Coronavirus
“Cease and Desist:” Cal Workers’ Union Pushes Back on New State Vaccine Requirement
The governor announced the policy during a press conference on July 26. He said all state employees and health care workers will either have to test regularly for COVID-19 or provide evidence that they’ve been vaccinated by August 2, 2021.
Activism
ESSAY: Technology and Medicine, a Primary Care Point of View
The COVID-19 pandemic, for example, restricted millions of people to their homes, which required reliance on the internet for communication and information. Personal internet searches became essential to understanding information about COVID, human physiology, symptoms, and keeping up with vaccine updates. However, this increase in independent online research resulted in people accessing more misinformation circulating on the internet. This posed a challenge for medical providers trying to treat patients according to research-based guidelines. With so much information within reach, it was difficult for providers to help their patients distinguish between legitimate evidence-based sources and opinion, speculation, and fabrication.
Alameda County
After Years of Working Remotely, Oakland Requires All City Employees to Return to Office by April 7
City Administrator Jestin Johnson recently told city unions that he is ending Oakland’s telecommuting program. The new policy will require employees to come to work at least four days a week. These new regulations go into effect on Feb. 18 for non-union department heads, assistant and deputy directors, managers, and supervisors. All other employees must be back at work by April 7.
Bay Area
Authorities Warn: There’s a COVID Surge in California
According to data estimates by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the coronavirus in California’s wastewater has spiked for eight consecutive weeks. Hospitalizations and emergency room visits have also increased since the rise of the new subvariants. Over the last month, Los Angeles County experienced an average of 389 hospital patients per day that tested positive for the coronavirus. The FLiRT subvariants such as KP.3.1.1. Made up over 2% of coronavirus samples nationwide, an increase of more than 7% last month.
-
Activism4 weeks agoOP-ED: AB 1349 Puts Corporate Power Over Community
-
Activism3 weeks agoProtecting California’s Black Moms and Babies: Policies and Programs Struggle to Fix Deep-Rooted Maternal Health Inequities
-
Activism3 weeks agoWhy Peace on Earth Begins with Birth, a Q&A with Midwife Nikki Helms
-
#NNPA BlackPress3 weeks agoJefferson County (AL) Democrats Open Qualifying for 2026 Primary Elections
-
#NNPA BlackPress3 weeks agoCOMMENTARY: With Gratitude and Praise for 2026
-
#NNPA BlackPress3 weeks agoFrom Civil Rights to ICE Raids, Trump’s Unchecked Power Puts Every Community at Risk
-
#NNPA BlackPress3 weeks agoFrom Civil Rights to ICE Raids, Trump’s Unchecked Power Puts Every Community at Risk
-
#NNPA BlackPress2 weeks agoOP-ED: The Dream Cannot be Realized Without Financial Freedom




