Centralia PD arrange two buy/bust operations, arrest 5 wmix94.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wmix94.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
School district anticipates return to in-person learning
Archuleta School District schools are planning to return to in-person school on Jan. 4, 2021, according to Superintendent Dr. Kym LeBlanc-Esparza’s Friday memo for staff, which was shared with The SUN.
“Today the leadership team and I met to look at the data, study the Toolkit for Returning to In-Person Learning and plan for how we will return from the winter break. The data and the research continues to tell us that schools are some of the safest places. We also know that our students need to be in-person. We have done an amazing job with the last three weeks, but nothing beats being in your classrooms, learning with their peers, from you,” the memo states. “So we are planning to return to in-person school on January 4. We realize that conditions change and there are dynamics that are out of our control. So the leaders will convene for a brief meeting on Thursday December 31, just to be sure our plan
SUN photo/Randi Pierce
Dr. Ralph Battels, chief of staff at Pagosa Springs Medical Center, receives the county’s first COVID-19 vaccine while fellow physician Dr. Michelle Flemmings claps. Flemmings received the next vaccine dose.
By Randi Pierce
Staff Writer
The first doses of COVID-19 vaccine arrived in Colorado Monday, with some of those doses then making their way to Pagosa Springs Medical Center (PSMC) Wednesday.
Early Wednesday afternoon, PSMC Chief of Staff Dr. Ralph Battels and fellow Emergency Room physician Dr. Michelle Flemmings became the first in Archuleta County to receive a dose of the vaccine.
Both noted their excitement and anticipation before receiving the vaccine, likening it to Christmas, and reported no pain from the shot.
It is unconscionable: Washingtonians react to Congress stalemate impacting benefits
Roughly 100,000 Washingtonians would lose benefits by Dec 26 if Congress cannot agree.
REDMOND, Wash. - Redmond resident Brandi Pierce is a proud grandmother who is now the source of childcare for her daughter’s family in Seattle.
With unemployment benefits set to expire for Brandi the day after Christmas, she is now wondering if she will have enough money for transportation to get to her 7 month-old grandson.
“We are looking down to paring down our phone bills paring down insurance,” Pierce said.
That says a lot coming from her since Pierce says she has always been very frugal.