Quick Take:

Approximately 16 percent of hospitality and tourism workers lost their job in 2020 due to a permanent closure or layoff....

Hello, everyone, we’re headed toward a sunny Friday with some increasingly sunny news for parents, students and teachers who have been longing for the pre-pandemic normalcy of in-person instruction. To that and more:

BACK TO CLASS: News that most public elementary schools in the northern part of the county plan to return students to campus five days per week highlights some ambitious movement.
THE JAB GRAB: How is it that some people not yet eligible are getting inoculated before others? It’s a game of craftiness.
PANETTA PANDEMONIUM: If you’re not already signed up to watch our Wallace Baine interview the congressman, it’s time to do so!

And now to the headlines…

School looking more and more open

Mae Villanueva, 4, plays at Lake Balboa Park in Van Nuys on Jan. 20, 2021.
Mae Villanueva, 4, plays at Lake Balboa Park in Van Nuys on Jan. 20, 2021. Mae’s parents worry that without in-person instruction she will fall behind in reading. Photo by Shae Hammond for CalMatters

COVID-K-12: A number of Santa Cruz County school districts are preparing to allow elementary students back into classrooms full-time later this month — and at least two are planning to fully reopen secondary schools. The largest district in the county, Pajaro Valley Unified, remains the biggest asterisk. Nick Ibarra spells it out for you here.

They’re not cheating, they’re just crafty

Artim Aghakhani receives a Johnson & Johnson inoculation
Artim Aghakhani receives a COVID-19 shot in Lincoln Park on Tuesday. (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)

VACCINE WATCH: Excess supplies and unused appointments have led officials in some parts of the state to make doses available to all adults, even those not eligible under current rules. Here’s a look at where that’s happening and why it isn’t cheating.

RELATED: Alameda County opens vaccines to those 16 and over in certain ZIP codes (SF Gate)

COVID-19’s neurological, psychiatric effects

Pain

COVID TODAY: One-third of COVID-19 survivors were diagnosed with a psychiatric or neurological condition within six months of being infected with the coronavirus, new research shows. The findings come from the largest effort yet to track the neuropsychiatric aftereffects of a coronavirus infection. More on that startling discovery here.

More from here & elsewhere

‘Another family losing their home’: SF transplants are displacing Tahoe locals (SF Gate)
‘Only hot people get the Pfizer’: Vaccine rivalries descend on TikTok (NBC News)
Colorado vaccination site shuts down after 11 ‘adverse reactions’ to Johnson & Johnson jabs (USA Today)
You’re vaccinated now, so can you go to a restaurant? What you should know (CNN)
FAQ: What Is A Vaccine ‘Passport,’ And What Are These Credentials Used For? (NPR)
The pandemic ruined one musical’s debut plans. Not for long (ABC News)
Majority of pandemic stimulus checks went toward savings or paying off debt (ABC News)

Our next big event

U.S. Rep. Jimmy Panetta ad podium
READ THE STORY: Credit: Courtesy Kaiser Permanente

COMING TOMORROW — Wallace interviews Rep. Jimmy Panetta, and you’re invited: It’s been a year of transition in Washington, D.C. So what does that mean for residents and businesses in the Monterey Bay area? Our Wallace Baine sits down with U.S. Rep. Jimmy Panetta tomorrow to explore that and a litany of other subjects during an hourlong virtual conversation — be there!

When: 5 p.m.
Where: Zoom
To register FREE, click here.

FINALLY, YOU TELL ME: Are you going on a road trip to get jabbed? Considering it? Hit reply and share the deets, please.

Tomorrow is Friday and the weekend weather is looking good!

Mark Conley
Deputy Managing Editor

Follow Mark Conley on: Twitter, Instagram, Facebook. Mark joins Lookout after 14 years at the Mercury News and Bay Area News Group, where he served as Deputy Sports Editor on a staff that covered three...