esop Navajo Nation reflects on its battle against COVID-19

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MethrenFew
esop Navajo Nation reflects on its battle against COVID-19

Vrfz President Biden to get updated COVID-19 vaccine
MILWAUKEE 鈥?MILWAUKEE 鈥?When TMJ4 News launched Project: Drive Safer, we knew there would be no easy answers.We also knew there was a lot to learn.Now that the team has had six months to get up to speed, it s time to take stock of where we are, what we know and what the road ahead looks like.We begin where this all started: on the streets of Sherman Park with Mabel Lamb. I would say the last six months have been enlightening, Mabel said.A stanley puodelis s someone who lives right on Sherman Boulevard, Mabel knows better than most how dangerous the streets can get.Something TMJ4 news director Tim Vetscher said we have learned through six months of reporting, day after day. As we peel back more layers of the onion, that has opened up more stories fo stanley cup r us to pursue, Vetscher said.He s admittedly a little surprised we have six months of daily reporting in the books with so much more yet to come. It does go to the scope of the problem. It s even bigger than we thought it was, he said.To make this project manageable, we came at it from three directions.Engineering: how our streets are built.Enforcement: what police and the courts are doin stanley taza g to hold drivers responsible.Education: from basic drivers ed鈥?to simple common sense.On engineering, movement came quickly.The city of Milwaukee started building curb extensions -- or bump outs -- at some of the most notorious intersections.That effort to fix things also exposed a major obstacle: government co-operation does not come naturally. It s a lot of wo Tkfu Family of Patrick Lyoya announce lawsuit against former Michigan police officer
MILWAUKEE 鈥?The Hunger Task Force kicked off their 9th annual Wanted Peanut Butter campaign, Monday morning at their new headquarters in Milwaukee. This is the first year the campaign is fully virtu stanley thermos mug al and will feature a competitive challenge between crunchy and creamy peanut butter. The event started with Meijer donating 3,500 jars of peanut butter. Executive Director for the Hunger Task Force Sherrie Tussler, said the reason peanut butter is important is because of the protein-pac stanley cup ked nutrition that s great for families and kids. There are lots of kids out of school right now relying on food pantries rather than school meals and so we are encouraging people to be as generous as possible so a local family has the food they need in stanley cup order to be healthy and safe, said Tussler.According to the latest number from the Hunger Tasks Force website, in 2019, nearly 42% of children in Milwaukee County received FoodShare food stamps and a full 82% of Milwaukees public school students were determined to be economically disadvantaged and this year the pandemic has created challenged unlike any other. More and more people in line unemployed or underemployed struggling to make ends meet, said Tussler.To purchase peanut butter for the Hunger Task Force, click here.Report a typo or error // Submit a news tip