ANGOLA â Cameron Memorial Community Hospital and the Steuben County Health Department have put out a primer to help people determine when they might be able to get a COVID-19 vaccine, a news release said.
The Indiana Department of Health announced Wednesday it has updated its vaccination plan. The changes expand access to the vaccine and continue the stateâs commitment to first protect health care workers caring for patients with COVID-19, people who are at the highest risk of being hospitalized or dying and those at high risk of exposure to COVID-19.
âWe have been highly encouraged by the outpouring of requests weâve received from community members anxious for their turn to be vaccinated,â said Connie McCahill, president and CEO at Cameron. âEach new phase the state opens is another giant leap towards beating this virus and returning to the normalcy we all desire.â
STROH â Three men had to be pulled from Big Turkey Lake after falling through the ice on Wednesday, said a news release from the Indiana Department of Natural Resources, Division of Law Enforcement.
Indiana Conservation Officers responded to a report of three fishermen who had fallen through at about 3:30 p.m.
One man had fallen into the lake as he was going out to ice fish with his father. He was freed from the water by two other fishermen and as they were returning to shore, they all went in.
At approximately 3:30 p.m., Steuben County Communications received a 911 call that the fishermen had fallen through the ice near the 10200 block West C.R. 475S.
ANGOLA — Vaccinations for COVID-19 available in Steuben County are being provided to medical professionals, long-term care staff and emergency medical services staff, which is an expansion from the early
ANGOLA â Mark Leu no longer thinks of LaGrange County REMC as just an electric membership cooperative that serves a rural community.
âWe no longer consider ourselves an electric cooperative. We are now an electric and communications cooperative,â said Leu, CEO of LaGrange County REMC.
Thatâs the new reality of two electric cooperatives that had humble beginnings of simply working to string wire to rural LaGrange and Steuben counties so those who lived in the country â mainly farmers â had electricity.
Both REMCs are starting to work on providing fiber optics to their members so broadband connectivity becomes a reality out in areas that, much like electricity during the Great Depression, was dark.