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September 23, 2024 — The five candidates competing for two seats on the Fort Bragg City Council participated in a public forum on September 19, addressing key community issues such as the Skunk Train litigation, Airbnb regulations, and the possible annexation of the Noyo harbor. The event, held at Fort Bragg City Hall, was organized by the League of Women Voters.
September 16, 2024 — On September 9th, the Fort Bragg City Council held a hearing on a local coastal program amendment and coastal development permit for the area commonly referred to as the millsite. The changes alter the zoning on several parcels. If approved by the Coastal Commission, the change will allow the Noyo Center to build on its portion of the site, place the Noyo Headlands trail systems under parks and recreation zoning, and change the zoning on two parcels owned by the Sherwood Valley Tribe to medium-density residential.
August 30, 2024 — Investigators determined the cause of a fire that burned the interior of a beloved Noyo Harbor seafood restaurant early Wednesday morning to be accidental.In other fire-related news, the Ukiah City Council closed a loophole in the city code to prohibit setting fires for cooking or recreational use — unless the owner of the property sets the fire. Meanwhile, a Ukiah man accused of setting fire to vegetation in the area of the McClure Subdivision Road is being held in the county jail with a bail set for $527,000.
August 19. 2024 -- Fort Bragg City Council heard plans for an upcoming Pomo “Biggest Time” event on the Noyo Headlands, explained the three confusing sales tax items on the consent calendar, adopted a draft strategic plan, received a report on the financial status of the employee retirement plan, approved new firearms for the police department, and hired consultants and engineers for three new water reservoirs at the August 12th City Council meeting. City Clerk Diana Sanchez updated the council on applications for the two open council seats that are up for election in 2024. As of the initial deadline of August 9th, the City received three applications, however, as Mayor Norvell is not seeking reelection the deadline was extended to August 14th, and Sanchez expected additional applicants.
"They're Coming! Humanoids From the Deep!" It's June and we are proudly kicking off our "Roger Corman Tribute Month" with one of his most notorious and trigger warning packed 80s Horror Flicks! Join Henrique and David this week as they travel to Noyo, California where a quiet fishing village becomes the target of mysterious sea monsters who are killing the men and assaulting the women. The town must come together with a visiting biologist and fight back to fend them off in 1980's "HUMANOIDS FROM THE DEEP" !Directed by Barbra Peeters & Jimmy T. Murakmi, plus starring Doug McClure, Ann Turkel, & Vic Morrow. Hear our hosts discuss the incredible legacy of Roger Corman, what the problem with the original cut of the film was according to Corman, what makes "Humanoids" a 14-year old's ideal Horror film, how the first 10 minutes perfectly sets the tone by murdering kids and dogs, plus how close we were to getting a sequel! It's the kick off of Roger Corman Tribute Month and also David's Birthday Movie Pick on this episode of DYEM you don't wanna miss! Visit our website: DoYouEvenMovie.com Email us: doyouevenmoviepod@gmail.com LIKE us on Facebook: Do You Even Movie? - PodcastFollow Us on Instagram: @DoYouEvenMoviePod Twitter: https://x.com/dyempodWatch HUMANOIDS FROM THE DEEP on Tubi:https://tubitv.com/movies/452490/humanoids-from-the-deep
"They're Coming! Humanoids From the Deep!" It's June and we are proudly kicking off our "Roger Corman Tribute Month" with one of his most notorious and trigger warning packed 80s Horror Flicks! Join Henrique and David this week as they travel to Noyo, California where a quiet fishing village becomes the target of mysterious sea monsters who are killing the men and assaulting the women. The town must come together with a visiting biologist and fight back to fend them off in 1980's "HUMANOIDS FROM THE DEEP" !Directed by Barbra Peeters & Jimmy T. Murakmi, plus starring Doug McClure, Ann Turkel, & Vic Morrow. Hear our hosts discuss the incredible legacy of Roger Corman, what the problem with the original cut of the film was according to Corman, what makes "Humanoids" a 14-year old's ideal Horror film, how the first 10 minutes perfectly sets the tone by murdering kids and dogs, plus how close we were to getting a sequel! It's the kick off of Roger Corman Tribute Month and also David's Birthday Movie Pick on this episode of DYEM you don't wanna miss! Visit our website: DoYouEvenMovie.com Email us: doyouevenmoviepod@gmail.com LIKE us on Facebook: Do You Even Movie? - PodcastFollow Us on Instagram: @DoYouEvenMoviePod Twitter: https://x.com/dyempodWatch HUMANOIDS FROM THE DEEP on Tubi:https://tubitv.com/movies/452490/humanoids-from-the-deep
Daniel Kirchert gilt als versierter Kenner der Automobilbranche mit umfassender Expertise in Produktstrategie, Aufbau von Händlernetzen und Joint-Venture-Operationen. Nach Stationen bei BMW, Nissan, Inifiniti, dem Elektroauto Start-Up Byton sowie Evergrande Auto geht Kirchert mit Noyo Mobility seinen eigenen Weg. Noyo positioniert sich als eine Schweizer Plattform für Service und Vertrieb, die chinesischen Elektrofahrzeugen den Eintritt in den europäischen Markt ebnen soll. Über sein Start-Up, den globalen Elektromobilitätsmarkt und einiges mehr habe ich mich mit Daniel im Elektroauto-News Podcast ausgetauscht. Im gemeinsamen Gespräch eröffnen wir den Blick auf Perspektiven und Herausforderungen der Elektromobilität, insbesondere der Einfluss und die Expansion chinesischer E-Auto-Hersteller nach Europa. Daniel teilt seine reichhaltigen Erfahrungen und Einblicke aus seiner langjährigen Karriere in der Automobilindustrie und seiner tiefen Verbindung zu China bereits zu Beginn mit mir. Er erläutert, wie China über die Jahre hinweg durch gezielte Industriepolitik und massive Investitionen in die Elektromobilität und Batterietechnologie zu einem führenden Akteur in der E-Auto-Branche avancierte. Diese Entwicklungen mündeten in der Gründung von Start-ups und der Transformation etablierter Hersteller, die sich zunehmend auf Elektrofahrzeuge fokussierten. Da man sich in China durchaus bewusst war, dass gerade im Verbrenner-Bereich nichts mehr zu reißen war. Mit Noyo verfolgt Daniel das ambitionierte Ziel, hochwertige chinesische Elektroautos nach Europa zu bringen. Er unterstreicht die Bedeutung erschwinglicher E-Autos, die breiten Verbraucherschichten zugänglich sind, um die Elektromobilität in Europa voranzutreiben und einen Beitrag zu einer nachhaltigeren Zukunft zu leisten. Ein zentraler Diskussionspunkt unseres Gesprächs waren die Herausforderungen und Strategien, um chinesische E-Autos erfolgreich in Europa zu etablieren. Daniel betont die Notwendigkeit eines soliden Vertriebs- und Servicenetzes sowie einer engen Zusammenarbeit mit lokalen Händlern, um europäischen Kunden ein vertrauenswürdiges und zufriedenstellendes Erlebnis zu bieten. Der Aufbau von Vertrauen und die Überwindung von Skepsis spielen dabei eine entscheidende Rolle. Eine Kombination aus Offline-Präsenz und digitalen Angeboten, wie einer Kunden-App und Online-Verkaufsplattformen, soll dabei helfen. Wir diskutieren in der Podcast-Folge auch über die zukünftige Entwicklung des Marktes und die Rolle von E-Autos mit Reichweiten-Verlängerung (Range Extender). Daniel ist überzeugt, dass reine Elektrofahrzeuge dank fortschreitender Batterietechnologien und sinkender Kosten die Zukunft dominieren werden. Abschließend diskutieren wir Noyos Skalierungsstrategien und Expansionspläne über die Schweiz hinaus nach Deutschland, Österreich und den Rest Europas. Er legt dabei großen Wert auf einen nachhaltigen und bedachten Markteintritt, der langfristigen Erfolg und Kundenzufriedenheit in den Vordergrund stellt, anstatt kurzfristige Absatzziele zu verfolgen. Dies kannst du dir im Gespräch gerne selbst anhören.
If you're aged 11 to 25 and love music, National Open Youth Orchestra (NOYO) are looking for people to audition for their regional ensembles which rehearse in London, Birmingham, Bristol, Bournemouth and Cardiff. Amelia talked to NOYO programme manager Beatrice Hubble, NOYO Seaboard RISE player Ben Evans and Ben's mum Claire to learn more. Musicians can apply until the 24th March. Learn more about NOYO by visiting their website https://noyo.org.uk/ Image shows six smiling musicians posing with their acoustic and electronic instruments. On the lower right of the image there is a wheelchair user with a Clarion instrument on her iPad, with coloured shapes on the screen representing musical notes on the screen. An accordion player sits in the lower centre, and a cello player sits in the lower right. A clarinet player stands in upper left, a trombonist stands in the upper centre, and a violinist stands in the upper right.
The Mendocino Railway, locally called the Skunk Train received a federal loan to repair Noyo Tunnel 1. The Tunnel was initially closed in 2013, reopened briefly, and closed again in 2015. Mendocino Railway shares the 31.4-million-dollar loan with the Sierra Northern Railway. Due to a pending lawsuit between Mendocino Railway vs The City of Fort Bragg and the California Coastal Commission, we were unable to get interviews with the Railway or other local groups. This piece pulls from a June 2021 interview with Robert Pinoli, the president of Mendocino Railway to explain what happened to the tunnel and his plans, at that time, to reopen it.
Insurance has a long enrollment process that goes against the modern technology experience in all other areas of our lives, says National Practice Leader Gay Davis of Noyo.
Tony chats with Gary Davis, National Practice Leader at Noyo. Noyo is building the digital infrastructure to bring health insurance enrollment into the modern era. Noyo replaces today's manual data entry and cumbersome legacy systems with a powerful API platform that enables faster, more accurate data exchange between health insurance platforms and their carrier partners.Gary Davis: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gary-davis-1716a2a/Noyo: https://noyo.com/Video Version: https://youtu.be/B7P0AH3GOmg
This episode's Community Champion Sponsor is Catalyst. To virtually tour Catalyst and claim your space on campus, or host an upcoming event: CLICK HERE---Episode Overview: Joining us on today's episode is Shannon Goggin, CEO and co-founder of Noyo, a passionate innovator and entrepreneur on a mission to build the digital infrastructure necessary to power modern benefits experiences.With over a decade focused on developing technology to tackle meaningful impacts on people's daily lives, Shannon started Noyo to ensure everyone can easily understand and utilize their healthcare benefits.While together, we discuss the inspiration behind Noyo's founding and Shannon's advice for entrepreneurs seeking large-scale change by both envisioning an ideal future state and deeply understanding current real world constraints.Shannon also explains Noyo's role as a bridge helping antiquated systems adapt to enable much needed consumer-centric innovation around benefits experiences.Through this pursuit, Shannon aims to eliminate common pain points like surprise bills and improve trust through correct, readily available benefits information.Join us for this exciting look at the data fueling the next generation of benefits. Let's go! Episode Highlights:Envisioning an ideal future state and understanding current constraintsBridging modern innovation and antiquated legacy systemsEliminating common benefits pain points like surprise billsImproving access to correct benefits informationData powering next-generation benefits experiences About our Guest: Shannon Goggin is the CEO and co-founder of Noyo, the benefits data platform built to power next-generation benefits experiences for everyone. Shannon has been building software for nearly a decade and is passionate about putting technology to work on issues that have a meaningful impact on people's daily lives. Shannon started Noyo to make sure everyone can easily understand and use their healthcare and benefits every day. She lives in San Francisco, where Noyo is headquartered.Links Supporting This Episode:Noyo Website: CLICK HEREShannon Goggin LinkedIn page: CLICK HEREShannon Goggin Twitter page: CLICK HERE Mike Biselli LinkedIn page: CLICK HEREMike Biselli Twitter page: CLICK HEREVisit our website: CLICK HERESubscribe to newsletter: CLICK HEREGuest nomination form: CLICK HERE
Do you often find yourself wrestling with the myriad of challenges in benefits administration? Tune into our fascinating conversation with Shannon Goggin, co-founder and CEO of Noyo, as we traverse the landscape of benefits experience enhancement for customers. Shannon shares the inception story of Noyo, a visionary company that simplifies data exchange across divergent systems and how their mission is to enable secure data sharing with the goal of delivering the right information to the right people, at the opportune time.Ever felt exasperated by the industry's stumbling blocks such as the absence of universally accepted standards or the herculean task of processing an ocean of information? We've got you covered! We dive into the heart of these issues and discuss how Noyo provides comprehensive solutions for companies longing to integrate a seamless benefits experience into their software. We also unravel the knotty issue of premium leakage and delve into the transformative potential of technology, particularly AI, in boosting operational efficiency and reducing the burden on employers. Catch the wave and join us in exploring the monumental influence of AI in managing data and the urgent requirement for speedy carrier set-up and how Noyo's pioneering technology simplifies this process.
A well-designed benefits program can help employees manage their health and financial wellbeing, which can improve their overall wellness and quality of life.When employees have a clear understanding of their benefits and can utilize them effectively, it can lead to increased productivity, reduced absenteeism, and lower healthcare costs. A positive employee benefits experience is important to an employer because it can have a helpful impact on employee morale, job satisfaction, and overall engagement with the company. This, in turn, can have a significant impact on the bottom line. In this episode of the HRchat show, we present a benefits innovation story from Ameritas, one of Noyo's carrier customers who is reaping the rewards of Noyo's data platform, which is allowing Ameritas to unlock the power of its once-siloed benefits data to deliver an enhanced benefits experience for all involved: employers, employees, Ameritas staff, as well as its broker partners. Employers want to deliver the best benefits experience to employees so they clearly understand their benefits and can proactively utilize them for enhanced population health among their associate base.Our guest this time is Karen Gustin, Executive VP - Group Division at Ameritas Life Insurance Corp.Questions For Karen Include:You've said an API strategy is the great equalizer in the insurance industry – tell us moreWhen was the moment you realized that partnering with a data platform specializing in API connections was the right path forward for Ameritas?How have you managed Ameritas's API strategy and why did you make the choices that you did?Was it hard setting the strategy within your organization? And how did you go about finding the right partner?Ameritas was an early adopter of the Noyo platform and API-powered data exchange. What's been the impact over the years? Any success metrics you can share?For other insurance carriers looking to innovate their data strategies, the choice often comes down to heavily investing resources to build in-house connections or partnering with an external resource. As we've mentioned earlier before, Ameritas chose to partner with Noyo. What would be your advice to other benefits carriers now faced with the same choice, and why?We do our best to ensure editorial objectivity. The views and ideas shared by our guests and sponsors are entirely independent of The HR Gazette, HRchat Podcast and Iceni Media Inc.
Dennis chats with Noyo CEO and Co-Founder, Shannon Goggin. Listen as they discuss how poor data quality prevents the benefits industry from delivering the modern experiences today's consumers want. Addressing these challenges at the carrier and ben-admin level with clean, always updated enrollment data lets HR professionals and brokers truly remove friction for members — while paving the way for frictionless benefits that are easy to understand and easy to use. Shannon Goggin is the CEO and co-founder of Noyo. Before starting Noyo, she was a product manager, building benefits software that showed off the powerful role technology can play in improving people's experience with their benefits. Shannon lives in San Francisco, where Noyo is based. visit https://www.noyo.com/ for more info.
It's not just a platform, it's a culture. In this episode of Marketing Mondays, Andreea Borcea interviews Vanessa Sierra, VP of Marketing at Noyo, about what they do and how they are marketing and positioning this benefits platform. Noyo's mission is to create a seamless platform experience that allows carriers, providers, and customers easy access to the benefits available to them easily and understandably. Vanessa shares her journey with Andreea, explaining what she learned from every position she's been in and how Noyo found her. She discusses the challenges of marketing to different types of users and why community building is becoming crucial in the health and wellness industry. Tune in to this episode to listen to how Noyo will let you access your employee benefits in an accessible way and how they're marketing its platform! Click this link to the show notes, transcript, and resources: outcomesrocket.health
March 8, 2022—Anna Neumann is well known along the coast for her many leadership roles in the fishing industry. She has taken on a new role as harbormaster at the Noyo Harbor. In this interview she explains the role and challenges of being a harbormaster, how the harbor is funded and her plans for the future.
Noyo is a connections gateway for modern insurance. Co-founder Shannon Goggin started life in small-town Maine, then moved on to the tech world of Silicon Valley.
February 17, 2022--Hosts Annie Esposito and Steve Scalmanini talk with with George Reinhardt and Jim Tarbell of The Grassroots Institute of Mendocino County about the Future of the Noyo Headlands (previously the Georgia Pacific mill site) in Fort Bragg.
For Mendocino County Public Broadcasting, this is the KZYX News for Friday, Oct. 15. I'm Sonia Waraich. It's a Wednesday afternoon in late September and technicians from San Diego are installing a desalination unit at the Fort Bragg water plant. Heath Daniels works for the city and will be responsible for operating the desalination system when the Noyo River's water becomes too salty. The river water can become salty during king tides, which happen when the moon's gravitational pull causes water levels to rise several inches. That's been an issue because the river hasn't provided enough fresh water to dilute the saltwater that gets into it during those events, which prevented the city from being able to pump water from the river. For the moment, the rain's eliminated the need for the city to use the desalination system.Daniels says the desalination system is standing ready for when the streamflow in the Noyo does get too low again. City Manager Tabatha Miller told the Fort Bragg City Council on Tuesday that they did end up using it recently for a few days.The rain and the arrival of the desalination system have left the city in a secure enough position to downgrade its drought emergency from a Stage 4 water crisis to a Stage 2 water alert. Miller says the drought isn't over yet, but people in the city don't have to conserve as much as they were during the summertime.There's no need to get water trucked in from Ukiah anymore either. The city put a stop to that last week.On top of all of that, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is predicting Mendocino County has a pretty good chance of getting its usual amount of rainfall through the rest of the year.The impacts of the drought might be less severe for the moment, but catastrophic wildfires are still raging across the state. Scientists say the solution is to fight fire with fire and now the state agrees. Last week, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed into law the last of three bills that are going to make it easier to conduct a prescribed burn on private land. Lenya Quinn Davidson is with the UC Cooperative Extension and an authority on prescribed fires.Experts recognize we need more of these fires on the landscape in California, so the state decided to make it easier for tribes and private landowners to conduct burns without having to worry about paying the firefighting costs if the fire got out of control. Twenty million dollars was also set aside in the state wildfire budget for a prescribed fire claims fund.Quinn-Davidson says the fact that you couldn't get insurance made it really difficult to do a prescribed burn even with increased investment from the state. But she says the benefits of conducting prescribed fires can't be overstated. A prescribed fire project in Sequoia National Park was able to change the behavior of the wildfire there and protect the General Sherman Tree, which is the largest tree on Earth.For KZYX News, I'm Sonia Waraich, a Report For America corps member. For all our local coverage, with photos and more, visit KZYX.org. You can also subscribe to the KZYX News podcast, wherever you get your podcasts.
Noyo, California is suffering a strange series of mishaps. Dogs are being killed, people are going missing and a boat just blew up in the harbor without warning. Add in a new controversial canning facility being built and tempers are running high. To try to ease some of the tensions, the locals set out to discover what's causing the missing local canine and human population. They were probably hoping for a saboteur, or nice, mundane serial killer. I'm sure mutant monsters weren't even on their radar. But they are now.... This episode is also available as a blog post: http://randommoviemusings.com/2019/12/04/humanoids-from-the-deep-1980/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/randommoviemusings/support
From Mendocino County Public Broadcasting, this is the KZYX News for Monday, Aug. 16. I'm Sonia Waraich.Last month was the hottest July ever recorded on Earth and in Mendocino County, according to NOAA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,. The federal agency is also predicting there's going to be lower than average rainfall in Mendocino for at least the next six months so the drought's not going anywhere.One of the groups working on addressing the drought locally is the Mendocino Countywide Drought Task Force. The task force is made up of Supervisor John Haschek, Supervisor Glenn McGourty and Josh Metz, who was contracted by the county to coordinate the drought response. They met on Thursday by Zoom and gave updates on how the drought is being felt and addressed around the county.Josh Metz started with some good news – the county is making progress in addressing one of the major issues its facing because of the drought, how to move water from one part of the county to another.Ukiah and Fort Bragg started the push for a regional approach to the drought through mutual aid agreements. Those agreements are expected to make it easier for cities to share water by without facing regulatory hurdles.Metz said the initial goal will be to transport ten 6,000-gallon truck loads of water from Ukiah to Fort Bragg for a total of 60 to 70,000 gallons per day.There's also been talk of using the Skunk Train to transport water from inland to the coast. The idea hit some roadblocks around cost, but it looks like funding has become available for the project through the state's Department of Water Resources.Not everyone in attendance was happy with that idea. During public comments, one resident of the Willits Valley called in and told the task force to lobby elected officials to implement solutions that won't tax people living inland.Supervisor Glenn McGourty didn't foresee the depletion of groundwater being a problem in the immediate future since that water supply is monitored by the Ukiah Valley Basin Sustainable Groundwater Management Agency.Move water around the county in an efficient and cost-effective way has been central to the drought response. That's because even though the entire county is facing an extreme drought, not every part of the county is experiencing the drought the same way. Ukiah is faring pretty well through the drought because of early investments the city made in building up its water resources. The city has reduced how much water it pulls from the Russian River by 75 to 80% and still has water available to spare to help other areas around the county.But cities like Fort Bragg are concerned. The city still has a steady supply of water but last Monday the Fort Bragg City Council kicked up its water emergency to Stage 3, calling for water users in the city to conserve 10% more than they had been since mid-July.City officials are worried about the lack of rainfall predicted in the region in the coming months because of how it will impact the Noyo River. Fort Bragg relies on the Noyo River as one of three main water sources. The Noyo usually experiences its lowest streamflow at this part of the year and doesn't get replenished until there's significant rainfall. In the meantime, high tides can cause the water in the Noyo to become too brackish to be pumped for drinking water by the city. Fort Bragg Public Works director John Smith said the city's is expecting its desalination system to arrive next month. That will allow the city to make the brackish water drinkable after high tide events.For the KZYX News. I'm Sonia Waraich, a report for America corps member. For all our local stories, with photos and more, visit KZYX.org. You can also subscribe to the KZYX News podcast where you get your podcasts.
Rabbi Noyo is a non-denominational, radically inclusive rabbi, who happens to be a bisexual demiwoman. After considering cantorial school and then committing to rabbinical school, they are now excited to be in their new position working as a Hillel rabbi. She is also a Zumba instructor and is active on TikTok using #ProgressiveClergy and #RabbisOfTiktok. Rabbi Noyo's TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rabbi.noyo Gender Exercise Twitter Thread: https://twitter.com/HTHRFLWRS/status/1342558548065214466 Support the podcast: patreon.com/introducingmepodcast Have a question or want to guest host? Email: introducingmepodcast@gmail.com Find all the podcast social media and more on the website: https://www.introducingmepodcast.com Artwork: instagram.com/graphite.vmb Music/Editing: youtube.com/colemanrowlett
July 28, 2021 — The collapse of the kelp forest off the north coast is part of a long-running sequence of destabilizing disasters. The kelp is being devoured by purple urchin, a native species whose predators have disappeared from the food chain. The otters, which ate the larger urchin, were hunted to near regional extinction for their fur, and the pycnopodia sunflower sea star, which formerly feasted on smaller urchin, have withered away from a wasting disease. Now the urchin, unchecked, have eaten themselves into overpopulation and near starvation, a condition they can survive in for years. The result is expanses of urchin barrens, with nothing but purple urchin where entire underwater ecosystems once thrived in kelp forests. Earlier this month, Congressman Jared Huffman introduced the Kelp Act, which would provide millions of dollars in grants to fund conservation, restoration, and management projects to restore kelp. Sheila Semans, Executive Director of the Noyo Center for Marine Science in Fort Bragg, has a list of priorities for how to put some of that money to use, from figuring out how to remove more urchin from the water and turn it into a sustainable commodity, to restoring the sea star — and learning more about the dynamic between the urchin and kelp. There are some glimmers of hope, with a few beds of kelp hanging in there even during the worst years of the urchin barrens.
In this episode, we are excited to host Shannon Goggin, Co-Founder and CEO at Noyo. Noyo is a complete API platform for the health insurance industry, transforming data exchange across the insurance ecosystem. In this podcast, Shannon talks about how Noyo aggregates data for insurance companies while helping members have amazing consumer experiences around their health insurance and benefits. She explains the process of what's going on at the back-end of the software and solving the visibility and transparency of member coverage. She also shares about a study with an insurance company and the impressive results showing how Noyo reduces processing time for both members and insurance companies, lesser issues in terms of coverage, better efficiency, and better coverage confidence. Click this link to the show notes, transcript, and resources: outcomesrocket.health
In this episode, Noyo Co-Founder and CEO Shannon Goggin joined us to talk about Noyo’s API-driven solutions that power data exchange between the leading benefits administration platforms and a plethora of carriers, from industry veterans to new solutions like Brella.Visit https://www.joinbrella.com/podcast for more notes and links to resources mentioned in this episode. If you’re a Texas-based broker or employer we’d love to chat. Email sales@joinbrella.com to get in touch.
April 30, 2021 — The county moved into the yellow tier this week, which means movie theaters can open with 50% maximum capacity, more if everyone can prove they’ve been vaccinated or have a recent negative test. That’s just in time for the independently owned Noyo Theatre in Willits, which is reopening May 4, the 81st anniversary of its premiere. Owners Lois and Jeff Hoover are history buffs and movie lovers. To them, the two are inextricable. We’ll hear about how the theater has come through history and current events, and how the Hoovers plan to keep it going into the future.
Making a sea or tree change often means uprooting from your existing community to move to a smaller coastal or inland community. - Noyo zagat lori zoon goí mani oíldeki onór comaj óttu duré zon goí. Funi so gaúñ elaka lro zon ór baabote..
Making a sea or tree change often means uprooting from your existing community to move to a smaller coastal or inland community. - Noyo zagat lori zoon goí mani oíldeki onór comaj óttu duré zon goí.Funi so gaúñ elaka lro zon ór baabote..
This week's episode is brought to you by Oracle NetSuite (sign up for a personalized product tour at www.netsuite.com/scale) and Indeed (get a $75 credit for your job post at www.indeed.com/scale). Shannon Goggin is the CEO & Co-Founder of Noyo, a technology company that uses software to enable data exchange between health insurers and apps that help employers and consumers manage their health insurance and other benefits. Shannon has raised money from top-tier Silicon Valley investors and is a leading voice on the changes and trends in the health insurance space. Noyo works with leading national insurance companies and cutting edge technology companies. Connect with Shannon Goggin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/shannongoggin/ Connect with Poya Osgouei: https://www.linkedin.com/in/poyaosgouei/ Connect with Robby Allen: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robbyallen/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/uncharted1/support
Trout Unlimited opened up two miles of previously obstructed Central Coast coho salmon habitat on the Noyo river, providing hope for the endangered species.
Episode 22 Music from the Dark–In Memory of Harold Budd Playlist Harold Budd, “Style Is,” an interview excerpt (with music) (cassette, 1983 Les Disques Du Crépuscule). Part of a longer production by Wim Mertens for the New Musical Festival in Chicago, July 1982, featuring music and interviews (by Mertens). The festival featured performances by Peter Gordon, Jon Gibson, Meredith Monk, Jill Kroesen, Glenn Branca and others. The recording was dedicated to John Cage, and intended to be released on his 70th birthday, 1982. Harold Budd, “Noyo” (1970 unreleased), excerpt. From a late-night electronic music mix produced by the editorial staff of Source Magazine--Music of the Avant Garde. Harold Budd, voice, Buchla Modular synthesizer, jazz ensemble (uncredited). Harold Budd, “The Oak of The Golden Dreams” (1971 Advance), for Buchla modular synthesizer from the California Institute of the Arts, based on the Balinese 'Slendro' scale, a five-note scale and the older of the two most common scales used in Indonesian gamelan music. Harold Budd, “The Plateaux Of Mirror” from Ambient 2 (The Plateaux Of Mirror) (1980 Editions EG). Composed by Harold Budd and Brian Eno; acoustic and electric piano, Harold Budd; other instruments and treatments, produced by Brian Eno. Harold Budd, “The Serpent (In Quicksilver)” from The Serpent (In Quicksilver) (1981 Cantil). Bass, Eugene Bowen; Electric Piano [Yamaha Electric Piano], Grand Piano [Bosendorfer], Organ [Hammond Organ] and producer, Harold Budd. Harold Budd, “On Performing,” an interview excerpt (with music) (cassette, 1983 Les Disques Du Crépuscule). Harold Budd, “A Stream with Bright Fish” from The Pearl (1984 Editions EG). Composed by Harold Budd and Brian Eno. Produced by Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois. Harold Budd, “Against the Sky” from The Pearl (1984 Editions EG). Composed by Harold Budd and Brian Eno. Produced by Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois. Harold Budd, “Abandoned Cities” excerpt from Abandoned Cities (1984 Cantil). Composed, performed and produced by Harold Budd. Guitar Eugene Bowen. Harold Budd, “Flowered Knife Shadows (For Simon Raymonde)” from Lovely Thunder (1986 Editions EG). Composed and performed by Harold Budd. Produced by Harold Budd and Michael Hoenig. Harold Budd, “The White Arcades” from The White Arcades (1988 Opal). Composed, performed and produced by Harold Budd Harold Budd, “Advent” from By The Dawn's Early Light (1991 Opal). Piano, Organ [Hammond B3], Synthesizer, Vocals, Artwork, Written-By [Poems], Composed By, Producer, Harold Budd; Electric Guitar, Acoustic Guitar, Bill Nelson; Harp, Susan Allen; Steel Guitar, BJ Cole; Viola, Mabel Wong. Harold Budd, “Paul McCarthy” from Luxa (1996 All Saints). Composer, performer, producer, Harold Budd. Harold Budd, “The Room of Ancillary Dreams” from The Room (2000 Atlantic). Composer, performer, producer, Harold Budd. Harold Budd, “Arabesque 3” from Avalon Sutra (2004 Samadhisound). Composer, performer, producer, Harold Budd. Composer and sopranino saxophone, Jon Gibson. Harold Budd, “It's Steeper Near the Roses (for David Sylvian)” from Avalon Sutra (2004 Samadhisound). Composer, performer, producer, Harold Budd. Cello,Marston Smith; Viola, James Acevedo; Violins, James Sitterly and Peter Kent. Harold Budd, “Jane 1” from Jane 1-11 (2014 Darla). Composer, performer, producer, Harold Budd. Harold Budd, “As Long as I can Hold My Breath” from Avalon Sutra (2004 Samadhisound). Composer, performer, producer, Harold Budd. Archive Mix (two tracks played at the same time). Harold Budd, “Jane 11” from Jane 1-11 (2014 Darla). Composer, performer, producer, Harold Budd. Harold Budd, “As Long as I can Hold My Breath” (excerpt of longer version) from Avalon Sutra (2004 Samadhisound). Composer, performer, producer, Harold Budd.
In episode fifteen we speak with Shannon Goggin the Co-Founder and CEO at Noyo about connected health insurance, the magic of APIs, volunteering your tech skills for political campaigns, and vegetarian cooking!
Today on Health in 2 Point 00, Jess and Matthew discuss UnitedHealth Group acquiring DivvyDose for $300 million, which is a knock off of PillPack. Is there anything left for them to buy? We cover many more deals in Episode 155—Noyo raises $12 million in a series A, helping health plans exchange data, Medigate raises $30 million working on cybersecurity for connected devices in hospitals, OnCall raises $6 million helping health systems launch their own virtual care platforms, RapidAI raises $25 million to improve MRI and CT quality using AI to layer those images, and Medefer raises £10 million offering telehealth and referrals to patients within the NHS.
In this episode, Daniel sits down with a brilliant young tech founder, Shannon Goggin. Shannon is the co-founder and CEO of Noyo - an API platform company that builds modern infrastructure for modern healthcare systems to make them more efficient, affordable, and transparent. As she tells the story behind the startup, Shannon shares how she identified the industry need that drove her company’s vision. Highlighting the virtues of clear communication and relational networking, she offers winsome and valuable business and fundraising advice throughout the interview.Shannon’s backstory and early professional learning experiences (2:03)A Startup is envisioned: Shannon shares how she identified an industry need and envisioned the startup to meet it. (3:55)A Startup is born: Taking the leap of faith to launch Noyo. (7:44)Investors and Fundraising: Shannon wisely speaks to the importance of relationships in the fundraising process. (10:37)Building and developing the right team is crucial for any startup. Shannon shares practical team building advice and discusses the unique challenges of developing camaraderie in a remote work environment. (15:20)Appearing bigger than you are: Creative ideas for a startup to present a legitimate presence and sell their product to a fortune 500 type company. (21:37)Being a Female tech founder in a male-dominated business community (26:50)Secret weapons for Shannon’s success (28:42) What a helpful conversation! Thanks for sharing your time and insight with us, Shannon. Product Market Misfits is a weekly podcast that helps entrepreneurs learn more about starting companies and getting funded by sharing conversations with world-class venture-backed founders who are one or two steps ahead of you on the path to success. For more, visit us at www.ProductMarketMisfits.com
This morning, Noyo, a startup that provides APIs that link players in the health insurance space, announced that it has closed a $12.5 million Series A round of funding. The new capital comes less than a year after the startup disclosed that it had raised around $4 million in pre-seed and seed capital, and that […]
Hello and welcome back to Equity, TechCrunch’s venture capital-focused podcast where we unpack the numbers behind the headlines.This is Equity Monday, our weekly kickoff that tracks the latest big news, chats about the coming week, digs into some recent funding rounds and mulls over a larger theme or narrative from the private markets. I subbed in for Alex this week, so send your love over to the show on Twitter here and fan mail to me right here. Also, don’t forget to check out last Friday’s episode.This week, we couldn't help but weigh into the latest TikTok drama, but we got into why it's worth following these budgets and moves (and a whole host of other fascinating news):Reminder that life makes 0% sense right now, so give yourself grace if you don't feel 10/10 every single day always.TikTok's latest is that it's not (yet) getting banned in the States.The New York Times has published data on Donald Trump's tax returns.Register to vote.Alexis Ohanian has filed paperwork for his new fund, 776, eyeing a $150 million close. The name is fun to noodle over.Poshmark confidentially filed its S-1.Bill Gurley fans can put their party pants on because Palantir and Asana are direct listing this week, both potentially with a Wednesday debut.Chinese fitness tech startup Fiture got a $65 million Series A, Philippines payment processing API startup PayMongo landed $12 million, and another API startup, Noyo, raised the same plus $500,000 to focus on healthcare.All that, and we didn't even get to make fun of LinkedIn stories.
Hello and welcome back to Equity, TechCrunch’s venture capital-focused podcast where we unpack the numbers behind the headlines.This is Equity Monday, our weekly kickoff that tracks the latest big news, chats about the coming week, digs into some recent funding rounds and mulls over a larger theme or narrative from the private markets. I subbed in for Alex this week, so send your love over to the show on Twitter here and fan mail to me right here. Also, don’t forget to check out last Friday’s episode.This week, we couldn't help but weigh into the latest TikTok drama, but we got into why it's worth following these budgets and moves (and a whole host of other fascinating news):Reminder that life makes 0% sense right now, so give yourself grace if you don't feel 10/10 every single day always.TikTok's latest is that it's not (yet) getting banned in the States.The New York Times has published data on Donald Trump's tax returns.Register to vote.Alexis Ohanian has filed paperwork for his new fund, 776, eyeing a $150 million close. The name is fun to noodle over.Poshmark confidentially filed its S-1.Bill Gurley fans can put their party pants on because Palantir and Asana are direct listing this week, both potentially with a Wednesday debut.Chinese fitness tech startup Fiture got a $65 million Series A, Philippines payment processing API startup PayMongo landed $12 million, and another API startup, Noyo, raised the same plus $500,000 to focus on healthcare.All that, and we didn't even get to make fun of LinkedIn stories.
We're back after a short week off, to bring you some more summer fun! This week the fellas head down to sunny Noyo, California and discuss the infamous Roger Corman produced, Humanoids from the Deep! It has it all... Gore! Production Drama! Rob Bottin! Explosions! What more do you want from a shlocky early 80s exploitation movie! We also cover some current movie updates as well as the new Raw Underground show WWE is trying out! Listen! Rate! Review! Dig It! Humanoids from the Deep trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=enKt54W9P7I Raw Underground: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iux8CM5xrxA&t=25s Support Bladejob by donating to their Tip Jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/bladejob Find out more at https://bladejob.pinecast.co
In a small coastal fishing village called Noyo in northern California, the residents are set to celebrate their annual salmon festival. The festival has been on the decline of late because the fish population has dwindled, leaving the town suffering Doug McClure plays a fisherman and trusted community leader named Jim Hill (Doug McClure), doing what he can to keep harmony among his neighbors. Vic Morrow is the town's more aggressive type, twisting whatever arms necessary to get a company to establish a cannery in town. Anthony Pena is among the Native Americans protesting the cannery planning to exploit his tribe's land. The corporation has been experimenting with ways to escalate the growth of fish in the area. Ann Turkel is a scientist named Dr. Susan Drake who led the experiments, which involved tinkering with salmon DNA so they'd grow large and increase spawning activity. However, the experiment goes awry after prehistoric coelacanths begin to consume these genetically altered salmon. Their offspring evolves quickly into humanoid sea creatures that emerge out of the ocean, attacking landlubbers with an overwhelming desire to feed on mammals and procreate with human women. Directed by Barbara Peeters for Roger Corman's New World Pictures.
North and Tiffany On the Move - Black Millennials Living Van Life
We were headed to Humboldt County, and stopped at the Noyo River. We blew up the inflatable kayaks and set off. We'll tell you our new sleep over spot in Fort Bragg, and where to launch when you visit!
Como el NoYo usa esta técnica para arruinar tus planes
In this edition of Advancement Live, John Arboleda, Owner of NOYO -- stakeholder engagement consulting joins Ryan on the podcast. John lives in Barcelona, Spain and specializes in international engagement. John has a fascinating background in higher education that begins in California and includes a stop in Germany. John is a CASE volunteer and Board member of the UCLA Alumni Association.
This week on the Just an Insight Podcast, Tim is joined by good friends Noyo Mathis ahead of their first show of 2017. They discuss the trios new album, how despite being in different countries they are still going strong and how the recording process in the States was. Also the show the guys played was raising money for a local domestic abuse charity called Aurora New Dawn. You can find out more about the charity and support them by visiting aurorand.org.uk. This week we also launched a new feature on the show where Tim gives his views on three on the latest trailers which have been released. This new segment is after the chat with Noyo, so keep tuned in for that. As always you can keep up to date with the show on Twitter @just_an_insight using #JAIpod or e-mail us at just_an_insight@hotmail.co.uk
This week out road trip takes us to Noyo, a small fishing town with a big problem; men in rubber fish suits running amok and raping their women. Listen in as we suffer through this bonkers movie that features fish men, an Olympia brew crew, over the top explosions and Jim!