90s Snakeskin Flats Size 10, Unworn Vintage Reptile Clifford And Wills Snake Leather Tan Brown Italy Ballet Slip On Shoes - Latest

This is a cool pair of 90s vintage snakeskin leather slip on ballet flats. They are soft and supple, we believe it is real snakeskin with individual scales, in a beige and white reptile design. They have a soft ribbon trimmed opening, a white insole, a tan leather sole and a low stacked black heel. They have cute white string bows at the vamps. These shoes are in very good clean condition and look mostly unworn. The soles have virtually no wear, indicating they may have been tried on but not used. The insoles and heels are also exceptionally clean and there is one teeny pale stain noted on the left opening edge of the right shoe, but it's hardly noticeable. The shoes are stamped in gold letters, "C&W, Clifford & Wills," and on the soles they are stamped, "Made in Italy, 10, Leather Upper, Leather Sole, Leather Heel." They are a women's US size 10 and measure:Length on the inside - 10-1/4 inches,Width on the outside ball of the foot - 3-1/8 inches,Heel height - 1/2 inch.Shop for more vintage shoes and boots:https://www.etsy.com/shop/MorningGlorious?section_id=5497264View our vintage hats and handbags:https://www.etsy.com/shop/MorningGlorious?section_id=6179024See more cool vintage accessories here:https://www.etsy.com/shop/MorningGlorious?section_id=22540225

Mayor Jerry Thorne said the city is organizing an effort to look into the feasibility and cost of options to replace the two facilities adjacent to each other on the southern end of the downtown. To help guide the planning, the City Council is creating an 11-member ad hoc committee. “We have many things we need to look into, including ‘How are we going to pay for it?’ ” Thorne said last week after announcing the effort during his state of the city address. Council members and other civic leaders for years have discussed the possibility of replacing the 1988 library building that is among the most heavily used libraries in the area.

A 2011 city assessment determined Pleasanton needs a library with 73,000 square feet, more than double the 31,000-square-foot size of the current building, said Sandy Silva, the library services assistant director, Library use has been much larger than expected in 1999 when the city bolted from the county library system and took over direct operation of the library, Pleasanton library users check out 1.5 million books, journals and other items per year, a ratio of 20.9 items per capita, The checkout rate is 13 items per capita in Livermore, 13.9 in Dublin and 11.7 in San Ramon, On many afternoons, every seat in 90s snakeskin flats size 10, unworn vintage reptile clifford and wills snake leather tan brown italy ballet slip on shoes the library is taken, Silva said..

“We’re happy that people like the library,” Silva said. “We could be doing more if we were larger.”. With its space limits, the library has just 24 computer terminals for public use, a low rate compared to many other libraries, she said. Lack of space also forces the library to turn away people at public events at its 200-seat community meeting room, including a Masai dance group that performed there last month, said Councilmember Kathy Narum. “We need a larger place for community events,” said Narum.

A broad 90s snakeskin flats size 10, unworn vintage reptile clifford and wills snake leather tan brown italy ballet slip on shoes look at options for the entire Civic Center complex is needed because planning a larger library could infringe on the existing city offices at the Civic Center or the Police Department, said City Manager Nelson Fialho, The planning effort will look at alternative sites at the Civic Center as well other sites in town, City staffers had no cost estimates yet, The city also won state approval for its new housing element that designates 70 acres as sites for future affordable housing, he noted, Pleasanton’s commercial office vacancy rate declined from 15.4 percent two years ago to 14.2 percent at the end of 2014, he said..

Pushed in 2004 by residential group home directors and psychiatrists, Assembly Bill 2502 sailed to the governor’s desk with no opposition even as a succession of bills that would have scaled back prescribing died in committees. Now, with youth advocates cheering a major new legislative push to curb overprescribing in foster care, the years of setbacks are forcing an uneasy question: This time, will things finally change?. Beginning Tuesday with a Senate Human Services Committee hearing, lawmakers will consider four new bills in the wake of this newspaper’s yearlong investigation “Drugging Our Kids.”.

The newspaper found that although California tasked the juvenile court with reining in reckless prescribing as early as 1999 90s snakeskin flats size 10, unworn vintage reptile clifford and wills snake leather tan brown italy ballet slip on shoes — making it unique in the nation — the number of foster children receiving psychiatric drugs over the last decade remains at almost 1 in 4 teens, Well over half of those children were prescribed antipsychotics, drugs that are poorly studied in children and can cause debilitating side effects — but blockbuster moneymakers for pharmaceutical companies, Those numbers indicate the state has urgent work to do, said retired Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Terry Friedman, who sponsored the bill that requires California’s juvenile courts to approve all psychotropic prescriptions in foster care, Friedman said while some children need medications to manage their emotional health, the current rates are “alarming and disappointing” — given that the “clear goal” of the bill he pushed 16 years ago “was to stop overmedication.”..

“It seemed painfully evident that kids were being medicated for behavioral-control purposes and that just seemed inappropriate, excessive and dangerous,” he said. However, history shows the new controls may have difficulty passing if they increase workloads, raise costs or run into opposition from groups concerned that easy access to medications could be hampered. Lobbyists representing doctors and group homes have long had powerful voices in the state Capitol. “Care delayed is care denied,” said Randall Hagar, a lobbyist for the California Psychiatric Association, “so we would look at the time elapsed between the time a doctor said, ‘I think this kid needs a med,’ and when they get the med. And if that’s too long, then bad things happen.”.

Carroll Schroeder, executive director of the California Alliance of Child and Family Services, said the residential group homes he represents have similar concerns, Any new controls, 90s snakeskin flats size 10, unworn vintage reptile clifford and wills snake leather tan brown italy ballet slip on shoes he said, should not prevent a child from getting “the right treatment or therapies at the right time in the right dosage.” The 2004 bill his alliance sponsored required the courts to rule on med requests within seven days, addressing what his members described as harmful delays in prescription authorizations..



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