In the city’s most recent efforts to fight the spread of COVID-19, Hoboken Mayor Ravi S. Bhalla announced on September 13 that Hoboken will have new pop-up booster clinics to distribute the bivalent COVID-19 vaccine.
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Kathy Hochul, the Governor of New York, recently announced that masks are no longer required for mass transit in New York.
On April 1, Stevens announced that “effective Monday, April 4, 2022, masking indoors will be optional in campus facilities at times when physical distance can be maintained.”
The COVID-19 pandemic has generated sizable amounts of trash in the forms of masks, test kits, vaccine syringes, gloves, and other various items that have become more prevalent.
The COVID-19 pandemic has no doubt changed the way we work. From our actual workload to our commute, the pandemic has influenced every facet of our work experience.
As the COVID-19 and its newest variant, Omicron, have spread globally since the beginning of 2020, the amount of cases and deaths do not show any signs of stopping as they continue to rise daily.
The COVID-19 pandemic influenced the ways in which social media is used both in terms of time spent as well as content viewed.
Now armed with what may essentially be stronger immunity against whatever variant may develop in the coming weeks, many wonder the likelihood of getting a fourth booster shot.
With Omicron cases on the decline, college campuses across the nation are taking everything they’ve learned over the past two years to implement post-pandemic policies.
The City of Hoboken ended a mask mandate on February 7, marking a turning point in the local response to the pandemic.