Skip to main content
Currently Reading
Only 2% of people in prioritized ZIP codes live in the Bay Area under California s vaccine equity plan
FacebookTwitterEmail
Devi Kamala, a Fremont local, waves hello to a caregiver at On Lok Pace Senior Center on her way to recieve her COVID-19 vaccine on Janurary 28, 2021.Nina Riggio / Special to The Chronicle
Bay Area residents make up just 2% of the roughly 10 million people living in ZIP codes slated to receive additional coronavirus vaccines under a new state plan announced this week, even though the nine-county region accounts for 20% of the state’s population, according to a Chronicle review of data.
Conscious Cook: Embrace the March warmth with a healthy spring soup
Robin Glowa
FacebookTwitterEmail
Throw fresh greens into a springy soup.MetroCreative Connection /Contributed photo
“May your troubles be less, And your blessings be more. And nothing but happiness, Come through your door.” Irish blessing
The marvelous month of March arrives just in time to revive our winter-weary spirits. As the earth begins to reawaken, our bodies begin to yearn for lighter, brighter foods.
There is no better time to celebrate the restorative power of green ingredients such as cabbage, spinach, Swiss chard, broccoli rabe, bok choy, arugula, herbs, lettuces, leeks, scallions, broccoli and kale.
Will Harvest Middle School shut down in 2022, or will another Napa school close its doors instead? And where will Napa children receiving dual English-Spanish instruction go to class?
Leaders and advisers with the Napa Valley Unified School District this week have started grappling with those possibilities as the district laid out alternatives for boiling down its footprint, amid excess classroom capacity and an attendance decline that is expected to worsen budget woes during the decade.
We re offering our best deal ever with this Editor s Special. Support local news coverage by subscribing to the Napa Valley Register.
On Tuesday, a 50-member task force of teachers, administrators and parents started to weigh one plan that would eliminate one of the city of Napaâs four campuses for students in grades 6 to 8 starting with the 2022-23 academic year, against an alternative that would shut Harvest Middle School along with one elementary campus â but also channel hundreds of