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according to a hospital spokesperson.The masks were sold to Holy Name Hospital in Teaneck. Bergen County, where the hospital is located, is the county in New Jersey with the most COVID-19 cases.N95 masks are regulated by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, the spokesperson said. But Holy Name couldn't verify NIOSH certification for this particular batch of masks.Clinicians test supplies at the hospital before they're distributed. They found that the batch of masks would not have adequately protected workers.The hospital sent the masks back to the vendor, though, and later received a new shipment of certified masks.The supply of N95 masks has become a key issue for medical officials and elected officials, with many urging civilians to save them for healthcare workers that are in desperate need of them.This story was originally published by Corey Crockett and Aliza Chasan on 911
in Summit County, Colorado."Any store that sells both essential items and non essential items, in the definitions we have both at our local and state public health orders, they need to close them off, those non-essential items," said Julie Sutor, director of communications for Summit County. Customers are unable to purchase items like clothing, video games, or toys in those stores. "The only reason we want people to go out and be in a commercial establishment are for those essential activities. So, they’re buying groceries because I need to cook food. For those non-essential items we don’t want to create incentives for people to be going out circulating, interacting with one another," said Sutor.In Denver, Bighorn Firearms plans to continue business as usual despite being called "non-essential" under Denver’s order 829

— a climate think tank based in Melbourne, Australia — says that human civilization is at risk of collapsing by 2050 due to climate change. The report has been endorsed by a former Australian defense chief and senior royal navy commander.The analysis says 257
on most of its classroom supplies and clothing items.From July 13-20 teachers can save 15% on select classroom supplies, women's and men's clothing.The promotion also applies to teachers who work in daycare centers, early childhood learning centers and home schools.Teachers must fill out a 293
after video shows police pepper-spraying what appears to be a non-violent protester and firing a now-lethal weapon toward him. The video, which circulated on social media, showed a man a protest in Grand Rapids on Saturday night near the intersection of Fulton St. and Division Ave. Ven Johnson, a police brutality attorney, called the video "unacceptable.""It's despicable; this young man is clearly walking towards the officers. Lets even give them the benefit of the doubt," Johnson said. "We don't have any video of what happened before that. Who knows what they've been told. Who knows what happened before. But he's walking toward the officer in a relatively non-threatening manner. Clearly has nothing in his hands except maybe a cigarette."At the end of the video, the man appears to be hit by some sort of blast by officers."It looks like he got shot with a projectile," Johnson said. "Whether it hit him or not I don't know."That is horrible, tragic. We want to know why things are escalating? This is a perfect example where the police could have stayed back, stayed in line, said nothing, which they're trained to do. They're trained to de-escalate. Not escalate," Johnson said.Witnesses claim protests were peaceful, outside of a few fireworks which were not aimed at police."Some people were lighting fireworks, that were just going straight up, because we have a point to make," witness James Curley said. "Black Lives Matter. Police brutality needs to stop."Curley said the video was recorded by his friend Dakota Spoelman. The two do not know the man shown in the video."(He) walked up to the line of police, to express his freedom of speech," Curley said. "The cop stepped up to him and pepper-sprayed him. Completely no threat after that. Don't know what's going on. They shot him; it looked like they shot him, from the chest to the head with some type of flash grenade."Curley says the police's action is the exact reason he's protesting."After that, that's when things started escalating," Curley said. "Police started shooting off more of those flash grenades at everybody there. That's when they started rioting."This story was originally published by Julie Dunmire on 2195
来源:资阳报