Montclair city employees asked to wear stickers to prove vaccination if they want to ditch masks on the job
Montclair employees must prove vaccination if they want to ditch masks on the job
Employees with the City of Montclair must show proof of vaccination if they want to work without a mask on.
MONTCLAIR, Calif. - Montclair’s Human Resources Department sent out the memo and compliance form to city employees, asking workers to provide proof of vaccination. In return, vaccinated city employees will get a yellow sticker they can place over their badge. The sticker is not mandatory, says the city’s human resources director, but it does tell the public that the person they are dealing with is vaccinated.
By Kenny Cress, Noozhawk Correspondent
December 17, 2020
| 6:10 p.m.
Jeff Monteiro was on the coaching staff when Pioneer Valley High won its first football game in 2005, a year after the school opened its doors.
Jeff Monteiro, the athletic director at Pioneer Valley High, is retiring after 36 years in the Santa Maria Joint Union High School District.
He attended the Santa Maria school s first graduation in 2007, and was the athletic director when the program moved from the CIF Southern Section to the Central Section.
And he was in charge when the Panthers won a Central Section boys wrestling title last February.
Now, after 36 years with the Santa Maria Joint Union High School District, Monteiro has decided to retire.
National Center for Civil and Human Rights debuts immersive virtual tour with support from Cox Enterprises
Visitors can now access popular exhibits online and enjoy the holidays with a cultural activity from the comfort and safety of their own homes
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ATLANTA, Dec. 18, 2020 /PRNewswire/ The National Center for Civil and Human Rights has launched a free, immersive online virtual tour of its exhibitions –as schools across the country are seeking remote learning experiences due to COVID-19. Cox Enterprises, headquartered in Atlanta, provided a generous grant to The Center to produce the virtual tour and ensure it was offered free to schools.
Working for the ‘weekly squeak’ as 15 year-old for 15 cents per column inch PERSPCTIVE Unusual police vehicle crashes such as the one shown above 20 years ago when a Manteca Police unit ended up driving off a rural dirt road into a drainage ditch right after they vehicle the officer was pursuing did were a routine occurrence for a while in Lincoln in Placer County.
Forty-nine years ago in February I became the sports editor of the “weekly squeak”, the name that almost everyone in Lincoln called the News Messenger that has been publishing every Thursday since 1891.
It’s not as a big deal as it sounds. I was a high school sophomore at the time. I was paid a dollar for every photo that ran, a dollar for every roll of film I processed, and 15 cents per column inch. Depending upon the season it was 1½ to 3 pages a week.