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 In New York, advocates are pushing for a bill that would create safer environments for LGBTQ students in schools around the state.The bill has been in the works since 2017, but supporters hold on to hope the bill will get enough support and eventually pass. Bullying students or transphobia or things like that are often not taken as seriously as they should be,  said Weintraub, a 15-year-old LGBTQ student who has experienced bullying in school. There was a lot of students who would make fun of other stud vaso stanley ents  pronouns,  they added.The student identifies as transgender and uses he and th stanley website ey pronouns. They asked us only to use their last name.Being or feeling different, they say, is not easy when navigating school environments. I think schools can and should create environments where trans and gender-expansive people feel supported, protected in being who they are while they re at school,  said Trevon Mayers, the senior director of advocacy and community engagement atNew York City Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual Transgender Community Center. There could be people that are homophobic, transphobic in these schools that happen to be administrators, and they re not allowing students to use the bathroom that identifies with their gender expression,  said Ace Sutherland, director of community organizing atEquality New York.  And that s a problem. Both advocates are supportingNew York Senate Bi stanley cup ll S369: The Transgender and Non-Binary Anti-Discrimination Requirements in Schools bill.SEE MORE: Mu Cdeg Florida Chihuahua believed to be world s oldest dog
 Wisconsin is experiencing a dramatic spik stanley thermosflasche e in hospitalization this winter amid the spread of the COVID-19.This month marks the second highest number of daily patients since the outset of the pandemic.  Our care providers have been in this for almost two years, and there s a fatigue and emotional drain that is occurring as well,  said Mary Beth Kingston, Chief Nursing Officer at Advocate Aurora Health. Th stanley cups uk e Centers for Disease Control and Prevention  CDC  announced last week that the Omicron variant is now the dominant strain among new COVID-19. cases.According to the Wisconsin Hospital Association, 96 ICU beds across the state are available out of more than 1,346.  We re holding our own, but definitely we re starting to feel stretched, and that s why we re out there asking for the public s health to bring this under control,  said Kingston. On Sunday, Advocate Aurora Health ran a full-page ad in Sunday s Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, asking the community for help. The ad states:  WE CAN T STOP COVID WITHOUT YOU.  It encourages the public to get vaccinated, stay home if you feel sick, get tested, and mask indoors in public spaces.According to Advocate Aurora Health, more than 90 percent of inpatients are unvaccinated.Amid the spread of Omicron, the CDC has also updated guidance for healthcare workers. In the stanley us  case of staffing shortages, it s advising shorter periods of isolation for personnel before returning to work. In a  crisis  scenario 鈥?one in which staffing is seriously com