Denver7 viewers help make rebuilding a reality for Louisville nurse, her family

By |2023-02-14T22:24:50-05:00February 14th, 2023|COVID-19|

LOUISVILLE, Colo. — Neighborhoods in Louisville and Superior are starting a new chapter with many new builds cropping up in empty lots more than a year after the Marshall Fire. The Christensen family is one of the many embarking on the rebuilding process. Denver7 first met Kim Christensen early last year, when her neighborhood was covered in rubble. “The first year, it felt like it was more of a blur, but it does feel like a very long time waiting," Christensen said. “It's like you're waiting for Christmas."Monday afternoon, Christensen and her family broke ground on the construction of their new home on their old lot. Crews break ground on Louisville nurse's new home following Marshall Fire “It'll still be our home, but not exactly the same," Christensen said. “It will look different, but the same people will be here. So we'll be back in the neighborhood again, and we'll have our house going up soon.”From their lot, Christensen can see Centura Avista Adventist Hospital, where she has worked for nearly two decades. She worked on the frontlines of the COVID-19 pandemic before losing her home in the Marshall Fire. Denver7 viewers stepped up to help, and through Denver7 Gives, the Christensen family's mortgage was paid for 10 months, allowing her to focus on the future. “We're able to put money towards something else instead of having to pay this constant mortgage to something that's not here," Christensen said. “Many neighbors are not rebuilding. And so it has been tremendously helpful. Every little bit helps, but that's a huge chunk of help. So thank you.”The home is being built by Ascent Builders, which hopes to have the family in their new home in time for Christmas. “We can only move forward, right?" Christensen said. "Can't go backwards.” Click here to go directly to the Denver7 Gives donation form then choose a campaign Denver7 features the stories of people who need help and now you can help them with a cash donation through Denver7 Gives. One hundred percent of contributions to the fund will be used to help people in our local community.Want more stories of hope and ways to help in your inbox? Sign up to get the weekly Denver7 Gives Email Newsletter 💌

Frisch’s in St. Matthews is closing its doors – Louisville – WLKY

By |2023-02-14T22:24:50-05:00February 14th, 2023|COVID-19|

YEAR. WHILE A LONG TIME CASUAL, FAMILY FRIENDLY RESTAURANT IN ST MATTHEWS CLOSED ITS DOORS FOR GOOD THIS AFTERNOON. TODAY WAS THE LAST DAY FOR THE FRESHIES BIG BOY ON SHELBYVILLE ROAD ROAD. THE LOCATION NEAR THE MALL HAS BEEN THERE FOR DECADES, EATING THERE SEVERAL TIMES WITH THIS CLOSING THE ONLY LOCAL FRESH RESTAURANTS ARE ON POPLAR LEVEL ROAD IN SHEPHERDSVILLE AND IN NEW ALBANY. THE CINCINNATI BASED CHAIN HAS OTHER LOCATIONS ACROSS KENTUCK

GOP launches probe into COVID-19 origins with letter to Fauci – WAVE 3

By |2023-02-14T11:22:59-05:00February 13th, 2023|COVID-19|

WASHINGTON (AP) — House Republicans kicked off an investigation Monday into the origins of COVID-19 by issuing a series of letters to current and former Biden administration officials for documents and testimony.The Republican chairmen of the House Oversight Committee and the subcommittee on the coronavirus pandemic requested information from several people, including Dr. Anthony Fauci, surrounding the hypothesis that the coronavirus leaked accidentally from a Chinese lab.“This investigation must begin with where and how this virus came about so that we can attempt to predict, prepare or prevent it from happening again,” Rep. Brad Wenstrup, R-Ohio, chair of the virus subcommittee, said in a statement.Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., chairman of the oversight committee, added that Republicans will “follow the facts” and “hold U.S. government officials that took part in any sort of cover-up accountable.”The letters to Fauci, National Intelligence Director Avril Haines, Health Secretary Xavier Beccera and others are the latest effort by the new Republican majority to make good on promises made during the 2022 midterms campaign.Wenstrup, who is also a longtime member of the House Intelligence Committee, has accused U.S. intelligence of withholding key facts about its investigation into the coronavirus. Republicans on the committee last year issued a staff report arguing that there are “indications” that the virus may have been developed as a bioweapon inside the China’s Wuhan Institute of Virology.That would contradict a U.S. intelligence community assessment released in unclassified form in August 2021 that said analysts do not believe the virus was a bioweapon, though it may have leaked in a lab accident.The letters sent Monday do not require the cooperation of recipients. But in announcing the Republican staff report in December, Wenstrup said that lawmakers would issue subpoenas if potential witnesses didn’t cooperate.It is extremely difficult for scientists to establish definitively how diseases emerge, but studies by experts around the world have determined that COVID-19 most likely emerged from a live animal market in Wuhan, China.Initially dismissed by most public health experts and government officials, the hypothesis that COVID-19 originated from an accidental lab leak began to receive scrutiny after President Joe Biden ordered an investigation into the matter in May 2021.The 90-day review was meant to push American intelligence agencies to collect more information and review what they already had. Former State Department officials under President Donald Trump had publicly pushed for further investigation into virus origins, as had scientists and the World Health Organization. But the review proved to be inconclusive, with intelligence agencies saying that barring an unforeseen breakthrough, they wouldn’t be able to conclude the origin either way.Many scientists, including Fauci, who until December served as Biden’s chief medical adviser, say they still believe the virus most likely emerged in nature and jumped from animals to humans, a well-documented phenomenon known as a spillover event. Virus researchers have not publicly identified any key new scientific evidence that might make the lab-leak hypothesis more likely.But Republicans have accused Fauci of lying to Congress when he denied in May that the National Institutes of Health funded “gain of function” research — the practice of enhancing a virus in a lab to study its potential impact in the real world — at a virology lab in Wuhan. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, even urged Attorney General Merrick Garland to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate Fauci’s statements.Fauci, who served as the country’s top infectious disease expert under both Republican and Democratic presidents, has called the GOP criticism nonsense.Cruz and Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., have previously said that an October 2021 letter from NIH to Congress contradicts Fauci. But no clear evidence or scientific consensus exists that “gain of function” research was funded by NIH, and there is no link between U.S.-funded research to the emergence of COVID-19. NIH has repeatedly maintained that its funding did not go to such research involving boosting the infectivity and lethality of a pathogen.Nonetheless, Fauci indicated in November that he would “cooperate fully and testify” if Republicans followed through with their plans to investigate COVID’s origin.“I have no trouble testifying — we can defend and explain everything that we’ve said,” he told reporters during a White House briefing last year.___This story has been corrected to show that Rep. James Comer is from Kentucky, not Tennessee.Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

UK queen consort tests positive for COVID-19 – Louisville – wdrb.com

By |2023-02-13T14:22:59-05:00February 13th, 2023|COVID-19|

LONDON (AP) — Buckingham Palace says Camilla, Britain’s queen consort, has tested positive for Covid-19 after suffering from cold symptoms. The palace says the wife of King Charles III cancelled all her engagements this week “and sends her sincere apologies to those who had been due to attend them.″ Camilla, 75, also tested positive last year. Both she and the king have been vaccinated. Charles, 74, previously contracted the coronavirus in March 2020, during the first wave of the pandemic.

Max Wise’s bill to curb ‘woke agenda’ sparks plea for compassion from Senate colleague

By |2023-02-09T23:22:34-05:00February 9th, 2023|COVID-19|

FRANKFORT, Ky. —  Republican Kelly Craft’s running mate in the Kentucky governor’s race took her anti-woke crusade to the Senate floor Wednesday, drawing a plea from a colleague to “avoid politicizing issues that are literally killing our children.” Sen. Karen Berg, D-Louisville, begged her colleagues to think about “who you’re putting in the center of this fight.” Berg’s son, who was transgender, committed suicide in December. Berg spoke after Wise, R-Campbellsville, criticized what he called the “woke agenda” in the Kentucky Department of Education and its recent guidance on how to support LGBTQI+ students and their families. His remarks garnered some applause.  Wise introduced Senate Bill 150 which, among other things, would ban any Education Department guidance on students’ preferred names. A news release from the Senate majority office said SB 150  “provides staff and students First Amendment protections by ensuring nobody is compelled or required to use pronouns that do not conform to a student’s biological sex.”  On the Senate floor, Wise said, “Now these may seem like very simple ideas, but in a day and age where our own commissioner of education says that a teacher can be fired for not referring to a student as a furry, it’s much needed legislation in today’s time.”  Sen. Karen Berg, D-Louisville, comments on a COVID-19 issue before the General Assembly in February 2022. (Legislative Research Commission photo) Questioned later by reporters, Wise said he had been speaking hypothetically and had no knowledge of Education Commissioner Jason E. Glass ever saying anything about a furry. According to Wikipedia, furry fandom is a subculture interested in anthropomorphic animal characters. Glass issued a statement later Wednesday, saying: “Sen. Wise’s statement is false and ridiculous. It is hurtful statements like these that have a negative impact on not just our students, but our educator workforce. Putting forth policies aimed at cruelty and harm toward marginalized groups has no place in our democracy.” If passed into law, Wise’s bill would prohibit the Department of Education and state Board of Education from “recommending or requiring policies to keep minor students’ information confidential from their parents,” the  Senate majority news release said. A school district would have to notify parents about the health and mental health services students are offered or seek at school.  School districts would also be required to give parents a two-week notice about instruction or school courses on human sexuality as well as an opportunity to review accompanying materials. If parents disapprove of an assignment, the bill would require that an alternative assignment be given to the student.  Berg asserted that teachers would be uncomfortable telling parents a child is gay or trans if the parents were unaware, in part because of concerns for the child’s safety. She suggested that disrespecting students’ name preferences could be a form of bullying and warned against “putting children in the middle of a political fight between some ostensible right and some ostensible woke culture when most of us are simply trying to do the best for the most.” Sen. Max Wise, R-Campbellsville, speaks to the Senate in January 2022. (Legislative Research Commission photo) Berg’s son, Henry Berg-Bousseau, 24, died by suicide in December. He had recently been promoted at the Human Rights Campaign, a nationwide LGBTQ advocacy and lobbying organization, and worked with the statewide LGBTQ rights advocacy group Fairness Campaign as a high school student.  At the time, Sen. Berg issued a statement  saying, in part, “As a mother of a transgender son, I gave my whole heart trying to protect my child from a world where some people and especially some politicians intentionally continued to believe that marginalizing my child was OK simply because of who he was.”  Wise, who was chairman of the Senate Education Committee from 2019 until recently, told reporters that the bill is not targeting a certain lifestyle but is about “empowering parents.”  “Our schools should be focused on teaching students math, science, history, life skills, and leave it to the parents to engage their children with deeply personal discussions about their lives, but do it at home,” said Wise. Wise’s bill and remarks come days after gubernatorial candidate Craft  vowed to dismantle the Department of Education and the Kentucky Board of Education. In a statement, she accused both of “pushing woke agendas in our schools.” Kentucky Department of Education spokesperson Toni Konz Tatman in an email said:  “In Commissioner’s Glass’ testimony to the House Education Committee on Tuesday, he stated if a teacher could not follow a district’s guidelines, they should find employment elsewhere. This is the same advice that applies to any employee in any industry. “The Kentucky Department of Education does not have authority to set curriculum, select instructional materials or mandate guidelines for how districts respond to students who are LGBTQI+, but we are aware that these are situations facing schools and educators on a daily basis.  “It is necessary that the department be able to provide ongoing support and guidance to all Kentucky school districts as they face situations that are unique to their local context. “The guidance produced by KDE gives administrators and educators information to consider when a district is devising its own policy, but this is guidance only. KDE’s guidance on this issue is rooted in evidence-based best practices, which are cited directly in the document and is designed to promote the health and safety of all students.” Tatman provide a link to the KDE guidance. Liam Niemeyer contributed to this report. This article is republished under a Creative Commons license from Kentucky Lantern, which is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Kentucky Lantern maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jamie Lucke for questions: [email protected]. Follow Kentucky Lantern on Facebook and Twitter.

How this west Louisville florist creates more than floral arrangements alongside his mom

By |2023-02-09T23:22:37-05:00February 9th, 2023|COVID-19|

It's hard to have a bad day when you're surrounded by flowers.No matter what's going on in his life, a shift at the florist shop always helps settle Davin Anderson's mind."I didn't realize how much plants and roses and flowers can change your mindset," he said. "The aroma can make your day a little better. Sometimes I'd come in here sleepy or stressed about getting things done, and by the time I leave, I've forgotten all about it."After his mother's flower shop was forced to leave its previous space at the Gene Snyder Federal Building due to increased rent, Anderson helped her find a new location at 2001 W. Broadway five years ago. Now, he owns and operates DN Surprise Florist in the Russell neighborhood and its decorating and catering offshoots while he continues to learn flower arranging from his mother, Sherrell.And while it's just the two of them operating the business, Anderson has big goals for DN Surprise's future.DN Surprise — named for Davin and his brother Nicholas — sells a little bit of everything, from roses and lilies to hydrangeas and other flowers, in both real and silk flowers. Flowers are available for any type of occasion: birthdays, anniversaries, holidays, funerals and even "because it's Wednesday."You may like:What Louisville restaurants are open on Valentine's Day? 18+ dine-in and to-go optionsAnderson said along with "thank you" and "get well soon," he's seen people get more creative in recent years, sending flowers for all kinds of reasons, including "Hey, I might not make it to dinner tonight, but I'll see you at home.""COVID-19 taught people they have to be creative," he said. "Instead of calling to say I can't make it, someone would send some roses and say 'hey, at least I can put a smile on your face.'"The busiest holidays for Anderson are exactly what you'd expect: Valentine's Day and Mother's Day, followed by Memorial Day and Teacher's Appreciation Day."Valentine's Day is not just one day, it's more like Valentine's week," Anderson said. "It's high-intensity because people wait until the last minute to order. During Valentine's week, we get here at 7 or 8 a.m. to prepare the flowers, clean them, cut them, put them in fresh water, check online orders and phone orders. Then we have to make sure delivery orders have the right zip codes...then we send them out."You may like:An insider's guide to 20+ nice restaurants in Louisville for Valentine's DayAnderson said he does about a quarter of the arrangements and Sherrell does the rest. It's a lot more complex than it seems: there are a hundred kinds of roses alone, plus dozens of kinds of greenery and fillers for arrangements and color theory that works differently than it does with clothes."You really should order flowers for Valentine's Day two or three days in advance so we can have it ready," Anderson said."For Valentine's Day?" His mother chimed in. "It's better to order a week or two in advance. A lot of people forget and call on the same day. If you call same-day, you have about 50 people ahead of you. We try to get everything done as fast as we can."DN Surprise mainly sells roses for Valentine's Day and offers one dozen for $50, two dozen for $90 and a florist's choice for $45. The shop offers arrangements at a variety of prices and colors as well as a "Florist's Choice" arrangement if you don't know what you want.

Are metal detectors coming to Louisville schools? Most JCPS board members hope so

By |2023-02-08T22:25:46-05:00February 8th, 2023|COVID-19|

Two weeks after a gun ended up on the floor of the cafeteria at Eastern High School, a push for metal detectors at most of the district's schools was an unexpected but widely supported idea brought up during Tuesday's Jefferson County Board of Education meeting.After members of the Moms Demand Action organization gave a planned presentation on how the district can work to educate parents on secure firearm storage, District 6's board member Corrie Shull said JCPS should take a bigger step by creating a plan by the April board meeting to have metal detectors in every middle and high school. Shull also recommended Superintendent Marty Pollio "immediately" create a school safety task force.More:What happens when a student brings a gun to school in JCPS?The purpose, Shull said, is not to criminalize kids who bring guns to school, but to "keep guns out of our schools."Carrying a firearm on a school campus is a Class D felony and district policy is that each student caught doing so is cited, JCPS spokesperson Carolyn Callahan said after the incident at Eastern High. The citation either comes from outside law enforcement such as Louisville Metro Police or from one of the district’s sworn law enforcement officers on their in-house security team, Callahan said.All but one of Shull's fellow board members voted in support of the plan and Pollio briefly explained what aspects of the proposal will be complicated.District 2's Chris Kolb was the sole dissident in supporting metal detectors in the district's schools, saying the detectors are unlikely to increase school safety but would definitely contribute to the criminalization of Black students. Additionally, Kolb questioned whether guns are the most urgent safety issue facing children in schools.More education news:A silent disco shows how kids at a Louisville school advocate for peers with disabilitiesPointing to the number of students who have died in school shootings versus the number of students who have died due to COVID-19, Kolb said, "There are far more threats that are more pressing to kids at school that we've done nothing about."When it comes to conversations about school safety, Kolb said, "I don't want to hear anything from anyone who voted against a mask mandate or opposed a mask mandate in schools."District 5's board member Linda Duncan supported Shull's suggestion, but questioned his claim that the detectors wouldn't lead to the criminalization of students and suggested the district take action now, rather than waiting on metal detectors."To me, bringing a gun on school property is a crime and we have to deal with it like that," she said.When it comes to installing metal detectors, Duncan said, "I don't even want to wait that long. I'm concerned about backpacks. ... I think backpacks need to be in a locker and put away with coats."More:Beshear makes more Kentucky juvenile detention center changes, including worker raises"I think we need to think immediately about what we can do now, as well as long term," she continued.After each board member responded to Shull's recommendation, Pollio expressed frustration that as a board of education, their focus was on guns rather than about learning and teaching.Rather than decreasing the proliferation of guns in schools, Pollio pointed out, there is a legislative bill "to add guns to our schools, not take them away."The discussion, he said, "Reminds me of what we had to do during COVID, which was to be health officials."Installing the metal detectors isn't an issue of cost, he said, but rather personnel. Based on research his team has already started, each high school will need between five to 10 detectors and each middle will need three to five, which will cost about $5 million."We can implement it with the finances that we currently have," he said, but several trained personnel would be needed to monitor the detectors at each school. Plus, trained officers would need to be present to conduct searches when a detector alerts that a weapon is on a student, he said."It will be a major challenge with the staffing crisis we are in right now," Pollio said.With a 6-1 vote, Pollio is set to bring more information to the board about this plan by April 25.

Photos Show Behind-The-Scenes Look At Life As A Touring Band During COVID

By |2023-02-08T22:26:01-05:00February 8th, 2023|COVID-19|

Jake Gunter and Josh Dawn of the country band Jake Gunter and Josh Dawn of the country band "Big 50" tune their instruments before a show in Nashville, Tennessee.It’s no secret that COVID-19 (along with its variants) changed our world as we knew it, and asall businesses have been forced to adapt, the music industry has been no exception: fromsuperstars selling out stadiums to newcomers grinding to build a grassroots career path,musicians as a whole have been forced to navigate a time where playing live was not an optionand where success is measured in views on social media instead of bodies in crowds.New forms of exposure, like TikTok and Instagram, became the only option for exposure, andeven as live music has returned, a fraction of pre-pandemic venues remain, with rising fuel andhealth safety costs have far outweighed the value of a gig.Tour packages and traveling musicians have been forced to reduce their scope, stripping downproduction (and even band members) to keep costs at a minimum and keep touring viable. Fora while, the days of a musician being able to earn a living seemed as though they had passed.Dawn smokes a cigarette before a show in Nashville at Springwater bar, the oldest operating bar in Tennessee.Dawn smokes a cigarette before a show in Nashville at Springwater bar, the oldest operating bar in Tennessee.Dawn (left) and Andrew Gaultier talk together after a show at The Basement in Nashville.Dawn (left) and Andrew Gaultier talk together after a show at The Basement in Nashville.Prior to COVID, musicians and bands would find themselves traveling the world over to builda name for themselves, finding their start playing in small clubs in different cities in an attempt togrow an organic fan base and, for bands with the right work ethic and sound, this route couldprove successful. Fast forward to our post-pandemic world, a large majority of small,independent venues that welcomed new artists with open arms have shut their doors due to theloss of income when live music was out of the question. These closures have left few viableoptions for independent artists to perform in public, and the venues left standing are oftenunable to provide the payouts that once allowed a band to tour profitably.As our world began to spend more time at home (and on our phones), musicians have found anew form of semi-organic exposure through TikTok and other forms of visual social media.Similar to how TV killed the radio star, modern musicians are forced to conform to newshort-form video standards, writing songs around a hook as opposed to writing for radio or liveplay, and while this has proven a fruitful endeavor for more social media-savvy artists, thelearning curve has been insurmountable for many musicians who got their start by hitting theroad to build an organic grassroots fan base. For many, finding an algorithm-friendly sound hasled to frustration and outright disenchantment with the music industry.Gunter plays his guitar during a show in Nashville.Gunter plays his guitar during a show in Nashville.Austin Wright puts his drum kit away after a show at The Basement.Austin Wright puts his drum kit away after a show at The Basement.The “TikTok Success Story” is one that we’ve all heard, and while the explosive popularity of anovernight viral sensation is often an extraordinary moment for artists, it’s been proven time andtime again that these “successes” do not provide a fan base with the same long-lastingfoundation that organic, steady growth has provided to musicians in the past: simply put, thealgorithm can’t replace the power of a meaningful performance and genuine connection to fans.Now, almost three years later, artists are finally seeing the return of the days of viable touring.With TikTok usage on the decline, it is carving the route for musicians to get back to what theylove: writing great music, traveling the world, meeting new fans, and creating long-lastingrelationships with the fans who support them. With any luck, musicians can now look into 2023and beyond as a time for touring, and social media can return to its rightful place, not as areplacement, but as another tool in a kit that allows extracurricular connection with fans.See more photos of “Big 50” by Seth Herald below. Dawn plays his guitar during a show at The 5 Spot in Nashville.Dawn plays his guitar during a show at The 5 Spot in Nashville.Gunter (right) and Gaultier cross the street to public radio station WUTC 88.1 in Chattanooga, Tennessee, to perform a live session.Gunter (right) and Gaultier cross the street to public radio station WUTC 88.1 in Chattanooga, Tennessee, to perform a live session.Gunter (left) and Gaultier perform during a live session at WUTC 88.1.Gunter (left) and Gaultier perform during a live session at WUTC 88.1.Dawn relaxing during the van ride from Chattanooga to Nashville.Dawn relaxing during the van ride from Chattanooga to Nashville.Gaultier (center) and Dawn enter an elevator in Chattanooga.Gaultier (center) and Dawn enter an elevator in Chattanooga.Dawn puts on his cowboy hat before a show in Louisville, Kentucky.Dawn puts on his cowboy hat before a show in Louisville, Kentucky.Gaultier changes strings on his guitar before a show at Gerstles in Louisville.Gaultier changes strings on his guitar before a show at Gerstles in Louisville.People dance as the band performs at Gerstles in Louisville. People dance as the band performs at Gerstles in Louisville.Gunter after a show in Louisville.Gunter after a show in Louisville.Related...

Louisville Baseball: Projecting the depth chart for the Cardinals – 247 Sports

By |2023-02-08T22:26:03-05:00February 8th, 2023|COVID-19|

The University of Louisville baseball program has been one of the best in the country in recent years.The Cardinals are coming off a 42-21-1 season and have won 45 or more games in eight of the past 10 seasons that didn't end early as the 2020 season did because of Covid-19. And in six of those 10 seasons, the Cardinals won 50 or more games during the season.U of L has made it to the College World Series seven times since head coach Dan McDonnell arrived in 2007. And the Cardinals have won five ACC Atlantic Division titles in the first seven full seasons in the league.Now, it's time for McDonnell's 17th season at the helm.The Cardinals are ranked in multiple national polls among the top 10 teams in the country, checking in as high as No. 5. U of L is the pick to win the ACC Atlantic Division championship - again - and the overall ACC title this season.After missing the NCAA Tournament two years ago in 2021, U of L won the ACC division title, won 42 games, and made an appearance in the College Station Super Regional against Texas A&M last season. The Cardinals return four starting position players - including preseason All-Americans Jack Payton and Christian Knapczyk - and they also return 11 pitchers who saw action in at least 10 innings last season.McDonnell said he was pleased the Cardinals are getting preseason expectations but noted it doesn't mean much."I always say it’s 50 percent the history and you give a lot of credit to the former players and the success that they have had,” McDonnell said. “Combined with the 50 percent of you have a lot of talented players on campus and that’s how you get into the preseason rankings. You have to be professional and take it for what it is.”U of L opens the season on Feb. 18 with a three-game series against Bucknell at Jim Patterson Stadium.Here's a crack at Cardinal Authority projecting the Louisville lineup:

JCPS students get caught up on vaccinations at Newcomer Academy – WLKY

By |2023-02-05T03:27:20-05:00February 5th, 2023|COVID-19|

Jefferson County Public Schools students got another chance to get up-to-date on their vaccinations.The district held another vaccine clinic Saturday at Newcomer Academy.Students received MMR, COVID-19, and flu vaccines while JCPS staff were offered COVID-19 shots.The recent clinics are in response to a measles outbreak in Columbus, Ohio, as well as to increase health care access for students and their families."Vaccines save children. The outbreak in Columbus, over 40 % of all the kids infected had to be hospitalized so that's a pretty big deal. Measles is very, very infectious so from the turnout today we know parents want their kids to be healthy and well. And we need to make sure they have access to do that," said nurse practitioner Eva Stone, JCPS.The first 500 students who got their vaccinations were given a $20 gift card. LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Jefferson County Public Schools students got another chance to get up-to-date on their vaccinations.The district held another vaccine clinic Saturday at Newcomer Academy.

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