Dublin USD Trustee Catherine Kuo killed in car crash on campus pleasantonweekly.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pleasantonweekly.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
K-12 coronavirus cases in Idaho continue drop, approach four-month low
Kevin Richert, IdahoEdNews.org
Share This
Idaho’s K-12 coronavirus cases approached a four-month low last week.
Idaho’s K-12 coronavirus cases approached a four-month low last week.
The Idaho Department of Health and Welfare reported at least 87 K-12 cases for the five-day period ending Friday.
Not only does Friday’s report represent another decrease, it’s Health and Welfare’s second-lowest weekly case count in K-12 schools. The agency launched the weekly counts on Oct. 1, reporting 51 cases involving K-12 students and teachers.
One caveat: The latest report only covers a five-day period, from Feb. 8 through Friday. Health and Welfare normally releases these reports on Monday covering a seven-day period ending on Sunday. But since Monday is Presidents Day, a state holiday, this week’s count reports just five days.
DailyTrib.com Support Community Press You can show your support of a vibrant and healthy free press by becoming a voluntary subscriber. Subscribe Now Llano County Judge Ron Cunningham issued a disaster declaration for Llano County due to weather issues that had left more than 12,000 county residents without power as of 7 p.m. Monday, Feb. 15. Staff photo by David Bean
As Central Texas Electric Cooperative crews and additional teams work to restore power, Llano County Judge Ron Cunningham issued a disaster declaration for the county.
Cunningham reported that approximately 86 percent of Llano County homes were without power as of 7 p.m. Monday, Feb. 15, affecting more than 12,000 residents. A bulk of the outages are in eastern Llano County. He added in a media release that there’s no indication that power to some of these home will be restored within 24 hours.
UpdatedWed, Dec 30, 2020 at 2:17 pm PT
Reply(1)
Police responded to the school after learning that neither janitor returned home from their shift on Tuesday. (Renee Schiavone/Patch)
DUBLIN, CA The Coroner s Bureau of the Alameda County Sheriff s Office has identified the janitor found dead Wednesday morning at Fallon Middle School in Dublin.
The body of James Covington, 32, of Pittsburg was discovered around 7 a.m. after Dublin police received word that he and another janitor his fiancee, as KRON reported did not return home after their shift at the school at 3601 Kohnen Way Tuesday.
Fentanyl was found at the scene. Police are awaiting toxicology results to determine whether the drug played a role in his death, said Dublin Police Department Capt. Nate Schmidt in an email. Covington s cause of death is pending, according to the coroner s bureau.
Coroner IDs victim as 32-year-old man from Pittsburg
Uploaded: Mon, Dec 28, 2020, 6:37 pm
Time to read: about 2 minutes
Dublin police continue to investigate the death of a Fallon Middle School janitor and the illness befalling his fiancee, also a custodian at the school, when the engaged couple were found by police in severe medical distress in the library early in the morning after not returning home after their shift last week.
The decedent has been identified by the Alameda County Coroner s Bureau at James Covington, 32, of Pittsburg. His fiancee and colleague, identified online as Shameka Wilbon, had been treated at a local hospital and was expected to make a full recovery.