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If You Build It, Will They Come? Study Highlights Broadband Adoption
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U S Marshals Deputize Nodaway County Sheriff s Deputies
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Health dept. reports 7 cases of COVID-19; at 2,427 total
Kirksville Daily Express
The Adair County Health Department reported seven new cases of COVID-19 on Monday, which come after a 10-day lull following Easter.
Adair County stands at 2,427 cases of the virus, with the seven new cases being the only active ones.
With those cases, the health department also recovered 11 more cases in its ongoing audit of case totals. Two of those cases were in November and nine were in December.
Monday’s new cases involve an 18-year-old female and males ages 18, four age 19 and one age 62. Six cases are in the higher education sector and one is in the K-12 schools sector. Five reside at addresses with at least one other confirmed case.
New COVID-19 cases plummet in Missouri
Mike Stucka
USA TODAY NETWORK
Missouri reported far fewer coronavirus cases in the week ending Sunday, adding -4,685 new cases. That s down 206.5% from the previous week s toll of 4,398 new cases of the virus that causes COVID-19.
Missouri ranked 50th among the states where coronavirus was spreading the fastest on a per-person basis, a USA TODAY Network analysis of Johns Hopkins University data shows. In the latest week the United States added 472,154 reported cases of coronavirus, a decrease of 3.4% from the week before. Across the country, 21 states had more cases in the latest week than they did in the week before.
After his early and loud opposition to Maryvilleâs mask ordinance gained him prominence in the local political scene â making him a voice for those fed up with Maryvilleâs City Council and skeptical of the coronavirus altogether â Tim Jackson is now less than a week away from his first appearance on a ballot after months of conservative activism.
Jackson, who in July gained local and regional media attention for posting a âNo masks allowedâ sign at his business, is one of two candidates who has gained widespread support from the Maryville and Nodaway County Resident Council as a conservative martyr, though he has only posted once on the groupâs Facebook page, making an initial announcement Nov. 25 of his campaign for City Council, promising that he is ânot a puppetâ in a note that contained 36 words and garnered 58 likes in a group that now has 1,100 members.Â
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