Bexar County commissioners in first-ever virtual meeting say they want COVID testing at rodeo
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Bexar County Commissioners Rebeca Clay-Flores, from left, Justin Rodriguez, County Judge Nelson Wolff, Trish DeBerry and Tommy Calvert bow their heads during the opening prayer by San Antonio Archbishop Gustavo Garcia-Siller, not pictured, for the Bexar County Commissioners Court meeting in the Bexar County Courthouse on Jan. 12, 2021. Commissioners Court will hold a virtual meeting Tuesday after one of the commissioners tested positive for COVID-19 on Jan. 15.Lisa Krantz /Staff photographerShow MoreShow Less
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Newly elected Bexar County Commissioner Rebeca Clay-Flores responds to a concern brought to the court by a group of her constituents during the Bexar County Commissioners Court meeting in the Bexar County Courthouse on Jan. 12, 2021. Behind her is Bexar County Commissioner Tommy Calvert.Lisa Krantz, Staff / Staff photographerShow MoreShow Less
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Currently Reading A nightmare from day one : How a lack of federal vaccine guidance led to confusion in states, cities
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Jay Flexner, 59, gets the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine administered by Maribel Hernandez at Wonderland of Americas Mall, Monday, Jan. 4, 2021. People lined up for the vaccine administered by University Health. It is the first day of vaccinating people in the 1B group, those 65 years and over and 18 and above with certain medical conditions. The 17,280 vaccination slots were taken up in five hours after University Health opened the website for registration on Dec. 31.Jerry Lara, Staff / San Antonio Express-News
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Currently Reading You are saving someone s life by masking up, Mayor Nirenberg says as San Antonio s coronavirus death toll mounts
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Linda Salinas receives her no-cost COVID-19 vaccination at the Alamodome on Monday, Jan. 11, 2021. About 9,000 vaccines will be given at the site this week, or about 1,500 per day, depending on staffing.Billy Calzada, Staff / Billy Calzada
Even as the number of new coronavirus cases appear to be decreasing slightly, more and more San Antonians are dying because of the disease.
The San Antonio Metropolitan Health District reported 1,684 new coronavirus cases Saturday 563 fewer than reported the day before. The seven-day rolling average stood at 1,806 Saturday, decreasing by 165.