Clete Winkelmann Selected as Executive Director of Nexus-PATH
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After an extensive search, Nexus Family Healing announced Clete Winkelmann, M.S., as the Executive Director of its North Dakota foster care agency, Nexus-PATH Family Healing.
Clete Winkelmann
“Clete is an accomplished executive with decades of experience in child welfare including foster care, residential, education and mental health services. His drive to bring positive change to communities will be essential as Nexus-PATH continues to expand its impactful work. PLYMOUTH, Minn. (PRWEB) January 21, 2021 After an extensive search, Nexus Family Healing announced Clete Winkelmann, M.S., as the Executive Director of its North Dakota foster care agency, Nexus-PATH Family Healing.
CBS News
Local leaders work to combat coronavirus vaccine mistrust in African American and Latino communities
Boston-based Reverend Liz Walker preaches about three things: truth, love and lowering anxiety. And in the middle of a pandemic, Walker has shifted her focus to spreading the truth about the COVID-19 vaccine.
Skepticism surrounding the vaccine is widespread in communities of color, which have suffered disproportionately from the coronavirus.
When about half of the congregation at Roxbury Presbyterian Church told Walker they would not take a vaccine if given the opportunity, Walker knew she had to do something to counter the distrust that is commonly found in African American and Latino communities.
Oh, NOW CBS is concerned with vaccine skepticism?
This Morning hosts and reporters on Friday fretted that Americans, particularly African Americans and Hispanics, might be resistant to taking the newly-approved COVID vaccine. Yet nowhere in the segment did Gayle King or reporter Adriana Diaz remind viewers that Vice President-Elect Kamala Harris indulged in anti-science, anti-vaccine propaganda during the campaign.
King opened the segment by worrying, “The FDA could approve emergency authorization, rather, for Pfizer s COVID-19 vaccine as soon as today. But no vaccine will be effective if the people don t take it. In our series Vaccinating America, we re looking at coronavirus vaccine hesitancy, is what it’s called. 60 percent of Americans said they would definitely or probably get a vaccine. But another survey shows only 14% of black Americans and 34 percent of Latinos trust that it will be safe.”