Page 11 - பேவியூ வேட்டைக்காரர்கள் பாயஂட் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
Stonestown development faces unfamiliar S F housing criticism: Is it dense enough?
sfchronicle.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sfchronicle.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
SF s newest murals are a love letter to Bayview-Hunters Point
sfgate.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sfgate.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
ByManny Otiko, California Black Media
Health care specialists, including several medical doctors, are keeping their eyes on coronavirus variants that some fear could lead to new strains of COVID-19 that could possibly undermine global efforts to vaccinate people and stem the global crisis.
According to the Centers of Disease Control, the B117 variant (first detected in the U.K.), the most threatening because of its prevalence, is the cause of 20% of new infections in the United States – and 30% of new infections in Florida.
Dr. Nirav Shah, Senior Scholar at Stanford University’s School of Medicine and chief medical officer of Sharecare, a health data services firm, says there are currently four different variants of COVID-19. He said the virus is adapting because “of evolution and natural selection.”
The Virus, Vaccines and New Variants: Weighing the Threat of a Mutant COVID Strain
By Manny Otiko, California Black Media
Published April 1, 2021
Health care specialists, including several medical doctors, are keeping their eyes on coronavirus variants that some fear could lead to new strains of COVID-19 that could possibly undermine global efforts to vaccinate people and stem the global crisis.
According to the Centers of Disease Control, the B117 variant (first detected in the UK), the most threatening because of its prevalence, is the cause of 20 % of new infections in the United states – and 30 % of new infections in Florida.
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The former Hunters Point shipyard in San Francisco in October 2018. (Courthouse News photo / Nicholas Iovino)
SAN FRANCISCO (CN) A federal judge on Wednesday refused to dismiss several lawsuits against a U.S. Navy contractor accused of fudging soil samples to conceal radioactivity at a former shipyard and site of one of the largest redevelopment projects in San Francisco history.
U.S. District Judge James Donato largely rejected Navy contractor Tetra Tech EC’s motions to dismiss four lawsuits brought by Bayview Hunters Point residents, police officers who worked at the site for years and real estate developers who built homes on the property. He granted the contractor’s motion to dismiss the residents’ lawsuit with leave to amend.
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