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Dillingham City School plans for pre-pandemic schedule this year

The school’s plan also details extensive cleaning protocols for busses and facilities. It also outlines mitigation efforts in case  a student or faculty member tests positive for COVID-19.  Those efforts also apply if there is a spike in cases in the community.   Credit KDLG    The Dillingham City School District plans to return to a pre-pandemic schedule for the upcoming school year. The district released a draft for COVID-19 operations on Thursday. Both the elementary and Middle-High school will operate at full capacity and masks will no longer be required as long as the level of COVID-19 cases in the community remains low. The City of Dillingham also plans to change mandatory COVID-19 precautions to suggestions later this week. Students can also opt for remote classes through an online learning platform, ACELLUS.

Full schedule of PHS student activities planned for fall

Full schedule of PHS student activities planned for fall Posted by Angela Denning | May 24, 2021 Wrestlers, runners, and other high school athletes have been traveling to competitions this year with Covid protocols in place. That’s likely to be the case this fall too. In a report to the school board, Petersburg’s Activities Director Jaime Cabral said student travel will be different in the fall like it has been this spring but a lot is scheduled to happen anyway. “We’ve made our schedules just in case so we wanted to make sure we had dates and everything put up,” Cabral said. “So we have scheduled honor music already for the fall. We have scheduled 2022 Art Fest, we have schedule 2022 Music Fest. It’s on the calendar so if you need information about when those are, they’re up there. When is region basketball, it’s on there, state basketball, all that stuff…we’re looking at calendars in April 2022 already.”

Palmer legislator introduces bill banning transgender women from Alaska sports

An effort is underway in the Alaska Legislature to change the state’s policies regarding transgender athletes. With just days left in the legislative session, Rep. Shelley Hughes, R-Palmer, introduced Senate Bill 140, which would limit participation in women’s sports to “biological females,” meaning those born female. The bill bans transgender females from competing in women’s sports in state-funded activities and in institutions through the collegiate level.  Given time constraints and the many issues facing the Legislature, the bill will not be heard until the next legislative session. Hughes did not respond to questions but said in a statement that My staff and I will be working over the interim on our plan to start the bill hearing process during the next legislative session.” The bill, Hughes said, is the “culmination of several months’ work” and was introduced with hopes of starting a conversation that will be continued.

COVID-19 surge in Ketchikan prompts school closures, stricter recommendations

Print article A recent rise in COVID-19 cases in Ketchikan has prompted health officials there to recommend tighter pandemic protocols in an attempt to prevent further spread of the virus. While coronavirus transmission and case rates appear to be declining significantly in most of Alaska, some regions including Southeast are continuing to see flare-ups. “Over the past week Ketchikan has seen an alarming increase in COVID-19 cases, in all settings and age groups,” said an update posted Tuesday by the borough’s Emergency Operations Center. As a result, Ketchikan on Tuesday moved into the region’s highest COVID-19 alert level for the first time since the pandemic began. That means that unvaccinated residents specifically are being asked to pause non-essential travel outside the home, avoid gathering in large groups and discontinue visits with people living in congregate settings like nursing homes, according to Ketchikan emergency officials.

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