"We are incredibly lucky that trade in essential goods, in agriculture products, in pharmaceuticals is flowing back and forth as it always had," he said. Just kiss your nonessential Canadian dreams goodbye: Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said today that the ban on nonessential travel between our two countries will remain in effect until the world has better control over the pandemic. The deal still needs regulatory approval and a thumbs-up from Slack's shareholders, but the merger "creates a cloud giant that can better compete with Microsoft," notes Axios. Slack's co-founder and CEO Stewart Butterfield will continue leading the company. We've got a big tech merger: Salesforce plans to buy Slack for nearly $28 billion.
“More than two sides,” she says, “you’re putting up a barrier to airflow, so that is concerning from an exposure perspective.”
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Public Health’s Spitzer explains, “We know the virus can build up in the air of poorly ventilated spaces … an enclosed space that happens to be outdoors should also be open enough to allow free airflow.” Three-sided structures are allowed, he says, “only if they include an opening large enough to ensure cross ventilation.” Baker, however, is not comfortable with this latter COVID-19 judgment call. Outdoor structures should be open on at least two sides: If you’re dining outdoors all warm and cozy in Seattle right now, that’s no good. What about a warm outdoor dining bubble, like the ones at San Fermo in Ballard? Here's Seattle Times's Bethany Jean Clement and two specialists on the safety of outdoor dining: A post shared by your semi-regular reminder that takeout is your safest dining option.