Health Agency says new batch of J&J COVID-19 vaccines has arrived wtvbam.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wtvbam.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
COLDWATER, MI (WTVB) – The number of COVID-19 vaccines that have been distributed in Branch County is now over 10,000 according to new data from the Branch-Hillsdale-St. Joseph Community Health Agency.
The Health Agency reported on Wednesday that 30,892 vaccines have been distributed in the three counties of their jurisdiction. That includes 10,401 vaccinations in Branch County, 9,884 in Hillsdale County and 10,607 in St. Joseph County.
Vaccination clinics are coming up on Thursday at the Dearth Community Center in Coldwater, Friday at Mendon High School and next Monday at Three Rivers Middle School.
It was also reported on Wednesday that Branch County had its first day of double digit new COVID-19 cases since January 28.
COLDWATER, MI (WTVB) â The Branch-Hillsdale-St. Joseph Community Health Agency reported on Sunday that they are currently receiving about 2,400 doses of COVID-19 vaccine every week for the three counties they serve.
As more vaccines are approved, the agency expects more vaccine to be made available. The agency currently has Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccine.
The Moderna vaccine will be administered at the Hillsdale United Brethren Church on Wednesday, at the Dearth Community Center in Coldwater on Thursday and at Mendon High School this Friday.
The Johnson and Johnson vaccine will be administered at the COVID-19 vaccine clinic which is scheduled for next Monday, March 15 at Three Rivers Middle School.
Margeson remembered as a inspiring football coach, dedicated officer by former colleagues, players
The Evening Tribune
Robert “Bob” Margeson was as comfortable policing the streets of Hornell as he was writing what he called “police dramas” during his off hours.
Starting in Hornell in 1990 after six years with the Alfred Police Department, Margeson, known as “Bull” by colleagues, preferred the night shift.
“It’s bar fights, domestics, you know, that’s what the midnight shift’s about. Everybody’s hunkered in,” Margeson, who died in his sleep Tuesday in Honesdale, Pennsylvania at age 64, told The Spectator in 2019.
That 2019 newspaper interview coincided with the publication of Margeson’s “Tribulation’s Fate,” a crime novel set in the fictional small New York State city of Emmitsburg. Margeson writes crisply about policing, life in a college town, collegiate football and murder.