Lifelong Marion County resident Dennis Strow had just undergone knee-replacement surgery on March 16, just four days before most hospital procedures were postponed throughout the county due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Strow, 66, a Vanguard High graduate, has since spent a year helping care for his father-in-law. Though they maintained their distance, it was stressful for Strow and his wife, Susie. They did not want to unintentionally expose the 88-year-old man to the virus.
A few weeks ago, Strow received his second shot of the Moderna vaccine. Strow s father-in-law just had his second Moderna shot and is about a week away from being fully protected. Susie, a cancer survivor, is a weeks from getting her second shot.
edie s #SustyTalk interview series continues with Lucozade Ribena Suntory s (LRS) Michelle Norman revisiting the company s key climate and plastics milestones from 2020 and looking ahead to what this year will hold for corporate sustainability.
By ROSE L. THAYER | STARS AND STRIPES Published: December 16, 2020 AUSTIN, Texas The Navy has hired two special education lawyers as part of a three-year pilot program to expand support for service members enrolled in the Exceptional Family Member Program. The two civilian attorneys, who have a background in special education law, began in November to assist families trying to get services for special needs children through federal laws put into practice differently in school districts across the country, said Lt. Cmdr. Nick Stampfli, legal assistance department head at the Legal Services Office for Mid-Atlantic Region. Navy families can find themselves at a disadvantage when it comes to special education because frequent moves mean they are regularly entering new school districts with different rules and resources.