Swampscott Asks For Volunteer Help Reopening Schools | Patch PM

News

Swampscott MA

08 March, 2021

3:52 PM

Description

SWAMPSCOTT, MA — It's Monday, March 8. Here's what you should know this afternoon: Swampscott Public Schools is asking for the community to help cover staffing shortages as kids begin to return to class.Top Democrats have agreed on a deal that would help workers and employers climb out from the hole the pandemic left. Friends of a Natick teen killed in a weekend crash gathered for a vigil remembering their classmate. Scroll down for those and other stories Patch has been covering in Massachusetts today. Monday's Top Story If parents want students back in school, they may have to be willing to lend a hand in at least one district. Swampscott Public Schools is asking for parental and community volunteers to help cover staffing shortages as the district tries to bring students back in-person five days a week. Help is needed for things like monitoring mask and snack breaks. Those willing to volunteer will need to be fingerprinted and return a confidentiality form with a CORI check. Today's Other Top Stories In Massachusetts We've got a deal — Top legislative Democrats announced Monday they'd reached a deal on a COVID-19 recovery bill that aims to help workers and employers. According to an outline of the deal, it includes measures around tax relief for certain unemployed workers, paid leave related to COVID-19 and vaccinations, relief from planned hikes in unemployment insurance rates, and waiving state taxes on Paycheck Protection Program grants. (State House News Service) Fundraiser after teen killed in crash — Friends of the Natick 17-year-old killed in a car crash gathered for a vigil at Natick High School on Sunday night to remember the teen. Giovanni Taboh, 17, was identified as the victim in the Saturday night rollover crash, according to WBZ-TV. A GoFundMe fundraiser has also been set up for Taboh with a goal of raising $70,000. By The Numbers 2,700+ — That's how many COVID-19 tests the Medford school district administered last week — with zero positive results. They Said It "The nurses also report their patients in Worcester are experiencing an increase in patient falls, an increase in patients suffering from preventable bedsores, potentially dangerous delays in patients receiving needed medications and other treatments — all due to lack of appropriate staffing, excessive patient assignments, and cuts to valuable support staff." — The Massachusetts Nurses Association in a statement as about 800 nurses went on strike at St. Vincent Hospital in Worcester Readers Write In Why Rename Columbus Elementary School Now? — Medford United calls on the School Committee to table discussions over a new name for the school until other district issues are addressed. Other local stories 50 Students Quarantining After Exposures At 3 Reading Schools Waltham Not Ready For Full, In-Person School: Superintendent Nashoba Valley Ski Crash: Teen Flown To Hospital

By:  view source

Discussion

By posting you agree to the Terms and Privacy Policy.

/
Search this area