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Ttum Investigation after white S.C. deputy shoots black homeowner
Every NFL stadium in the U.S. can become a COVID-19 vaccination site, according to the football league s top official.The stadiums can be quickly retrofitted for vaccines because the buildings had  <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.co.uk>stanley cup</a> been used for coronavirus testing, commissioner Roger Goodell said in a letter Friday to President Joe Biden. Some stadiums have already been transformed into vaccination sites in recent weeks, Goodell said, including the home facilities for the Arizona Cardinals, Atlanta Falconsand other teams. Our efforts will not stop there,  Goodell said in the letter.  The NFL and our 32 member clubs are committed to doing our part to ensure that vaccines are as widely accessible in our communities as possible.                            <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.co.uk>stanley cup</a>               Mr. Biden will take Goodell up on his offer, the president said in an interview with CBS Evening News  anchor and managing editor Norah O Donnell. Asked if he would use the NFL stadiums as vaccination sites, Mr. Biden said,  Absolutely we will.  And, I mean, let me put it this way mdash; I tell my team they re available and I believe we ll use them,  the president continued.  Look, it was one thing if we had enough vaccines, which we didn t. So we re pushing as hard as we can to get more vaccines manufactured.         The NFL s commitment to pitch in to the vaccination effort could boost many of the states thathave struggledto ramp up the number  <a href=https://www.stanley-quencher.us>stanley cup</a> of people getting shots amid bottlenecks in vaccine and logistical hurdles.NFL players and team staff h Pvtv The record-shattering 2020 hurricane season, explained
NEW ORLEANS -- More than a million people were displaced by Hurricane Katrina. A decade later, some of them are still unable to return to their homes.It s not just a matter of money, but of red tape. While much of New Orleans is almost back to what it was before the storm, the Lower Ninth Ward is still rebuilding.                                                                                                         Rescued by The Cajun Navy: How citizens turned into saviors 10 years ago          07:03                                                                      Errol Joseph, 64, is a lifelong resident of this community.  A general contractor, he helped rebuild dozens of his neighbors  homes.                                         I had somewhere to live. We were able to rent a house,  Joseph told CBS News.  So many people didn t have anywhere to go.  Years later, he is still frustrated by one final project: fixing his own home.         That was my mistake, working on different people s houses, ge <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.ca>stanley cup</a> tting them in place,  Joseph said.  When I had a lot of men working for me, within three months we would have been able to be in here.  After the waters receded, it took four years for Joseph to get the permits he needed. He took his savings <a href=https://www.nikeairjordan.de>jordan</a> , insurance payouts and <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.com.de>stanley cups</a>  federal funds to begin rebuilding.                                                                                                                           Katrina 10 years later: New Orleans                      
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