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Napa residents tell their stories of life during the coronavirus pandemic

March 20, 2020 is the day life changed dramatically in Napa County and, with the one-year anniversary fast approaching, things are still out of whack. That’s when a Napa County order issued two days earlier kicked in and required people to stay home unless engaged in an “essential activity,” such as buying food. That’s when the COVID-19 pandemic hit home with force and fear. Optimistically, the shelter-at-home order was supposed to expire April 8, 2020. Instead, the county put in place modified restrictions that mirror state regulations. Support local news coverage and the people who report it by subscribing to the Napa Valley Register.

Napa Journal: Who goes to the Napa library these days?

Didn’t I miss checking out books? Not particularly. Truth be told, I don’t read books. The library’s been my place for TV shows and old movies on DVD. My previous other source — Netflix’s DVDs by mail — has withered during the pandemic. All the good stuff went to streaming. When I visited the library’s website two weeks ago, I discovered that the physical library was still operating, dishing out materials like always. Open seven days a week even. Should I order something? Maybe a TV show from pre-pandemic days? We’d watched all of “The Good Wife,” a legal drama, on library DVDs. What about the sequel, “The Good Fight”?

Books bridge the gap: Napa County library shares donations with jail inmates

Books bridge the gap: Napa County library shares donations with jail inmates
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Bridging the digital divide: Napa County vaccine interest hotline serves tech-free residents

Technology is now perhaps more important than it has ever been: Napans are using it to socialize, to support local businesses and now to express interest in receiving the coronavirus vaccine. Napa County was one of the first in the Bay Area to launch an online vaccine interest form, according to spokesperson Janet Upton. The idea was to give eligible or interested country residents a way to alert the county of their desire to receive a vaccine. Supply and eligibility permitting, the county would take names and then reach out to residents using the information they’ provided once vaccines supply improved. (Due to shortages, the county is currently unable to administer new first doses to residents.)

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