4-year-old boy ejected in Georgia interstate rollover crash dies from injuries
Azariah Howard, 4, died Saturday Share Updated: 8:33 AM EDT May 25, 2021
4-year-old boy ejected in Georgia interstate rollover crash dies from injuries
Azariah Howard, 4, died Saturday Share Updated: 8:33 AM EDT May 25, 2021
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Azariah Howard, 4, died Saturday Share Updated: 8:33 AM EDT May 25, 2021 Authorities say a 4-year-old boy who was thrown from his vehicle during a crash on a Georgia interstate last week has died.Azariah Howard was listed on critical condition following the crash Thursday on Interstate 16. Officials say he died from his injuries Saturday.He was not in a car seat nor did he have a seat belt on, authorities say.GSP says the driver, Christie Nelson, 37, of Savannah, remains in serious condition.Authorities say the crash happened around 4:15 p.m. Thursday on the
Authorities: 4-year-old boy ejected in I-16 rollover crash dies from injuries
Georgia State Patrol says Azariah Howard, 4, was not in a car seat nor did he have a seatbelt on before the crash near mile marker 151 on I-16. Share Updated: 4:29 PM EDT May 24, 2021
Authorities: 4-year-old boy ejected in I-16 rollover crash dies from injuries
Georgia State Patrol says Azariah Howard, 4, was not in a car seat nor did he have a seatbelt on before the crash near mile marker 151 on I-16. Share Updated: 4:29 PM EDT May 24, 2021
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Show Transcript All lanes of I 16 back open and Bloomingdale tonight after a major crash near Exit 1 52 it happened around 4 15 this afternoon, shutting down one lane of I 16 westbound and one lane of I 16 eastbound Chatham County police tell us one person was ejected. Two people seriously hurt. Live Star helped take the victims to a nearby hospital. Right now, We are not sure how many cars were involved, but as we
Plymouth parent group seeks return to full-time learning ASAP
Wicked Local
PLYMOUTH – A plan to return to school full time this spring looks more and more likely, but it isn’t moving fast enough for some.
A group of parents wants the district to ditch hybrid learning right away and get students back in classes for regular sessions as soon as possible.
With other districts in the region returning to classes full time in March, they say waiting until after the April vacation is too long and too harmful for students.
Christie Nelson, a mother of two elementary school students from Manomet who has been leading protests for full-time learning since last fall, said her group expanded dramatically in the last two weeks as the district announced its plans for returning to classes.
JAM SESSION: 11 candidates for four months
Wicked Local
Jam session is an opinion forum offering comments on issues from a group of Plymouth residents. It appears on the Forum pages in the Weekend edition of the OCM.
The newspaper poses a question to the group each week, and participants choose whether to comment. This column is designed to bring the voices of well-informed residents into the Forum page to address issues, one at a time.
Participants cross the local political spectrum and live throughout the town. Some are current or past Town Meeting representatives, and all are active in the community. We hope their diverse points of view will encourage discussion of the issues Plymouth faces.
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A recently formed local group designed to support Black youth and their parents better navigate the education system and achieve their life goals has secured full funding for the next three years.
Family Fuse, launched last August, received $253,500 from the Ontario Trillium Foundation’s Youth Opportunities Fund. The non-profit group is also backed by W.E.S.T. (Women’s Enterprise Skills Training Inc.) of Windsor.
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The goal is to assist, over the next few years, at least 75 local families of Black youth through a combination of community partnerships, workshops and one-one-one support as they advance through the school system starting in junior kindergarten right up to working through university or college.