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Hurtado: COVID strategy must urgently change in California [The Hanford Sentinel, Calif ]

Hurtado: COVID strategy must urgently change in California [The Hanford Sentinel, Calif.] Jan. 26 SANGER Senator Melissa Hurtado (D-Sanger) has issued a statement urging Gov. Gavin Newsom to change California’s COVID-19 strategy to include increased access to monoclonal antibody treatment. “We are nearly a year into this pandemic and it has been one crisis after another. Vaccine approval and distribution has brought hope to our communities, but we need to be realistic about the current movement. We are facing a surge, and vaccine distribution has been slow to say the least,” Hurtado said. “In order to save lives and prevent hospitalizations, we need to make monoclonal antibody treatment available today. We need to consider having mobile clinics to provide equitable access to our most vulnerable populations.”

New laws take effect in 2021 [The Hanford Sentinel, Calif ]

New laws take effect in 2021 [The Hanford Sentinel, Calif.] Jan. 2 SACRAMENTO Hundreds of bills were passed in California’s legislature this past year and many involving minimum wage, COVID-19, sick leave and public safety took effect on Jan. 1 Here’s a look at some new laws that may affect you. Workplace Minimum Wage Increase: California’s minimum wage will hike up by one dollar to $13 an hour for businesses with 25 or fewer employees and $14 an hour for businesses with 26 or more employees. AB 685, Potential COVID-19 Exposure Notification: Requires all employers to notify employees, as well as local public health officials, of a coronavirus exposure at the workplace. The law also expands Cal/OSHA’s authority to shut down a workplace if the agency deems it a hazard.

Life Again?: The top 10 stories of 2020 [The Hanford Sentinel, Calif ]

Life Again?: The top 10 stories of 2020 [The Hanford Sentinel, Calif.] Dec. 21 HANFORD 2020. The year that absolutely no one will forget. Littered with multiple divisive issues, none bigger than COVID-19 and the Black Lives Matter movement, the year had multiple memorable moments in Kings County. After hours of combing through hundreds of stories I wrote, here are my top 10 of 2020. 1. Hundreds attend Black Lives Matter protest at Hanford Civic Auditorium HANFORD With Hanford being a staunch and overtly conservative area, organizers for the Black Lives Matter protest in June were hoping for 50 people to show up. Instead, what transpired was a sea of support at the Hanford Civic Auditorium with more than 500 people standing in solidarity for one cause.

Brothers Donald, Timothy Young Go On California Killing Spree

On July 18, 1995, three men walked into Pato’s Place, a quiet bar on the outskirts of town in Tulare, California.  They wore ski masks and carried shotguns. They demanded money from everyone inside and gathered about $300. Minutes later, the owner, Guadalupe Cantu, 43, was critically wounded and five others in the bar were dead. Cantu, who’d been shot in the chest, pretended to be dead until the shooting stopped and the perpetrators left. He then managed to call 911.  Investigators described the crime scene as “horrific” and a place of “carnage.” It would take 10 years and another mass homicide before the Pato’s Place killers would be brought to trial.

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