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but there are still more questions than answers, creating a range of reactions from parents. ((christopher prado poorer communities, they re probably gonna have pooer schools and richer schools are gonna have wealthy schools )) ((staysha barranco, mom i just think it would be beneficial if every school district was able to go and work with their own issues, their own test scores, what struggles with their students )) sharie johnson it started in 2015 when the legislature approved a bill to come up with a plan to reorganize ccsd. the deadline is next year. and the plan rolls out 20 benefits students and teachers. ((staysha barranco, mom i just wish, maybe if it was different prencincts and everything they could supply our teachers better )) ((christopher prado we need teachers to get paid well; they re right there spending the most time with our kids than we are )) the meeting is at the winchester cultural center on mcleod drive. tomorrrow, the committe is releasing revisions
New-yorkUnited-statesCarson-cityNevadaGreen-valleyUtahWashingtonBostonMassachusettsChinaTown-hallVirginia and there are lane closures on the southbound side after a deadly wreck. maryland . after an explosion caused a three-alarm fire at an apartment building last night. a montgomery county fire department spokesman said two firefighters and at least 25 other people were injured officials believe natural gas contributed to the explosion and the fire. more than 150 firefighters responded to the scene./// ((kirsten joyce)) a local woman accused of killing her baby shortly after it was born . was indicted 20- year- old veronica salazar faces charges for the death of her newborn. police say she hid her pregnancy. and gave birth to the child in a bathtub. after it was born. she cut the umbilical cord and left the baby to die in the tub. salazar s mother told investigators she was suspicious that her daughter was pregnant. but the young woman denied it. the cuidate program manager for planned parenthood of southern nevada says half of the country s pregnancies are unintended.and nev
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Dr. Nicole Van Groningen is exhausted. A hospitalist and assistant professor at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, Van Groningen has been on the front lines fighting Covid-19 for 11 months, and as L.A. comes down from its worst surge in cases since the pandemic began, she’d spent the final two weeks of January at the hospital’s overwhelmed intensive care unit. Even as cases had begun to plateau, morale is bleak.
“Everyone is on edge, it’s a feeling of constantly bracing ourselves for things to get worse. And the patients at the ICU are so sick for so long,” she says with a slight sigh. It’s late January, and the area is averaging more than 40,000 cases per week. The hospital’s ICU is 33 percent past maximum capacity. “They get worse, and they don’t bounce back like we usually see. We’re used to having the skills we can use to make most people better. We know we’re doing everything we can, but it takes a psychological to
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