CDC: Workers should not force customers to wear masks to avoid violence
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warns that forcing customers who do not want to follow face covering rules could lead to violent confrontations.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warns that forcing customers who do not want to follow face covering rules could lead to violent confrontations.
Explore Biloxi’s story and what it can tell other U.S. communities about long-term disaster recovery.
A 33-year old man was found to have a second SARS-CoV-2 infection some four-and-a-half months after he was diagnosed with his first, from which he recovered.
Colorado crop progress and condition report from the USDA for the week ending August 23, 2020.
It’s tempting to assume that once the first COVID-19 coronavirus vaccine is approved for human use, all the problems of this pandemic will be immediately solved
A new reports says the average employment rate in 24 states was still below the Great Recession years even before the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development has given Colorado more than $110 million in COVID-19 coronavirus aid.
A proposal on Colorado's November ballot would fund family and sick leave insurance through taxes on employers and employees.
An action or process is said to be “feasible” when it’s possible, but the word “possible” doesn’t really capture the essence of the concept of feasibility. Something may be possible, but it could also be extremely difficult.
Gwendolyn Pearl (Crozier) Jagers
June 19, 1934 – August 18, 2020
Gwendolyn Pearl (Crozier) Jagers was born June 19, 1934, at home near Sioux Lookout, Nebraska. She was the first child of Jesse and Faye Crozier. A year later, her sister, Arlene, joined the family. In 1939 another sister, Betty, was born, and in 1946 her baby brother, Marvin, completed their family.