Hawais Digger Error
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Videos Podcast Blog Hawaii Aloha Travel > Hawaii Vacation Blog > OH-OH! Hawaii-Designed Quarter Has Errors OH-OH! Hawaii-Designed Quarter Has Errors Hawaii Culture & Happenings Tweet Here's a big OH-OH! for you: Look closely at the newly unveiled U.S. quarter, depicting the Big Island's Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. There's an image of a lava-spewing volcano, but look closely at the bordering text. Notice anything wrong hawaii state quarter error value with that? No, this isn't one of those classic “What's Wrong With These” photos you challenge your brain with as a kid. It's an actual U.S. mint already minted for the whole world to see. So what's wrong? Well, I blame my copyeditor-trained eyes for this, but the first thing you might notice is the missing okina in the word “HAWAII.” The name across the top has it but not the name to the bottom left. You're probably thinking, “And??” See, it's these subtle details that make all the difference. The Hawaiian language uses two diacritical markings: the okina and the kahako. The okina is a glottal stop, similar to the sound between the syllables “oh-oh.” (Which is also the sound many are making when realizing these mistakes!) The kahako is the line you see over the vowel that adds stress or lengthens it. These small details have big responsibilities. For instance, lanai is a balcony while Lanai is a Hawaiian Island. Such markings are also considered consonants. You wouldn't leave out any consonants in the English language, would you? For example, writing “ear” instead of “dear.” The same goes for the Hawaiian language. W
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& PlacesPolitics State officials frustrated with Vermont Health Connect contractorMay. 1, 2016, 5:49 am by Erin Mansfield 24 Comments Cassandra Gekas, the director of operations for Vermont Health Connect, and Gov. Peter Shumlin address reporters at a news conference Thursday in Burlington. Photo http://vtdigger.org/2016/05/01/state-officials-frustrated-with-optum-negotiating-with-speridian/ by Erin Mansfield/VTDiggerEditor's note: This story was updated at 10:30 a.m., May 2, with comment from Archetype. State officials are frustrated with the current Vermont Health Connect contractor and have been https://gaming.youtube.com/watch?v=AMdBfMwyWyQ&list=FLUmzNe1Q7cZ5Vj109STA_nQ&mweb=1 negotiating with another company that wants to stabilize the exchange, documents show.
Internal communications at the Department of Vermont Health Access in February show that top officials were hesitant to sign a quarter error reference letter for OptumInsight Inc., the current contractor on Vermont’s health exchange.RELATED STORIESLawrence Miller blows up at House Health Care CommitteeTop official says state not frustrated with exchange contractorJustin Tease, who left his post as an implementation expert for Vermont Health Connect, wrote Feb. 16 he disagreed with the statement “Optum has successfully delivered contractual obligations in a quality manner, by the hawaii volcanoes quarter identified due date, and within the agreed-upon budget.” View note On Feb. 18, he told colleagues that Optum “is not planning to be capable of supporting” a specific feature of Vermont Health Connect through a maintenance and operations contract. View note On March 9, Tease wrote that the team asked Optum to perform a task but “They don’t/didn’t have the business insight to do it in a meaningful way. We didn’t get a cost estimate from them.” View note In a Feb. 10 document released under a similar public records request, Optum wrote that software called OneGate — which the state is now seeking to detach from Vermont Health Connect — had 145 “issues,” and 70 had been “remediated.”The state of Vermont said on March 30 that it intended to remove OneGate from Vermont Health Connect in order to make the system more stable. Speridian Technologies Inc. has proposed to do the work to detach OneGate for the state of Vermont, documents say.The Shumlin administration released the documents to VTDigger following a March 24 request under the Vermont Public Records Act. The Department o