equally distributed. the richest four fifths of the population was managing to save up to £400 per month more than normal through the pandemic, an average of about £170. in contrast, the poorest fifth of the population had to eat into savings or borrow about the same amount per month. around town, socially distant queues to get into banks, perhaps to put money in rather than take it out, as in the previous financial crisis. elsewhere, things are far from back to normal. most of these shops will reopen. some will not because we have seen a generational shift in how we buy and consume that will change our high streets and city centres forever. the rise in the proportion of online sales has been staggering. it took a decade to grow slowly from 10% to 20% of total sales. injust 12 months, that has jumped to 36% change that would have taken a decade and a half injust one year. so as the tide goes out on the support, the pandemic aftermath will see enduring changes to the way w
bank accounts. with so much money being pumped into the economy, the question is whether it could be too much of a good thing. and the crisis on the southern border. the biden administration sends fema to help manage the surge of unaccompanied minors. question is, how will the u.s. government safely accommodate the more than 4,000 children in custody? plus, the latest on the scandal surrounding new york governor andrew cuomo, as democrats turn up the heat and urge him to resign. the question is, where does the president stand? it s way too early for this. good morning! and welcome to way too early, the show that s also following music history being made. we re going to get to that just ahead. i am kasie hunt on this monday, march 15th. we ll start with the news. the president and vice president will hit the road to begin promoting the new covid relief package this week. the president begins with an event at the white house today, while vice president harris will a
all set up at a studio at home. what s happening? olivia is calling. somebody answer olivia. someone answer that, please. and i-65, going to go ahead and apologize, my alexa is going off. alexa, off. a downstream effect playing out across the system. sorry, you re hearing my dog park at the mailman. sorry, this is my cat. the maps aren t going to move because he just whacked the computer with his head. let me just verbalize the forecast. 62 in pasadena. we ll talk about this storm he walks now, guys, so, i ve lost all control. hold on one second. sorry. yes. you can have two biscuits. sorry about that! and run to the supreme court, as they ve indicated, clearly, that s failed. they ve refused to intervene and ultimately, now, those ballots are going to be counted. oh, my gosh. you know, i understand why people do their show from their home, but if we ever did, it just wouldn t feel right, mika. that s why we have maintained our you re a pione
The World Health Organization (WHO) in the Western Pacific, and the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) have all agreed to provide 200,000 doses of the 5-in-1 vaccine for Vietnamese children to address vaccine shortages in the national expanded programme on immunization (EPI).
response coordinator dr. ashish jha. a public health emergency declared by the secretary of health and human services unlocks a set of tools. allows us to speed up vaccines and make treatments more easily available. allows us to gather more data efficiently. the decision comes as cases top 7,000 nationwide with a quarter of those cases in new york state alone, and as headlines across the country continue to warn of vaccine shortages. joining me now, ammish hadala new york council member eamon vecher. doctor, this comes two weeks after the w.h.o. declared a public health emergency, new york, california, illinois followed soon after. did the biden administration wait too long? is it no longer possible to contain monkeypox in the u.s.? i still think it is possible to contain monkeypox if we are able to see competent delivery of vaccine to high-risk individuals. i think what ended up happening is the public health emergency