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COVID-19 outbreaks at Upper Valley nursing homes take a toll on staff, residents and family Charlene Truell, of Unity, N.H., shows her mother Beverly Whiting on Dec. 11, 2020, the deer Truell recently shot during their first in-person visit together since Whiting, 88, tested positive in mid-October for COVID-19 at the Woodlawn Care Center in Newport, N.H. In total the outbreak included 33 residents and 24 staff members (Valley News - Geoff Hansen) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to [email protected]. Sitting behind a bulletin board displaying the number of staff and residents who have currently tested positive for COVID-19, Amber Williams works at the reception desk at Woodlawn Care Center in Newport, N.H., on Dec. 11, 2020. Williams is also a licensed nursing assistant at the facility. (Valley News - Geoff Hansen) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to ....
MERRIMACK HAS ALWAYS been a civically engaged town where citizens across the political and ideological spectrums get involved. We can recall 13 years ago, when local legislators happily passed on that their âMr. Merrimackâ was bringing his talents to the State House. By then, Dick Hinch already was a fixture in local politics, having chaired the Board of Selectmen and served on the townâs budget, zoning and library boards, as well as taking leadership roles in the local Lions, Rotary and Chamber of Commerce groups. Hinch, 71 at the time of his death last week, was not a headline-seeker. He preferred to stay in the background and pull the levers of government power to get results. ....
MERRIMACK HAS ALWAYS been a civically engaged town where citizens across the political and ideological spectrums get involved. We can recall 13 years ago, when local legislators happily passed on that their âMr. Merrimackâ was bringing his talents to the State House. By then, Dick Hinch already was a fixture in local politics, having chaired the Board of Selectmen and served on the townâs budget, zoning and library boards, as well as taking leadership roles in the local Lions, Rotary and Chamber of Commerce groups. Hinch, 71 at the time of his death last week, was not a headline-seeker. He preferred to stay in the background and pull the levers of government power to get results. ....