Counseling Center
Through high quality professional and confidential services, the Counseling Center aims to reduce distress, promote emotional wellness, enhance life satisfaction, and improve overall well-being for all Rhode Island College students.
Dean of Students
We improve the quality of student life by addressing students’ needs and issues and work to maintain student safety.
Food 4 Thought Pantry
The Learning for Life Food 4 Thought Pantry assists students with food insecurity by providing a private and confidential opportunity to obtain food and toiletries.
Health Services
Located in Browne Hall, the Office of Health Services is here to provide confidential and holistic primary health care to enhance the academic potential of our students. Learn more about available services and COVID-19 information for Rhode Island College students.
Northland College
Spring Break Travel
In general, the College discourages students, faculty, and staff from traveling during spring break (April 24 – May 2). Staying on campus or close to Ashland will help to limit transmission of the COVID-19 virus, increasing the chances that our community can stay safe and successfully complete the academic year.
If you must travel, students should complete a COVID-19 travel request if heading beyond a 40-mile radius of Ashland. Each request is evaluated by a team for risk assessment and appropriate follow-up is communicated to each student. It is crucial that students submit travel requests in advance, so that required protocols can be determined and communicated. Submitting a travel request does not mean travel has been approved. Self-quarantine, quarantine, or isolation periods may interfere with May Term courses scheduled to start May 3. Not all courses may be able to accommodate physical absences from classes.
Florida prison staff, inmates wait on word for vaccine eligibility
19 states have prioritized inmates, staff
For at least 210 Florida inmates, a prison sentence turned into a death sentence due to COVID-19.
and last updated 2021-03-15 18:19:29-04
WFTS
For at least 210 Florida inmates, a prison sentence turned into a death sentence due to COVID-19.
The second-highest death toll in the country for prison inmates continues to tick up. The death rate is 1.5 times the rate in Florida overall.
Currently, Florida inmates are not eligible for a vaccine.
âI know what itâs like to try to get medical care under normal conditions, so to further exasperate that under COVID conditions, itâs a nightmare,â said Susan Melendy, whose son is in prison.
Baltimore County students are more than ready to return to school, and they ve got plenty of reasons why.|| Coronavirus updates | Maryland s latest numbers | Get tested | Vaccine Info ||A small group of Baltimore County students will be allowed back into school buildings on March 1. Students and parents are reacting, while the school district is doing what it can to make sure schools are ready for learning. “Very excited to go back to school,” seventh grader Piper Kennedy said.“Yeah, I m very excited to go back to see my teacher and my friends,” fifth grader Hadley Kennedy said.WBAL-TV 11 News has been keeping track of the Kennedy family since the start of the pandemic back in March 2020; three daughters, one son and their parents are making the best of virtual learning.“I miss being with my friends and seeing people, because if you don t see our friends and our peers as much when we are stuck at home, but I think when we go back, we ll be able to see people, so that w
Danville prison wracked by COVID-19 commercial-news.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from commercial-news.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.