pandemic Mobile Provident

Eastriggs library finally reopens after closing at start of pandemic

Reading now: 642
www.dailyrecord.co.uk

Eastriggs is to have its customer service centre and library reopened today after being shut-down at the start of the pandemic.

Annan South councillor Sean Marshall, who lives in the region’s “Commonwealth Town” said it is long overdue and that residents will be glad to have it back.

He said: “I have been continually pushing Dumfries and Galloway Council for this to reopen after it was closed during Covid and I am pleased to confirm it will re-open after the February school holidays, operating on a Tuesday morning and Thursday afternoon. “More details will be provided by the council before it reopens including a list of services it provides.” The weekly opening times will be Tuesdays from 9am to 1pm and Thursdays from 1pm to 5pm.

Councillor Marshall said he has also been in touch with Post Offices Ltd about the building also potentially providing a postal service for the community too.

Read more on dailyrecord.co.uk
The website covid-19.rehab is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

Robert Smith - Jerry Jordan - Students will learn remotely after asbestos discovered in West Oak Lane's Building 21 school - fox29.com - state Pennsylvania - Jordan
fox29.com
54%
663
Students will learn remotely after asbestos discovered in West Oak Lane's Building 21 school
PHILADELPHIA - Students at a Philadelphia high school were abruptly moved to remote learning when the presence of asbestos was found in the building during a Tuesday night inspection. The Building 21 School in the city's West Oak Lane section will remain closed for the rest of the week after asbestos was found in stairwells and the auditorium. The School District of Philadelphia says it's working to clear the hazardous material, but they did not offer a timetable about when the job will be complete.Before the coronavirus pandemic, a dozen Philadelphia schools closed between 2019 and 2020 due to the presence of asbestos. District teachers say it's a health hazard that must be addressed. MORE LOCAL HEADLINES"You come in here, and you try to teach the kids, but you've got to worry about your own health, and their health, and there ain't nothing being done," Robert Smith said. Philadelphia Federation of Teachers President Jerry Jordan says a lack of funding for school maintenance has caused problems like asbestos to keep reoccurring. "Our buildings have been neglected because of the lack of budget to keep them in good repair, this unfortunately happened," Jordan said.A recent court decision in Pennsylvania called state funding of Philadelphia school unconstitutional, but Senator Vincent Hughes has crafted a bill that he believes will provide appropriate funding."It provides $1B to fix up toxic and broken schools, it provides $2.15B – the largest increase in equity and adequacy funding in Pennylvania's history – to make our schools in compliance with the state's constitution," Senator Hughes said. He was optimistic that he could get newly-elected Pennsylvania Gov.
DMCA