Traveling during the pandemic: Your questions answered
Traveling after COVID-19 By Kate Smith | March 16, 2021 at 6:30 PM CDT - Updated March 16 at 6:45 PM
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (WAFF) - For more than a year, COVID-19 has brought travel to a standstill. With more states and countries lifting COVID restrictions, thousands of people are dreaming of traveling to escape a yearâs worth of shutdowns.
You should expect to carry documentation proving you have been vaccinated and be prepared to go touchless. Major transportation hubs across the United States have converted ticket sales, baggage, and loading docks to all virtual platforms.
Brighter days are ahead for those itching to break out their passport and travel the world.
Send Pat Lynch was built for radio, his old colleague Michael Hibblen says, perhaps because Lynch inhabited an audio world.
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Arkansas medical experts weigh in on past, present and future of COVID-19
March 4, 20214:11 pm
In a time when everything from politics to weather can be described as “unprecedented,” it’s hard to emphasize that one institution has been taxed and tested more than others.
But the coronavirus pandemic pummeled and reshaped nearly every facet of our medical system, forcing innovations, revealing weaknesses and pushing limits.
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In Little Rock, a hospital supply chain manager who used to rely on steady, scheduled deliveries of all the necessities found himself scrumming at 3 a.m. to secure masks and hand sanitizer. Forced to hunt down scarce commodities directly from factories in Malaysia and other far-flung places, he started keeping Pop-Tarts and sandwich meat in his office for the nights when he worked through the sunrise. In Arkadelphia, a school nurse juggled her standard Band-Aids and morning meds with spreadsheets listing which students and staff were quarant