Starting March 26, vaccines and testing will no longer be mandatory for students and employees at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa, according to an email sent out today from campus officials.
Over the past few days, students and faculty have received an increase in emails from UH notifying them of COVID-19 cases on campus.
What once was an iconic hub flooded by tourists from all over the world to get their dream vacation photos, now serves as a hard lesson on relying on the state’s economy from tourism.
On Wednesday, Gov. David Ige and his pandemic response leadership team announced the details of the pre-travel testing program that begins on Oct. 15.
After a month-long stay-at-home order, residents of Oʻahu are allowed to once again partake in small group gatherings and activities on Thursday, per the “recovery framework” announced today by Mayor Kirk Caldwell.
Gov. David Ige, along with Honolulu Mayor Kirk Caldwell and Department of Health Director Bruce Anderson, announced Tuesday that O‘ahu will undergo new restrictions instead of a broad shutdown.
Commented
Sorry, there are no recent results for popular commented articles.