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Latest Breaking News On - ஜாக்சன் கவுண்டி பொது ஆரோக்கியம் துறை - Page 1 : vimarsana.com

EPHS returning to in-person learning, following 4 students testing positive for COVID-19

Eagle Point School District Superintendent, Andy Kovach, announced the move in a press release. He said the sick students will quarantine for 14 days before being allowed back onto campus. He says if you weren’t contacted by phone or email by the school district or the Jackson County Public Health Department, your student is not considered to be a ‘close contact’. He said the school has been thoroughly cleaned. CORRECTION: This article previously stated students were going back to remote learning. Students are in fact returning to campus for in-person learning tomorrow, May 13th. NBC5 News reporter Mariah Mills is a Medford native. She graduated from the University of Oregon with a Bachelor’s Degree in journalism. She also minored in sociology.

Jackson Co Fair still on as planned this summer - KOBI-TV NBC5 / KOTI-TV NBC2

CENTRAL POINT, Ore The Jackson County Fair is planning to return to the Expo this summer, following a disruption in 2020 due to the pandemic. The Fair is scheduled for July 14th-18th. Organizers are developing a plan to space out rides, vendors, and seating outdoors to ensure proper distancing. “The bonus about having a mobile amusement park or a carnival, is that we can actually space the grounds in ways that people will not have to be in crowds at all,” Helen Funk, director of the Jackson County Expo told NBC5 news. “We have a pretty solid idea as to what our capacity numbers are in the various sections of the grounds.”

At The Whims Of The State : Confusion Persists For Missouri s COVID-19 Vaccinators

Dr. Randall Williams, Missouri s public health director, answering questions during a briefing last year. When the St. Louis County Department of Public Health saw itself listed among the hospitals expected to receive thousands of vaccines last week, it came as a surprise. No one had told the health department or hospital systems that was the plan, or even what that meant setting off days of confusion over where the department was supposed to get its vaccine doses. “What it has meant,” said Christopher Ave, spokesman for the county’s department of public health, “is that we have received no doses from the state.”

Confusion persists for Missouri s COVID-19 vaccinators

In the scramble to roll out the largest vaccine program since polio, and with supplies still limited, the state’s vacillating directives are leaving local providers tasked with carrying out the state’s plan unclear as to how to do so.

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