Vaccine rollout, civil unrest keeping the National Guard busy after unprecedented 2020 Share Updated: 4:08 PM PST Jan 7, 2021 By Jason Hanna Cam Bonelli/Hattiesburg American From left, Mississippi National Guard Spc. Timothy Kelly, state health department environmentalist Anthony Claytor and Spc. Hinton Lindun check paperwork for a patient at a COVID-19 vaccine drive-through clinic in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, on Jan. 5, 2021.
(Cam Bonelli/Hattiesburg American/Imagn Content Service) SOURCE: Cam Bonelli/Hattiesburg American
TRACKING THE COVID-19 VACCINE Share Updated: 4:08 PM PST Jan 7, 2021 By Jason Hanna The U.S. National Guard was so busy last year with unprecedented domestic deployments helping with COVID-19, civil unrest and natural disasters it referred to 2020 as Year of the Guard.So far, this year is no slouch, either.In the nation s capital, about 6,200 Guard members from si
Despite violence in DC, state houses appeared quiet across New England
The Capitol in Boston remains closed to the public amid the pandemic
By Matt Stout Globe Staff,Updated January 7, 2021, 3:00 p.m.
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The dome of the Massachusetts State House looms over the Boston Common.John Tlumacki/Globe Staff/The Boston Globe
A day after a mob stormed the US Capitol, trampling on American democracyâs literal bedrock, its cradle was otherwise quiet.
The Massachusetts State House stood stoically in downtown Boston Thursday, still closed to the public amid COVID-19 precautions. Vermont officials were busy preparing for their governor to be sworn in. In New Hampshire, a small group of elected officials, including Governor Christopher Sununu, gathered Thursday inside a 28-foot-by-48-foot room at State House in Concord, took their oaths, and dispersed after all of 10 minutes.
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