Del Sol Lions Club contributes to MAEGA scholarship fund
Members of the Del Sol Lions Club met with representatives of MAEGA to recognize the Lions donations to the two new scholarship funds. (L-r) Del Sol Lions Chuck Dumbrell, Fran Fenical, Joanne Fink, Paula Dumbrell, John Page, Linette Page, Jan Shields and club president David Cain presented checks to MAEGA board members Linda Grenssted, Anna Vallez, Betty Byrd and Jan Wier. Paul Salgado joined Del Sol Lion Kristin Salgado.
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The Del Sol Lions Club recently made donations to MAEGA for two new scholarships. To honor local community leader Catalina Salgado, the new $1,500 Del Sol Lions Scholarship in memory of Salgado will be established. In addition, a new $1,000 Lions scholarship will be awarded to a local high school graduate in June.
Credit: Allison Shelley for American Education
April 7, 2021
A Los Angeles parent group filed a lawsuit Wednesday against the Los Angeles Unified School District and district Superintendent Austin Beutner, calling for a return to full-time, in-person instruction to the extent possible.
The group, California Students United, wants the school district to eliminate requirements that students stay 6 feet apart and that they be tested for Covid-19.
Currently, a district agreement calls for testing of all students and staff seven days prior to schools reopening and every two weeks while Los Angeles County is in the red tier of the state’s color-coded Covid-19 tracking system. The red tier indicates there is substantial spread of Covid-19 in the community.
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Carlsbad Unified students, who for the most part are grateful to be back for full-time in-person instruction, protested outside Carlsbad High School Wednesday.
What 3-foot social distance means for reopening California schools
By Diana Lambert and John Fensterwald
Published
(Photo by John Moore/Getty Images)
OAKLAND, Calif. - New state and federal Covid safety guidelines that reduce the recommended minimum distance between students from 6 feet to 3 feet should make it easier for California schools to return students to classrooms full time, but most districts are not likely to make the change until the fall.
Instead, many district officials contacted by EdSource expressed reluctance to make changes to instructional models this school year because most have either reopened or plan to reopen campuses in the next few weeks.