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Ron DeSantis Will Pardon Those Charged With COVID Crimes

(SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images) May 13, 2021 11:56 AM ET Font Size: Gov. Ron DeSantis announced Wednesday evening that he will be pardoning Floridians charged with violating COVID-19 mask or social distancing restrictions. The Florida Republican broke the news on “The Ingraham Angle” to Mike and Jillian Carnevale, gym owners who face jail time for allowing their members to workout maskless. “I’m glad you have Mike and Jillian on, and I’m also glad to be on, to be able to say that effective tomorrow morning, I’m going to sign a reprieve under my constitutional authority,” the governor said. “So that will delay the case for 60 days against both of them and then when our clemency board meets in the coming weeks we will issue pardons not only for Mike and Jillian but for any Floridian that may have outstanding infractions for things like masks and social distancing.”

Letters to the editor: April 8: Anyone who has been fully vaccinated should be eligible to cross Is it time to reopen the Canada-U S border? Plus other letters to the editor

Rob Gurdebeke/The Canadian Press Keep your Opinions sharp and informed. Get the Opinion newsletter. Sign up today. Top gear? Re Provinces Struggle To Shift Vaccinations Into High Gear (April 7): At my vaccine appointment there were four intake workers processing people – they were not busy. The immunization stations were not busy either, with a number of doctors waiting to give shots. There were two emergency response units, also waiting. The final release personnel were reading or chatting with other workers who were similarly not busy. Story continues below advertisement In all, the facility looked ready to vaccinate hundreds of people a day, yet it seemed to be doing only a couple of dozen. Where is everybody?

I m A Psychiatrist Who Treats Health Workers A Year Into The Pandemic, We re All Suffering From Burnout

On Tuesday, Jan. 26, 2021, registered nurse Diane Miller pulls on an N-95 mask as she enters the red zone before heading into a patient s room in the COVID Acute Care Unit at UW Medical Center in Montlake in Seattle. (Elaine Thompson/AP) A couple of Saturdays ago, I slept in until 11 a.m. I haven’t done that since college. As I peeled myself out of bed, I convinced myself  it was just one of those days. I must’ve needed the sleep, and a lot of it. When my phone rang, I felt torn between desperately wanting to talk to friends and family to ease my social isolation, and feeling emotionally drained from my day-to-day work as a psychiatrist. That Saturday, I silenced the incoming call.

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