About 34,000 L.A. Unified School District students have not yet complied with the vaccine mandate.
And there's now no longer enough time for those who haven't gotten their first jab to be fully vaccinated by the start of the second semester latimes.com/california/sto…
Context: All children 12 and older in Los Angeles public schools must be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 to enter campus under an order approved by the Board of Education.
The high number of students who will not be able to meet the full inoculation deadline is likely to force difficult decisions on leaders of the nation’s second-largest school system latimes.com/california/sto…
Moving 34,000 students 12 and older into independent study would be challenging — especially as the district’s independent study program has been beset by staff shortages and confusion after it was inundated at the start of the school year with 10,000 kids latimes.com/california/sto…
Already, about 515 of the unvaccinated teachers have been transferred to City of Angels — the district’s independent study program — to oversee the 16,000 students currently enrolled latimes.com/california/sto…
The L.A. school system is one of the few in the nation with a student vaccine mandate — and also among a small number with an employee vaccine mandate.
Faced with getting a COVID-19 vaccine or losing their jobs, thousands of L.A. school-district employees opted for a last-minute jab (99% compliance among teachers and 97% of all employees) latimes.com/california/sto…
The compliance rate, so far, of nearly 85% for students has improved since Nov. 22 when it was 80% and about 44,000 students were not on track latimes.com/california/sto…
As for continued resistance, two lawsuits against the L.A. Unified student mandate are pending.
And parents & students opposed to the mandate have called in to every recent school board meeting — pleading their cause, threatening litigation latimes.com/california/sto…
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The movie is about teenage boys and their hard-nosed captain who learn about life and loyalty sailing a 1911 brigantine through a deadly storm.
The motto was roughly engraved on the vessel’s bell, which served as the emotional heart of the story. latimes.com/california/sto…
In QAnon legend, the bell belonged to John F. Kennedy and was on his yacht — part of a labyrinthine belief that John F. Kennedy, Jr. is still alive and working with Trump to expose the elite cabal and perhaps run as his vice president in the next election. latimes.com/california/sto…
In #TheEnvelope podcast, @JENCOOLIDGE opens up about overcoming cocaine addiction in her 20s, channeling the death of her mother to play Tanya McQuoid in “The White Lotus” and what she wants from Season 2. latimes.com/entertainment-…
Citing mounting evidence of ongoing harm, U.S. Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy issued a public health advisory on the mental health challenges confronting youth, a rare warning and call to action to address an emerging crisis exacerbated by the pandemic.
Symptoms of depression and anxiety have doubled during the pandemic, with 25% of youth experiencing depressive symptoms and 20% experiencing anxiety symptoms, according to Murthy’s 53-page advisory.
In early 2021, emergency department visits in the U.S. for suspected suicide attempts were 51% higher for adolescent girls and 4% higher for adolescent boys compared to the same time period in early 2019, according to research cited in the advisory.
Southern California Pizza Hut customers are being hit with an extra charge to help recover “the increased cost of operations in the state of California.”
A reader shared with @Davidlaz a screenshot of his recent online transaction with a Pizza Hut restaurant.
Attached to his $8.99 order for pasta and breadsticks was a 76-cent “service charge.” latimes.com/business/story…
This is separate from Pizza Hut’s delivery charge and separate from tax. It’s a fee explicitly passing along part of the restaurant’s cost of doing business in California.
All companies have every right to do that — but that’s not what’s happening here. latimes.com/business/story…
California is preparing for a winter COVID-19 surge — if not from the newly identified Omicron variant, then from the Delta variant, which still poses a severe threat and has already caused surges in other states.
Surge planning is also well underway in Central California, which has recently experienced a reprieve in COVID-19 hospitalizations, falling by nearly 30% since mid-November.
Holiday decorations will stay up, and seasonal performances will continue, until Jan. 9.
If you book a reservation for Jan. 2 through Jan. 9, you can avoid the crowds and still see all the holiday lights, ornaments, shows and parades. latimes.com/business/story…