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Pessimistic Californians + Group calls for progressive Senate pick + Unemployment woes [The Sacramento Bee]

Pessimistic Californians + Group calls for progressive Senate pick + Unemployment woes [The Sacramento Bee] Dec. 14 Good morning, and happy Monday. CHILDREN WILL BE WORSE OFF, CALIFORNIANS BELIEVE Californians are pessimistic about their children’s financial prospects, according to a new survey from the Public Policy Institute of California. More than six in ten Californians, 63%, believe that when today’s children grow up they will be financially worse off than their parents, while just over a third, 35%, believe children will be better off. That outlook holds true across race and ethnicity, with 76% of whites, 67% of Asian Americans, 62% of African Americans and 47% of Latinos believing children will be worse off. It also holds across income groups.

More pressure on Kamala replacement + Playgrounds reopen + Ma gets appointed to Pope-affiliated group [The Sacramento Bee]

More pressure on Kamala replacement + Playgrounds reopen + Ma gets appointed to Pope-affiliated group [The Sacramento Bee]
dailyrepublic.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailyrepublic.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

We have failed : A look at how COVID-19 affects California s 800,000 farmworkers

Kim Bojórquez The Sacramento Bee Against the backdrop of a global health crisis and a summer of unprecedented wildfires, California s 800,000 farmworkers continue to sustain the state s annual $50-billion agricultural industry in order to make a living and provide for their loved ones. It comes at a cost. A new study released by the Clinica de Salud del Valle de Salinas and the University of California, Berkeley School of Public Health underscores the COVID-19 pandemic s unequal toll on agricultural workers in California. The majority of participants in the study, conducted between July and November, were from Mexico and identified as Latino.

After health care workers, which essential employees in California will get the COVID-19 vaccine?

Their work spans across dozens of industries. They drive city buses, stock grocery shelves and run homeless shelters, package our food, put out fires and answer our Uber requests. The world is rejoicing that the first vaccinations against COVID-19 have been jabbed into the arms of grateful Britons. However, health experts say getting vaccinated is by no means a free pass to live in the Before Times, maskless and hanging out in crowds. According to Business Insider, infectious-disease pharmacist Debra Goff warns that we still don t know how long the vaccine s protection will last. Likewise, we also don t know whether it prevents recipients from continuing to spread the virus to other people. What s more, the vaccine also won t protect recipients right away, and, for a small percentage of the population, won t protect them at all. Still, vaccinated people can start making plans for 2021 and look forward to resuming aspects of the old normal as more and more people get vaccinated.

More pressure on Kamala replacement + Playgrounds reopen + Ma gets appointed to Pope-affiliated group

More pressure on Kamala replacement + Playgrounds reopen + Ma gets appointed to Pope-affiliated group
msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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