HANOVER Two Upper Valley residential colleges announced this week that they plan to require employees as well as students to be vaccinated against COVID-19 before the next academic year begins.Dartmouth College plans to expand its current.
Dartmouth, Colby-Sawyer to require vaccines for employees as well as students
Usually bustling with students, the Dartmouth College campus is mostly empty on Tuesday, May 5, 2020, in Hanover, N.H.(Valley News - Jennifer Hauck) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com. Jennifer Hauck
Published: 5/28/2021 11:27:56 AM
Two residential colleges announced this week that they plan to require employees as well as students to be vaccinated against COVID-19 before the next academic year begins.
Dartmouth College plans to expand its current requirement that all students be vaccinated against COVID-19 ahead of fall term to also include employees, Dartmouth Provost Joseph Helble said during a webcast community conversation on Wednesday.
Here s what the Ivy League is planning for fall 2021 | The Daily Pennsylvanian thedp.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thedp.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
COVID-19: NH will offer shot to teachers; Dartmouth says outbreak may be linked to virus variant
Staff and wire reports
Modified: 3/4/2021 10:03:21 PM
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CONCORD Vaccinations will begin late next week for New Hampshire teachers and other school staff, Gov. Chris Sununu said Thursday.
Phase 2a of the state’s vaccination plan includes roughly 50,000 teachers, other school employees and child care workers, while phase 2b includes anyone age 50 and older. The plan always has called for completing those phases between March and May, though meeting that target initially appeared unlikely given the limited supply of vaccine available.
But with the addition of a third vaccine and increased distribution, regional public health networks will begin overseeing clinics for school districts around the state March 12.
COVID-19: Vermont to make teachers, prison guards, more high-risk people eligible for vaccine
VtDigger and Staff Reports
Modified: 3/2/2021 11:03:48 PM
MONTPELIER With the Johnson & Johnson vaccine receiving emergency use authorization and the federal pharmacy program ramping up supply, Gov. Phil Scott announced Tuesday that school staff, public safety employees, child care workers and more Vermonters with high-risk conditions will become eligible for COVID-19 vaccinations starting next week.
Phase 5 of the state’s vaccination program will open Monday, March 8, Scott said, for high-risk Vermonters age 55 and over. Starting March 15, people with the same high-risk conditions ages 16 and over will become eligible. All told, that’s about 75,000 people, according to administration officials.