After serving under his leadership during the Obama administration, I know that Ali Alejandro Mayorkas has the character, intellect, and integrity to serve as Secretary of Homeland Security, Kevin McAleenan wrote in a letter to Sens. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., and Gary Peters, D-Mich., of the Senate’s Homeland Security committee.
Former Department of Corrections officer Frankie Rosalin, who had pleaded guilty to official misconduct as a misdemeanor, has been working under the Maintenance Division at the Port Authority of Guam.
The Year In Review: How COVID-19 Has Impacted Maryland’s Education Sector In 2020
Photo by Julia M Cameron from Pexels
The coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has dramatically changed the education landscape in Maryland and around the world. As a result, students, teachers, faculty, superintendents, and many other stakeholders have been forced to quickly adapt to what is now widely known as “the new normal.” As Marylanders prepare to usher in 2021, there is still a great deal of uncertainty that remains; what does the future hold for Maryland’s education sector? Will online and remote learning become far more commonplace, even more so than in-person learning? Before we can move forward and attempt to answer these queries, let’s take a look back at this past year and how COVID-19 has impacted the state’s education industry.
File photo of service chiefs at the Presidential Villa during a security meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari
Following the increased rate of insecurity in the country, Former Department of State Service (DSS) Director, Mike Ejiofor has joined voices with Nigerians calling for the removal of service chiefs.
Ejiofor during an interview with Channels Television on Monday said President Muhammadu Buhari should surprise Nigerians and respond to the calls by those seeking removal of the service chiefs.
“I expect that Mr President should take Nigerians by surprise, change the service chiefs. The attitude of Nigerians to security agencies should also change.
Rebekah Jones, former Florida COVID-19 data manager, files suit over law enforcement s sham raid on her home Jeffrey Schweers, Capital Bureau
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Former Department of Health data manager Rebekah Jones has filed a lawsuit against the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, alleging the Dec. 7 morning raid on her house was a sham to retaliate against her for not altering COVID-19 data.
Jones was fired from her job in May and soon launched her own COVID-19 online data dashboard. Gov. Ron DeSantis blamed Jones firing on her insubordination; Jones said she was let go because she wouldn t alter data to cast Florida in a more favorable light to justify DeSantis plans to reopen the state s economy.