Cases of COVID-19 are rising, businesses are reopening, and some employers are worried. So what are the protections for employers, employees, and customers?
When the day finally comes that you get your vaccine shot and the pharmacist hands you a long list of warnings, you might want to say, 鈥渢hank you, Ian.鈥
In March, breaking news was 19 deaths, 420 COVID cases in the U.S. Now it's July, the virus is back on top, and early projections were actually understated.
One of the keys to keeping the coronavirus under control is contact tracing, which helps sort out the source of outbreaks and potentially contain them. Kim Steele-Peter, public health branch director for Pierce County, explains how it works.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that religious schools can't be excluded from private school subsidies. In Washington, private school subsides aren't allowed.
Katrina Johnson, the cousin of Charleena Lyles, says change in policing won't happen until the right people with the right intentions are at the table.
You can go ahead and reform your government, but if it can鈥檛 control the knuckleheads, pretty soon even reasonable people will start ripping off their masks.
Omari Salisbury with Converge Media has been reporting on the ground from the CHOP every day. He stopped by Seattle's Morning News to provide an update.