Close X
Monday, October 7, 2024
ADVT 
National

New school year begins for many Yukon students

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Aug, 2020 07:44 PM
  • New school year begins for many Yukon students

Students in many parts of Yukon are heading back to class for the first day of the new school year.

All kindergarten to Grade 12 students in Whitehorse are in class, while the Robert Service School in Dawson, and schools in Carmacks and Teslin also begin the year.

Schools in other rural communities resume next week or in early September.

This is the first time Yukon students have been in classrooms since the COVID-19 pandemic shut schools in March.

Each school has individual operating plans, which include more spacing for students.

School buses are running but physical distancing means more of them are carrying fewer students, and health officials are encouraging families to handle their own transportation needs this year. (CKRW)

MORE National ARTICLES

Charges in Vancouver's 6th, 7th homicides of 2020

Charges in Vancouver's 6th, 7th homicides of 2020
Charges have been laid in connection with a fatal double shooting in Vancouver. Police say a 43-year-old man was taken into custody Wednesday night in Harrison Hot Springs, east of Vancouver.

Charges in Vancouver's 6th, 7th homicides of 2020

Indigenous leader Ed John pleads not guilty to historic sex charges

Indigenous leader Ed John pleads not guilty to historic sex charges
An Indigenous leader and former British Columbia cabinet minister has pleaded not guilty to sex charges dating back more than 40 years.

Indigenous leader Ed John pleads not guilty to historic sex charges

Plane's altitude 60 metres when it went missing: TSB

Plane's altitude 60 metres when it went missing: TSB
The Transportation Safety Board says a plane that went missing last month in British Columbia with two people on board was last recorded travelling at an altitude of about 60 metres.

Plane's altitude 60 metres when it went missing: TSB

Charges approved against B.C. RCMP officer

Charges approved against B.C. RCMP officer
An RCMP officer in British Columbia has been charged with breach of trust in connection with the duties of his office, criminal harassment and forcible entry.

Charges approved against B.C. RCMP officer

Experts say "airborne" incorrect term for COVID

Experts say
A group of 239 scientists and physicians urging the World Health Organization to recognize the potential for airborne transmission of the novel coronavirus have sparked debate over how COVID-19 is spreading.

Experts say "airborne" incorrect term for COVID

Calls grow for media to address own failures with systemic racism

Calls grow for media to address own failures with systemic racism
Journalists have not had to go far to uncover searing stories of racism in Canada — they're finding them in their own newsrooms, among their co-workers and involving their bosses.

Calls grow for media to address own failures with systemic racism