Montgomery County considering guidelines for summer camps
By Natalie Rubino
Montgomery County is considering opening summer camps with new guidelines this summer.
ROCKVILLE, Md. - Montgomery County Council is considering new guidelines and restrictions on summer camps. The council president and vice president released a proposal laying out the guidelines.
The proposed guidelines include:
- Separating participants into groups of 25 people while indoors and 50 people while outdoors. Those groups cannot intermingle
- A cap of 25 people in a sleeping area with social distancing and infection control strategies in place
- No campers from outside Maryland, D.C. or Virginia
- COVID-19 protocol plan approved by county health official
(Shine co-founders Naomi Hirabayashi and Marah Lidey)
Dealing with stress in the workplace is one thing, but when it’s dialed-up to the max due to racism, sexism, and microaggressions, something’s gotta give.
For Marah Lidey and Naomi Hirabayashi, the tipping point came almost a decade ago. They met as coworkers, and did the usual watercooler chat, comparing the mental and emotional roadblocks they’d both endured in their corporate careers to date. But when it came to the mental health redress solutions on the market, they just didn’t see themselves represented.
So they jumped ship, formed Shine, a BIPOC-centered wellness app, and raised $11 million from investors. It now has over 4 million users across 189 countries, and Apple named Shine one of its App Store Best of 2020 winners. We spoke with Lidey recently about why Shine is a welcome addition to the wellness space for so many people.
i think this too much division. i think they don t have a common goal, they don t want to partner together. they want to blame the other side. ifill: betty ann bowser reports on the explosion in the number of cases of type two diabetes among children, a trend with frightening consequences. my grandfather, he lost his eyesight from diabetes and my dad was like you don t want to lose your eyesight, do this, do that. i think losing my eyesight scares me the most. losing a limb scares me but not as much as losing my eyesight. woodruff: jeffrey brown remembers ray bradbury, whose tales of science fiction and fantasy captured the imaginations of generations of readers. ifill: and in the latest installment in our american graduate series, ray suarez talks to teachers about testing and accountability. woodruff: that s all ahead on tonight s newshour. major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: growing up in arctic norway, everybody took fish oil to s
together. they want to blame the other side. ifill: betty ann bowser reports on the explosion in the number of cases of type two diabetes among children, a trend with frightening consequences. my grandfather, he lost his eyesight from diabetes and my dad was like you don t want to lose your eyesight, do this, do that. i think losing my eyesight scares me the most. losing a limb scares me but not as much as losing my eyesight. woodruff: jeffrey brown remembers ray bradbury, whose tales of science fiction and fantasy captured the imaginations of generations of readers. ifill: and in the latest installment in our american graduate series, ray suarez talks to teachers about testing and accountability. woodruff: that s all ahead on tonight s newshour. major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: growing up in arctic norway, everybody took fish oil to stay healthy. when i moved to the united states almost 30 years ago, i could not find an omega-3 fish
goal, they don t want to partner together. they want to blame the other side. ifill: betty ann bowser reports on the explosion in the number of cases of type two diabetes among children, a trend with frightening consequences. my grandfather, he lost his eyesight from diabetes and my dad was like you don t want to lose your eyesight, do this, do that. i think losing my eyesight scares me the most. losing a limb scares me but not as much as losing my eyesight. woodruff: jeffrey brown remembers ray bradbury, whose tales of science fiction and fantasy captured the imaginations of generations of readers. ifill: and in the latest installment in our american graduate series, ray suarez talks to teachers about testing and accountability. woodruff: that s all ahead on tonight s newshour. major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: growing up in arctic norway, everybody took fish oil to stay healthy. when i moved to the united states almost 30 years ago,