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Despite worries, Wisconsin Capitol quiet on Inauguration Day 2021

Despite worries, Wisconsin Capitol quiet on Inauguration Day 2021 Despite worries, Wisconsin Capitol quiet on Inauguration Day 2021 Madison prepared for possible protests, Wisconsin Capitol police urged lawmakers to be vigilant and the Department of Administration recommended Capitol staff stay home on Inauguration Day 2021. MADISON, Wis. - Madison prepared for possible protests, Wisconsin Capitol police urged lawmakers to be vigilant and the Department of Administration recommended Capitol staff stay home on Inauguration Day 2021. The FBI director had raised worries of possible violence and armed protests on Inauguration Day, including at state Capitols. Police patrol the Wisconsin Capitol with bomb-sniffing dogs on Jan. 20, 2021

Mass Vaccination Bill Clears Committee

One provision would expand vaccination to everyone by March, DHS says bill doesn t address critical limitation. //end headline wrapper ?>Get a daily rundown of the top stories on Urban Milwaukee Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine. photo by Lisa Ferdinando. U.S. Secretary of Defense, (CC BY 2.0), via Wikimedia Commons Two bills that would impose new requirements on the state’s COVID-19 vaccination program sailed through an Assembly Health Committee public hearing Wednesday and could head to the Assembly floor as soon as next week. One measure, AB-4, requires the state Department of Health Services (DHS) to expand the category of professionals authorized to administer vaccines to include pharmacy technicians and students studying to be pharmacists who have taken required coursework on vaccine administration.

Assembly Bill Seeks to Vaccinate Everyone

DHS, GOP point fingers over COVID-19 vaccine rollout in Wisconsin

DHS, GOP point fingers over COVID-19 vaccine rollout in Wisconsin DHS, GOP point fingers over COVID-19 vaccine rollout in Wisconsin Republican lawmakers and the Evers Administration are pointing fingers over the slow rollout of the COVID-19 vaccine in Wisconsin. MADISON, Wis. - The road to herd immunity is starting off a little bumpy. Republican lawmakers and the Evers Administration are pointing fingers over the slow rollout of the COVID-19 vaccine in Wisconsin. If you ask state health officials about the coronavirus vaccine distribution, they will tell you they have made incredible progress. Julie Willems Van Dijk I think we’re really hitting our stride, said Julie Willems Van Dijk, Wisconsin DHS Deputy Secretary.

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