The town lost to the Dixie Fire

Published: Aug. 12, 2021, 9:50 p.m.

How some states are trying to make students and staffers feel safe in school. Why more moms may leave the workforce as the delta variant spreads. And what it\u2019s like to lose your town to a wildfire and to have to start again. 
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California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) announced Wednesday that the state will require all teachers and school staffers to be vaccinated against the coronavirus or to submit to weekly testing. It\u2019s the first state to impose such a rule. The governor is citing the surge of the delta variant as the reason \u2013\u2013 and the fact that more and more children are being hospitalized by infection. 
As the pace of coronavirus cases rises nationwide and children\u2019s camps and day cares shut back down, working mothers\u2019 lives and livelihoods are taking another massive hit. Heather Long reports on the panic setting in among America\u2019s millions of mothers with children under the age of 12 and the potential economic cost of a second mass resignation of moms.
The Dixie Fire in California has been burning since mid-July. It now covers more than 500,000 acres in four counties and has forced thousands of people to evacuate their homes. Marisa Iati reports on the state\u2019s containment efforts, the emotional toll of evacuation and why rebuilding may not be an option in Greenville, Calif.