San Francisco restaurant that kicked out cops says it ‘handled this badly,’ won’t rule out doing it again

The owners of a San Francisco restaurant are now apologizing after denying service to three uniformed police officers who were on-duty.

Hilda and Jesse initially denied service to the three San Francisco Police Department officers on Friday after they were seated at the restaurant. 

According to ABC7 News, one of the owners said that the on-duty police officers’ “presence” made staff at the restaurant feel “uncomfortable.”

“It’s not about the fact that we are anti-police,” co-owner of Hilda and Jesse, Rachel Sillcocks said. “It is about the fact that we do not allow weapons in our restaurant. We were uncomfortable, and we asked them to leave. It has nothing to do that they were officers. It has everything to do that they were carrying guns.”

SAN FRANCISCO RESTAURANT DEFENDS DENYING SERVICE TO ARMED POLICE OFFICERS: ‘WE WERE UNCOMFORTABLE’

Hilda and Jesse Storefront (Credit: Fox 2 San Francisco) (Fox 2 San Francisco)

According to Sillcocks, the officers are welcome to come back and dine in the restaurant but without their weapons.

In a new Instagram post on Sunday afternoon, the co-owners apologized for asking the on-duty officers to leave.

“We made a mistake and apologize for the unfortunate incident on Friday when we asked members of the San Francisco Police Department to leave our restaurant,” co-owners Rachel Sillcocks and Kristina Liedags Compton said. “We are grateful to all members of the force who work hard to keep us safe, especially during these challenging times.”

The co-owners continued, stating that they hope the incident will be a “teachable moment” but stopped short of saying whether on-duty officers are welcome in the establishment.

San Francisco Police Officers (Credit: Fox 2 San Francisco) (Fox 2 San Francisco)

SAN FRANCISCO GUARD, A FORMER COP, SHOT AND KILLED PROTECTING NEWS CREW COVERING A SMASH-AND-GRAB

The online restaurant review platform Yelp announced they are temporarily suspending the ability for individuals to make reviews for the Hilda and Jesse restaurant because of “increased public attention.”

“This business recently received increased public attention, which often means people come to this page to post their views on the news. While we don’t take a stand one way or the other when it comes to this incident, we’ve temporarily disabled the posting of content to this page as we work to investigate the content you see here reflects actual consumer experiences rather than the recent events,” the announcement reads.

Logo for the Hilda and Jesse restaurant in San Francisco. (KTVU FOX 2)

After the incident on Friday, the business received a number of one-star reviews bashing the restaurant for asking the on-duty police officers to leave.

“Given that this business has decided to Discriminate against first responders, I reserve the right to Call For A Boycott Of Hilda and Jesse,” one Yelp user wrote.

The San Francisco Police Department Chief William Scott said in a Twitter post on Saturday that he found the incident “discouraging and personally disappointing.”

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San Francisco Police Chief Bill Scott speaks to reporters in San Francisco. San Francisco saw an increase in shootings in the first half of 2021 compared to the same period in 2020, and a slight uptick in aggravated assaults like those seen in viral (AP Newsroom)

“The San Francisco Police Department stands for safety with respect, even when it means respecting wishes that our officers and I find discouraging and personally disappointing,” Scott said on Twitter. “I believe the vast majority of San Franciscans welcome their police officers, who deserve to know that they are appreciated for the difficult job we ask them to do – in their uniforms – to keep our neighborhoods and businesses safe.”

A spokesperson for Yelp told FOX Business that the company takes a very “proactive approach” when dealing with “review bombing.”

“For years, Yelp has taken a very proactive approach to dealing with ‘review bombing’ incidents through our Consumer Alerts program. We place Unusual Activity Alerts on a Yelp page when we uncover an influx of activity in response to a business gaining public attention, caused by people coming to Yelp to express their views on an issue instead of describing their actual interaction with a business. It’s our policy that all reviews on Yelp must be based on a first-hand consumer experience with the business.  After this activity has dramatically decreased or stopped, our moderators will remove the alert and clean up the page so only first-hand consumer experiences are reflected. Factoring this type of content out of the equation protects the interests of both consumers and business owners,” the spokesperson said.

FOX Business reached out to Hilda and Jesse for comment.

Fox News’ Emma Colton contributed to this report

November U.S. auto sales: Toyota, Honda, Hyundai, Kia sales fall 4th straight month; Ford rises 5.8{cfdf3f5372635aeb15fd3e2aecc7cb5d7150695e02bd72e0a44f1581164ad809}

Supply-chain disruptions, driven by the ongoing shortage of microchips that has dented new-vehicle stockpiles, undercut U.S. sales at Toyota Motor Corp., American Honda, Hyundai and Kia for the fourth straight month in November.

But there was another clear sign that the U.S. market is bottoming out. The seasonally adjusted annualized rate of sales (or SAAR), came in at 13.1 million units — unchanged from October, according to Motor Intelligence. The SAAR was 16.1 million a year ago.

Among automakers that reported November results, sales slipped 14 percent, but LMC said overall sales fell 16 percent, which was worse than previous forecasts that called for a drop of 11-12 percent.

For the recent month, volume dropped 25 percent at Toyota Motor, 17 percent at American Honda, 20 percent at Hyundai — its biggest decline of the current slump — and 5.4 percent at Kia last month, the companies said Wednesday.

Deliveries at Subaru skidded for the sixth consecutive month, down 35 percent in November.

Volvo, the last major automaker to report November results, on Friday said deliveries plunged 34 percent to 7,667 units.

Meanwhile, Ford Motor Co. said Thursday it was the top-selling automaker in the U.S. for a third consecutive month, posting a 5.8 percent increase in November light-vehicle sales that contrasted with declines for nearly all other companies that reported monthly results.

Ford’s utility vehicle sales jumped 21 percent from a year ago, and F-Series pickup sales rose 15 percent despite the ongoing microchip shortage that has thinned dealership inventories. The automaker said sales of its electrified vehicles grew at triple the rate of those from other manufacturers.

Ford said its total light-vehicle sales of 157,417 was enough to beat all other automakers, including General Motors and others that report on a quarterly basis, based on numbers those companies provide privately to analysts and industry data trackers. The last time Ford had such a streak at No. 1 was 1974, company officials said.

Toyota Motor, which has overtaken longtime U.S. market leader General Motors this year, has been forced to cut output in recent months because of tight chip supplies. It has now posted declines of 22 percent or more three consecutive months. Sales last month dropped 24 percent at the Toyota brand and 32 percent at Lexus.

The Toyota brand was hampered by a 47 percent drop in November car deliveries, with Corolla sales skidding 63 percent to 8,906 and Camry off 34 percent to 19,261 units. The brand’s top-selling light trucks also saw double-digit declines: RAV4, off 14 percent; Highlander, down 13 percent; and Tacoma, off 21 percent.

Toyota said it had 116,638 cars and light trucks in inventory — or an 18-day supply — at the end of November, down 67 percent from 349,639 units a year earlier.

Honda said volume dropped 17 percent at the Honda division and 21 percent at Acura, with American Honda car volume off 24 percent and light-truck deliveries down 13 percent. Honda Civic sales slid 26 percent and CR-V volume dropped 19 percent.

Hyundai said it ended November with just 17,096 units in stock, down from 19,894 at the end of October and 145,885 at the close of Nov. 2020. Some of the company’s top-sellers posted notable declines last month; Elantra, down 42 percent; Sonata, off 56 percent; Santa Fe, down 24 percent and Kona, off 37 percent.

Hyundai’s fleet shipments also dropped sharply last month — 97 percent, and represented less than 1 percent of overall volume.

Randy Parker, senior vice president for national sales at Hyundai Motor America, said “consumer demand remains exceptionally high” but “lingering availability issues persisted into November.”

At Kia, some of the brand’s key models — led by the Telluride, Seltos, Sportage and Soul — all posted declines. The company said it sold 77 percent of available U.S. inventory in November.

Three of Subaru top U.S. sellers — the Outback, down 19 percent; Crosstrek, off 51 percent and Forester, down 70 percent — suffered significant declines last month, leaving the company on pace to post back-to-back declines in annual U.S. volume for the first time since the 1990s.

Mazda said volume dropped 5.3 percent in November, its third straight decline.

Genesis, helped by an expanding product lineup, continued to rack up major gains, with November volume advancing 435 percent to 5,002 sedans and crossovers. 

General Motors, Stellantis, Nissan Motor Co., Volkswagen Group and the rest of the industry post U.S. sales quarterly.

Analysts had expected a more substantial finish to 2021 fueled by traditional year-end holiday discounts — after volume dropped 14 percent in 2020 at the onset of the pandemic.

The emergence of another COVID-19 variant also threatens to upend the spotty recovery to the extent supply chains and manpower are impacted by new travel and other possible operating restrictions.

Retail inventories remained below 1 million units in November for the fourth straight month, J.D. Power and LMC Automotive said.

“The typical Black Friday sales surge will be difficult to support,” this year, said J.D. Power analyst Thomas King. “The traditional year-end sales push will be somewhat non-traditional.”

Industry sales rose 13 percent through September behind a strong first quarter and a 4.96 percent rise in the second quarter, followed by a 13 percent decline in the third quarter.

Still, November sales are expected to increase slightly from October, rising less than a percent to reach an estimated 1.05 million, Cox Automotive said.

“The market is stuck in low gear,” said Cox Automotive Senior Economist Charlie Chesbrough. “There are potential buyers out there, but many are waiting on the sidelines, put off by limited selection and high prices.”

Even amid tight supplies, some automakers continue to pitch deals to keep consumers and buyers engaged.

Hyundai and Ford last month offered 0 percent financing and waived payments up to 90 days on select models, and BMW dangled up to $2,500 off on select new models through Nov. 30.

Today’s coronavirus news: Ontario reports another 1,053 cases, eight deaths for Saturday; Outgoing Chancellor Angela Merkel makes final appeal for Germans to get vaccinated

The latest coronavirus news from Canada and around the world Saturday. This file will be updated throughout the day. Web links to longer stories if available.

10:57 p.m.: More cases of the Omicron COVID-19 variant were confirmed in Ontario on Saturday as the province recorded more than 1,000 new virus cases for the second day running.

The latest infections involving the variant of concern emerged in Hamilton and Peel Region, according to news releases from local authorities.

Officials said a Hamilton local resident who returned from travelling to South Africa recently tested positive for Omicron, while a second potential case is under investigation with sequencing results expected in the coming days.

It also noted that Hamilton Public Health Services is conducting case and contact management and the two individuals and their case contacts continue to self-isolate.

Read the full story here.

10:18 p.m.: Five people in Sydney have contracted the omicron variant locally, New South Wales health authorities said.

The cases are linked to two schools and a climbing gym in Sydney’s western suburbs, which may also be the source of a confirmed omicron infection in the Australian Capital Territory, NSW Chief Health Officer Kerry Chant said Sunday. Urgent genome testing is under way for a number of other cases linked to the venues and should be available in coming days, she said in a video update.

New South Wales state has confirmed 15 omicron infections and more are likely, Chant said. The outbreak was seeded from infected travelers on a flight from Doha who had been in southern Africa.

Separately, Australia will begin vaccinating young children starting early next year once authorities receive final approvals in the coming weeks.

9:41 p.m.: Ten people aboard a Norwegian Cruise Line ship approaching New Orleans have tested positive for COVID-19, officials said Saturday night.

The Norwegian Breakaway had departed New Orleans on Nov. 28 and is due to return this weekend, the Louisiana Department of Health said in a news release. Over the past week, the ship made stops in Belize, Honduras and Mexico.

More than 3,200 people are on board the ship, officials said.

According to the statement, Norwegian “has been adhering to appropriate quarantine and isolation protocols as new cases and exposures have been identified aboard this vessel.”

Prior to disembarking in New Orleans, each person on board will be tested for the coronavirus. Anyone who tests positive will either go directly home or self-isolate in accommodations provided by the cruise line, officials said.

Officials did not release any information about the conditions of those who have contracted the virus.

Cruise ships were an early source of outbreaks last year at the start of the coronavirus pandemic as some ships were rejected at ports and passengers were forced into quarantine. Some passengers died of COVID-19 at sea while others fell so ill they had to be carried out of the vessels on stretchers.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a no-sail order in March 2020, prompting a standstill that ended last June as cruise ships began to leave U.S. ports with new health and safety requirements. According to Norwegian’s website, the company requires all passengers and crew members to have been vaccinated against the virus at least two weeks prior to departure.

8:55 p.m.: About 15 people who attended an animé convention in New York in November with a Minnesota man who later was found to have the omicron variant have also tested positive for the coronavirus, the man has told health officials in his state. It is uncertain whether any of those cases involved the omicron variant.

The man said that his friends — a group of about 30 people — had come from all over the country for the event, which was held Nov. 19-21. About half of them also later tested positive for the virus, he told the officials.

The man, officials said, was fully vaccinated and had gotten a booster just weeks before the convention. He has recovered from mild symptoms that began shortly after the convention ended and has provided health officials with names and contact information of several in his group. Because the friends live in other states, their names were forwarded to those states’ health departments. Details of their cases are not known.

The Minnesota man’s case was among the first reports of omicron in the United States, and it presented a worrisome possibility for health officials: Might the animé convention, which drew tens of thousands of people to the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center for three days, have been a vector for spreading the new variant, which scientists fear may be able to spread more quickly than any other variant?

After learning that the man had attended a large convention in New York, Kathy Como-Sabetti, manager of the COVID epidemiology section for the Minnesota Department of Public Health, said, “I kind of went, ‘Wow, well, this changes our story.’ This changes the picture of what we’re dealing with.”

At the Animé NYC conference, focused around a popular animation style that originated in Japan, attendees were fairly compliant about wearing masks, the man told officials. But some rooms were very crowded, at capacity, with crowds standing shoulder to shoulder, he said.

Convention attendees were required to provide proof that they had received at least one vaccine shot, and they had to wear masks, according to the convention website. The rules allowed entry “immediately after” a first dose. People are seen as having full vaccination protection two weeks after a second dose of a two-dose vaccine.

7:37 p.m.: Australia’s Parliament House will be closed to the public for the foreseeable future after a political staffer for Greens leader Adam Bandt tested positive for the coronavirus.

The staffer is fully vaccinated and tested positive upon return to Melbourne after attending parliament last week, a spokesperson for Bandt said in a statement. Other staffers have been cleared while Bandt, who is vaccinated, is isolating until he receives a result, according to the statement.

Given the positive result, officials “have decided that Parliament House should close to the public until further notice,” the Department of Parliamentary Services said in a separate statement. Authorities said they are investigating possible close contacts, exposure locations in parliament as well as in the broader community.

The Australian Capital Territory, home to capital Canberra, recorded six cases on Sunday, a health department spokeswoman said by phone. Neighboring New South Wales state found 286 new virus cases, while Victoria state recorded 980 new infections, according to separate statements on Twitter.

6:06 p.m.: A rush of vaccine-seeking customers and staff shortages are squeezing drugstores around the U.S., leading to frazzled workers and temporary pharmacy closures.

Drugstores are normally busy this time of year with flu shots and other vaccines, but now pharmacists are doling out a growing number of COVID-19 shots and giving coronavirus tests.

The push for shots is expected to grow more intense as President Joe Biden urges vaccinated Americans to get booster shots to combat the emerging omicron variant. The White House said Thursday that more than two in three COVID-19 vaccinations are happening at local pharmacies.

And pharmacists worry another job might soon be added to their to-do list: If regulators approve antiviral pills from drugmakers Merck and Pfizer to treat COVID-19, pharmacists may be able to diagnose infections and then prescribe pills to customers.

“There’s crazy increased demand on pharmacies right now,” said Theresa Tolle, an independent pharmacist who has seen COVID-19 vaccine demand quadruple since the summer at her Sebastian, Florida, store.

5:46 p.m.: The U.K. will require all travelers to take a pre-flight COVID-19 test within 48 hours prior to their flight regardless of their vaccine status, a surprise government move that prompted a swift and angry reaction from the airline industry.

The measure, which takes effect on Dec. 7, will be temporary and be reviewed as the omicron outbreak develops, Health Secretary Sajid Javid said. More than 150 people across the U.K. have been identified with the new variant.

Travelers will be allowed to take either an instant test or a PCR test. After omicron was detected in the U.K. a week ago, the government added a required PCR test within two days of arrival, requiring travelers to self-isolate until they received a negative result.

The risk of a second lost winter has already tanked shares of airline stocks, with the Bloomberg EMEA Airline Index losing 18 per cent in November, its worst monthly performance in more than a year.

4:43 p.m.: As the number of confirmed cases of the omicron coronavirus variant rose to 160 in Britain, the government Saturday announced further tightening of travel restrictions to combat its spread. Beginning Tuesday, travelers will be required to take a coronavirus test within 48 hours of traveling to Britai…

As the number of confirmed cases of the omicron coronavirus variant rose to 160 in Britain, the government Saturday announced further tightening of travel restrictions to combat its spread.

Beginning Tuesday, travelers will be required to take a coronavirus test within 48 hours of traveling to Britain regardless of their vaccination status and restrictions will be placed on travelers from Nigeria, the country’s health secretary said in a statement. Nigeria announced Wednesday that it had detected the variant in three travelers who arrived from South Africa in November, according to Dr. Ifedayo Adetifa, director-general of the Nigeria Center for Disease Control.

The two additional measures being imposed by Britain are the latest to come after a week of heightened concern led to the introduction of a number of restrictions intended to slow the incursion of the omicron variant.

At the moment, travelers are required to self-isolate and take a coronavirus test on the second day after arriving. If that test is negative, they can end their isolation. If not, they are expected to remain in self-isolation until they do get a negative result.

4:22 p.m.: The major of Rio de Janeiro canceled plans for the city’s New Year’s Eve celebrations following advice from the state that they weren’t safe to go ahead as the first cases of the omicron variant were reported in Brazil.

“We respect science,” Mayor Eduardo Paes wrote on his Twitter account Saturday. “The City Council says it can go ahead. The State’s says no. So it can’t. We will thus cancel the official New Year’s Eve celebration in Rio.”

Paes said there was no way to organize the celebrations without a guarantee from all health authorities. The party “will be missed, but the important thing is that we continue vaccinating and saving lives,” he said.

Rio de Janeiro Gov. Claudio Castro said on his Twitter account that he’ll meet Paes next week to make a final decision on the issue.

Brazil has reported 22.1 million COVID-19 cases, with 10,627 confirmed in the last 24 hours, according to Health Ministry data. More than 20 capitals have canceled their New Year’s Eve events amid concerns regarding the omicron variant, Exame reports, citing official statements.

4:08 p.m.: One more case of the Omicron COVID-19 variant was confirmed in Ontario on Saturday as the province recorded more than 1,000 new virus cases for the second day running.

The latest infection involving the variant of concern emerged in Hamilton, according to a news release from the city. Officials said one local resident who returned from travelling to South Africa recently tested positive for Omicron, while a second potential case is under investigation with sequencing results expected in the coming days.

It also noted that Hamilton Public Health Services is conducting case and contact management and the two individuals and their case contacts continue to self-isolate.

“As we have since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, Hamilton Public Health Services follows up directly with all individuals diagnosed with COVID-19 and their close contacts,” the release reads. “Hamilton Public Health Services is working with the Province of Ontario and Public Health Ontario to monitor COVID-19 variants of concern including Delta and Omicron and will take strong action if necessary.”

Canada’s first known cases of the Omicron variant emerged last week when two positive tests were confirmed in Ottawa.

3:36 p.m.: New York announced three more cases of the omicron variant of the coronavirus Saturday, bringing the number of state cases linked to the new variant to eight.

“The omicron variant is here, and as anticipated we are seeing the beginning of community spread,” state Health Commissioner Mary Bassett said in a news release.

The number of states finding the variant is growing as well, with authorities in New Jersey, Georgia, Pennsylvania and Maryland reporting their first confirmed cases Friday, and Missouri reporting its first presumed case.

The variant also has been detected in Nebraska, Minnesota, California, Hawaii, Colorado and Utah.

In New York, seven of the cases have been found in New York City, once a global epicenter of the pandemic, and the other in Suffolk County.

The arrival of omicron comes as hospitals statewide continue to strain under a surge in coronavirus cases, most traced to the delta variant, along with staffing shortages.

The number of people testing positive statewide each day for the virus has doubled in the last 30 days.

Gov. Kathy Hochul in recent days has authorized the Health Department to limit nonessential, non-urgent procedures at hospitals close to running out of beds and deployed National Guard teams to relieve healthcare workers at facilities dealing with staffing issues and surging caseloads.

Fifteen members of the National Guard arrived at Monroe Community Hospital in Rochester on Saturday, WROC reported. Lt. Gov. Brian Benjamin said Wednesday the state would send 13 National Guard teams to the western New York county, where County Executive Adam Bello has declared a state of emergency.

3:15 p.m.: Health officials in New Brunswick are reporting 77 new cases of COVID-19 on Saturday as the province prepared to enter the first phase of its so-called winter action plan.

The province will enter Level 1 of the plan as of Sunday, which is the least restrictive of the three tiers.

Among other things, masking will be required outdoors when physical distancing cannot be maintained.

Physical distancing will also be mandatory in indoor public spaces that do not require proof of vaccination, such as retail stores, malls, salons and spas.

A maximum of 20 people is permitted for informal indoor household gatherings, and 50 for informal outdoor gatherings.

And it is recommended that unvaccinated individuals who are eligible to be vaccinated should not attend household gatherings.

The province’s number of active COVID-19 cases stood at 722 as of Saturday, which included 51 people in hospital — 16 of them in intensive care.

Eighteen of the hospitalized patients were initially admitted for other reasons and contracted COVID-19 due to outbreaks at hospitals in Moncton, Saint John and Miramichi.

3:14 p.m.: Chile on Saturday reported its first case of the omicron variant of the coronavirus.

A foreign national residing in Chile returned from Ghana on Nov. 25 and tested positive in a PCR test at the Santiago airport, according to authorities.

The foreigner, who had two Pfizer vaccines, is in good health and in quarantine, while other passengers on the flight he was on were being monitored, health officials in Valparaíso said in a statement.

12:22 p.m.: A Hamilton resident who recently returned from travelling to South Africa has tested positive for the COVID-19 Omicron variant, the city of Hamilton said in a news release Saturday.

The resident is one of two people under investigation by the city’s Public Health Services.

Testing results for the second case are expected in the coming days.

The statement from the city said the two individuals and their case contacts are self-isolating.

11:47 a.m.: Quebec is reporting another jump in COVID-19 cases today with 1,512 infections and one further death attributed to the virus.

The Health Department says 225 people are hospitalized, a drop of five, including 60 people listed in intensive care, an increase of three patients.

The province hasn’t reported more than 1,500 daily infections since mid-April, and the seven-day average for new cases is 1,089.

More than half of the new cases were among people who were either unvaccinated or less than two weeks removed from receiving their first dose of vaccine.

Quebec has reported 453,380 COVID-19 cases and 11,586 deaths since the beginning of the pandemic.

Due to a technical error, the province was not able to provide an update on vaccinations today.

10:49 a.m.: Rio de Janeiro on Saturday canceled its New Year’s Eve party due to renewed COVID-19 fears.

Rio Mayor Eduardo Paes announced the decision on social media.

Paes had previously promised the biggest New Year’s Eve party ever, with multiple firework displays and artists performing on a dozen stages across the city. He said there is no decision about Carnival taking place in March.

The yearly celebration on Copacabana beach has in the past gathered more than one million locals and tourists.

Other Brazilian cities, including Sao Paulo and Salvador, have also canceled New Year’s Eve celebrations due to fears of the omicron variant,. So far, the Ministry of Health has confirmed five omnicron cases in Brazil.

9:51 a.m.: Ontario is reporting another 1,053 cases and eight deaths on Saturday.

Individuals who are not fully vaccinated represent 23.4 per cent of Ontario’s total population, amounting to 494 of Ontario’s 1,053 new reported cases, and 60 cases are in individuals with an unknown vaccination status.

The current seven-day average is 894 cases per day, which is up 22.7 per cent in a week, or a doubling pace of every 24 days.

Additionally, in the province 23,913,372 vaccine doses have been administered — 90.0 per cent of Ontarians aged 12+ have had one dose and 87.3 per cent have had two doses.

There are 284 people hospitalized with the virus, of which 220 are not fully vaccinated or have an unknown vaccination status and 64 are fully vaccinated.

In the ICU there are 160 people due to COVID-19 — 136 are not fully vaccinated or have an unknown vaccination status and 24 are fully vaccinated.

8:08 a.m.: Public Health Sudbury and Districts says it is pulling out all the stops to help curb the rapid spread of COVID-19 cases in local schools.

With more than 3,000 vaccination appointments booked in the Sudbury and Manitoulin districts for children aged five to 11 and hundreds of rapid antigen screening kits distributed to students this week, there is hope that cases will decrease ahead of the Christmas break.

Although it’s too early to tell if these “additional layers of protection” are doing the trick, a health promoter at Public Health said she is confident these measures will help protect the school community.

Joëlle Martel added the local response to these programs have been positive so far and the health unit has been on hand to answer any questions that parents/guardians might have.

“Right now, the goal is to keep kids in school,” said Martel, who works in Public Health’s school health, vaccine preventable diseases, and COVID prevention division.

“If we start seeing cases go down and the trend holds steady, then we can slowly start to remove some of those measures, but our goal remains to keep kids in school as much as possible.”

Saturday 8 a.m.: Outgoing Chancellor Angela Merkel on Saturday made what is likely her final appeal before leaving office next week for Germans to get vaccinated against COVID-19.

Merkel gave what is expected to be her last weekly video message two days after federal and state leaders decided on a series of measures meant to break a wave of coronavirus infections.

The measures include excluding unvaccinated people across the country from non-essential stores, restaurants and sports and cultural venues. In a longer-term move, Parliament will consider a general vaccine mandate.

At least 68.9{cfdf3f5372635aeb15fd3e2aecc7cb5d7150695e02bd72e0a44f1581164ad809} of Germans are fully vaccinated against the coronavirus, short of the government’s aim of a minimum 75{cfdf3f5372635aeb15fd3e2aecc7cb5d7150695e02bd72e0a44f1581164ad809} vaccination rate. The number of unvaccinated residents has been blamed as a key factor in a surge of new virus cases in recent weeks.

Official figures suggest that the infection rate may now be stabilizing, but at too high a level.

Read Friday’s coronavirus news.

NFL schedule Week 13: TV coverage, channels, scores for every football game today

The NFL is reaching the final stretch of the season, with just six more weeks of regular-season action remaining, and several contenders will fight with high stakes on the line.

The Bengals continue to make a push in the AFC, both in the hunt for the North and for a wild card, after a thumping of the rival Steelers. On Sunday, they face the Chargers, who have lost four of their last six games and now find themselves needing to fight to re-emerge back in the playoff picture. The Buccaneers will have a chance to add to their division lead over the Falcons when the two clash in Atlanta.

In the afternoon slot, the Steelers will hope to turn things around in another AFC North battle against the Ravens, who are clinging to a one-game edge over Cincinnati after beating the Browns last Sunday.

The “Monday Night Football” matchup has perhaps the most enticing game of the week. The Bills will host the surging Patriots, who have won six straight to claim first place in the AFC East.

Sporting News has you covered for everything you need to watch Week 13 of the season.

MORE: Watch NFL games live with fuboTV (7-day free trial)

NFL schedule this week: Week 13 TV coverage

Here’s the full schedule for Week 13 of the NFL season, plus final scores and how to watch every game live. 

Note: national broadcasts are listed in bold

Thursday, Dec. 2

Game Time (ET) TV Channel
Cowboys at Saints 8:20 p.m. Fox, NFL Network, fuboTV

Sunday, Dec. 5

Game Time (ET) Channel
Buccaneers at Falcons 1:00 p.m. Fox, fuboTV
Cardinals at Bears 1:00 p.m. Fox, fuboTV
Chargers at Bengals 1:00 p.m. CBS, fuboTV
Vikings at Lions 1:00 p.m. CBS, fuboTV
Giants at Dolphins 1:00 p.m. Fox, fuboTV
Eagles at Jets 1:00 p.m. CBS, fuboTV
Colts at Texans 1:00 p.m. CBS, fuboTV
Washington at Raiders 4:05 p.m. Fox, fuboTV
Jaguars at Rams 4:05 p.m. Fox, fuboTV
Ravens at Steelers 4:25 p.m. CBS, fuboTV
49ers at Seahawks 4:25 p.m. CBS, fuboTV
Broncos at Chiefs 8:20 p.m. NBC, fuboTV

Monday, Dec. 6

Game Time (ET) Channel
Patriots at Bills 8:15 p.m. ESPN, fuboTV

How to watch NFL games in Week 13

The NFL will have three prime time games with matchups slated for Thursday, Sunday and Monday. The Cowboys and Saints occupied the “Thursday Night Football” slot, while the Broncos will travel to Arrowhead Stadium to face the Chiefs on “Sunday Night Football.” Then, it will be a matchup of the top two teams in the AFC East between the Patriots and Bills on “Monday Night Football.”

The rest of the slate will be aired either on CBS or FOX. Check your local listings to see which games will be on your broadcast.

Canadian viewers can find the games on TSN, CTV and CTV2.

NFL scores Week 13

Thursday, Dec. 2

Game Score
Cowboys at Saints

Sunday, Dec. 5

Game Score
Buccaneers at Falcons
Cardinals at Bears
Chargers at Bengals
Vikings at Lions
Giants at Dolphins
Eagles at Jets
Colts at Texans
Washington at Raiders
Jaguars at Rams
Ravens at Steelers
49ers at Seahawks
Broncos at Chiefs

Monday, Dec. 6

Game Score
Patriots at Bills

Coronavirus daily news updates, December 4: What to know today about COVID-19 in the Seattle area, Washington state and the world

Editor’s note: This is a live account of COVID-19 updates from Saturday, Dec. 4, as the day unfolded. It is no longer being updated. Click here to see all the most recent news about the pandemic, and click here to find additional resources.

Health and safety measures aimed at protecting communities against the delta variant should remain as the foundation for fighting the pandemic, World Health Organization officials said Friday. The announcement came as dozens of countries continue to report cases of the mutated omicron variant.

The variant appears to be three times more likely to cause reinfection in a person than the delta and beta variants, an aspect that may shed light on how the variant quickly spread across the globe, according to a preliminary study from South African scientists, which is yet to be peer-reviewed.

Though it’s still not known how much protection current COVID-19 vaccines provide against the new variant, scientists say the vaccines still offer the most protection against severe illness and possible death.

As countries grapple with increased COVID-19 cases and uncertainties over the omicron variant, the outgoing Czech government announced it will issue a vaccine mandate for people 60 and over as well as some professional groups. Though the plan is in motion, it’s still unclear whether the succeeding health minister will enforce the mandate.

Click here to see previous days’ live updates and all our other coronavirus coverage, and here to see how we track the daily spread across Washington.



Omicron variant found in Washington state

Washington state health authorities Saturday confirmed three cases of the omicron variant of the coronavirus have been found in Thurston, Pierce and King counties.

The patients, two men and one woman, range in age from 20 to 39, according to the Washington State Department of Health. At least one of the three infected, a King County woman in her 20s, was vaccinated.

In a media briefing Saturday, state health officials said the emergence of the omicron variant is a cause for concern but not panic.

Little is yet known about the severity of illness it causes or about the efficacy of the vaccines against it. However, it is expected to spread much faster than other variants.

While scientists figure that out, which the officials said will take “weeks, not days,” they urged the community to adhere to the now standard COVID protection protocols: get vaccinated and get a booster shot when eligible; wear good-quality masks at indoor gatherings and at crowded outdoor venues; wash hands frequently; and stay home and away from others if you have symptoms. 

Read more here.

—Dominic Gates, Seattle Times


U.S. colleges prepare for unknowns with omicron variant

Officials at U.S. colleges, already bracing for a potential rise in coronavirus cases when students returned to campus after Thanksgiving break, are worried about the impact of the new omicron variant, with its troubling mutations and a host of unknowns.

School leaders are wondering what will happen with the variant over the coming winter break – and how that might affect the spring semester.

For now, most schools are sticking with the virus mitigation rules and strategies they have in place, but ramping up reminders about testing, vaccination and other safety measures. And they are monitoring the situation closely, ready to pivot to more stringent rules if needed when students return after winter break.

Read the story here.

—Susan Svrluga, The Washington Post


Study: Black, Asian Britons have higher COVID-19 death rates

A report commissioned by the U.K. government concluded that almost two years into the pandemic, Black people and members of other racial and ethnic minorities in Britain are still dying with the coronavirus at higher rates than white residents.

The likely cause is thought to be lower vaccination rates among those minority populations.

Read the story here.

—Jill Lawless, The Associated Press


Italian dentist presents fake arm for vaccine to get pass

MILAN — A dentist in Italy faces possible criminal charges after trying to receive a coronavirus vaccine in a fake arm made of silicone. 

A nurse in the northern city of Biella, Filippa Bua, said she could tell right away that something was off when a man presented the phony limb for a shot on Thursday.

“When I uncovered the arm, I felt skin that was cold and gummy, and the color was too light,’’ Bua told Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera.

Read the story here.

—The Associated Press


More omicron detected as hospitals strain under virus surge

A person takes COVID-19 test at mobile testing site near Grand Central Terminal on Friday, Dec. 3, 2021, in New York. The omicron variant of COVID-19, which had been undetected in the U.S. before the middle of this week, had been discovered in at least five states by the end of Thursday, showing yet again how mutations of the virus can circumnavigate the globe with speed and ease.(AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)


New York announced three more cases of the omicron variant of the coronavirus Saturday, bringing the number of state cases linked to the new variant to eight. 

“The omicron variant is here, and as anticipated we are seeing the beginning of community spread,” state Health Commissioner Mary Bassett said in a news release.

The number of states finding the variant is growing as well, with authorities in New Jersey, Georgia, Pennsylvania and Maryland reporting their first confirmed cases Friday, and Missouri reporting its first presumed case.

Read the story here.

—Carolyn Thompson, The Associated Press


Anti-lockdown protesters march through Dutch city of Utrecht

UTRECHT, Netherlands — Thousands of people marched peacefully through the Dutch city of Utrecht on Saturday to protest the government’s coronavirus lockdown measures.

Holding balloons, umbrellas and banners, including ones that said: “It’s not right,” protesters watched by a large police presence moved from a park into the city center without incident. 

Siebke Koopman said he was demonstrating against more than just the Dutch government’s COVID-19 restrictions.

Read the story here.

—Aleksandar Furtula, The Associated Press


Chile reports first case of omicron variant of coronavirus

SANTIAGO, Chile — Chile on Saturday reported its first case of the omicron variant of the coronavirus.

A foreign national residing in Chile returned from Ghana on Nov. 25 and tested positive in a PCR test at the Santiago airport, according to authorities.

Read the story here.

—The Associated Press


US drugstores squeezed by vaccine demand, staff shortages

A sign is posted outside a CVS pharmacy Thursday in Indianapolis. A rush of vaccine-seeking customers and staff shortages are squeezing drugstores around the country. That has led to frazzled workers and even temporary pharmacy closures. (AP Photo/Tom Murphy)


A rush of vaccine-seeking customers and staff shortages are squeezing drugstores around the U.S., leading to frazzled workers and temporary pharmacy closures.

Drugstores are normally busy this time of year with flu shots and other vaccines, but now pharmacists are doling out a growing number of COVID-19 shots and giving coronavirus tests.

The push for shots is expected to grow more intense as President Joe Biden urges vaccinated Americans to get booster shots to combat the emerging omicron variant. 

Read the story here.

—Tom Murphy, The Associated Press


Resurgence in business travel expected as companies tire of Zoom, but omicron variant complicates outlook

Travelers walk between terminals at O’Hare International Airport on Nov. 28, 2021, after the Thanksgiving weekend. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune/TNS) (Brian Cassella / TNS)


Many road warriors’ suitcases and passports have been gathering dust since the COVID-19 pandemic brought business travel to a halt.

That’s not the case at Chicago-based Devbridge, which hosted an all-hands event in Lithuania earlier this year and brought teams from Toronto, London and Lithuania to its Chicago office last month to workshop new products with clients.

Read the story here.

—Lauren Zumbach, Chicago Tribune


Police get complaints over U.K. leader’s festive parties

LONDON — Britain’s opposition Labour Party has raised complaints to police about Christmas parties held by Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s staff in his office last year in breach of coronavirus restrictions. 

The reports surfaced as many in the U.K. and elsewhere are increasingly concerned about festive parties and socializing over Christmas this year amid the spread of the new omicron variant.

Read the story here.

—The Associated Press


COVID kills a leading anti-vaccine televangelist; evangelicals don’t want to talk about it

When famed televangelist Marcus Lamb died this week at 64 after contracting COVID-19, a who’s who of conservative Christian leaders sent out regrets. Evangelist Franklin Graham said Lamb is now “experiencing heaven.” National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference head Samuel Rodriguez called him a “faithful follower of Jesus … with a heart for the lost and broken.”

Absent was a painful truth: Lamb had led his global Christian network, Daystar, for months in spreading inaccurate information about coronavirus vaccines and instead promoting treatments that are not proven remedies. The vaccines, a May segment on Daystar said, falsely, are “killing your immune system.”

Read the story here.

— Michelle Boorstein, The Washington Post


Cognitive rehab: One patient’s painstaking path through long COVID-19 therapy

Samantha Lewis works to improve her balance during a therapy session at the Shirley Ryan AbilityLab in Burr Ridge, Ill., Oct. 8, 2021. Lewis is relearning some basic aspects of her daily life after struggling with brain fog and other lingering symptoms for more than a year since being infected with COVID-19. (Alex Wroblewski/The New York Times) XNYT101 XNYT101


AURORA, Ill. — There is sobering evidence of Samantha Lewis’ struggle with long COVID-19 on her bathroom mirror.

Above the sink, she has posted an index card scrawled with nine steps reminding her how to brush her teeth. It is one of many strategies Lewis, 34, has learned from “cognitive rehab,” an intensive therapy program for COVID-19 survivors whose lives have been upended by problems like brain fog, memory lapses, dizziness and debilitating fatigue.

Read the story here.

—Pam Belluck, The New York Times


Merkel: Virus death toll ‘so bitter because it is avoidable’

German Chancellor Angela Merkel waves goodbye at the Defence Ministry during the Grand Tattoo (Grosser Zapfenstreich), a ceremonial send-off for her in Berlin on December 2, 2021. (Odd Andersen/Pool Photo via AP)


BERLIN — Outgoing Chancellor Angela Merkel on Saturday made what is likely her final appeal before leaving office next week for Germans to get vaccinated against COVID-19.

Merkel gave what is expected to be her last weekly video message two days after federal and state leaders decided on a series of measures meant to break a wave of coronavirus infections. 

The measures include excluding unvaccinated people across the country from nonessential stores, restaurants and sports and cultural venues. In a longer-term move, parliament will consider a general vaccine mandate.

Read the story here.

—The Associated Press


FDA authorizes Eli Lilly antibody treatment for high-risk young children

The Eli Lilly headquarters  in Indianapolis in 2006. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings, File)


The Food and Drug Administration on Friday authorized Eli Lilly’s monoclonal antibody treatment for infants and children under age 12 with COVID-19 who are at high risk of becoming severely ill from the virus because they have a condition such as obesity or diabetes.

Previously, high-risk COVID patients 12 or older had been eligible to get the drugs, which are typically administered intravenously at a clinic or hospital and have been shown to lower the risk of hospitalization and death.

Read the story here.

—Rebecca Robbins, The New York Times


Over 129K WA kids ages 5–11 receive first COVID vaccine dose

Andre Mattus, a nurse at the University of Washington Medical Center, gives the first shot of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine to Amar Gunderson, 6 1/2, last month, in Seattle. (Ted S. Warren / AP)


OLYMPIA — More than 129,000 children ages 5 through 11 in Washington state have received their first dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech pediatric vaccine since eligibility expanded to include younger kids on Nov. 3, health officials said this week. 

“While COVID-19 is often milder in children than adults, children can still get very sick and spread the disease to family and friends, which is an even bigger concern as people gather this holiday season,” Secretary of Health Dr. Umair A. Shah said Thursday. “As a father, knowing our children are vaccinated helps me breathe a sigh of relief.”

Read the story here.

—The Associated Press


UW men’s basketball game vs. No. 5 UCLA canceled due to COVID-19

The Washington Huskies line up for the playing of the national anthem before, Nov. 9, 2021, in Seattle. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)


The Washington men’s basketball team will suffer its first Pac-12 defeat due to COVID-19 developments within the program.

The Huskies are unable to host No. 5-ranked UCLA on Sunday at Alaska Airlines Arena and will forfeit the game in accordance to Pac-12 guidelines.

Washington has seven players and coaches in COVID-19 protocols, according to a Los Angeles Times report that cited an anonymous source.

Read the story here.

—Percy Allen


So far, Washington workers pushed out over vaccine mandates aren’t losing jobless benefits

Boeing workers protest against the jet-maker’s vaccine requirement in Everett in October. (Dominic Gates / The Seattle Times)


In August, when Gov. Jay Inslee ordered state employees, health care workers and others to get vaccinated against COVID-19 by Oct. 18, officials issued a stern warning: If you quit or get fired for refusing a jab, don’t expect unemployment benefits. 

But nearly two months after the vaccination deadline, it’s unclear just how much vaccine-hesitant workers have to worry about. 

Although thousands of workers in Washington likely have quit or been fired over government and private vaccine mandates — including nearly 2,000 state employees as of Nov. 15, according to state data — just 26 mandate-related claims for jobless benefits had been flagged for review by the state Employment Security Department as of Friday. Although the review process isn’t complete, ESD officials don’t believe that any of those claims have been denied.

Read the story here.

—Paul Roberts

Fashion Fair Cosmetics Receives Makeover, Returns to Stores | Black Voices | Chicago News

Many Black women may be familiar with the cosmetics brand Fashion Fair — founded in 1973 by Eunice Johnson, wife of John Johnson, the Black publishing magnate behind Ebony and Jet magazines.

Though the publishing house is no longer what it used to be, new ownership has given Fashion Fair its own makeover and returned it to store shelves.

“We’re the queen,” said co-owner Desiree Rogers, who bought the company along with fellow former Ebony executive Cheryl Mayberry McKissack. “We started 56 years ago, you know, and we were, if not the first, close to the first. And we’ve always focused on darker skin tones. It wasn’t novel. It wasn’t something that, you know, we thought like, ‘wow, isn’t this hip and cool to do, let’s be politically correct.’ It didn’t exist.”

Founded in 1973, Fashion Fair catered to black women who could afford the department store prices for cosmetics that suited their spectrum of skin tones.

“So for me, it was my first makeup. It was the first makeup my mother allowed me to use and so that is a big deal in any girl’s life because all of us when we’re young, we want to wear something!” Rogers said.

Packaged in iconic pink tubes and compact cases, the brand was seen on hundreds of Ebony Fashion Fair models, as well as fashion show audience members, over the years.

But as Johnson publishing was filing for bankruptcy in 2019, it sold Fashion Fair to former executives Rogers and McKissack.

The business duo, along with another partner, scooped it up with plans of returning it to its former glory.

“So the opportunity to take the historical legacy that Fashion Fair has been known for around the world, certainly all work Mrs. Johnson did bringing Fashion Fair into the marketplace, it’s wonderful,” said Mayberry McKissack. “But yet a little bit scary because, you know, there’s a history and there’s a legacy and you know, we’ve got to make sure that we do it right.”

Chicago-native and celebrity makeup artist Sam Fine returned to help redevelop the product.

Today’s Fashion Fair is vegan and includes natural additives like vitamin C and green tea extract to provide a skin-care benefit.

A range of lipsticks and foundations — in both new and legacy colors — are now presented in white and gold packaging, perched on the shelves of retail beauty giant, Sephora, instead of department store counters.

“Being able to say that you can go to this gondola and find something for your cousin, your sister and your aunt, I think is unique because many of the brands, even in their shade extensions don’t really speak to the nuances of, of coloring that that speak to us so beautifully,” Fine told WTTW News.

But Fashion Fair’s comeback arrives at a time when women of color already have far more choices than in the late 20th century.

Heritage brands have extended their lines to include darker shades, and Rihanna’s all-inclusive Fenty beauty line has sold enough to turn the popstar into a billionaire business mogul.

Research shows that Black women alone spent about $1.3 billion on color cosmetics in 2020 — down from nearly $1.7 billion in 2019, likely because of the pandemic.

Rogers and McKissack say while there’s room for everyone, Fashion Fair is the original — and its new makeover is for those who knew it when, and fresh faces who can get to know it now.

“They’re also gonna see us and I think in a very different way and it really is about us really focusing on women with darker skin tones. That’s our number one focus: we don’t do anything else,” McKissack said.

The pair also co-own Black Opal cosmetics, a mass-market brand designed for Black women, sold in drug stores and Ulta.