Central Texas students struggle with mental health issues due to pandemic
and last updated 2020-12-23 00:21:32-05
Throughout these past several months, children have seen multiple schools and businesses close their doors. They ve watch loved one s and others pass away due to COVID-19. Itâs all taking a toll on them and their mental health.
Normally, kids in Central Texas, like 11-year-old Ronreco Foster, would be enjoying playing basketball and hanging out with his friends. But due to the pandemic, normal is no longer the same.
âEven though Iâm home schooled, I was able to play with all my friends. I kind of miss them,â he said.
no out of the way. there is a lot of activity, this is more than we ve seen all day long. you can see a few spots on the tarmac, that is the first time today that we ve actually seen some of the tarmac as the snow has slowly been moved aside. the problem now the gusts of wind that continue to whip around here. 30 inches of snow reported not too far from here, gusts of winds reportedly at 30 miles per hour, that is working all the snow they are working so hard to clear right back on to the runway so they can get the passengers out. one of the passengers is joann foster and she has been here for 27 hours, poor thin. you re from new jersey, where were you trying to get to? we were going to southern california, and we were on the plane, we finally got on at 12:00, and there was something wrong with the door, so then we had to get back off, they fixed that, we got on and we were deicing and some people wanted to get off, so we went back to