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Bay Briefing: Antioch s moment of reckoning

Bay Briefing: How California s vaccine rollout will change (again)

Bay Briefing: How California s vaccine rollout will change (again) FacebookTwitterEmail S.F. State student nurse Havin Lim prepares to give Shelia Auzenne, 68, a COVID-19 vaccination.Stephen Lam/The Chronicle Good morning, Bay Area. It’s Friday, March 5, and Bay Area baseball fans have gotten a pandemic culture shock at Arizona’s spring training games. Here’s what you need to know to start your day. Coronavirus updates What’s behind California’s switching up its vaccine distribution again? Poorer California residents have been harder hit by the pandemic: Case rates are twice as high among households earning $40,000 to $60,000, compared with households earning $120,000 or more, state data shows. Deaths are also concentrated in the lowest-income areas of the state the same communities the state is now targeting to accelerate vaccinations.

Bay Briefing: How S F s Japantown could disappear

Bay Briefing: How S.F. s Japantown could disappear FacebookTwitterEmail The Japan Center Mall sits at the heart of San Francisco’s Japantown, one of the last in the country.Marlena Sloss / Special to The Chronicle Good morning, Bay Area. It’s Thursday, Mar. 4, and California is changing the way it allocates vaccines, aiming to address inequities. Here’s what you need to know to start your day. Dozens of businesses under threat San Francisco’s Japantown has persisted, even as others throughout the United States faded away. Today, Nihonmachi is the country’s oldest and largest Japantown, one of three remaining, but it covers only about six blocks, anchored by the Japan Center malls. Many worry the neighborhood is in danger of disappearing.

Bay Briefing: Three more Bay Area counties loosen virus restrictions

Bay Briefing: Three more Bay Area counties loosen virus restrictions FacebookTwitterEmail 1of4 San Francisco Mayor London Breed waves to a group of visitors at the Wipeout Bar & Grill at Pier 39 after announcing the city’s move to the state’s less-restrictive red tier amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic in San Francisco, California Tuesday, Mar. 2, 2021.Stephen Lam / The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less 2of4 My Sweet & Spicy Butternut, a vegan sandwich from Rozmary Kitchen consisting of butternut squash, Calabrian chili jam, crispy shallots and seeds on Dutch crunch.Rozmary KitchenShow MoreShow Less 3of4 Marsha Marsha-Marsha performs in Mother: Britney vs Christina, a drag show at Oasis, Sunday, Feb. 2, 2020, in San Francisco, Calif.Santiago Mejia / The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less

Bay Briefing: Schools may reopen in spring, but normal is another question

Bay Briefing: Schools may reopen in spring, but normal is another question FacebookTwitterEmail Miraloma first-grader Colette Schwab, 6, works on homework for her remote class at Midtown Terrace Park in San Francisco in a “Zoom in” demonstration with fellow students.Jessica Christian / The Chronicle Good morning, Bay Area. It’s Tuesday, Mar. 2, and a year of drought is on the horizon again. Here’s what you need to know to start your day. A year of school at home State officials announced a $6.6 billion reopening plan Monday for California schools that would require schools to reopen as soon as April 1 with funding for staffing, ventilation, supplies and more.

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