On Saturday morning, the statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee was removed from Charlottesville, Virginia, four years after a violent white supremacist protest in the city led to a peaceful counter-protester being killed.

Officials removed the statue at 8 a.m., and several hours later also took down Gen. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson’s statue.

The recent campaign to take down the statues began in 2016, when then-16-year-old Zyahna Bryant created a petition to rename and remove Lee’s statue.

The city council voted for the statues’ removal in 2017, sparking a violent rally among white supremacists in August that shook the country.

A counter-protester, Heather Heyer, was killed at the rally after a man drove his car into a crowd of people. The man, James Alex Fields Jr., was found guilty of murder in 2019.

Source Article from https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ikrd/robert-e-lee-statue-charlottesville-confederate-general

As Western forces exit Afghanistan, Iran is watching with alarm. The resolution of one long-standing aim, the withdrawal of U.S. troops, is unleashing a separate challenge: what to do about the Taliban, another longtime problem for Iran, swiftly regaining power and territory next door.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2021/07/10/iran-taliban-afghanistan-us-troop-withdrawal/

The new school year in California will start with students and teachers wearing masks, state officials announced Friday, staking out a cautious position on a day when new federal guidelines stressed the importance of fully reopening schools and recommended masks only for those who are not vaccinated.

As part of a multilayered approach to limit the spread of COVID-19, those who are not vaccinated should wear masks indoors — and schools, health departments or states may continue to require masks on campus, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.

California has opted for a safety standard that is likely to be more cautious than in many other states.

“We’re going to start with a requirement K through 12 that the year begins with masks,” said California Health and Human Services Secretary Mark Ghaly. “At the outset of the new year, students should be able to walk into school without worrying about whether they will feel different or singled out for being vaccinated or unvaccinated — treating all kids the same will support a calm and supportive school environment.”

He added: “And we think that’s very consistent with what the CDC outlined.”

The CDC guidelines also emphasized the importance of offering in-person learning to all after pandemic-forced school closures and online learning kept many children from campus, resulting in learning losses and mental health problems during months of isolation.

As an example to guide decision making, the CDC describes a situation in which not all students are vaccinated and physical distancing of three feet between desks is difficult to achieve. They advise that a school “should not exclude students from in-person learning to keep a minimum distance requirement,” the guidelines state.

When it comes to masks, the new federal guidelines also list situations in which authorities may appropriately maintain universal masking requirements — and some examples apply to California. They include a recent increase in the COVID-19 transmission rate, occurring in L.A. County and elsewhere. Overall infection rates remain far below what they were at the height of the winter surge.

L.A. County has urged all residents to wear masks indoors in public. Officials reported a doubling of new cases this week compared to last, with 1,107 reported Friday compared to 549 the previous Friday. There are 320 people hospitalized in the county for COVID-19; last Friday there were 280.

The CDC said that the wearing of masks should be considered when there is increasing community transmission of a COVID variant that spreads more easily — or makes people sicker. That could be the situation with the Delta variant, according to California health authorities.

Ghaly added that both the CDC and California recognize that various safety strategies work together in layers to make a school environment safer — with vaccination being foremost among them.

The fundamental shared goal, he added, is for all schools to open and for all students to have access to a safe, in-person classroom experience. In California, he said, masking is a central strategy toward achieving this objective.

The masking requirement also simplifies the work of school administrators who must determine how to create a safe environment through such strategies as improved ventilation and coronavirus testing, Ghaly said. Masks at least will be required for the start of the school year. After that, state guidelines will evolve based on science, data collection and prevalence of the virus and its more dangerous variants, he said.

For children with disabilities who cannot manage masks or who cannot wear masks safely, parents can seek an accommodation that includes not wearing a mask.

The CFT, which represents teachers and other school employees, strongly supported the mask requirement. Teachers monitoring hallways between classes should not have to police which students are allowed to forgo masks and which are not, said union President Jeff Freitas. A partial mandate could raise privacy issues and expose students to unwanted attention based on whether they were or were not wearing masks, he added.

Some of those same concerns were voiced by Megan Bacigalupi, who heads a group that advocated for reopening campuses as soon as possible. But for her, such concerns made the case that no one should be forced to wear a mask.

“In communities with high vaccine adoption and low hospitalization rates due to COVID, including most of California, masks should be optional for all students” as well as vaccinated staff, Bacigalupi said. “Continued mask mandates for vaccinated individuals undermines confidence in our highly effective COVID vaccines and may increase vaccine hesitancy, as the benefits from vaccination become less clear.”

California school districts are expected to fully reopen to the state’s 6 million K-12 students in the fall and the state budget approved by Gov. Gavin Newsom incorporates far-reaching multibillion-dollar education initiatives. These include funding for tutoring, after-school programs and additional counselors and teachers so that students can recover for lost time during the pandemic.

In the fall, many students at every grade level will start the school year unvaccinated. Those under 12 are not yet eligible for vaccinations. Many of those 12 and older have not received shots; they cannot be required to do so because the vaccines have not completed the full federal authorization process.

The new federal guidance is the latest revision in its advice for schools. In March, the CDC stopped recommending that children and their desks be spaced 6 feet apart, shrinking the distance to 3 feet, and dropped its call for use of plastic shields. The CDC still recommends at least 3 feet of distance when students are not vaccinated.

After facing legal action from a parents group, California dropped its distancing requirements altogether, although other health agencies and districts have the option to impose them.

In May, the CDC said that Americans in general don’t have to be as cautious about masks and distancing outdoors and that fully vaccinated people don’t need masks in most situations. That change was incorporated into updated guidance for summer camps — and now, schools.

American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten praised the CDC guidelines as “grounded in both science and common sense.”

“The guidance confirms two truths: that students learn better in the classroom, and that vaccines remain our best bet to stop the spread of this virus and get our kids and educators fully back to those classrooms for in-person learning,” she said. “It also makes clear that masking is important in the absence of vaccination.”

Regardless of the mask policy at schools, passengers and drivers must wear a mask on school buses, including on buses operated by public and private school systems.

The CDC also advised that schools should provide masks to those students who need them, including on buses — and that no disciplinary action should be taken against a student who does not have a mask.

Moreover, fully vaccinated people who were in close contact with someone who has COVID-19 but do not have COVID-19 symptoms, no longer need to quarantine or be tested.

California is updating its own guidelines for schools and could issue those as early as next week.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-07-10/california-to-require-masks-in-schools-despite-cdc-guidelines-theyre-not-needed-if-vaccinated

A 24-year-old man “more than likely” shot his girlfriend in the neck on accident while trying to fend off a “swarm” of people who pulled the couple out of their car on a busy Humboldt Park street near last month’s Puerto Rican Day festivities, police said Saturday.

Gyovanni Arzuaga was then fatally shot “execution-style” by Anthony Lorenzi during the vicious June 19 encounter that was captured on video, according to Chicago police. Yasmin Perez, the mother of Arzuaga’s two young children, died three days later.

Lorenzi, 34, was arrested Friday in San Diego. He’s awaiting extradition to Chicago, where he’ll face just one charge of first-degree murder because investigators say the evidence suggests Arzuaga inadvertently shot his 25-year-old girlfriend after they were ambushed in a “frenzy” on Division Street.

The couple were driving with two friends in the backseat about 9 p.m. in the 3200 block of West Division when they got into a “minor traffic accident” with the vehicle in front of them, according to CPD Chief of Detectives Brendan Deenihan.

A “swarm” of people then attacked, “punching and trying to pull them out of the car,” Deenihan said — all of which was captured on surveillance video.

A gunshot rang out, hitting Perez in the neck. Arzuaga was then pulled out of the car completely and shot in the head “almost execution-style,” Deenihan said.

Graphic video of the shooting began circulating online within hours. Police received several tips identifying Arzuaga’s shooter as Lorenzi, who left for San Diego the morning after the shooting, Deenihan said.

But the bullet that killed Perez “more than likely” came from a .40 caliber gun inside the car that was recovered from Arzuaga, Deenihan said, citing the video. Authorities recovered a shell casing that matched the gun and are performing ballistics tests to confirm.

“Everything points to — once again, more than likely — that [Arzuaga] discharged that firearm, accidentally, causing that gunshot wound” to Perez, Deenihan said.

But “this individual in custody — Lorenzi — he is the one responsible for this death. There is nobody else responsible,” Deenihan added.

Anthony Lorenzi.
Chicago police

Lorenzi was arrested by U.S. Marshals Friday evening outside an apartment complex in San Diego. It wasn’t clear how long it would take for him to appear before a Cook County judge.

Lorenzi has previously been convicted seven times, most recently for a 2016 case of aggravated fleeing and eluding from an attempted “vehicle invasion” that took place two blocks away from the scene of last month’s shooting, according to CPD Supt. David Brown.

Detectives have yet to interview Lorenzi. Police said the couple posted a photo online of themselves holding guns before the parade, but Deenihan said the motive for the attack is unknown.

“It appears that it’s possibly just the car accident, and then that immediate frenzy that occurred,” he said.

The couple leave behind two young children.

“It may look hard for a lot of people, but Yasmin was such a great mom,” her friend Jae Pacheco previously told the Sun-Times. “She loved her kids so much. You could tell they were so loved, and they were so happy.”

Arzuaga “was just about being around good vibes, being around good people,” Pacheco said.

Investigators are still looking for an unspecified number of other possible suspects in connection with the case.

Source Article from https://chicago.suntimes.com/crime/2021/7/10/22571454/puerto-rican-day-parade-shooting-humboldt-chicago-charges-police

The death toll from the Miami condo collapse reached 84 on Saturday, as workers recovered the bodies of seven new victims overnight. 

Another 43 people still remain ‘unaccounted for’ – 17 days after the 13-story Champlain Towers South apartment block crumbled. 

Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava stated that 62 of the victims have so far been identified.  

Meanwhile, there are now also fears survivors and first responders could develop cancer due to potentially hazardous dust floating in the area. 

Surfside Mayor Charles Burkett told local reporters that ‘huge amount’ of dust had kicked been kicked up in the area on Saturday, despite heavy rainfall overnight. 

Air samples collected by Local 10 News show ‘hazardous air quality’ in and around the debris. 

According to the website, ‘materials [from the site] released into the air… can lead to cancer and respiratory disease’, as happened to hundreds of survivors and first responders following the 9/11 terrorist attacks.  

‘We will probably never know everything we’ve been exposed to out there,’ Billy McAlister, the  president of Metropolitan Dade County Local 1403 Firefighters old Local 10. 

The death toll from the Miami condo collapse reached 84 on Saturday, as workers recovered the bodies of seven new victims overnight. There are now also fears survivors and first responders could develop cancer due to potentially hazardous dust floating in the area. A man is seen covering his face as he makes his way to the recovery site on Saturday 

Dust is seen floating through the air as rescue workers remove debris overnight 

A worker wearing a P100 mask is seen among the rubble searching for remains of 43 people who are ‘unaccounted for’

The death toll from the Miami condo collapse reached 84 on Saturday, as workers recovered the bodies of seven new victims overnight

McAlister said he and his team had been in contact with medical experts who run the World Trade Center Respiratory Health Initiative to try and employ tactics to mitigate exposure to hazardous air. 

First responders are required to wear P100 masks, but recovery shifts can stretch on for 12 hours at a time, meaning there’s no telling the true levels of exposure. 

‘It is the unknown. We don’t know what we don’t know,’ McAllister stated. 

However, he praised the efforts of his team, stating: ‘That is our job. We have to be there.’ 

On Friday, four of those victims were named. They included a 21-year-old University of Chicago student, Ilan Naibryf, and a 31-year-old man visiting from New Jersey, Benny Weisz.

Colombian-born Angela Velasquez, 60, owner of a popular men’s boutique, and Leidy Luna Villalba, a Paraguayan nursing student, were also named among the dead.

Luna lived in the condo, having traveled abroad for the first time as a nanny for the family of Silvana Lopez Moreira, the first lady of Paraguay. 

On Thursday, Paraguay’s foreign minister said in a radio report that the body of Lopez’s sister was among those found. 

Ilan Naibryf, 21, a physics major at the University of Chicago, was confirmed on Friday as among the dead. His girlfriend Deborah Berezdivin, also 21, a student at George Washington University, is still missing

Benny Weisz, 32, and Malki Weisz, 27, of Lakewood, N.J., had just flown into Surfside on the night of the Champlain Tower collapse. The couple, married for five years, came to visit Malki’s father, Chaim Rosenberg, and spend Shabbat with him in his new apartment. Benny and his father-in-law have been found; Malki is still missing

Angela Maria Velasquez, 60, was confirmed on Friday to have died in the tragedy. Her husband Julio Cesar Velasquez, 67, remains missing in the Surfside condo collapse, as does her daughter Theresa, 36

Leidy Luna Villalba, the 23-year-old nanny for the Paraguayan first lady’s sister, was confirmed dead on Friday

Paraguay foreign minister has confirmed that the bodies of the Paraguayan First Lady’s sister, Sophia López Moreira, her husband Luis Pettengill and their youngest child were among the bodies identified on Thursday

Recovery workers on Friday toiled for a 16th day to find victims in the rubble. 

Another 61 people remain unaccounted for, among them Naibryf’s girlfriend, Deborah Berezdivin, a student at George Washington University. 

Naibryf was a physics major with a minor in molecular engineering and was also president of the student Jewish life organization.

‘He also was co-founder and CEO of STIX Financial, a 2021 College New Venture Challenge finalist, served as president of the Chabad House student board, was a former member of the men’s track and field team, and was active in recreational soccer,’ the school said.

Weisz’s wife Malki remains unaccounted for, as do Velasquez’s husband Julio and daughter Theresa, a Live Nation executive, 36, who had flown in from Los Angeles the night before.  

Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said the work to recover victims was ‘moving forward with great urgency’ in order to bring closure to the families of victims who have spent an agonizing two weeks waiting for news.

‘This is a staggering and heartbreaking number that affects all of us very deeply,’ Levine Cava said of the latest death toll.

This aerial view, shows search and rescue personnel working on site after the partial collapse of the Champlain Towers South in Surfside

‘All those who have passed … are leaving behind loved ones. They’re leaving behind devastated families. The magnitude of this tragedy is growing each and every day,’ she said.

Rescue workers and emergency support teams from Florida and several other states have labored in 12-hour shifts, 24 hours a day at the site of the devastated beachfront condominium in Surfside – physically and emotionally taxing work performed amid oppressive heat and in dangerous conditions.

‘We know that there will be long-term impacts for the teams on the front line,’ Levine Cava said. 

‘They have given so much of themselves in these first two weeks.’

Miami-Dade Fire Chief Alan Cominsky said taking care of the mental health and well-being of the first responders is a priority. He said it is critical that the first responders communicate with each other. 

‘It’s important for us to talk,’ he said.

Rescuers are seen searching through the debris on June 27. The death toll is now at 79

To that end, Levine Cava said officials have added peer support personnel at the fire stations.

No one has been found alive since the first hours after a large section of the 12-story Champlain Towers South came crashing down on June 24.

Hope of finding survivors was briefly rekindled after workers demolished the remainder of the building on Sunday night, allowing access to new areas of debris. 

Some voids where survivors could have been trapped did exist, mostly in the basement and the parking garage, but no one was found alive. Instead, teams recovered more than a dozen additional victims.

On Wednesday, workers shifted their mission from search and rescue to recovery after concluding that there was ‘no chance of life’ in the rubble.

Levine Cava said the high death toll is ‘an aching hole in the center of this close-knit family here in Surfside.’

She said that with 61 people still listed as missing, detectives are continuing to audit the list to verify that all of those people were actually inside the building when it collapsed. ‘We want to get this right,’ she said.

Miami-Dade Fire Chef Alan Cominsky said it is unclear how the long the recovery effort will take, but said crews are making progress.

Rescue workers now focused on finding remains instead of survivors have pledged to keep up their search for victims until they clear all the debris at the site.

State and local officials have pledged financial assistance to families of the victims, as well as to residents of the building who survived but lost all their possessions. 

On Friday, Gov. Ron DeSantis issued an executive order indefinitely suspending laws that would require the payment of property taxes for residents whose homes were destroyed or rendered uninhabitable in the collapse. 

The order also requests that the state legislature explore additional acts that may be needed to alleviate their property tax obligations.

Meanwhile, authorities are launching a grand jury investigation into the collapse. And at least six lawsuits have been filed by families.

Footage shot by a prospective buyer showed cracks and puddles in the Surfside condo building in Miami a year before it collapsed.

The video, which was shared with DailyMail.com, was taken in the garage of the Champlain Towers South building in July last year. 

Fiorella Terenzi, who had toured the complex in anticipation of buying a unit on the sixth floor, said what she saw in the garage ultimately turned her off buying in the building.

Terenzi’s video showed wide cracks in the ceiling of the garage that appeared to have been repaired and painted over. 

It also showed what appeared to be water puddles in the ceiling. 

The video was taken by prospective buyer Fiorella Terenzi in the garage of the Champlain Towers South building in Surfside in July last year

Several engineers reviewed Terenzi’s video and determined there were no obvious red flags that could have pointed to the building collapsing some 12 months later, according to the Miami Herald.  

The parking garage that Terenzi filmed is the same one in which an engineer flagged in a 2018 report as having ‘major structural damage’ to the pool deck area and underground parking garage. 

The engineering report from the firm of Morabito Consultants did not warn of imminent danger from the damage.

It did, however, note the need for extensive and costly repairs to fix the systemic issues with Champlain Towers South.   

Investigators, who have been at the site since the building collapsed on June 24, are still working to determine how it collapsed.

It has previously been suggested that existing damage to a ground-floor pool deck and, or, concrete cracking throughout the building could potentially be behind the collapse. 

Structural engineers have warned, however, that the investigation into the cause will be long-term given they have been limited so far because the rescue operation is ongoing.

Terenzi, who had toured the complex in anticipation of buying a unit on the sixth floor, said what she saw in the garage ultimately turned her off buying in the building

Terenzi’s video showed wide cracks in the ceiling of the garage that appeared to have been repaired and painted over

It also showed what appeared to be water puddles in the ceiling

It comes as an additional 14 bodies were uncovered in the rubble of the Champlain Towers South condo building by Friday, bringing the death toll to 79

The painstaking search for survivors shifted to a recovery effort at midnight on Wednesday after authorities said they had come to the conclusion that there was ‘no chance of life’ in the rubble

Source Article from https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9776131/Death-toll-Miami-condo-collapse-surges-86-43-remain-unaccounted-for.html

An intense heat wave is already bringing dangerous conditions to inland and desert regions of Southern California.

Officials believe records could fall in these areas Saturday after some desert communities saw low overnight temperatures that barely dropped below 90 degrees.

“Borrego had a low of 88, breaking their old record of 87 from 1985. At 1 a.m. it is still in the mid-upper 90s in the deserts,” the National Weather Service said Friday. “Lows will only drop into the upper-80s to low-90s in the deserts, so the natural relief overnight will be minimal.”

Temperatures along the coast will be mild, in the 70s and low 80s, getting progressively hotter farther inland.

Much of Southern California will be blanketed until Monday morning by excessive heat that could send temperatures as high as 120 degrees.

Among the areas likely to be hit hardest are the San Diego County deserts, the Coachella and Antelope valleys, interior San Luis Obispo County and the Cuyama Valley. Saturday will likely be the hottest day in this heat wave, forecasters said.

The Apple and Lucerne valleys could climb as high as 120 degrees by the weekend — potentially the hottest of the year so far.

And in Death Valley, the notoriously scorching desert temperatures are expected to reach a blazing 130 degrees Sunday — potentially equalling the hottest temperature recorded on Earth in nearly a century.

The weather service also issued a heat advisory for the Santa Clarita Valley as well as the Los Angeles, Santa Barbara and Ventura County mountains, areas where temperatures could soar to 105.

Forecasters warn humidity is also expected to be low, around 10% to 13%. The combination of low humidity, high heat and gusty winds create an elevated fire risk.

With highs expected near 112 degrees, “we could be looking at some daily records in Fresno, especially on Sunday and Monday,” said meteorologist Colin McKellar at the weather service’s Hanford office. In addition, Bakersfield, Merced and other areas of the Central Valley may break daily heat records over the weekend into Monday, McKellar said.

The Indian Wells Valley may experience its hottest day on record, McKellar said, with a high near 118 possible Saturday.

Palm Springs and the Coachella Valley area are expecting temperatures up to 121 , according to the weather service.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-07-10/temperatures-could-top-120-in-inland-southern-california-today-as-heat-wave-bears-down

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/07/10/white-house-calls-out-door-to-door-vaccine-push-critics/7922041002/

VENICE, Italy, July 10 (Reuters) – An upsurge in new coronavirus variants and poor access to vaccines in developing countries threaten the global economic recovery, finance ministers of the world’s 20 largest economies warned on Saturday.

The G20 gathering in the Italian city of Venice was the ministers’ first face-to-face meeting since the start of the pandemic. Decisions include the endorsement of new rules aimed at stopping multinationals shifting profits to low-tax havens.

That paves the way for G20 leaders to finalise a new global minimum corporate tax rate of 15% at a Rome summit in October, a move that could recoup hundreds of billions of dollars for public treasuries straining under the COVID-19 crisis.

A final communique said the global economic outlook had improved since G20 talks in April thanks to the rollout of vaccines and economic support packages, but acknowledged its fragility in the face of variants like the fast-spreading Delta.

“The recovery is characterised by great divergences across and within countries and remains exposed to downside risks, in particular the spread of new variants of the COVID-19 virus and different paces of vaccination,” it read.

While G20 nations promised to use all policy tools to combat COVID-19, the Italian hosts of the meeting said there was also agreement to avoid imposing new restrictions on people.

“We all agree we should avoid introducing again any restriction on the movement of citizens and the way of life of people,” said Italian Economy Minister Daniele Franco, whose country holds the rotating G20 presidency through to December.

The communique, while stressing support for “equitable global sharing” of vaccines, did not propose concrete measures, merely acknowledging a recommendation for $50 billion in new vaccine financing by the International Monetary Fund, World Bank, World Health Organization and World Trade Organization.

Differences in vaccination levels between the world’s rich and poor remain vast. WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has called the divergence a “moral outrage” that also undermines wider efforts to tame the spread of the virus.

While some of the wealthiest countries have now given over two-thirds of their citizens at least one shot of vaccine, that figure falls to well below 5% for many African nations.

Brandon Locke, of the public health non-profit group ONE Campaign, decried what he described as the G20’s inaction, calling it “a lose-lose situation for everyone.”

“Not only will it cost lives in poorer countries, it increases the risk of new variants that will wreak havoc in richer ones,” he said.

Italy said it the G20 would return to the issue of vaccine funding for poor countries ahead of a Rome summit in October and that new variants was an area that needed to be looked at. It did not give further details.

“We must agree on a process for everyone on the planet to be able to access vaccines. If we don’t, the IMF predicts that the global economy will lose $9 trillion,” religious development organization Jubilee USA Network said.

It was referring to an IMF forecast that international cooperation on COVID-19 vaccines could speed world economic recovery and add $9 trillion to global income by 2025.

TAX HOLDOUTS

A Reuters tally of new COVID-19 infections shows them rising in 69 countries, with the daily rate pointing upwards since late-June and now hitting 478,000. https://graphics.reuters.com/world-coronavirus-tracker-and-maps/

IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said the world was facing “a worsening two-track recovery” partly driven by the differences in vaccine availability.

The biggest policy initiative at the talks was a well-flagged agreement on the global corporate tax rate, capping eight years of wrangling on the issue.

Setting a floor of 15% is intended to stop multinationals shopping around for the lowest tax rate. It would also change the way that companies like Amazon (AMZN.O) and Google (GOOGL.O) are taxed, basing it partly on where they sell products and services, rather than on the location of their headquarters.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said any countries opposed to it would be encouraged to sign up by October.

“We’ll be trying to do that, but I should emphasise it’s not essential that every country be on board,” she said, adding the deal included mechanisms against the use of tax havens anywhere.

G20 members account for more than 80% of world gross domestic product, 75% of global trade and 60% of the population of the planet, including big-hitters the United States, Japan, Britain, France, Germany and India.

In addition to European Union holdouts Ireland, Estonia and Hungary, other countries that have not signed on include Kenya, Nigeria, Sri Lanka, Barbados and St. Vincent and Grenadines.

EU Economy Commissioner Paolo Gentiloni told reporters there were still discussions about what level of a company’s profits should be taxed at national level, and whether other sectors beyond financial services and mining should be exempt.

Among other sticking points, a fight in the U.S. Congress over President Joe Biden’s planned tax increases on corporations and wealthy Americans could cause problems, as could a separate EU plan for a digital levy on tech companies.

The G20 officials called on the International Monetary Fund “to quickly present actionable options” for rich countries to channel part of a $650 billion issuance of IMF currency reserves to poorer countries.

They stopped short of endorsing the IMF’s $100 billion target for transferring Special Drawing Rights to countries in need, but called for contributions from all able countries to reach “an ambitious target.”

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/g20-signs-off-tax-crackdown-warns-virus-variants-2021-07-10/

An arrest warrant for the suspect in the Georgia golf course shooting last week reveals the lengths to which he allegedly went in order to carry out three murders

Police allege that Bryan Rhoden, 23, bound two of the victims with tape around their hands, legs and mouths in the back of a white Dodge Ram pickup truck on July 3.

Authorities found Henry Valdez, 46, and Paul Pierson, 76, dead in the bed of the truck, which officials say belonged to Pierson. The third victim, golf pro Gene Siller, 41, was found shot dead on the course near the 10th hole. Police believe that Rhoden shot Siller because he approached the truck when it veered onto the golf course. 

(Cobb County Sheriff’s Office)

MINNESOTA POLICE CHIEF CITES ‘DEFUND’ MOVEMENT FOR LACK OF COOPERATION, PROGRESS IN CASES

Rhoden faces three counts of felony murder, three counts of felony aggravated assault with intent to murder and two counts of felony kidnapping,  Fox 5 Atlanta reported

Police found the truck on a hill on the golf course. 

(Gene Siller)

“We definitely feel confident there was no relationship between the shooter and Mr. Siller,” Cobb County Police Chief Tim Cox said, although investigators will explore a possible link between Rhoden and the other two victims.

The Southeast Regional Fugitive Task Force arrested Rhoden Thursday at around 5:30 p.m. after he was asked to come to the Chambee police station regarding other charges. 

MIDDLEBOROUGH SHOOTING: SUSPECT ARRESTED AFTER OPENING FIRE OUTSIDE MASSACHUSETTS TRANSPORTATION DEPARTMENT

Chambee police confiscated a large amount of money from Rhoden during his arrest, WSB TV reported

Police did not reveal how Rhoden’s name came up in relation to the crime, though Cox did confirm that Rhoden was named within a few days of the bodies turning up. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP  

Rhoden has been booked into Cobb County Jail without bond. 

Cobb County police did not respond to Fox News’ request for comment on Saturday.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/georgia-golf-course-shooting-suspect-bound-victims

Colombian Armed Forces Commander Gen. Luis Fernando Navarro (center), National Police Director Gen. Jorge Luis Vargas (right), and Army Commander Gen. Eduardo Zapateriro give a press conference regarding the alleged participation of former Colombian soldiers in the assassination of Haiti’s President Jovenel Moïse, in Bogotá on Friday.

Ivan Valencia/AP


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Ivan Valencia/AP

Colombian Armed Forces Commander Gen. Luis Fernando Navarro (center), National Police Director Gen. Jorge Luis Vargas (right), and Army Commander Gen. Eduardo Zapateriro give a press conference regarding the alleged participation of former Colombian soldiers in the assassination of Haiti’s President Jovenel Moïse, in Bogotá on Friday.

Ivan Valencia/AP

The arrest in Haiti of more than a dozen former Colombian soldiers in connection with Wednesday’s assassination of President Jovenel Moïse initially provoked shock and shame in Colombia and calls for swift justice.

“There’s no way Colombia should be making international headlines due to a group of criminals and hitmen,” Colombian Vice President Marta Lucía Ramírez said Friday after the handcuffed Colombians were paraded before TV cameras in Port-au-Prince, the Haitian capital. “They must face the full weight of justice.”

But some officials and analysts now say that the Colombians, who claim to have been recruited by private security firms in Haiti, are being used as scapegoats. They point out that Moïse had numerous enemies at home — ranging from political opponents to powerful criminal gangs — while no clear motive has emerged for why the Colombians would have targeted Moïse.

The Center for Analysis and Research on Human Rights, an independent Haitian organization, has questioned how the assassins could so easily gain entry to the president’s bedroom and carry out their attack without killing or injuring any member of the presidential guard.

Indeed, Steven Benoit, an opposition senator in Haiti, blamed Moïse’s security detail for the attack that left the president riddled with bullets and his left eye gouged out. First lady Martine Moïse was also injured in the attack and is now recovering in a Florida hospital. Moïse “was assassinated by his security agents,” Benoit told reporters in Haiti. “It wasn’t the Colombians.”

Jean Mary Exil, Haiti’s ambassador to Colombia, told Bogotá’s El Tiempo newspaper that the Colombians were not the masterminds and added that whoever was behind the assassination may try to have the detained army vets killed to prevent them from giving testimony to Haitian authorities.

At a news conference in Bogotá on Friday, Colombia’s police director Gen. Jorge Luis Vargas confirmed that at least 13 of the detained Colombians are former soldiers who had retired since 2018. Vargas said the former soldiers initially flew from Bogotá to the Dominican Republic in May and June. They then crossed the border into Haiti where he said they had been recruited for jobs with four private security firms at a salary of $2,700 per month.

Rather than acting like a clandestine hit squad and keeping their whereabouts a secret before departing for Haiti, a few of the Colombian army vets posted on Facebook photos of themselves at tourist sites in the Dominican Republic. What’s more, hours after Moïse was killed the Colombians apparently offered no resistance as they were rounded up in their hotels by Haitian police and civilians.

“These were so-called elite commandos,” Luis Moreno, a former acting U.S. ambassador in Haiti, told The Wall Street Journal. “And they ran away a couple of blocks and were caught, allegedly by civilians? Why did they all get caught, almost immediately?”

The wife of Francisco Uribe, one of the detained Colombians, told a Bogotá radio station that her husband had been recruited by a security firm called CTU and was told he would work as a bodyguard for wealthy families around Latin America. The woman, who requested anonymity, added: “It was a job opportunity.”

Indeed, former Colombian police and soldiers have increasingly found work abroad once they retire from active duty.

Colombia has been fighting guerrillas and violent drug cartels for most of the past 50 years and between 10,000 and 15,000 officers and soldiers leave the armed forces every year, according to John Marulanda, a former army colonel who heads the Colombian Association of Retired Military Officers. Upon retirement, he said, their pensions are relatively small prompting many to use their military expertise to get jobs with private security firms.

“There are no rules preventing them from being recruited” by outside security firms, Colombian Armed Forces Commander Gen. Luis Fernando Navarro told a news conference on Friday.

Over the past two decades Colombians have worked as bodyguards, helicopter pilots and frontline soldiers in Afghanistan, Dubai, Iraq, Libya and Yemen. But in some cases, authorities say, they have collaborated with illegal armed groups — like drug cartels in Colombia and Mexico.

It remains unclear exactly what the detained former Colombian soldiers were doing in Haiti, but on Friday Colombian President Iván Duque announced that he had dispatched police intelligence agents to Port-au-Prince to help local authorities investigate.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/07/10/1014947924/ex-colombian-soldiers-arrests-add-to-the-mystery-around-the-haiti-assassination

Questions have been raised over Haiti’s official narrative for the assassination of its president, Jovenel Moïse, who was gunned down at his mansion in Port-au-Prince last Wednesday.

Haitian police and the politicians who stepped into the political vacuum created by Moïse’s killing have claimed he was shot at about 1am by members of a predominantly Colombian hit squad who had stormed the president’s hillside residence. “Foreigners came to our country to kill the president,” police chief Léon Charles alleged after the shooting.

However, opposition politicians and media reports in Haiti and Colombia are now casting doubt on that version, as uncertainty grips the Caribbean country and the streets of the capital remain eerily quiet amid fears Haiti is lurching into a new phase of political and social upheaval.

On Friday, Steven Benoit, a prominent opposition politician and former senator, told the local radio station Magik9: “The president was assassinated by his own guards, not by the Colombians.”

A report in the Colombian magazine Semana, citing an anonymous source, suggested the former Colombian soldiers had travelled to Haiti after being hired to protect Moïse, who had reputedly been receiving death threats, rather than kill him.

Further adding to the mystery, the Colombian newspaper El Tiempo claimed a source had told it that security footage from the presidential compound showed the Colombian operatives arriving there at between 2.30 and 2.40am on Wednesday. “That means they arrived one and a half hours after the crime against the president,” the source was quoted as saying.

Earlier on Friday Colombian authorities named 13 of the alleged Colombian mercenaries whom Haitian security officials have captured and claim were involved. They included Manuel Antonio Grosso Guarín, a former member of an elite unit of the Colombian army called the urban counter-terrorism special forces group, which specialises in handling hostage standoffs and the protection of VIPs.

Grosso, 41, is alleged to have arrived in Haiti with 10 former soldiers on 6 June after travelling through the resort town of Punta Cana in the Dominican Republic, which shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti. A second group of ex-soldiers arrived in Haiti about a month earlier via Panama.

Haiti’s police chief told journalists 15 Colombians had been arrested in the aftermath of the president’s killing as well as two US citizens of Haitian descent, who have been named as 35-year-old James Solages and 55-year-old Joseph Vincent. Three Colombians were killed while eight suspects remained at large, Charles said, adding: “We urge citizens not to take justice into their own hands.”

The presence of such a large number of foreigners among the Haitian leader’s alleged killers has shocked many, particularly in Haiti itself. But Colombian guns-for-hire have been turning up in war zones around the world, including Yemen, Iraq, Israel and Afghanistan, for years. Many were once trained by US soldiers and, having spent years battling insurgent groups or drug traffickers within Colombia, go on to find work with US-based private military contractors.

“After so many years of warfare, Colombia just has a surplus of people who are trained in lethal tactics,” said Adam Isacson, the director for defence oversight at the Washington Office on Latin America, a thinktank. “Many of them have been hired by private firms, often in the Middle East, where they make a lot more money than they did in Colombia’s armed forces. Others have ended up being hired guns for narco-traffickers and landowners, as paramilitaries. And now, for whoever planned this operation, in Haiti.”

A headline in El Tiempo on Friday said: “Colombian mercenaries: trained, cheap and available.”

The wife of one of the arrested Colombians told local radio that her husband, Francisco Eladio Uribe, had been hired by an agency to travel to the Dominican Republic to provide security to wealthy families but had not been given specific details of his mission. “He was a very good soldier, husband and partner,” she said, admitting, however, that her spouse had been investigated for his role in the forcible disappearance and murder of civilians, who were later passed off as guerrillas to inflate combat kills and receive bonuses.

Conflicting claims over the president’s assassination and controversial calls from Haiti’s elections minister, Mathias Pierre, for US military intervention to protect key infrastructure have left many of Haiti’s 11 million citizens suspicious and on edge.

Paul Raymond, a 41-year-old schoolteacher from Port-au-Prince, said he was convinced the president had been betrayed by members of his own security team, who have reportedly been summoned to explain why they failed to protect him. “This was planned by people who know him and people who know the house,” Raymond claimed, voicing bewilderment that none of Moïse’s bodyguards were reportedly injured during the assault. “Not even his dogs!” Raymond added.

Alfredo Antoine, a former congressman, said he suspected the murder was the work of powerful Haitian oligarchs. “They killed him because they didn’t want their interests [harmed],” he claimed.

Jake Johnston, a Haiti specialist from the Center for Economic and Policy Research thinktank, said sending US troops was not the solution to the political upheaval. “To think that foreign intervention is a solution to this is mind-boggling,” said Johnson, pointing to a centuries-long history of foreign meddling in Haiti, including an almost two-decade US occupation that followed the 1915 assassination of its president Jean Vilbrun Guillaume Sam.

“The last intervention of the United Nations brought cholera and killed thousands of people,” said Kinsley Jean, a youth leader and political activist. “This is not what we need right now.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/10/doubts-raised-about-who-was-behind-the-assassination-of-haitis-president

Workers remove a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee from Market Street Park on Saturday in Charlottesville, Va.

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Workers remove a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee from Market Street Park on Saturday in Charlottesville, Va.

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The city of Charlottesville, Va., removed a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee on Saturday, toppling a symbol that was at the center of the deadly Unite the Right rally in 2017.

The statue — along with another of Confederate Gen. Stonewall Jackson that was also to be removed Saturday — will remain on city property until the city council decides what to do with them. Ten groups have expressed interest in the statues, according to a statement from the city.

“Taking down this statue is one small step closer to the goal of helping Charlottesville, Virginia, and America, grapple with the sin of being willing to destroy Black people for economic gain,” Charlottesville Mayor Nikuyah Walker said as the crane neared the Lee monument, the Associated Press reported.

Charlottesville Mayor Nikuyah Walker (left) speaks to reporters before workers remove a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee from Market Street Park on Saturday.

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Charlottesville Mayor Nikuyah Walker (left) speaks to reporters before workers remove a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee from Market Street Park on Saturday.

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The removals were set in motion by a 2016 petition started by a local high school student. The city council voted to take the statues down early the next year, but that action was delayed by a legal challenge that was ultimately rejected by the Virginia Supreme Court this April.

The statues of Lee and Jackson — and threats to remove them — served as a rallying cry for the far right in the summer of 2017. The tension spilled into violence in the Aug. 12, 2017, Unite the Right Rally as neo-Nazis clashed with counter protestors. One woman, Heather Heyer, was killed when a man drove into a crowd of pedestrians. Dozens of others were injured in that attack and other violence.

Another, taller statue of Lee remains standing in Richmond, Virginia’s capital., awaiting a final judgment in a separate legal challenge. Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam has ordered the state-owned statue removed as soon as the case is resolved. Four other Confederate statues that lined the city’s iconic Monument Avenue were taken down last summer amid racial justice protests.

Charlottesville’s statues of Lee and Jackson were erected in the early 1920s with large ceremonies that included Confederate veteran reunions, parades and balls. At one event during the 1921 unveiling of the Jackson statue, children formed a living Confederate flag on the lawn of a school down the road from Vinegar Hill, a prominent Black neighborhood. The Jackson statue was placed on land that had once been another prosperous Black neighborhood.

Workers remove the monument of Robert E. Lee on Saturday, in Charlottesville.

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Workers remove the monument of Robert E. Lee on Saturday, in Charlottesville.

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Their erection coincided with a push across the South to valorize the Confederacy and suppress Black communities, according to Sterling Howell, programs coordinator with the Albemarle Charlottesville Historical Society.

“This was at the height of Jim Crow segregation, at the height of lynchings in American history,” he said. “There was a clear statement that they weren’t welcome.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/07/10/1014926659/charlottesville-removes-robert-e-lee-statue-that-sparked-a-deadly-rally

California plans to require masks for all students in the fall despite guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that says vaccinated students and teachers don’t need to wear them amid proper physical distancing. 

State health officials said the requirement will allow for full-time in-person learning and for all students to be treated the same, whether they’re vaccinated or not. 

Not all schools are able to accommodate three feet of social distancing as the CDC recommends, state Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly said. The CDC’s new guidance says that masks should be worn if social distancing can’t be achieved. 

CDC SAYS SCHOOLS SHOULD OPEN IN FALL, RECOMMENDS MASKS FOR UNVACCINATED

“Masking is a simple and effective intervention that does not interfere with offering full in-person instruction,” Ghaly said, according to FOX 11 in Los Angeles. “At the outset of the new year, students should be able to walk into school without worrying about whether they will feel different or singled out for being vaccinated or unvaccinated – treating all kids the same will support a calm and supportive school environment.”

“Treating all kids the same will support a calm and supportive school environment.”

— Dr. Mark Ghaly, California’s health secretary

Kindergarten students participate in a classroom activity on the first day of in-person learning at Maurice Sendak Elementary School in Los Angeles, April 13, 2021. (Associated Press)

Children as young as 12 are now eligible to receive the vaccine and younger children may be by the end of the year. 

The CDC has advised schools against requiring vaccines for teachers and eligible children, according to FOX 11. 

“It would be a very weird dynamic, socially, to have some kids wearing masks and some not,” Elizabeth Stuart, a public health professor at Johns Hopkins University, said, according to the station. “And tracking that? Teachers shouldn’t need to be keeping track of which kids should have masks on.”

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“We applaud the CDC’s commitment to ensuring that schools are fully, safely opened for in-person instruction,” Ghaly added, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. “Given California’s science-based approach and the fact that the state’s school facilities can’t accommodate physical distancing, we will align with the CDC by implementing multiple layers of mitigation strategies, including continued masking and robust testing capacity.” 

Schools have been shown to be lower centers of transmission than other locations, FOX 11 reported. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/health/california-schools-masks-cdc-guidance

  • Two US citizens arrested in the killing of Haiti’s president said they were working as translators.
  • One of the Americans said he found an online job listing to serve as a translator.
  • At least 15 people have been detained in connection with the assassination.
  • See more stories on Insider’s business page.

Two Americans arrested in connection with the assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moïse said they served only as translators for the hit squad and weren’t in the room when the killing took place, Haitian Judge Clément Noël said on Friday, according to The New York Times

The two US citizens have been identified as James Solages, 35, and Joseph Vincent, 55. Both are from Florida. Solages said he found a job listing online to translate for the hit squad. 

The motive for the assassination, which has left experts “dumbfounded,” remains unclear. Haitian police said the killing was carried out by 26 Colombian and two Haitian American mercenaries, Reuters reported. Law-enforcement and intelligence agencies in both Colombia and the US are investigating links to the killing in light of the arrests of nationals from their countries.

“The United States remains engaged and in close consultations with our Haitian and international partners to support the Haitian people in the aftermath of the assassination of the president,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said at a press briefing on Friday.

Moïse was killed in his private residence early on Wednesday. His assassination came amid escalating political turmoil and violence in Haiti, which is considered the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere.

Haitian authorities said the assailants posed as US Drug Enforcement Agency agents before entering Moïse’s home. Noël, who is investigating the assassination, said Solages at the start of the attack on the president’s home said via a loudspeaker that they were with the DEA, The Times reported. The Americans said the operation was planned for at least a month, Noël said, and that the goal was not to kill Moïse but to take him.

Fifteen suspects have been detained, and four were killed in a firefight with police.

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/us-citizens-haitian-president-jovenel-moise-assassination-translators-judge-says-2021-7

President Biden fired Trump-era Social Security Commissioner Andrew Saul Friday morning, for undermining and politicizing Social Security benefits, according to a White House official.

The president asked for Saul’s and Deputy Commissioner David Black’s resignation, the official said. Black agreed to resign, but Saul refused, so he was notified that his employment was terminated.

The Biden administration deemed Saul’s actions as commissioner as “contrary” to the Social Security Administration’s mission and to Mr. Biden’s agenda.  Among other issues, the White House complained that Saul ended the SSA’s telework policy, which was used by a quarter of its workers.

Mr. Biden has appointed Kilolo Kijakazi to be acting commissioner until a commissioner and deputy are named. Kijakazi is currently the deputy commissioner for Retirement and Disability at the SSA.

The Washington Post, which first reported Saul’s firing, spoke with Saul Friday afternoon. He told the Post that he would not leave his position because he does not believe that the president has the authority to fire him, since the IRS, as an independent agency, doesn’t usually change leadership with a new administration of a different party. Saul was appointed in 2019 by then-President Trump to fill an expiring term and for a new appointment that was to extend until 2025.

However, the White House official disputed Saul’s contention that Mr. Biden can’t fire him, saying, “Given Supreme Court precedent, we believe the president has the authority to remove these officials.” That’s likely a reference to the high court’s opinion in a case about the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, an independent agency, in which the justices held that the director of that agency “must be removable by the President at will.”

Saul has not yet responded to CBS News’ request for comment. According to the Post, he plans to sign in from home in New York for work on Monday.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/biden-fires-trump-social-security-commissioner/

General Luis Fernando Navarro said that the accused individuals had left the military between about 2002 and 2018, and that they were involved in “mercenary activities” with “purely economic” motives.

It is not clear whether the individuals recruited for the operation knew the specifics of the task they were being assigned, according to John Marulanda, the head of the association for retired military officials.

The idea that people would sign up for such a risky operation “doesn’t make sense, from a military perspective,” Mr. Marulanda said.

Paul Angelo, a fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations who studies security issues, said that Colombians had a history of being recruited into criminal tasks because they sometimes had limited options once they left the armed forces.

“Colombia is a country that for far too long had military conscription, which fell on the shoulders of the poorest men in the country,” he said. “When an economic underclass is taught how to fight and how to conduct military operations and little else, those skills don’t transfer readily to the civilian sector except in the private security realm.”

A former officer in Colombia’s army, who asked not to be identified, said that a mercenary who traveled abroad could easily be paid about $2,700 a month, compared with a military salary of about $300 a month — even for soldiers with years of combat experience.

“It’s not just Haiti, it’s Kabul, Mexico, Yemen, Emirates,” he said in a telephone interview, listing where former Colombian soldiers have gone.

Reporting was contributed from Colombia by Sofía Villamil in Cartagena and Edinson Bolaños in Bogotá.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/09/world/colombia-soldiers-suspects.html

California will continue to require masks in school settings, state health officials announced Friday, even though federal health authorities released new guidelines saying vaccinated students and teachers no longer need to wear masks inside campus buildings.

“Masking is a simple and effective intervention that does not interfere with offering full in-person instruction,” said California Health and Human Services Agency Secretary Mark Ghaly. “At the outset of the new year, students should be able to walk into school without worrying about whether they will feel different or singled out for being vaccinated or unvaccinated — treating all kids the same will support a calm and supportive school environment.”

The recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which also said schools should try and keep desks three feet apart, are not a mandate. The CDC guidance said prevention strategies, including indoor masking, should be utilized when it’s not possible to maintain a distance of at least three feet in the classroom.

Ghaly said that not all school facilities in the state can accommodate physical distancing and “we will align with the CDC by implementing multiple layers of mitigation strategies, including continued masking and robust testing capacity.” The state’s directive would also “ensure that all kids are treated the same,” the California Department of Public Health said.

With the highly contagious Delta variant of the coronavirus continuing to spread statewide, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health previously recommended that all residents wear masks in public indoor spaces — regardless of whether they’ve been vaccinated for COVID-19.

Here’s what parents and educators need to know:

Can parents demand the right to have their children attend schools without masks?
Not in most situations in California. There are some children with disabilities who cannot manage masks or who cannot wear masks safely. These parents already have the right to seek an accommodation that includes not wearing a mask.

What is the situation in the Los Angeles Unified School District?
All students, teachers and staff have been required to wear masks on campus even if they are vaccinated. This policy has been in place since schools began to reopen in April. The only exceptions are for students or others who have special health or physical reasons and are unable to wear a mask.

Will California children have to be vaccinated to attend school in person?
There is currently no vaccine authorized for emergency use in children under the age of 12, and it is unclear how soon that will change. Even after the Food and Drug Administration authorizes one or more COVID-19 vaccines for younger children, it could take several more months — or even years — for the vaccines to receive full approval in this age group. Once immunizations receive full federal approval, they could become mandatory for nearly all students.

Do students have to remain three or six feet apart?
Rules vary from district to district in California.

The CDC said Friday that schools should continue to space students — and their desks — three feet apart in classrooms and distancing is not required among fully vaccinated students or staff. In LAUSD, the nation’s second-largest school district, desks are three feet apart and are expected to stay that way in the fall.

The CDC does not deem any separation as needed among vaccinated children. Practically speaking, it could prove difficult to have different rules and procedures for different students. At middle schools, for example, some students will be eligible for shots and some won’t be. But even at high schools, not every student will be vaccinated.

Do masks have to be worn outdoors by unvaccinated people at schools?
Schools generally don’t require masks at recess or in most other outdoor situations. However, unvaccinated people are advised to wear masks if they are in a crowd for an extended period of time, like in the stands at a football game.

Are other school safety measures still needed?
Ventilation and hand-washing continue to be important. Students and staff also should stay home when they are sick.

And testing for infection remains an important way to prevent outbreaks. But the CDC said Friday people who are fully vaccinated do not need to participate in such screening.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-07-09/masks-wont-necessarily-come-off-students-in-l-a-schools-despite-cdc-guidelines