Wolcott and Waterbury Detectives found the suspect and his vehicle on Wolcott Road, and attempted to box him in with their vehicles, but he tried to escape
Jack Reed, 13, receives his first dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine by Dr. David Wahl on Thursday at Vail Health Hospital in Vail. The Pfizer vaccine was approved for children 12-15-years-old, with Thursday being the first day the kids were able to receive a shot.
Chris Dillmann/cdillmann@vaildaily.com
For months now, Eagle County Emergency Management Director Birch Barron has asserted that nobody will be happier than he is when the county can finally lift its COVID-19 public health restrictions.
Barron plans to celebrate in less than a week. He won’t be the only person at the party.
FAIRFIELD-SUISUN, CALIFORNIA
From left, Walt McDaniel, 98, Ed Williams, 91, Jerry Hedrick, 85, and Dan Dougherty, 95, are part of a recumbent trike club at Paradise Valley Estates. (Robinson Kuntz/Daily Republic)
Have recumbent trike, will travel: Paradise Valley residents average more than 12 miles a week
PARADISE VALLEY Dan Dougherty rode a bicycle with the Paradise Valley Pedalers until a few years ago.
Now he’s one of a handful of people who meet six mornings a week to ride their recumbent tricycles around the Paradise Valley Estates campus.
The average age of the riders is 92. Walt McDaniel is the oldest at 98. He spent 27 years in the U.S. Air Force as a pilot.
Reduced CMAS testing gives Eagle County Schools more time for learning vaildaily.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vaildaily.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Melisa Rewold-Thuon, assistant superintendent for Eagle County Schools, remembers spending her birthday at the emergency school board meeting. “It’s a birthday I will always remember,” she said of March 13, 2020.
. It would close 17 schools and switch to remote learning for three weeks starting Tuesday, just three days later.
The news that kids would be learning from home because of the rapidly-evolving pandemic, exactly one week after Eagle County’s first confirmed coronavirus infection, reverberated throughout the county’s households and businesses.
“I was hoping for the best, but also worrying, what if we have a huge outbreak?” Rewold-Thuon said of the uncertain weeks leading up to the district’s announcement, when the shadow of the pandemic spread and darkened, but had not yet upended life. “I do remember thinking, ‘This is not going to be good, I have a feeling,’” Rewold-Thuon said.