Elementary school students return to the classroom at Santa Barbara Unified District keyt.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from keyt.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Food residue, leaky dishwasher: Cumberland County restaurant inspections
Updated Feb 12, 2021;
The following Cumberland County restaurants were found to have violated Pennsylvania’s health and safety regulations during inspections between July 17-23.
Inspections are overseen by the Department of Agriculture. The department notes that in many cases violations are corrected by the restaurant before inspectors leave.
CARLISLE AREA HIGH SCHOOL
Date: Jan. 22, 2021
CEDAR CLIFF PIZZA
Date: Jan. 21, 2021
Violations: Old food debris and splash on interior walls, bed, door and ceiling of microwave oven. Corrected on-site. Plastic cutting boards on bain-maries have brown and black discoloration and excessive scoring from knife cuts. New boards put in place during inspection. Corrected on site.
Lori Torres was nervous about returning to teaching in-person in Chicago.
Torres, 47, teaches Spanish to all grades at her PreK-8 school and has a medical condition that puts her at increased risk for COVID-19, but her request to continue to teach from home hadn t been approved.
Her short-term concern was addressed when the Chicago Teachers Union voted to stay remote while union and city leaders haggled over the safety of working conditions in buildings.
But Torres long-term concern – getting a vaccine before she returns to Monroe Elementary School – is unresolved.
Chicago Public Schools vaccination schedule for teachers won t start until mid-February – and the district wants staff and students back before that. Some teachers in Chicago s suburbs, meanwhile, already have received vaccinations.
Insanity : COVID-19 vaccines for teachers, a key to reopening schools, comes down to location and luck Erin Richards and Lindsay Schnell, USA TODAY
Teachers struggle to get vaccinated for COVID with chaotic rollout
Replay Video
Lori Torres was nervous about returning to teaching in-person this week in Chicago. Torres, 47, teaches Spanish to all grades at her preK-8 school and has a medical condition that puts her at increased risk for COVID-19, but her request to continue to teach from home hadn t been approved.
Her short-term concern was addressed when the Chicago Teachers Union voted to stay remote while union and city leaders haggled over the safety of working conditions in buildings.
The Florida Times-Union
4:20 p.m. | Only 38% of nursing home workers accepted COVID-19 vaccines, new data shows
While residents of nursing homes and their caregivers have been considered a top priority for COVID-19 vaccination, only 38% of nursing home staff accepted shots when they were offered, new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention revealed Monday.
Anecdotal reports have been circulating for weeks that nursing home staff members were turning down vaccination offers, but these are the first national-level figures. These findings show we have a lot of work to do to increase confidence and also really understand the barriers to vaccination amongst this population, said Dr. Radhika Gharpure, lead author of the study and a member of the CDC’s Vaccine Task Force. | Read more