Health Minibuses Roll Out To Vaccinate Homeless New Yorkers
arrow The Health + Hospitals system s new vaccine minibus in Midtown on April 27th, 2021. Gothamist/Sydney Pereira
The city’s Health and Hospitals system deployed three minibuses on Tuesday to deliver COVID-19 vaccines and other health care to New Yorkers dealing with street homelessness.
Medical personnel set up in Midtown, the Upper West Side, and Washington Heights, where they’ll administer Johnson & Johnson shots. City and state officials said Saturday they’d resume the one-dose option after federal regulators lifted a two-week pause.
“For people that are living on the street in New York City, we want every New Yorker to have the same, equal chance to get vaccinated,” said Dr. Ted Long, the head of the Test & Trace Corps at Health + Hospitals. “We re going to do everything in our power including driving it right up to where you are.”
Dale went from a cattle herder to cotton magnate glasgowtimes.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from glasgowtimes.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Visiting Our Past: Uncovering the Hot Springs myth maybe Rob Neufeld, Visiting Our Past
A history story can be repeated so many times that it becomes truth. Often, you search for authoritative sources and find just one the progenitor, which lacks a source for its information.
For example, historian Terrell Garren, in his book, Mountain Myth, traces the key statistic used to characterize Western North Carolina as Unionist during the Civil War to a man with ulterior motives.
The oft-cited false numbers first appeared in a campaign biography by Alexander Hamilton Jones, trying to win a U.S. congressional seat reserved for Unionists in North Carolina.
Комментарии — Страна ментальных мутантов, гл.125 — Эхо Москвы echo.msk.ru - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from echo.msk.ru Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
George Rogers Clark National Historical Park this Saturday will hold its first ranger-led activity since February, hosting the sixth annual Henry Hamilton March.
Park rangers and volunteers will offer visitors the chance to follow in the footsteps of British Lt. Gov. Hamilton and his soldiers as they made their march into Vincennes in 1778.
The journey of the British troops to Fort Sackville was a challenge, as they faced cold weather, icy rivers and fear of ambush.
After a long march, Hamilton and his men arrived in Vincennes on Dec. 17, 1778, and held the fort for more than two months before George Rogers Clark launched his âwinter surpriseâ to retake the region.