President Biden shared photo and video footage of his new puppy, Commander, on social media Monday. The nearly 4-month-old German shepherd was a birthday gift from the president’s brother and sister-in-law.

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President Biden shared photo and video footage of his new puppy, Commander, on social media Monday. The nearly 4-month-old German shepherd was a birthday gift from the president’s brother and sister-in-law.

@POTUS/Instagram

There’s a new top dog at the White House.

The latest addition to the Biden family is a purebred German shepherd puppy named Commander. President Biden shared the news — along with some adorable photo and video footage — on social media Monday.

Michael LaRosa, press secretary for first lady Jill Biden, told NPR over email that Commander, who is just shy of 4 months old, was a birthday gift from the president’s brother and sister-in-law, James and Sara Biden. The president turned 79 on Nov. 20.

Commander arrived at the White House on Monday afternoon, LaRosa confirmed.

The little guy has massive paws to fill, in an administration-slash-family where German shepherds have loomed large.

The Bidens’ oldest dog, Champ, died in June at the age of 13. Major, whom they adopted as a puppy in 2018, notably became the first rescue dog to go from a shelter to the White House.

That adjustment proved a rough one. Major spent time at the family’s home in Delaware and received remedial training after two nipping incidents in March, reportedly involving a Secret Service agent and a National Park Service employee.

The president and first lady have both defended Major as a sweet, lovable dog who just needed some extra training to adapt to his new surroundings. Still, it seems they have since decided that the White House may not be the best home for him.

“After consulting with dog trainers, animal behaviorists, and veterinarians, the First Family has decided to follow the experts’ collective recommendation that it would be safest for Major to live in a quieter environment with family friends,” LaRosa said. “This is not in reaction to any new or specific incident, but rather a decision reached after several months of deliberation as a family and discussions with experts.”

The Bidens are set to welcome another furry family member in the near future: a cat. Rumors and reports about a potential first feline have circulated for months with the first lady saying in April that “she is waiting in the wings.” And now the time has come.

LaRosa confirms that a female cat will join the family in January.

This story originally appeared on the Morning Edition live blog.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/12/21/1066220864/commander-biden-puppy-major

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What do you find most surprising in the census? Join the conversation below.

The new estimates offer a summary of the pandemic’s fallout after its first year. Population growth had been slowing before the pandemic, but it had averaged more than 2 million a year over the last decade. As recently as 2016, the country grew by 2.3 million people.

Birthrates have fallen steadily since the 2007-09 recession. Death rates had edged up, especially in states hit hardest by the opioid epidemic. And immigration dropped in recent years under policies set by the Trump administration.

Seventeen states lost population, led by New York (-1.6%), Illinois (-0.9%) and Hawaii (-0.7%). California, which recorded only its second decrease ever after logging its first last year, also dropped by 0.7%. The District of Columbia’s population dropped 2.9%.

More broadly, the Midwest lost 0.1% and the Northeast lost 0.6%. The West was essentially flat, while the South gained 0.6%. Texas, the largest Southern state, gained 1.1%. States that grew the most included Idaho (2.9%), Utah (1.7%) and Montana (1.7%). Florida, Texas, and Arizona saw the largest gains from domestic moves as the pandemic prompted more people to uproot for warmer areas with low taxes.

Net international migration to the U.S. remains relatively low despite a record number of attempts to cross the southern border illegally. This year’s figure was just over half the size of the prior year’s total, when net new residents from abroad totaled 477,000. As recently as 2016, that figure was more than 1 million a year. The figures also include Americans moving to and from the U.S.

Most of those trying to cross the border illegally are being sent back, while the pandemic has slowed legal immigration channels, with visa processing at about half normal levels and the refugee-admissions program at a standstill. Census figures include people residing in the U.S. illegally, though their exact numbers can be difficult to pin down.

The estimates themselves also were affected by the pandemic, which has delayed detailed 2020 census data on which the estimates would normally be based. Instead, the bureau used limited 2020 census totals and other sources, such as birth and death certificates. The bureau is required to publish the estimates each year to help state and local governments in budgeting and distributing aid. The estimates also underpin disease and death rates.

Despite the nation’s slowing growth, projections by the Census Bureau and the United Nations show it is expected to continue growing at least through the middle of the century. By comparison, the populations of Japan and many European countries have begun to shrink, including those of Germany, Poland, Portugal and Russia. China’s population is expected to peak before 2030.

Write to Paul Overberg at Paul.Overberg@wsj.com

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/covid-19-pandemic-drives-u-s-population-growth-to-record-low-11640098763

Half a billion at-home coronavirus tests will be sent free to the American public in an effort to fight the surging Omicron variant, Joe Biden will announce on Tuesday.

The move is part of a renewed White House effort that includes the Pentagon calling up 1,000 troops to deploy to hard-hit hospitals and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) working to expand medical capacity.

As Covid-19 once again rages across America, there is no indication that the president will discourage holiday gatherings, impose vaccine mandates for domestic air travel or seek a new round of lockdowns.

Federal health officials said on Monday that Omicron has raced ahead of other variants and is now the dominant version in the US, accounting for three in four new infections last week. Biden, who earlier this month unveiled a winter plan to combat the pandemic dogging his political fortunes, has been forced to revise his strategy.

In an address from the White House on Tuesday, he will announce that his administration is buying 500m at-home, rapid tests this winter to be distributed for free to Americans who want them, with initial delivery starting next month. A website will enable people to order them to be delivered to their home for free.

The decision follows growing pressure on the White House to make free tests more widely available. At a recent briefing, press secretary Jen Psaki asked sarcastically: “Should we just send one to every American?” Critics pointed out that the UK does just that and wondered why the US could not follow suit.

In a preview call with reporters, a senior administration official said: “The first delivery of these tests from the manufacturers will arrive in January. We’re setting up a free and easy system to get those tests out to Americans, including the website. We’re actively working to finalise those distribution mechanisms and we’ll share more details in the weeks ahead on that.”

A six-fold increase in Omicron’s share of Covid-19 infections in just one week has seen long queues from at testing sites in major cities. Biden will announce new federal testing sites around the country. The first will be created this week in New York, which just reported a record number of new daily cases.

Biden will also unveil additional steps to ensure people can get vaccinated and boosted, including new pop-up vaccination clinics and deploying additional vaccinators. Currently 73% of adult Americans are fully vaccinated.

Psaki told reporters on Monday: “For those who choose to remain unvaccinated, he’ll issue a stark warning and make clear unvaccinated individuals will continue to drive hospitalizations and deaths. That is not trying to scare people – or maybe it is trying to make clear to people in the country what the risks are here of not being vaccinated.”

Hospitals are battling rising Omicron hospitalisations, mostly among the unvaccinated, with some near breaking point and turning non-Covid patients away. Biden’s winter plan made more than 60 winter Covid-19 emergency response team deployments available to states.

He will direct the defense secretary, Lloyd Austin, to ready an additional 1,000 service members – military doctors, nurses, paramedics, and other medical personnel – to deploy to hospitals during January and February, as needed.

“These doctors and nurses and others will be ready to deploy to neighbourhood hospitals that need them,” the official said. “God willing, we will not need all of these servicemen and women but, if we do, they’re ready and they’re mobilised.”

Six emergency response teams – with more than 100 clinical personnel and paramedics – are deploying to six states now: Michigan, Indiana, Wisconsin, Arizona, New Hampshire and Vermont. This is on top of the 300 federal medical personnel that deployed in response to Omicron.

In addition, Biden is instructing Fema to mobilise planning teams to work with every state and territory to assess hospital needs ahead of winter surges, and to start expanding hospital bed capacity now.

A White House fact sheet added: “To get ahead of surges, Fema is ready to deploy hundreds of ambulances and emergency medical teams so that if one hospital fills up, they can transport patients to open beds in other facilities.”

It also noted that the US government has hundreds of millions of N-95 masks, billions of gloves, tens of millions of gowns and more than 100,000 ventilators in the strategic national stockpile. Last week the administration sent 330 ventilators to states such as Indiana, Michigan, Maine, and New Hampshire.

Early studies suggest the vaccinated will need a booster shot for the best chance at preventing omicron infection but even without the extra dose, vaccination still should offer strong protection against severe illness and death.

In what is likely to prove a preview of Biden’s central message just ahead of Christmas, when millions of people will be travelling, the senior administration official added: “The bottom line for the American people is this: we should take all Omicron seriously but this is a cause for concern, not a cause for panic.

“We have the tools, we have the knowledge, we have the planning to get through this. If you’re fully vaccinated and especially if you got your booster shot, you are highly protected.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/dec/21/biden-to-announce-half-a-million-free-home-covid-tests-to-fight-omicron

  • The United Mine Workers of America asked Sen. Joe Manchin to rethink his stance on Build Back Better.
  • The UMWA asked Manchin to consider how the bill could help coal miners. 
  • Manchin has had long-standing ties to both the union and the coal industry.

A coal miners’ union with strong ties to Sen. Joe Manchin released a statement on Monday asking the senator to rethink his opposition to the beleaguered Build Back Better legislation

The United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) asked Manchin to reconsider saying no to President Joe Biden’s Build Back Better social and climate spending legislation, saying the bill had provisions for coal miners who suffer from black lung disease. 

“The bill includes language that would extend the current fee paid by coal companies to fund benefits received by victims of coal workers’ pneumoconiosis, or Black Lung. But now that fee will be cut in half, further shifting the burden of paying these benefits away from the coal companies and on to taxpayers,” wrote UMWA leader Cecil E. Roberts in the statement

Black lung disease happens after continued exposure to coal dust and is an occupational hazard for many coal miners. According to The New Republic, Build Back Better would help to extend an excise tax that funds the Black Lung Disability Trust Fund, a source of benefits for coal workers set to expire at the end of 2021. 

Roberts added that the bill also includes provisions for tax incentives that might encourage manufacturers to build facilities in coalfields that could create thousands of jobs for coal miners. 

“The bill includes language that will provide tax incentives to encourage manufacturers to build facilities in the coalfields that would employ thousands of coal miners who have lost their jobs,” Roberts said in the statement. “We support that and are ready to help supply those plants with a trained, professional workforce. But now the potential for those jobs is significantly threatened.” 

“We urge Senator Manchin to revisit his opposition to this legislation and work with his colleagues to pass something that will help keep coal miners working, and have a meaningful impact on our members, their families, and their communities,” Roberts added. 

Build Back Betters had previously seen opposition from coal miners that complicated the bill’s progress. Roberts previously penned an op-ed in November lauding Manchin for axing the Clean Electricity Performance Program from the bill. The CEPP advocated for the building of wind and solar generation plants over keeping fossil fuel plants running, an item in Build Back Better that Roberts strongly opposed. 

The UMWA represents coal miners in Manchin’s state of West Virginia, and has long-standing ties with the senator, having named him an honorary member in 2020. Manchin is also deeply invested in the coal industry and has millions of dollars in holdings in Enersystems, Inc., a coal brokerage firm he founded. 

“If I can’t go home and explain it to the people of West Virginia, I can’t vote for it,” Manchin said on Fox on Sunday, torpedoing a large part of the Biden administration’s agenda by coming out against BBB. “I’ve tried everything humanly possible. I can’t get there. This is a no.”

However, there is a chance that Manchin might agree to vote on a scaled-down, $1.8 trillion counter-offer to Biden’s plan, which includes provisions for universal pre-K and measures to combat the climate emergency. Politico also reported that Manchin and Biden had a phone conversation on Sunday night, which indicates there might be hope yet for Build Back Better.

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/coal-miners-union-manchin-rethink-no-to-build-back-better-2021-12

The highly transmissible Omicron variant has rapidly taken hold in the United States and now accounts for nearly three-quarters of new Covid-19 cases nationwide, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

CDC estimates on Monday showed that Omicron accounted for an estimated 73.2 percent of U.S. cases surveilled between Dec. 12 and 18, with the Delta variant now accounting for 26.6 percent of cases. Between Dec. 5 and Dec 11, Omicron accounted for just 12.6 percent of U.S. cases, the agency estimated.

CDC Director Rochelle Walensky and other health officials last week said the expectation was the variant would become the dominant strain in the coming weeks. The White House has urged vaccinations and booster shots to combat the new variant, and President Joe Biden is expected to amplify that message during a speech on the state of the pandemic on Tuesday.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/12/20/omicron-dominant-covid-strain-cdc-525801

On the roadside in Brooklyn Center, the officers asked Mr. Wright to step out of his car. But when Officer Luckey went to handcuff him, Mr. Wright pulled away and got back into the driver’s seat, where he struggled with Officer Luckey and a sergeant who had been called to the scene.

Police body cameras recorded Ms. Potter shouting “Taser! Taser! Taser!” immediately before firing a fatal bullet from her Glock handgun. Mr. Wright, mortally wounded, said “ah, he shot me,” and his car lurched forward, crashing into an oncoming car a short way down the block. He was pronounced dead at the scene. In the videos, Ms. Potter is heard saying that she had drawn the wrong weapon and is seen collapsing to the ground. “What have I done?” she asks at one point.

The killing of Mr. Wright, a father who had recently been working at a shoe store, happened while the trial of Derek Chauvin, the Minneapolis officer who was later convicted of murdering George Floyd, was in progress. It set off several nights of intense protests in Brooklyn Center, during which the police arrested hundreds of people.

Criminal charges against police officers who kill while on duty remain rare, and convictions even more so.

Instances of “weapons confusion” have also been rare. Even so, in the last two decades, at least three officers have been convicted in cases where they said they had confused a gun with a Taser, including two cases in which the person they shot died.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/20/us/kim-potter-trial-jury-deliberates.html

The rapidly spreading omicron variant is now the dominant Covid strain in the U.S., representing 73% of sequenced cases, according to data published Monday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Omicron has displaced the previously dominant delta variant, which the CDC says is now an estimated 26.6% of sequenced cases for the week ending December 18. Just one week earlier, delta made up 87% of cases to omicron’s 12.6%, the data shows.

The CDC had previously published data for the week ending Dec. 11 showing that omicron represented 2.9% of cases, but has revised the estimate for that period upward.

The omicron Covid-19 variant was first detected in southern Africa in late November and labeled a “variant of concern” by the World Health Organization on Nov. 26. It’s not clear when exactly it first arrived in the U.S. Though California was first U.S. state to confirm an omicron case in the country on Dec. 1, the CDC has said a patient developed symptoms earlier on Nov. 15.

While the variant has proven to be extremely transmissible, much remains unknown about the severity of the illness it causes.

In some parts of the country, the share of omicron cases is higher than the nationwide figure of 73%. The CDC estimates it makes up more than 90% of cases in portions of the Northwest, South, Southeast, and Northeast.

Mayor Bill de Blasio on Monday said New York City is experiencing a rapid surge of omicron infections, though he expects the wave to peak in a matter of weeks.

Average daily case counts in New York City more than doubled over the week ending Friday Dec. 17, according to the latest data available on the the city’s health department website. New York is reporting a seven-day average of more than 7,200 cases per day, up from about 3,200 the week prior, a 127% increase.

De Blasio said people infected with omicron in New York are experiencing mild symptoms so far, though he noted there remain many unanswered questions and scientists are still doing research to determine how sick people can become after contracting the variant. Even if omicron does prove to be more mild than delta, it could still strain health-care systems and potentially drive a spike in hospitalizations and deaths due to how fast it spreads, infectious disease experts have cautioned.

The U.S. is reporting a seven-day average of about 130,000 daily cases as of Dec. 19, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University, up 7% over the past two weeks.

Average daily cases are highest in the Northeast region adjusted for population, a CNBC analysis of Hopkins data shows. Rhode Island, New Hampshire, and New York are the three states averaging the most daily new cases per capita in the country.

About 69,000 Americans are hospitalized with Covid-19, according to a seven-day average of U.S. Department of Health and Human Services data as of Thursday, a two-week increase of 14%. Though rising, that is still lower than the delta wave’s high point when more than 100,000 patients were hospitalized in early September.

CNBC’s Spencer Kimball contributed reporting.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/12/20/omicron-now-the-dominant-us-covid-strain-at-73percent-of-cases.html

“We were close,” said Senator Tina Smith, Democrat of Minnesota, of her last conversation with Mr. Manchin, which she said occurred early last week.

Gregory Wetstone, president and chief executive of the American Council on Renewable Energy, a nonprofit group that supports green power, added, “We had good conversations directly with him and with his staff.”

“All of the prior conversations had been along the lines that he did not want to penalize fossil fuel but was fine incentivizing clean power,” Mr. Wetstone said. “We had not seen indications of pushback from Manchin or elsewhere from the clean energy provisions.”

The bill, as passed by the House, includes about $320 billion in tax incentives for producers and buyers of wind, solar and nuclear power. Electric vehicle customers would receive up to $12,500 in tax credits. Also included are $6 billion to make buildings more efficient and burn less fuel, $6 billion to replace gas-powered furnaces and appliances with electric versions, and billions more for research and development of new technologies to capture carbon dioxide from the air. Existing tax credits to lower the costs for homeowners of installing solar panels would be extended, as would credits for geothermal pumps and small wind turbines, covering up to 30 percent of the costs.

Though Mr. Manchin has always said his share of the coal brokerage is hidden in a blind trust, any general threat to coal power would impact that business.

A counteroffer that Mr. Manchin gave the White House last week did include scaled-back climate-related tax provisions, according to a congressional official familiar with it. But beyond scope, outstanding issues remained, such as a fee on oil and gas producers that emit methane, a potent greenhouse gas. Mr. Manchin on Monday mentioned tax credits for electric vehicles, which he said should not be available to higher-income families, and in a statement on Sunday, he said the House-passed bill would jeopardize the reliability of the electricity grid while increasing dependence on foreign supply chains.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/20/us/politics/manchin-climate-change-coal.html

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/12/20/moderna-booster-effective-against-omicron-study-shows-covid-19-news/8963500002/

Rep. Stephanie Murphy (D-Fla.), a prominent centrist House Democrat, announced Monday she will not seek reelection in 2022, making her the 22nd Democrat who will not contest their House seat next year.

Murphy, 43, was first elected to Congress in 2016 and serves as a co-chair of the moderate Blue Dog Coalition. However, her Orlando-area district was expected to be carved up in Florida’s redistricting process, making election to a fourth House term more of a challenge.

“These last few years have been some of the most rewarding moments of my life, but also some of the most challenging. Public service is not without personal sacrifice,” Murphy said in a video she posted to social media announcing her decision.

“As a mom of two young children, my time away from them has been hard,” Murphy added. “So, I wanted to share with you that I will not be seeking another term as your representative in Congress. This was not an easy decision, but it was the right decision.”

Murphy, the first Vietnamese-American woman to be elected to Congress, made national headlines with her 2016 defeat of longtime GOP Rep. John Mica and rose to become one of the most vocal moderates in the House Democratic conference, often proving to be a thorn in Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s (D-Calif.) side. She currently serves as the House chief deputy whip and also sits on the Democratic Steering and Policy Committee.

Murphy also serves on the powerful House Ways and Means Committee, the House Armed Services Committee, and the select committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.

Rep. Stephanie Murphy says she will not be seeking reelection in 2022.
Twitter / @SMurphyCongress
Rep. Stephanie Murphy had voted for President Joe Biden’s Build Back Better legislation.
Getty Images

“I am incredibly proud of what we have accomplished together over these last five years,” Murphy said in her retirement announcement. “I am most proud that through it all — whether the Democrats were in charge or the Republicans, whether under President Trump or President Biden — I was consistently named one of the most bipartisan and effective members of Congress. Because from day one, I have always put people over politics.”

Members of both parties lamented Murphy’s retirement on social media, with even far-right Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) praising her tenure.

Rep. Stephanie Murphy’s district in Florida is expected to lean Republican from redistricting.
Twitter / @SMurphyCongress
Rep. Stephanie Murphy is proud to be “one of the most bipartisan and effective members of Congress.”
Chip Somodevilla/Pool via AP, File

“We are in different parties and often disagree,” he tweeted. “That said, there is no denying how effective Rep. Murphy has been for Florida – especially our amazing military families. Best of luck going forward!”

Republican operatives were less kind, jumping on Murphy’s retirement as another sign that Democrats have no confidence in their ability to retain the House majority.

Rep. Stephanie Murphy is a member of the House select committee probing the Jan. 6 Capitol riots.
Twitter / @SMurphyCongress
Rep. Matt Gaetz respects Rep. Stephanie Murphy for serving military families.
Rod Lamkey – CNP / MEGA

“Between Build Back Better collapsing and an unmitigated retirement crisis, this is truly Democrats’ nightmare before Christmas,” National Republican Congressional Committee spokeswoman Camille Gallo said in a statement, pointing to Murphy’s “yea” vote last month on President Biden’s sweeping social spending bill — which has been opposed by moderate Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) in what appears to be a fatal blow to its chances at becoming law.

Murphy’s retirement announcement came hours after Rep. Albio Sires (D-NJ) told the New Jersey Globe he will not seek reelection next year. Sires, who was first elected to Congress in 2006, told the outlet to expect a formal retirement statement before the end of this year.

Rep. Stephanie Murphy was the first Vietnamese-American woman to be elected to the House of Representatives.
Rod Lamkey / CNP / SplashNews.com

Among those expected to contend to replace Sires are Robert J. Menendez, the son of Sen. Robert Menendez (D-NJ). The younger Menendez is an attorney who serves on the Port Authority’s Board of Commissioners.

Of the 22 House Democrats who have announced they will not seek reelection, 14 are retiring from public life completely, while four are running for the US Senate next year, and the remaining four are seeking other elected office.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/12/20/rep-stephanie-murphy-announces-she-will-not-seek-reelection/

A view of the West Wing from the Rose Garden is seen with Christmas lights on Dec. 17, A White House staffer tested positive for COVID on Monday. President Biden has tested negative for the virus.

Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images


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A view of the West Wing from the Rose Garden is seen with Christmas lights on Dec. 17, A White House staffer tested positive for COVID on Monday. President Biden has tested negative for the virus.

Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images

The White House said that a staff member who traveled on Air Force One on Friday tested positive for COVID on Monday – but said that President Biden has been tested twice so far since having contact with the person, and has tested negative. Biden will be tested again on Wednesday, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said in a statement.

Psaki said the “mid-level staff member,” who was not named, had spent about 30 minutes “in proximity” to Biden on Air Force One between Orange, S.C. and Philadelphia. The staff member is fully vaccinated and boosted, and tested negative before boarding the plane, Psaki said. “This staff member did not begin to experience symptoms until Sunday, and was tested on Monday,” Psaki said.

“As CDC guidance does not require fully vaccinated people to quarantine after an exposure, the president will continue with his daily schedule,” Psaki said.

Biden is tested regularly for COVID, and received an antigen test on Sunday. On Monday, he received a PCR test, Psaki said. Both were negative. Other people who were in close contact with the staff member will be advised to be tested, she said.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/12/20/1066106160/white-house-staffer-on-air-force-one-tests-positive-for-covid-biden-tests-negati

If you want to go to places in Boston like a restaurant, a gym, a sports venue or a museum, you’ll soon need to have show proof of vaccination against COVID-19.

Boston Mayor Michelle Wu announced the vaccine requirement, dubbed the “B Together” initiative, on Monday as cases spike in Massachusetts and around the country.

It will be phased in starting on Jan. 15. On that day, patrons and employees ages 12 and up will have to show proof of one shot. Starting Feb. 15, people will need to show proof of two shots. Children younger than 12 will need to show proof of vaccination starting in March. This plan does not currently include booster shots.

“Today we are facing another winter surge with the omicron variant, but there is a key difference between last winter and today,” Wu said Monday. “Vaccines.”

“Vaccines are the most powerful tool we have to fight this pandemic.”

Among those who are hospitalized with COVID-19 in Boston, two-thirds are unvaccinated, according to Bisola Ojikutu, executive director of the Boston Public Health Commission.

“We expect case numbers to rise significantly in January,” Ojikutu said Monday. “The sheer number of cases will have an impact on our health care system.”

Wu said the city’s vaccine passport initiative will help ease the burden on the health care system this winter, as hospitals brace for cases to keep rising this holiday season.

The requirement will apply to three categories of businesses: indoor dining (including bars and restaurants), indoor fitness; and indoor entertainment and event venues (including sports arenas, theaters, museums).

The order is for all employees, including part-time workers, interns or volunteers, of the venues. However, there are exemptions, including performing artists who are not “regularly employed” by a venue and professional athletes or sports team who enter an arena “as part of their regular employment for the purposes of competing.” The order specifies that those individuals must wear a face mask at all times.

According to the city, different ways to show proof of vaccination include:

  • A CDC vaccination card (the paper copy, or a digital image)
  • An image of any official immunization record
  • A city of Boston app or any other COVID vaccine verification app

Wu also announced that all city employees will need to be vaccinated along the same timeline: one dose by Jan. 15, two doses by Feb. 15. The mayor said there will no longer be a weekly testing alternative to vaccinations. Currently, she said, 90% of city employees are vaccinated.

“This is a response rooted in science and public health,” she said. “We need to take every available action to protect our residents.”

Protesters at City Hall were audible during the press conference. Wu acknowledged them at one point, welcoming them to what she called “the people’s house.” The protesters at one point sang the national anthem, and chanted, “Shame on Wu.”

Protesters chant “Shame on Wu” during Mayor Wu’s announcement that vaccines would be required to enter many indoor venues in Boston. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR)

Wu noted that New York City implemented a vaccine passport program months ago, and that some businesses in Boston have required vaccination for entry.

“Many have taken on the burden of asking vaccine proof on their own,” she said. “It’s time to ease that burden.”

Planned support for businesses affected include a series of webinars starting Tuesday.

Wu says that “down the road” enforcement will involve penalties such as fines.

Wu said this is “one step in an aggressive approach” the city will ramp up in the next few days. “We’re ready to take this step forward to protect our residents and are prepared to help our businesses, too.”

Source Article from https://www.wbur.org/news/2021/12/20/boston-michelle-wu-vaccine-passport-coronavirus-pandemic

“I would say that the president, of course, wants to extend the child tax credit,” Psaki said Monday. “That’s something he has spoken to. We know that it was a significant contributor to cutting in half the child poverty rate. I’m obviously not going to negotiate from here, but, you know, he doesn’t think ‘compromise’ is a dirty word, either.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/us-policy/2021/12/20/manchin-biden-child-tax-credit/

(CNN)The Omicron Covid-19 variant now accounts for over 73% of new coronavirus cases in the US, according to estimates posted Monday by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/12/20/health/us-coronavirus-monday/index.html