Several airlines in the U.S. will now allow passengers to fly without masks to align with a new order issued by the Centers for Disease Control that'll exempt those with disabilities from wearing a mask.
Pandemic learning takes another turn: Will teachers be in person in classrooms?
Donna St. George, Hannah Natanson and Perry Stein, The Washington Post
Feb. 6, 2021
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A third-grade class learns at Martin Luther King Jr. Elementary School in Southeast Washington on Friday.photo for The Washington Post by Evelyn Hockstein.
After nearly a year of online learning, parents in the Washington region were thrilled to hear announcements from public schools, some of them tumbling out rapid-fire last week, that in-person learning will resume next month for students who choose it.
But families quickly discovered that in-person learning will not necessarily mean sitting in a classroom, being taught by a teacher. Instead, school officials in Maryland and Virginia have been hiring classroom monitors who will fill out school staffing - in some cases supervising classrooms as students continue to do online lessons.
Several airlines in the U.S. will now allow passengers to fly without masks to align with a new order issued by the Centers for Disease Control that'll exempt those with disabilities from wearing a mask.
The original windows in the 1955 building are sealed around the edges with duct tape to keep out the drafts. NORTH ADAMS, Mass. A decade ago, former U.S. Sen. Scott Brown held his hand over a duct-taped original 1955 window in the police station to feel the cold draft coming through. So are the water-stained ceilings, cramped quarters, missing and crumbling tiles, one frightening bathroom, broken cells, mildewed carpets and outdated heating system. The deficiencies of the 66-year-old public safety building are well documented. Tours of the building over the years by the public safety commissioner and later the police and fire chiefs have pointed out the urgent need for a new building.
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