. But at the time, Walmart sidestepped any controversy involving gun politics, attributing its decision to lower customer demand for the military-style rifles.

This time, Walmart directly linked its action to the shooting in Florida, saying, “In light of recent events, we’ve taken an opportunity to review our policy on firearm sales.”

Top Walmart executives made the decision and then informed the board, a company spokesman said.

Walmart sells guns in roughly half of its nearly 4,000 supercenters, the company said, but the sheer scale of its customer base gives its decision significant heft. Every week, more than 150 million people around the country shop at Walmart.

Dick’s decision was announced by Edward Stack, the 63-year-old chief executive whose father founded the store in 1948. Mr. Stack made clear that he was deliberately steering his company directly into the storm over gun reform.

“When we saw what happened in Parkland, we were so disturbed and upset,” Mr. Stack said in an interview. “We love these kids and their rallying cry, ‘Enough is enough.’ It got to us.”

He added, “We’re going to take a stand and step up and tell people our view and, hopefully, bring people along into the conversation.”

The decision drew immediate — and passionate — reaction on social media. By midday, the number of Twitter messages containing Dick’s name had jumped 12,000 percent from the average over the previous 10 days, according to Sprout Social, a social media management, advocacy and analytics software platform.

GRAPHIC

With AR-15s, Mass Shooters Attack With the Rifle Firepower Typically Used by Infantry Troops

When a gunman walked into a Florida school on Feb. 14, his rifle let him fire in much the same way that many American soldiers and Marines would fire M16 and M4 rifles in combat.

 OPEN GRAPHIC

About 79 percent of the tweets had a positive sentiment, Sprout Social said, including supportive messages from Hollywood actors and actresses.

But the company’s critics posted their plans to no longer shop at the retailer, some closing their tweets with “#boycott.”

Investors did not appear to worry about a backlash, as Dick’s stock spent much of Wednesday trading about 1.8 percent higher before finishing up 0.69 percent.

Mr. Stack said Dick’s hoped to move the conversation beyond social media and into the political realm. As part of its stance, the company is calling on elected officials to pass what it called “common sense gun reform”: raising the minimum age to buy guns to 21, banning assault-type weapons and so-called bump stocks, and conducting broader background checks that include mental-health information and previous interactions with law enforcement.

This is not the first time that Dick’s has made changes in response to a school massacre. In 2012, after a gunman killed 26 people at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., Dick’s removed assault-style rifles from its main stores. But a few months later, the company began carrying the firearms at its outdoor and hunting retail chain, Field & Stream.

As of Wednesday morning, the company said, AR-15-style and other semiautomatic rifles will no longer be sold in its 35 Field & Stream stores or on its websites. And this time, Mr. Stack added, the changes will be permanent.

Mr. Stack said the retailer had begun scouring its purchase records shortly after the identity of the suspected Parkland killer, Nikolas Cruz, became known. The company soon discovered that it had legally sold a gun to Mr. Cruz in November, though it was not the type used in the school shooting.

“But it came to us that we could have been a part of this story,” Mr. Stack said. “We said, ‘We don’t want to be a part of this any longer.’”

That response raised rounds of discussions with the company’s top executives and its directors, all of whom backed the decision to take a stand, Mr. Stack said.

He said Dick’s remained a staunch supporter of the Second Amendment and would continue to sell a variety of sport and hunting firearms. Although he has never been a member of the N.R.A., Mr. Stack said, he is a gun owner and enjoys trapshooting.

But when it comes to selling guns to individuals under 21 or stocking assault-style rifles, Mr. Stack said, his company is done. “We don’t want to be a part of a mass shooting,” he said.

The company said that it had not decided what to do with its inventory of assault-style rifles but that they would not be sold in the marketplace.

Legal experts said they saw no likely challenges to Dick’s decision to stop selling assault-style rifles. But the decision to stop selling weapons to anyone under 21, however, could be tested in court.

Adam Winkler, a professor of constitutional law at the School of Law of the University of California, Los Angeles, said Dick’s could be challenged in lawsuits claiming a violation of laws that bar age discrimination. Although federal civil rights laws do not apply, some states, including New York, prohibit businesses from denying goods and services on the basis of age.

“Don’t be surprised if an aggressive attorney general of a gun-friendly state brings an age-discrimination claim against Dick’s,” Professor Winkler wrote in an email response to questions.

The company said that it believed its decision was in accordance with the law and that it was instituting the policy immediately.

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