Tag: supreme-court

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Coronavirus, Israel, Animal Tears: Your Thursday Evening Briefing – The New York Times

August 14, 2020

(Want to get this briefing by email? Heres the sign-up.)

Good evening. Heres the latest.

1. The coronavirus summer surge hit its deadliest day so far this month.

Officials across the U.S. reported at least 1,470 virus deaths on Wednesday, the highest single-day total yet in August, according to a Times database. For more than two weeks, the country has averaged more than 1,000 deaths a day. Medics in Houston responded to a nursing home on Wednesday, above.

But even that stark statistic doesnt tell the whole story. A Times analysis found that at least 200,000 more people have died than usual since March. This is about 60,000 higher than the number of deaths that have been directly attributed to the coronavirus. And by any account, the US. has suffered far more deaths than any other country.

2. New weekly jobless claims fell below one million for the first time since March.

The Labor Department reported that 963,000 people last week filed first-time claims for benefits under regular state unemployment programs. But layoffs remain exceptionally high by historical standards, and the pace of rehiring has slowed.

The economic pain is particularly severe for families with children. Researchers at the Federal Reserve found that household heads lost jobs in 12.9 percent of families with children since the pandemic took hold, compared with 9.2 percent in households without children. In single-parent households, the share jumped to 23.2 percent.

3. Israel will suspend plans to annex disputed West Bank territory as part of a deal to normalize relations with the United Arab Emirates.

In a surprise statement issued by the White House, President Trump said he brokered a deal for Israel and the U.A.E. to sign a string of bilateral agreements on investment, tourism, security and other areas while moving to allow direct flights between their countries and set up reciprocal embassies.

That would make the U.A.E. the third Arab country to establish normal diplomatic relations with Israel, after Jordan and Egypt. Above, Tel Aviv city hall lit up in the colors of the U.A.E. flag.

For its key players, the deal came at an opportune moment: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu needed to remind Israelis why they elected him; Mr. Trump needed a diplomatic win; and the U.A.E., under fire for alleged human rights abuses in Yemen and Libya, needed to improve its image in Washington and beyond.

4. President Trump explicitly linked his objections to more funding for the U.S. Postal Service to his aversion to mail-in voting.

In an interview on the Fox Business Network, Mr. Trump cited proposals by House Democrats to allocate $25 billion to the service and another $3 billion specifically to help it handle mail-in voting. Funding for the Postal Service has been a key sticking point in negotiations for a new coronavirus relief deal.

If we dont make a deal, that means they dont get the money, he said. That means they cant have universal mail-in voting, they just cant have it.

Separately, the Supreme Court effectively upheld a Rhode Island judges order that makes it easier for voters in the state to vote by mail during the pandemic.

5. The Justice Department accused Yale University of discriminating against Asian-American and white applicants in its undergraduate admissions process.

The finding came after a two-year investigation, the departments civil rights division said. It ordered Yale to suspend the use of race or national origin in its admissions process for one year after which it must seek clearance to use it. A federal appeals court is preparing to hear a challenge against the use of race in admissions at Harvard College.

We also took a look at the push for remote learning this fall. Rising infection rates were clearly the major driver. But President Trumps demands that schools reopen helped harden opposition to in-person instruction and gave powerful teachers unions fodder to demand stronger safety measures or resist physically reopening.

6. After celebrating 100 days without community spread, residents of New Zealands largest city are back under lockdown.

Four new cases reported in Auckland on Wednesday grew to 17 by Thursday. Epidemiologists are racing to determine the source possibly via a cargo ship or quarantine facilities for returning travelers and the country is rolling out a huge testing, contact tracing and quarantine blitz to quash Covid-19 for the second time.

And in China, two people tested positive for a second time after recovering earlier this year. The two cases have revived concerns about second-time infections that have baffled experts.

7. The Trump administration formalized the lifting of Obama-era controls on methane, just as new research shows that far more of the potent greenhouse gas is seeping into the atmosphere than previously known.

The reversal effectively frees oil and gas companies from the need to detect and repair methane leaks. The Environmental Protection Agency justified the move by citing agency data showing that leaks from domestic oil and gas wells have remained steady over the past decade. Above, a well pad near Mead, Colo.

However, numerous recent studies show the opposite: that methane emissions from drilling sites in the U.S. are far more extensive than the E.P.A.s official numbers.

8. How do you make a blockbuster hit in a pandemic? For starters: Rent an entire hotel for the cast and crew, and procure 18,000 Covid-19 tests and 150 hand sanitizer stations.

Jurassic World: Dominion, now filming in England, is one of the first major studio films to restart production since the coronavirus led to a global shutdown in March. The set requires constant testing, and has a Green Zone that is limited to the director, the cast and essential crew.

Its a chance for the movie industry to see if it can move past the financial woes caused by the pandemic including closed movie theaters and audiences increasingly comfortable watching movies from the couch and keep everyone safe.

9. Animal tears are starting to get more attention.

By studying the numerous ways animals keep their eyes wet and healthy, scientists hope to help address human vision problems. Dr. Arianne Pontes Ori and her colleagues reported this week that tears can be great equalizers: Vertebrates across the animal kingdom seem to swaddle their eyes with fluid in much the same way.

Their work requires collecting animal tears, like the barn owl above. Not to worry the entire process comes down to whats best for the patients. Whatever tears theyre willing to offer, Dr. Ori said, we respect that, even if it is only a tiny amount.

10. And finally, Special Agent Mulder to the rescue.

Rudy Garcia-Tolsons attempt to make a fifth Paralympic swim team after three years of retirement was missing a crucial element a pool where he could train. With all of the public pools near his home in Southern California closed, swimming in the ocean was hardly the best way to prepare to face elite competition.

Then David Duchovny, best known for his role on TVs The X-Files, offered up his pool in Malibu. The actor, a fellow swimmer and triathlete, had read an article in The Times about Garcia-Tolsons struggle.

The first few days I was in awe that I was in Malibu, at an outdoor private pool, Garcia-Tolson said. After I got over that I was able to get into my zone.

Read more from the original source:

Coronavirus, Israel, Animal Tears: Your Thursday Evening Briefing - The New York Times

The MacIver Daily Disease Brief: COVID-19 In Wisconsin – MacIverInstitute

August 3, 2020

On July 30, 2020, Governor Evers issued Executive Order #82, creating a public health emergency because of a new and concerning spike of infections of the novel coronavirus, or COVID-19. This order gives the Governor 60 days to issue emergency orders related to the COVID-19 outbreak.

The MacIver Institute has maintained a detailed record of DHS day-to-day emergency orders. We also have curated a detailed record of coronavirus data releases, and put together our own charts tracking the spread of the disease in Wisconsin, the number of people COVID + who require hospitalization and other important metrics you will not find anywhere else. Make sure to check back here every day for the latest information.

Executive Order #82was issued by Governor Evers on July 30, 2020 in response to a new spike in COVID-19 infections in the state.The order appoints the Wisconsin Department of Health Services as the lead agency to respond to the emergency. It also gives the Wisconsin National Guard the power to assist in the August 11 fall primary election.

Emergency Order #1 was also issued by Governor Evers on July 30. The order requires that all people aged 5 and older wear a face mask or cloth face covering when they are in any indoor or enclosed space other than a private home. Enclosed spaces include outdoor bars and restaurants (both places that are clearly not indoors). Enclosed spaces also include ride-share services and public transport. People are allowed to remove their masks when they are eating or drinking; when they are communicating with someone with hearing problems; while receiving a service like having photos taken for an ID; while swimming; while giving a speech or speaking, as long as the speaker is at least 6 feet away from their viewers; when wearing a mask would be a hazard; when your identity needs to be confirmed; when federal law prohibits mask wearing; and when sleeping. People are exempt from the order entirely if they have a disorder or condition that prevents them from wearing a mask; if they cannot remove the mask by themselves, like if they are unconscious; if they has trouble breathing; if they are below the age of 5; and if they are incarcerated. The State Legislature and the Supreme Court are also exempt. People are discouraged from using medical-grade masks like N95 respirators. Violators of the order can be fined $200 underWis. Stat. 323.28. The order goes into effect at 12:01 AM on August 1, 2020, and expires on September 28, 2020.

Executive and emergency orders below are from March 12, 2020 to May 11, 2020. Orders were issued from the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in Wisconsin until the State Supreme Court struck down Wisconsins second Safer at Home lockdown order.

Certain orders below are enforceable under Wis. Stat. 252.25. This means that people who violate the order or obstruct the enforcement of the order can be charged with up to 30 days in prison, a maximum fine of $500, or both. Orders where Wis. Stat. 252.25 does apply will be noted at the end of each order summary.

Executive Order #72declared a public health emergency in Wisconsin on March 12, 2020. Through the declaration, Governor Evers designated the Department of Health Services (DHS) as the lead responding agency to the emergency and gave the DHS authority to suspend the provisions of any administrative rule that would prevent the agency from taking appropriate action to respond to the COVID-19 outbreak. The order also authorizes the national guard to respond to the health emergency as needed, and directs the Department of Agriculture, Trade, and Consumer Protection to enforce crack-downs on price gauging.

Emergency Order #1was authorized by DHS Secretary-Designee Andrea Palm on March 13, 2020. The order requires all Wisconsin public and private schools to close for student instruction and extracurricular activities. The closure was to take effect from March 18, 2020 until April 6, 2020. This order has now been amended by Order #5. See below.

Emergency Order #2was signed by Governor Evers on March 14, 2020. It allows certain trucks to receive overweight permits, without fee, if they are transporting essential restock to grocery retailers. The order also relieves out-of-state delivery trucks from certain federal and state requirements. Finally, the order waives required permit fees for non-Wisconsin trucks to make 72-hour grocery delivery trips into Wisconsin.

Emergency Order #3was signed by the Governor on March 15, 2020. The order suspends 27 sets of administrative rules by the Department of Children and Families (DCF). Suspensions cover various rules, including certain required medical exams for children in settings like foster care or group homes. Certain standards and requirements in the field of child care are also suspended, including mandated schedules for pay, limits on the amount of children allowed to be in ones care, child care license requirements, and record keeping requirements, among other requirements.

Emergency Order #4was issued on March 16, 2020 by Secretary-Designee Palm, prohibiting gatherings of 50 people or more, be they public or private gatherings, planned or spontaneous. Locations conditionally exempt from the order included food pantries, libraries, transportation facilities, grocery and convenience stores, office spaces, the state capitol, state courts, and restaurants and bars, among others. The order went into effect at midnight on March 17 and any violators may be subject to Wis. Stat.252.25.

Emergency Order #5was issued by Palm onMarch 17, 2020. The order prohibited gatherings of 10 or more people and ordered all restaurants and bars to close from normal operations by 5:00 PM on the 17th. Order #5 also required all public and private Wisconsin schools to close, from 5:00 PM on March 18 until the end of the public health emergency. The order exempts transportation services, child care facilities, government facilities, retail establishments, educational institutions for non-instructional purposes, and healthcare facilities,among others. The order allowed food establishments, like restaurants, to stay open for take-out, curbside pick-up, and delivery.Wis. Stat.252.25 applies to any violators of this order.

Emergency Order #6was issued on March 18, 2020 by Secretary-Designee Palm. The order determined that licensed child care facilities are limited to no more than 10 staff members and 50 children present at one time. The order went into effect at 8:00am on March 19. Violators of the order are subject to Wis. Stat.252.25.

Emergency Order #7was also issued on March 18, 2020. Governor Evers signed the order to prohibit employers from firing workers who have exhibited symptoms or have contracted COVID-19. For Wisconsinites who have lost jobs due to the virus, the order suspends the weekly job-search requirement for people to make unemployment insurance claims. The order was retroactively made effective since March 12. Violators of Order #7 are subject to prosecution pursuant of Wis. Stat.252.25.

Emergency Order #8was signed by Secretary-Designee Palm on March 20, 2020 as an update to Emergency Order #5. Whereas Order #5 mandated that bars, restaurants, and schools be closed, Order #8 also includes the closure of Hair salons, barber shops, nail salons, day spas, tattoo parlors, body art establishments, and tanning facilities by 5:00 PM on March 20, 2020. #8 makes more specific which locations are exempt from the mass gathering order and further specifies how restaurants are allowed to operate. Wis. Stat.252.25 applies to order violations, but only a maximum of $250 may be charged for a fine.

Emergency Order #9was also signed on March 20, 2020 by Governor Evers. The order sets a temporary ban on admissions to the state prisons and juvenile facilities operated by the Department of Corrections. The order may be lifted by the DOC, partially or completely. Under #9, the DOC may continue to use facilities for temporary custody and detention. The order went into effect on Monday, March 23.

Emergency Order #10was issued on March 21, 2020 by the Governor. The order suspends four administrative rules by the Department of Public Instruction (DPI). One suspension streamlines theapplication process for state mandated school instruction hour waivers. The second suspension waives requirements for student teaching to ensure that seniors in a teaching program may graduate on time. The final two suspensions allow the Superintendent of Public Instructionto set new deadlines for choice school submissions and for 4-K grant applications, respectively.

Emergency Order #11was signed by the Governor on March 22, 2020, at the request of the Public Service Commissions (PSC) Chairperson Rebecca Valcq. The order suspends 17 PSC administrative rules on the provision of electricity, gas, and water services. In the words of Chairwoman Valcq, the suspensions would Authorize public utilities to waive late fees;Temporarily suspend disconnections, other than those needed for safety reasons;Enable customers who are unable to make a cash deposit to obtain residential service;Ensure that deferred payment agreements are available not only to residential customers but also commercial, farm, and industrial customers; [And] streamline the process for customers to apply for utility service by suspending requirements for identity and/or residence verification.

Emergency Order #12is the state shelter-in-place (Safer at Home) order issued on March 24, 2020 by Secretary-Designee Palm. The order demands that all members stay in their homes or residences and bans all non-essential travel of any kind, unless it is to get food, medicine, medical care, or other supplies to maintain quarantine. The order updates Orders #5 and #8 to further ban all public and private gatherings of any number of people unless the group lives under one roof.All for-profit and non-profit businesses with a physical presence in Wisconsin are banned from operation, with certain exceptions for essential businesses and special circumstances. Please read the Emergency Order in the link above to determine if your work or business is deemed essential. The order takes effect at 8:00 AM on March 25, 2020 and ends at 8:00 AM on April 24, 2020 unless a new sunset date is set by a later order. Wis. Stat.252.25 applies to order violations with a maximum fine of $250, maximum prison sentence of 30 days, or both.

Emergency Order #13 was issued on March 26, 2020 by Governor Evers. The order allows minors between 14 and 15 years old to work without a child labor permit. Certain other requirements must be met however, such as written consent from the minors guardian for the child to work. 30 days after the public health emergency has ended, the employer must pay for a permit to be given to the minors hired during the duration of this order. If that permit is not attained by the employer after that 30 days, there may be prosecution. Violators of the order are subject to Wis. Stat.252.25.

Emergency Order #14 was issued by the Governor and by Palm on March 27, 2020. The order amends Emergency Order #2, further regulating the weight of trucks that are transporting essential restock to Wisconsin grocers. Special permits given through Order #2 are now extended by Order #14 until April 11, 2020. The order is effective until the public health emergency is called off.

Emergency Order #15 was issued by Governor Evers and Secretary-Designee Palm on March 27, 2020. The order prohibits landlords from ending someones renter status or initiating the eviction process on any tennant who has failed to pay rent. Sheriffs likewise cannot act on any writs of restitution by a landlord and cannot carry out an eviction order if the sole reason is the renters failure to pay. The only reason, under the order, that a renter may be evicted for late payment is if they also pose a threat to others by remaining at the residence. The order similarly forbids mortgage lenders and sheriffs from foreclosing on a resident who cannot pay their mortgage. The Governor insisted in his public address on Friday the 27th that this is not an excuse to stop paying rent or mortgage if it is within a persons ability to make these payments. The order is effective for 60 days, until May 26, 2020.

Emergency Order #16 was also issued on March 27 by the Governor and the DHS Secretary-Designee. #16 loosens certain DSPS credentialing regulations among healthcare workers in order to allow more active workers into the field. The order specifically opens up interstate reciprocity to the licenses of out-of-state or Canadian healthcare providers, extends temporary healthcare licenses for workers, opens up work in telemedicine, and lessens restrictions on physycians assistants. It also enables qualified nurses to be quickly credentialed and allows healthcare workers whose licenses have expired in the last 5 years to re-enter into areas of medical need. A full list of changes to healthcare license regulations can be found in the order. The order is in effect until the end of the public health emergency and violators are subject to a maximum $250 fine and/or 30 days imprisonment under Wis. Stat.252.25.

Emergency Order #17 was signed into effect on March 27, 2020 by the Governor. The Department of Natural Resources (DNR) normally regulates, through nutrient management plans, how farmers may dump farm waste to fertilize their fields. The rule is to ensure that the dumped waste, like manure, does not contaminate any groundwater or waterways. Emergency Order #17 suspends that rule for certain small and medium sized farm owners who are unable to meet their nutrient management plan requirements during the state of emergency. The companion directive allows those farms to dispose of unused, excess milk as fertilizer on their properties, without the regulation. This order is in effect until the end of the public health emergency.

Emergency Order #18 was issued on March 30, 2020 by Evers and Palm to suspend six more DCF administrative rules. If a child has been initially determined to have been abused or neglected, the first suspension waives the required time period in which a review or a rescheduled review must be held on the determination. The order also suspends the deadline in which a newly placed foster child must receive a medical and dental exam. Another suspension makes it allowable for a hold-over room to hold a child for more than 24 hours and for a shelter facility to house a child for more than 30 days. #18 also suspends the deadline for when children receiving social services must have a physical exam. The last suspension waives the required time in which certain newly hired Wisconsin Works employees must complete their initial training. This order does not supersede any previous orders. The emergency order is in effect until the end of the emergency.

Executive Order #73 was declared by the Governor on April 3, 2020. The order called a special session of the legislature for Saturday, April 4 to take up the Governors proposed changes to the April 7, 2020 spring primary election. The proposal asks that the spring election be moved to May 19, that witness signatrue requirements on absentee ballots be waived, further in-person voting cease, further votes be mail-in only, and that all registered voters who have not yet voted or requested a ballot be automatically sent an absentee ballot. Under the proposal, ballot counting would begin once all ballots have been sent by a municipality and ballots would be accepted until May 26. Evers proposal would also combine the May 12 special election for Congressional Distict 7 with the extended spring primary election. The order requests these changes to minimize the risk posed to citizens and poll workers by eliminating the need for them to go to the polls on election day and risk exposure to the coronavirus. The order references the massive shortages in poll workers statewide (5,250 short as of April 2, even after consolidating voting locations) and also references the increasing mass of absentee ballot requests that leave insufficient time, within current mandate, for poll workers and clerks to count them all. It is unknown if the legislature will convene and it is unlikely that the Republican-majority legislature will pass the Governors proposal.

Emergency Order #19 was issued by Evers and Palm on April 2, 2020. The order requires local health officials to report the address of anyone in the area diagnosed with COVID-19 to their local first responders. Police officers, EMTs, Child Protective Services agents, parole officers, and any other professional who may have to enter the home of an infected person will be notified. This is meant for those professionals to prepare to protect their personal health before coming in contact with the patient. These warnings, according to the order, may not be used as a reason to not respond to an emergency call. The patients addresses are to remain confidential within the circle of area first responders and the local health department, however the order allows exception to that rule in the event of an undefined life-threatening emergency. This order is in effect until the end of the public health emergency.

Emergency Order #20 was issued on April 3, 2020 by the Governor and Palm. The order modifies the section of Emergency Order #16 which allows interstate reciprocity for current medical licenses and certifications. Order #16 is still in effect, but #20 modifies Section 1 to include speech-language pathologists and massage therapists among those allowed to practice in WI. It also modifies #16 so that health care providers who come to practice in WI must apply for a temporary or permanent Wisconsin health care licence within 30 days of beginning work in the state. Any license that was obtained by a health care worker during the health emergency will remain valid until 30 days after the emergency is over. It is now required that DSPS be notified that a health care worker is working in the state within 10 days of starting. This order is in effect until the end of the public health emergency.

Emergency Order #21 was issued by the Governor and Palm on April 3, 2020. The order suspends 47 DHS administrative rules. 15 rules are suspended related to EMS work, three to Home Health Agencies, three to hospice facilities, five to nursing homes, eight to nurse aid training programs, one to medical feeding assistants, two to community based residential facilities, three to adult family homes, and seven related to narcotic treatment services for opiate addiction. The order deregulates training requirements, inspection requirements, and licensure expiration rules, among others, in each category (see the full order in the link above for further details on the suspended administrative rules). This order also allows the DHS to suspend any additional DHS rules, as necessary, that require fees or worker assessments. If these rule suspensions conflict with federal regulations, an additional waiver may need to be submitted. Violators of this order are subject to a $500 fine and/or prison according to Wis. Stat. 252.25. The order is active until the end of the public health emergency.

Executive Order #74 was issued by Governor Evers on April 6, 2020. The order attempts to suspend in-person voting during the April 7 spring primary election and extend requests for absentee ballots until June 4, 2020, to be collected until 8:00 pm on June 9, 2020. Ballots that have already been cast absentee will still count under the order and do not need to be resubmitted. The order also demands another special legislative session on April 7 at 2:00 pm. Under the order, those in office who would be replaced in the spring election are allowed to continue their terms until the deadline to file for a voting recount has passed. Any new officials to take office after this election will end their term as originally scheduled, as if the election day had not been moved. Republican leadership rejected Evers previous request for a special session last Friday afternoon, April 3. Shortly after Order #74 was publicly released, Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald and Assembly Speaker Robin Vos announced that they will challenge Executive Order #74 in the Wisconsin Supreme Court immediately. The Wisconsin Supreme Court voted in favor of the GOP, 4-2, later that afternoon.

Emergency Order #22 was issued by the Governor on April 9, 2020. The order rolls back 14 Department of Safety and Professional Services (DSPS)administrative rules. Five of the rules remove specific deadlines to conduct routine inspections and approve of certain building permits. Similarly, one of the rules suspends and postpones required fire inspections until the end of the public health emergency. Paper submissions of building planning documents for elevators, buildings, plumbing, and wastewater treatment systems are now mandatorily replaced with electronic submission. The new order also removes the requirement for physical therapist assistants to meet face-to-face with their supervising physicians and extends the duration in which the certification test scores of a CPA candidate are valid. To read all rule suspensions and their specifics, please refer to the Emergency Order here. This order is in effect until the end of the public health emergency.

Emergency Order #23was issued by the Governor on April 9, 2020. The order suspends nine Department of Veteran Affairs administrative rules to remove barriers to receiving aid from the Assistants to Needy Veterans Grant (ANVG) program. The first three suspensions include definition changes for liquid assets, declaration of aid, and for description of benefits. Another item suspends economic emergency as a requirement to apply for the ANVG program. To apply for the program, this order removes the requirements for a declaration of aid, allows applicants to now exceed 180% of the federal poverty line, and takes away certain time limits within which an applicant must submit an application for aid and within which an applicant may receive health care aid. The order is effective until the end of the public health emergency.

Emergency Order #24 was issued on April 10 by Governor Evers, adding another set of modifications to Emergency Orders #2 and #14 on emergency overweight permits. Whereas previous orders allowed the DOT to issue emergency overweight permits to trucks carrying restock to grocery stores, Order #24 allows the DOT to issue permits to trucks carrying supplies to any critical service sectors identified by the federal CISA as essential. The order increases the maximum allowable weight of these trucks and retroactively applies these new standards to permits issued under Emergency Order #14. The permits will expire once the public health emergency officially ends in WI.

Emergency Order #25 was issued on April 14, 2020 by Secretary-Designee Palm to establish required COVID-19 procedures in Wisconsins migrant labor camps. The order requires social distancing standards during work time, on all worker transportation even if this requires additional transport or reduces productivity, and in dormitory and barracks style housing. Camp managers are required to provide cloth face coverings, daily disinfection of high-touch surfaces, and hand washing or hand sanitizer stations in select areas of the camp. Workers symptomatic for COVID-19 must be assigned to a separate toilet room/toilet, separate transportation, and separate living accommodations, among other requirements. This order, along with CDC handwashing guidelines, must be posted around the camp in english and, if necessary, in the dominant language at each work camp. Emergency Order #25 must also be included with a migrant workers written disclosure. Violators of the order may be subject to penalties under Wis. Stat.252.25. The order is in effect for 60 days, until June 13.

Emergency Order #26 was issued by the Governor on April 13, 2020 to suspend another 38 administrative DCF rules. This order targets rules for child care services in 5 areas: child care facilities and operators in general, family child care facilities, group child care facilities, day camps, and the child care subsidy program. Select suspensions remove specifics on hours of operation, hours that a child may be in a facilitys care, the ratio of caregivers to children, child health and permission records that operators must maintain, and programming for child night care. Please reference the Order for the full list of rule suspensions. This order supersedes conflicting items in Emergency Orders #3, 6, 12, and 18, but all four previous orders are still in effect. The order is in effect from now until the end of the public health emergency.

Emergency Order #27 was issued by the Governor on April 14, 2020 to suspend three Department of Tourism administrative rules. Suspension of the first rule now allows new tourism advertising projects to go underway at any time. The suspended rule prohibits advertisers from applying for a project if the advertising will be made public during a traditionally busy tourism period in their area. The second rule suspension now allows the applicant for an advertising project to receive the remainder of their marketing funds granted by the Department of Tourism in May, instead of just in April. The third suspension removes the time deadlines for a project application if the advertisement would help the recovery of Wisconsins state tourism economy.

Emergency Order #28 was issued by Andrea Palm at the request of the Governor on April 16, 2020. The order extends the Governors Safer-At-Home Order until May 26, 2020. #28 closely aligns with Order #12 with some key differences. For essential businesses, cleaning procedures need to be increased within their facilities and stores must limit the amount of people in their facilities at a time. Occupancy limits should be enforced with waiting lines outside of the stores or measures like scheduled pick-ups of goods. Essential businesses must also offer two hours per week dedicated exclusively to shopping for at-risk populations. All schools in the state are now closed for the rest of the school year, but may continue to administer distance and virtual learning. The order now opens libraries exclusively for curbside pick-up and drop-off of books, opens arts and craft stores only to customers buying supplies to make PPE with, and opens golf courses with certain limitations (driving ranges and mini golf courses remain closed). Some restrictions on non-essential businesses are lifted. These entities may now schedule and conduct curbside delivery and pick-up of their products. Non-essential businesses must now designate which of their employees are essential and suppliers may only provide goods to their businesses that will meet minimum basic operational needs. Public parks and open spaces may now be closed at the discretion of local health departments if the traffic does not allow for social distancing, if vandalism and disturbing of the peace become a problem, and if The local government does not have the ability to monitor or enforce Social Distancing Requirements. Like #12, this Safer-At-Home order asks that people in Wisconsin follow all DHS and CDC COVID-19 guidelines to the best of their abilities. To date (April 16, 2020), the CDC standards now include wearing a cloth face covering any time you leave the house. Tribal Nations are exempt from this order. Violators of the order may be subject to 30 days imprisonment, or up to $250 fine, or both. Wis. Stat. 252.25. Emergency Order #28 begins on Friday, April 24, 2020 at 8:00am and ends at 8:00am on Tuesday, May 26, 2020.

Emergency Order #29 was issued by the Governor on April 17, 2020. The order suspends one University of Wisconsin System administrative rule. Unclassified staff members of the UW System are normally required to file reports on their outside activities on or before April 30. This order extends the submission deadline to June 30. Unclassified staff are typically faculty, academic staff and limited appointees in the UW System. This order is in effect until the end of the public health emergency.

Emergency Order #30 was also issued on April 17, 2020 by the Governor. The Order suspends 14 administrative rules under the Department of Natural Resources. The suspensions relate to certification and recertification of waterworks operators, water system operators, septage servicing operators, and wastewater treatment plant operators. Suspended rules include those requiring a timeline for when certificate applications must be submitted, rules that mandate certificate expiration after 3 years, and rules that mandate the hours and deadlines for continuing education for workers in each field. This order is in effect from its issuance until the end of the public health emergency.

Emergency Order #31was issued by Palm on April 20, 2020 to establish the DOAs plan to reopen the Wisconsin economy, titled the Badger Bounce Back plan. The plan establishes a set of 14 requirements, divided into Gating Criteria and Core Responsibilities of the state. These requirements must be met or progress towards them must be shown in order to move out of Safer at Home and into one of three phases of reopening. The MacIver Institute staff has published a full analysis of the Badger Bounce Back plan here. Please reference the Emergency Order in the link above or the MacIver analysis for more detailed information on the plan.

Emergency Order #32 was issued by the Governor and Palm on April 23, 2020 to describe the way the Alternate Care Facility (ACF) constructed at the Wisconsin State Fair Park will operate. The facility will be a temporary accommodation for stable, lower-risk COVID-19 patients from overcrowded hospitals and other medical facilities in Wisconsin. Medical facilities can send patients to the ACF once they have expanded their capacity for COVID-19 patients, and that capacity has reached 80%. The order puts the DOA and a leadership team of healthcare professionals in charge of the ACF. Leadership must make a weekly review of hospitals that are sending patients to the ACF to reassess needs. This order is effective until the DHS determines that its no longer necessary to keep the ACF open and it can be safely torn down.

Emergency Order #33was issued by Governor Evers on April 24, 2020, suspending four administrative rules under the Department of Revenue. A retailer is normally required to sign invoices when receiving shipments of beer, liquor, and cigarettes. This emergency order suspends those rules so a signature is no longer required. For retailers that have a contract with the Wisconsin Lottery, thisorder also suspends requirements for them to sell a minimum monthly quota of lottery tickets. Under normal circumstances, retailers with a Wisconsin Lottery contract are obligated to sell an average of $400 worth of tickets per month. This order is in effect until the end of the public health emergency.

Emergency Order #34was issued by Palm on April 27, 2020 to edit the definition of minimum basic operations that was established in the renewed Safer at Home order. A non-essential business may now accept curbside drop-off and pick-up of goods or animals for service, repair, or care. This would allow customers to drop off small engines like lawn mowers for repair, or drop off dogs for grooming. Outdoor recreation rentals are now permitted under minimum basic operations. Items like kayaks, golf carts, and ATVs, for example, can now be rented. Self-service, automatic car washes are now permitted to operate as well. When working in each new capacity listed here, only one staff member may work in a single room or confined space at a time. Drop-offs and pick-ups must be scheduled ahead of time, and payment for services must be conducted online or over the phone, in order to maintain social distancing requirements. A business may not require a signature for service from a customer. The order is in effect until the end of the Safer at Home order.

Emergency Order #35 was issued by the Governor and Palm on May 4, 2020 to suspend 53 administrative rules in different areas that affect local public health departments, Medicaid eligibility and benefits, new retailers using EBT, the Birth to Three Program, childrens long term support, adult long-term care, emergency mental health services, outpatient mental health clinics, community support programs, community substance abuse programs, occupational therapist licensing, and training of hearing aid specialists. Many of the suspensions expand telehealth, eliminate the need for in-person staff and client meetings, suspend signature requirements, and reduce occupational training regulations. Please see the order for further details. Noteworthy suspensions in this order eliminate required proof of financial and personal conditions when a person applies for Medicaid (MA), eliminate mandatory reviews of recipients eligibility for MA and SeniorCare, and allow recipients to re-enroll in an MA Payment Plan if they have a record of skipping past premium payments. Medicaid recipients cannot be removed from their plans during the COVID-19 crisis. Order #35 also says that anyone who enrolled in MA during the COVID-19 crisis will stay enrolled during the crisis. Violators of this order are subject to fines up to $500, imprisonment, or both under Wis. Stat. 252.25. This order is effective immediately until the end of the public health emergency.

Emergency Order #36 was issued by Palm on May 11, 2020. The order modifies minimum basic operations to allow retailers to reopen to a maximum 5 customers at a time, regardless of the size of the store or how many employees are present at a time. Only stores with outdoor entrances, like stand-alone or strip mall shops, are allowed to open. Stores at shopping malls must remain closed. Drive-in movie theaters are allowed to reopen as well, but the theaters may not provide customer seating. The order is effective until the end of Order #28, the Safer at Home extension order.

Last updated August 2, 2020. Check back every day for new data updates to keep yourself informed.

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The MacIver Daily Disease Brief: COVID-19 In Wisconsin - MacIverInstitute

Barron County Sees 162-Percent Increase In Positive Cases Of COVID-19 In 2 Weeks – Wisconsin Public Radio News

July 31, 2020

The Barron County Health Department is urging residents to stop unnecessary travel and avoid all gatherings following a dramatic surge of new cases of COVID-19. More than 150 new cases have been reported since mid-July, nearly half of which occurred at a food processing plant.

In the past two weeks, the number of people testing positive for COVID-19 has increased by more than 162 percent according to data from the Barron County Department of Health and Human Services. A press release issued by the department Wednesday reported 150 new cases across the county includinga cluster at a processing facility in the city of Cumberland owned by Seneca Foods, though it did not specify how many employees had gotten sick. DHS data for Barron County showed79 total positives on July 16. On Thursday, the agency reported 207 cases in the county.

Matt Henschler, Seneca Foods senior vice president of technical services, was quoted in the county announcement as saying the company is taking a "united approach"in identifying people who have tested positive or are symptomatic.

"Individuals are being isolated and monitored until cleared to resume activity,"said Henschler. "CDC guidelines regarding the preparation and management for COVID-19 are being followed."

Henschler did not respond to an interview request for this story.

Laura Sauve, thecounty health officer, also noted in the press release that the cases at the Seneca food processing facility "is not the only cause for the increase in cases."She also said the company did a good job of following CDC recommendations in hopes of preventing cases.

"This situation shows just how quickly the virus can spread,"said Sauve.

In an interview with WPR, Barron County Public Health specialist Sarah Turner said preliminary numbers show that just less than half of the 150 new county COVID-19 cases in the past two weeks could be traced to Seneca Foods. She said the health department did not know if masks had been required at the plant prior to the outbreak. Much of the other new cases in Barron County were reported in the city of Rice Lake, she said.

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"A lot of the cases outside of the outbreak (at the Cumberland facility) can be traced back to travel gatherings, crowded spaces, things like that,"Turner said.

During a Wednesday discussion with the Milwaukee Press Club, Wisconsin U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin touted a bill she co-introduced that would require the Occupational Safety and Health Administration to issue an emergency standard establishing a legal obligation for all workplaces to implement control plans to limit worker exposure to COVID-19.

"We're in the end of July," Baldwin said. "And we don't have a federal agency who's issued standards. All we have is voluntary guidelines. Sothat to me is an essential piece of it."

As of Wednesday, there had been three deaths in Barron County. Data from the DHS shows two of those deaths happened within the last week. Barron County Health's Turner said six people were hospitalized as of Thursday afternoon, with "several of them"in the intensive care unit.

Another press release from the county health department issued Wednesday urged residents to practice steps recommended in the now defunct "Safer-at-Home"executive order issued by Gov. Tony Evers and DHS Secretary Andrea Palm in March. Those include avoiding gatherings of more than 10 people indoors, stopping all unnecessary travel, not eating in restaurants or going to bars and frequent hand washing.

Turner said the county is encouraging everyone in the community to "please stay home"and isolate if they show flu-like symptoms.

"You know, one thing in our area of the world in the Midwest we have an awesome work ethic, which is a great thing,"said Turner. "But unfortunately, in times of COVID-19, it can also be not such a great thing because, you know, even outside of this Seneca outbreak, we've seen people who have gone to work symptomatic because we always go to work."

The statewide stay-at-home order was struck down by the state Supreme Court May 13. That day there were a total of 10,902 positive cases of COVID-19 reported by DHS. That number has swelled to 51,409 as of Wednesday.

On Thursday, Evers announced a statewide mask mandate aimed at slowing the spread of the disease. The order goes into effect Aug.1 and is set to expire Sept. 28 and requires individuals5 years and older to wear masks in indoor or "enclosed public places"when non-family members are present. Indoor public places, under the order, include indoor and outdoor bars, restaurants, stores, outdoor park structures and public transit. Those who don't follow the mandate could be fined up to $200.

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Barron County Sees 162-Percent Increase In Positive Cases Of COVID-19 In 2 Weeks - Wisconsin Public Radio News

Mandatory COVID-19 vaccinations? Here’s what states and employers can legally require – The Conversation US

July 22, 2020

A safe and effective vaccine could end the coronavirus pandemic, but for it to succeed, enough people will have to get inoculated.

Recent polls suggest that the U.S. is far from ready. Most surveys have found that only about two-thirds of adults say they would get the vaccine. While that might protect most people who get vaccinated, it may be insufficient to reach herd immunity and stop the viruss spread.

As a law professor who has written about the legal questions around vaccination laws, employment discrimination and religious exemptions, I see four possible approaches that governments and employers can take to ensure enough Americans are immunized against COVID-19.

Which ones are legal might surprise you.

The most intrusive policy would involve government mandating vaccination for all Americans, with the exception of those with a medical exemption.

People are often surprised to learn that states would likely have the legal right to enforce such a rule.

In the 1905 landmark case Jacobson v. Massachusetts, the United States Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of a state criminal law that required all adult inhabitants of Cambridge to get a smallpox vaccine or be fined. The Supreme Court explained that an individuals liberty rights under the U.S. Constitution are not absolute and the mandatory vaccination law was necessary to promote public health and safety.

While Jacobson v. Massachusetts is over 100 years old, courts continue to rely on the reasoning of the case. State governments still occasionally enact broad compulsory vaccination policies. In 2019, in the midst of a measles outbreak, New York City mandated that anyone over six months of age who lived, went to school or worked in several ZIP codes within the city had to be vaccinated against measles or be subject to a fine.

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Requiring people to be vaccinated against the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus could similarly be justified by governments need to promote public health and safety. In late May, the New York State Bar Associations Health Law Section even recommended mandatory COVID-19 vaccination for all Americans.

Yet in the United States today, where even mask mandates are controversial, it is unlikely that many states will enact a compulsory vaccination policy for everyone. Additionally, there is a risk that heavy-handed public health tactics can backfire and escalate tensions, increase mistrust of government and unintentionally increase the influence of the anti-vaccination movement.

A less intrusive tactic would be for state governments to require COVID-19 vaccinations for only certain segments of the population.

All 50 states currently have some type of compulsory vaccination laws covering K-12 schoolchildren, and many states have compulsory vaccination laws covering college students. These laws typically allow for some type of medical exemption. States may also have mandatory vaccination laws covering employees in nursing homes and health care facilities.

If states required this type of targeted mandatory COVID-19 vaccination, they could cover those most at risk and those most likely to be in contact with others in ways that could stem the viruss spread.

Another approach would be legislation that requires proof of vaccination to obtain a passport, use public transportation or go to a gym.

One of the most controversial issues surrounding compulsory vaccination laws is the religious or philosophical exemption, which some states have eliminated in recent years. In the aftermath of the recent measles outbreaks, both New York and California eliminated these exemptions from vaccination laws covering schoolchildren. Courts have explained that while compulsory vaccination laws may burden religious practices, religious exemptions are not constitutionally required under the First Amendments free exercise clause since mandatory vaccination does not single out religion and is not motivated by a desire to interfere with religion.

Private employers have significant flexibility for requiring vaccination. Yet few businesses outside of health care facilities have done so, partly out of fear that employees would consider these policies to be unacceptable invasions of their personal lives.

There is a risk in a unionized workplace that a mandatory vaccination policy could be struck down if it violates a collective bargaining agreement. However, unlike government-mandated policies, these would not be subject to constitutional restrictions.

Employers may also be concerned that if policies do not include significant religious exemptions, workers could sue, claiming religious discrimination. However, it is unlikely that federal law would require employers to accommodate employees requesting a religious exemption to a COVID-19 vaccine. Under Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, the federal law prohibiting religious discrimination in the workplace, employers are not required to accommodate religious employees if doing so involves more than a de minimis, or minimal cost.

Certainly, in the midst of one of the worst public health and financial crises in recent history, there is a significant cost to having an unimmunized workforce.

Beyond mandates and laws, employers, politicians and government agencies have other ways to encourage people to get vaccinated. In particular, the messages they send matter. That was evident in the public controversy over mask-wearing after President Donald Trump and other prominent Republicans ridiculed the precaution.

In New York, Gov. Andrew Cuomo mandated wearing face masks in public, but he also successfully convinced New Yorkers to wear them by emphasizing that doing so showed respect for others, particularly essential workers, health care providers and high-risk individuals.

Government can similarly encourage Americans to get vaccinated through education campaigns led by trusted community members, such as religious leaders or celebrities. During the New York measles outbreak, the Orthodox Jewish Nurses Association was at the forefront of educating the Orthodox Jewish community on the safety and efficacy of vaccination.

Government and employers also could make vaccines free and available at convenient locations.

As the U.S. government fast-tracks the development of potential vaccines, its important to remember that a COVID-19 vaccine will stop the virus only if enough people get vaccinated. Now is the time for governments and employers to develop policies to ensure it succeeds.

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Mandatory COVID-19 vaccinations? Here's what states and employers can legally require - The Conversation US

COVID-19 cases rise by 444 in Virginia, with trends continuing to improve – WHSV

June 17, 2020

RICHMOND, Va. (WHSV) As of Wednesday, June 17, Virginia has had 55,775 total cases of COVID-19, including confirmed lab tests and clinical diagnoses, according to the Virginia Department of Health.

That's a rise of 444 cases since Tuesday, out of 9,696 tests newly added to the system, which comes out to 4.6% of the newest tests coming back positive a significantly lower proportion than the current total state average.

Virginia is in the second week of Phase 2 of Governor Ralph Northam's Forward Virginia plan for reopening, which allowed indoor dining to begin again with limited capacity, gyms and fitness centers open to indoor classes with restrictions, zoos and museums to reopen, and more outlined in Executive Order 65.

On June 16, Gov. Northam announced that Virginia will not enter Phase 3 until next week at the earliest.

State officials are basing any decisions about moving into each phase, as well as any potential increase on restrictions if spikes happen, on 7-day and 14-day trends in the data.

For the past several weeks, those trends have been good news: with increasing test capacity, decreasing percentage positivity (the number of cases confirmed as a ratio of the amount of testing), and decreasing hospitalizations though other states are now seeing new spikes.

Over the past week, there were 470 newly reported cases(at 4.5% positivity) from Wednesday to Thursday, 564 (with unclear percent positivity due to a correction of backlogged tests) from Thursday to Friday, 658 (at 6.1% positivity) from Friday to Saturday, 637 (at 6.1% positivity) from Saturday to Sunday, 380 (at 3.6% positivity) from Sunday to Monday, and 445 (at 6.8% positivity) from Monday to Tuesday.

Most tests are PCR tests that take several days to process, and the majority of people still only get tested when symptomatic and symptoms can take up to two weeks to develop, so test results reported each day reflect what the situation in Virginia looked like several days before. Antibody tests process results faster, but test whether someone has had the virus in the past: not necessarily if they currently have it.

Virginia has been meeting the governor's benchmark of steady PPE supplies and open hospital capacity for more than a month now, with 4,519 hospital beds available and no Virginia hospitals reporting any supply problems although at least 7 licensed nursing facilities are reporting PPE supply problems. The governor has said in recent press conferences that those facilities need to reach out to the Virginia Department of Emergency Management to request more supplies from the state's stockpile.

The commonwealth increased from around 2,000 tests a day in late April to the 5,000 range in the start of May, and was steadily hitting around 10,000 a day by the end of May, which Dr. Karen Remley, head of Virginia's testing task force, said was the goal for Phase 1. Testing has remained around that level since then.

The executive order requiring Virginians to wear face coverings when entering indoor businesses that went into effect across Virginia on May 29 will remain in effect for Phase 2 and indefinitely into the future.

By June 17, the Virginia Department of Health had received reports of 53,318 confirmed and 2,457 probable cases of COVID-19 across the commonwealth.

"Probable" cases are cases that were diagnosed by a doctor based on symptoms and exposure without a test also known as clinical diagnoses.

Those positive test results are out of 546,685 total tests administered in Virginia, which included 491,884 PCR tests and 54,801 antibody tests (The Dept. of Health announced in May that they would break testing data down by diagnostic and antibody tests.)

Last week, from from Tuesday to Wednesday, 7,492 new PCR tests and 419 new antibody tests were reported; from Wednesday to Thursday, 9,053 new PCR tests and 1,370 new antibody tests; and from Thursday to Friday, 93,505 new PCR tests and 1,474 new antibody tests. This week, from Sunday to Monday, there were 9,976 new PCR tests and 674 new antibody tests; from Monday to Tuesday, 6,451 new PCR tests and 106 new antibody tests; and from Tuesday to Wednesday, 8,860 new PCR tests and 836 new antibody tests.

A lot of the testing has been conducted through health department-sponsored community testing events around the commonwealth, through which state health officials have said the goal is to get tests into areas in the most need, and those events do not turn anyone away, regardless of symptoms.

Overall, considering testing numbers and positive results, about 10.2% of Virginians who have been tested have received positive results. At the start of May, that percentage was standing steadily around 17%, but with increased testing, it's come down over time. However, some localities have higher percentages, as outlined in our "local cases" section below.

At this point, 5,692 Virginians have been hospitalized due to the disease caused by the virus, and at least 1,583 have died of causes related to the disease.

The hospitalization and death numbers are totals confirmed by the Virginia Department of Health, which are always delayed by several days due to the logistics of medical facilities reporting information to local health districts, which then report it to the state health department.

The hospitalization numbers are cumulative they represent the total number of people hospitalized due to the disease throughout the pandemic and not the total number currently in the hospital. For current hospitalization stats, the VHHA offers more helpful data.

The state website shows a lot of detail by locality, including hospitalizations and deaths for each city or county, and are broken down by zip code here, if you want to track cases on a neighborhood level.

Overall, according to the Virginia Department of Health's June 17 breakdown, 546,685 tests have been run for the virus in Virginia, with 55,775 positive results.

The department's breakdown and location map, available to the public here, shows the number of cases confirmed each day, number of people tested, total hospitalizations, total deaths, demographic breakdowns, and testing numbers, as well as breakdowns by health district.

Here's a breakdown of cases for our region as of 9 a.m. on June 17. You can find the breakdown for the entire state in the chart at the bottom of this article.

Numbers sometimes decrease day to day when the health department determines that a test initially reported in one locality was actually for a resident of another city, county, or state.

Central Shenandoah: 1,820 total cases Augusta County - 157 (+5 from Tuesday) Buena Vista - 12 Harrisonburg - 864 (+5 from Tuesday) Highland County - 3 Lexington - 8 Rockbridge County - 18 (-1 from Tuesday) Rockingham County - 636 (+7 from Tuesday) Staunton - 61 (+1 from Tuesday) Waynesboro - 58 (+3 from Tuesday)Outbreaks: 18, with 7 in long-term care facilities, 1 in a healthcare setting, 8 in congregate settings, 1 in a correctional facility, and 1 in an educational setting | 566 cases associated with outbreaksTotal tests: 13,821Local percent positive: 13.2%

Lord Fairfax: 1,764 total cases Clarke County - 40 Frederick County - 440 (+5 from Tuesday) Page County - 256 Shenandoah County - 522 (+6 from Tuesday) Warren County - 233 Winchester - 273 (+4 from Tuesday)Outbreaks: 20, with 8 in long-term care facilities, 4 in healthcare settings, 7 in congregate settings, and 1 in a correctional facility | 573 cases associated with outbreaksTotal tests: 16,694Local percent positive: 10.6%

Thomas Jefferson: 713 total cases Albemarle County - 293 Charlottesville - 161 (+1 from Tuesday) Fluvanna County - 103 (+1 from Tuesday) Greene County - 46 (+1 from Tuesday) Louisa County - 101 (+2 from Tuesday) Nelson County - 18Outbreaks: 13, with 4 in long-term care facilities, 2 in correctional facilities, 6 in congregate settings, and 1 in an educational setting | 176 cases associated with outbreaksTotal tests: 15,861Local percent positive: 4.5%

Rappahannock Rapidan: 1,382 total cases Culpeper County - 790 (+3 from Tuesday) Fauquier County - 398 (+5 from Tuesday) Madison County - 42 Orange County - 135 (+2 from Tuesday) Rappahannock County - 17Outbreaks: 8, with 3 in long-term care facilities, 1 in a healthcare setting, and 4 in congregate settings | 118 cases associated with outbreaksTotal tests: 11,354Local percent positive: 12.2%

Local outbreaks

As numbers have climbed in parts of the Shenandoah Valley, much of the increase has been attributable to outbreaks within particular facilities. By June 17, the Central Shenandoah Health District had identified 18 outbreaks and the Lord Fairfax Health District had 20.

Health department officials have not specified the majority of the locations of our outbreaks, because the Virginia Department of Health has interpreted Virginia code as treating facilities the same as "persons," meaning their anonymity has to be protected. So information about outbreaks is only released to the public if a facility grants permission for that to be released, and that has not been often.

Of the outbreaks in our area, several have been confirmed at long-term care centers, including at Accordius Health Harrisonburg, where 22 patients died of COVID-19; here" target="_blank">Skyview Springs, where there have been 16 confirmed deaths; Ritenour Rest Home in Staunton, where Augusta Health has confirmed a "COVID situation" but no exact numbers have been provided; Sunnyside Communities, with at least 5 cases among residents and staff as of June 3; and three outbreaks in Shenandoah County, including one at an unnamed nursing home and two at unnamed assisted living facilities.

The largest of those outbreaks was the one at Accordius Health Harrisonburg, where 81 residents and 12 staff members tested positive for COVID-19 in April. By Tuesday, May 5, the facility confirmed 22 deaths due to coronavirus. By a little later in May, the large majority of patients had recovered from the virus.

In Page County, the outbreak at Skyview Springs Rehab resulted in 59 residents and 23 staff members testing positive for the virus. By May 13, here" target="_blank">16 people there had died of COVID-19-related causes. The facility has 115 residents total.

Dr. Colin Greene, with the Lord Fairfax Health District, told WHSV in May that the Skyview Springs outbreak was the only major outbreak in the Page County area.

However, he said they were monitoring five active outbreaks in Shenandoah County. Due to Virginia code preventing the identification of facilities with outbreaks, he could not identify the exact locations, but said two were at businesses, two at assisted living facilities, and one at a nursing home.

Outbreaks have also been confirmed at New Market Poultry, the Harrisonburg Men's Diversion Center, with at least 25 positive cases, and LSC Communications, which had at least six cases by the end of April but then stopped providing updates on their employee hotline so that media outlets would not have access to the information, which was not publicly provided.

On May 26, RSW Regional Jail confirmed at least 15 people at the facility had tested positive for COVID-19, as the outbreak identified inside a correctional facility in the Lord Fairfax Health District. A day later, that number was up to 18 positive tests.

New Market Poultry Products, which has more than 100 employees working on a daily basis, confirmed near the end of April that they had multiple employees test positive though an exact number was not provided and no update has come since then.

None of the other Shenandoah Valley poultry plants have released any information about COVID-19 cases to the public, but 18 workers tested positive at the Pilgrim's Pride in Moorefield, W.Va. and Cargill in Dayton has confirmed the death of one employee due to COVID-19 though never any information on the number of cases at the facility.

Poultry plants and other meat processing facilities have been hotspots for the virus across the country and a focus of Gov. Northam's in Virginia. State health commissioner Dr. Norm Oliver has also referenced the situation at poultry plants in Harrisonburg leading to a disproportionate number of cases among the Latino community in the Shenandoah Valley, though, again the facilities themselves have released no information publicly.

The only exact number for poultry workers that has been provided is that as of May 20, at least 317 poultry plant workers living in the Central Shenandoah Health District had tested positive.

Many of the local outbreaks that do not have confirmed locations have been identified in congregate settings, which could include workplaces, apartment complexes, churches, gyms, or any setting with a group of people in one place. While WHSV has received reports from viewers about specific stores, for instance, if the business does not provide consent for their information to be shared, the health department cannot confirm any information about cases there.

Hospitalizations

Of the state's 5,692 total hospitalizations, at least 145 have been in the Central Shenandoah Health District. Of those, 6 have been in Augusta County, 1 in Buena Vista, 68 in Harrisonburg, 63 in Rockingham County, 6 in Staunton, and 3 in Waynesboro.

In the Lord Fairfax Health District, there have been at least 149 hospitalizations. Fifty-two of those have been in Shenandoah County and 28 in Page County.

Deaths

As far as deaths, there have been 27 reported in Shenandoah County, 24 in Page County, two in Augusta County, 22 in Harrisonburg, and seven in Rockingham County.

Deaths, like all health department data, are reported by a person's listed residence.

Dr. Norm Oliver, the state's health commissioner, has said that it often takes several days before local health districts are able to enter death information into the state database. Dr. Laura Kornegay, director of the Central Shenandoah Health District, told WHSV that deaths first have to be reported to them by medical facilities, which is a major cause for delays that have often been seen on the numbers reported for our area.

Dr. Kornegay also explained that if someone has tested positive for COVID-19, that's what goes on their death certificate. Those death certificates have a space to list secondary causes of death, and that's where ongoing health issues like heart disease and cancer are listed. Some people have accused medical facilities of artificially inflating death tolls by doing that, but it's the same process by which flu deaths are reported every year.

Recovery

Wondering about the number of people who have recovered from COVID-19 in Virginia? Recovery information is not required to be sent to the Department of Health, so there is no accurate way to track that data for every single confirmed case. Individual health districts may track cases as "active" and "non-active," but that data is not published anywhere in aggregate.

But there is a way to track the number of patients who were hospitalized due to COVID-19 and have since been discharged effectively tracking how many people have recovered from the most severe cases.

The Virginia Hospital & Healthcare Association updates their own dashboard of data each day on hospital-specific statistics, including bed availability, ventilator usage, and more. Their online dashboard indicates that, as of June 17, at least 7,429 COVID-19 patients have been discharged from the hospital.

Unlike the VDH data that reports cumulative hospitalizations, their data on hospitalizations reflects people currently hospitalized for COVID-19 (whether with confirmed or pending cases), and that number is at 938.

The data used by the VDH to report cumulative hospitalizations is based on information reported in hospital claims. On the other hand, the numbers reported by the Virginia Hospital & Healthcare Association are based on a current census from hospitals, which provides a separate data set.

West Virginia updates

In the part of West Virginia we cover, there have been 16 cases in Grant County, 41 cases in Hardy County, and 13 cases, along with one death, in Pendleton County.

Timing of VDH data

The Virginia Department of Health COVID-19 website is updating with the latest statewide numbers somewhere between 9 a.m. and 10 a.m. each day. In recent days, that has steadily creeped closer to 10 a.m.

The numbers that appear on that list are based on the cases that had been submitted to the department by 5 p.m. the previous day, so there is always some lag between when local health districts announce positive test results and when the department's numbers reflect those new results.

Reporting by local health districts

Our Virginia counties are primarily served by the Central Shenandoah Health District, which covers Augusta, Bath, Highland, Rockbridge and Rockingham counties, as well as the cities of Buena Vista, Harrisonburg, Lexington, Staunton and Waynesboro; and the Lord Fairfax Health District, which covers Shenandoah, Page, Frederick, Warren, and Clarke counties, as well as the city of Winchester.

Most of Virginia officially entered Phase 2 of Gov. Northam's plan to gradually reopen the state on June 5. Richmond and Northern Virginia remain in Phase 1 until the data trends in those areas better match the rest of the commonwealth, which has seen declining percent positivity and increasing test capacity.

Executive Order 63 will remain in effect throughout Phase 2, making it mandatory for almost all Virginians to wear face coverings when entering businesses. You can learn how that will be enforced here.

Under Phase 2, Executive Order 53 has been modified extensively, with more and more non-essential businesses allowed to reopen and Virginia's 10-person gathering limit increased to a 50-person gathering limit.

That limit, like the original 10-person limit, is enforceable for indoor gatherings.

Executive Order 55, the 'Stay at Home' order first signed by Northam on March 30, is now a 'Safer at Home' order, encouraging Virginians to continue staying home whenever possible as the safest way to prevent COVID-19's spread and specifically telling Virginians vulnerable to the virus to stay home except for essential needs.

Virginia's state of emergency, which was originally set until June 10, was extended by Governor Northam on May 26 to run indefinitely.

The Virginia Supreme Court's judicial emergency, which suspended all non-essential, non-emergency court hearings, expired on May 17 and court hearings across most of Virginia resumed on Monday, May 18. But a few weeks later, on June 8, the Supreme Court of Virginia acted on Gov. Northam's request to halt all eviction proceedings through at least June 28.

DMV offices in Virginia began gradually reopening on Monday, May 18, and continue to open up more customer service centers around the state for appointments to handle business that can only be carried out in-person.

Extensions have been granted to people with expiring credentials for themselves or their vehicles, like licenses and registrations, and Virginia State Police have not been enforcing inspections.

Virginia's primaries in June have been postponed by two weeks. Virginia officials are encouraging all voters to request absentee ballots.

Most people don't suffer much from COVID-19, but it can cause severe illness in the elderly and people with existing health problems.

It spreads primarily through respiratory droplets produced when an infected person coughs or sneezes. Those droplets may land on objects and surfaces. Other people may contract the virus by touching those objects or surfaces and then touching their eyes, nose, or mouth.

The coronavirus that causes COVID-19 can cause mild to more severe respiratory illness. In a small proportion of patients, COVID-19 can cause death, particularly among those who are older or who have chronic medical conditions. Symptoms include fever, cough, and difficulty breathing. Symptoms appear within 14 days of being exposed to an infectious person.

To lower the risk of respiratory germ spread, including COVID-19, the Virginia Department of Health encourages the following effective behaviors:

Wash your hands often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds. Use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer only if soap and water are not available. Avoid touching your eyes, nose, and mouth. Cover your mouth and nose with a tissue or your sleeve (not your hands) when coughing or sneezing. Clean and disinfect frequently touched objects and surfaces. Stay home when you are sick. Avoid contact with sick people. Avoid non-essential travel.

There is currently no vaccine to prevent or antiviral medication to treat COVID-19. The best way to avoid illness is preventing exposure, which is why governments around the world have implemented Stay at Home orders.

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COVID-19 cases rise by 444 in Virginia, with trends continuing to improve - WHSV

Will government mandate COVID-19 vaccinations? | TheHill – The Hill

May 20, 2020

When a COVID-19 vaccine becomes available, I will be one of the first in line. But the fact is U.S. adults tend to have low vaccination rates. If the government determines that vaccinations are essential to stemming the spread of the disease, would it could it mandate vaccination compliance? Apparently, it can and it might.

Many medical experts believe that developing one or more COVID-19 vaccines is the key to reopening the economy and returning to our normal lives. For example, the Mayo Clinic says, A vaccine to prevent coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is perhaps the best hope for ending the pandemic.

The pharmaceutical industry has shifted into overdrive to find a vaccine effective against the coronavirus. Drug maker AstraZeneca hopes to have 30 million doses of its vaccine available in the U.K. by September. And Moderna just announced very promising results from its initial clinical trials.

But heres the problem: The majority of U.S. adults delay or skip vaccinations.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) encourages adults to be immunized for a range of diseases. The flu vaccine leads the CDCs list that includes tetanus and diphtheria every 10 years, shingles, pneumonia and several others.

Consider the flu vaccine. It is one of the most affordable and accessible vaccines available, and yet the CDC reports the adult vaccination rate over the past decade has ranged between 40 and 45 percent.

Fortunately, the same 10-year graph shows a much higher flu vaccination rate among older Americans: Between 65 and 68 percent for seniors. But only about 30 to 35 percent for 18-49 year-olds.

Children typically have much higher vaccination rates because all states require them with certain exemptions before children can enroll in public schools.

While a small percentage of Americans oppose vaccinations on religious or medical grounds, most of the unvaccinated apparently just choose not to.

Will a coronavirus vaccine see a higher uptake rate? Maybe. There is a lot of fear among the public, and that may persuade most adults to be vaccinated.

Costs probably wont be a barrier, either. About 91 percent of the population has health coverage. The Affordable Care Act requires public and private insurance to cover the entire cost of preventive care, which includes vaccines. And the government may ultimately cover vaccination costs for the uninsured.

Even so, it isnt clear that enough adults will choose to be vaccinated to create a herd immunity i.e., when roughly 60 to 80 percent of the population has developed immunity to a disease either by vaccination or having been infected and recovered. Epidemiologists say thats whats needed to end an epidemic.

If the COVID-19 vaccination rate is low, will the federal or, more likely, state governments step in and mandate vaccination?

The Congressional Research Service says the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that The states general police power to promote public health and safety encompasses the authority to require mandatory vaccinations. And states have all exercised that authority for children, usually allowing for some exceptions.

CRS also says, Congress, as a result of various enumerated powers in the Constitution, likewise has some authority over public health matters, including regulation of vaccination.

Government mandated vaccinations for adults would be a major and controversial step. But then government has taken a number of major and controversial steps recently, such as shutting down the economy.

But just because government can do something doesnt mean it should, which is why finding an effective treatment is so important. The good news is the pharmaceutical industry is doing exactly that. There are currently more than 1,100 clinical trials globally looking for a safe and effective COVID-19 treatment.

A treatment doesnt necessarily mean a cure. We dont have a cure for the flu, either. But Tamiflu helps reduce the symptoms so people can recover sooner. Something similar may be our best bet for COVID-19.

Having an effective treatment wouldnt eliminate the need for an effective vaccine. It would simply mean that those who werent vaccinated would still have the opportunity to reduce the symptoms and return to their normal lives sooner.

Merrill Matthews is a resident scholar with the Institute for Policy Innovation in Dallas, Texas. Follow him on Twitter @MerrillMatthews.

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Will government mandate COVID-19 vaccinations? | TheHill - The Hill

Coronavirus Live Updates: All 50 States Have Begun to Reopen – The New York Times

May 20, 2020

All 50 states have begun to reopen, but vast discrepancies remain.

In Connecticut, flags that had been lowered to half-staff during the somber peak of the pandemic were raised high again to signal the states return to business.

In Kentucky, gift shops opened their doors.

And across Alaska, restaurants, bars and gyms, which have already been seeing customers for weeks, were getting ready to rev back up to full capacity. It will all be open, Gov. Mike Dunleavy announced, just like it was prior to the virus.

As of Wednesday, all 50 states had begun to reopen to some degree, two months after the outbreak thrust the country into lockdown. But vast variations remain in how states are deciding to open up, with some forging far ahead of others. Many began to reopen despite not meeting White House guidelines for progress against the virus, and newly reported cases have been increasing in some states, including Texas and Minnesota, that are moving to ease restrictions. Public health officials warn that moving too fast could risk more outbreaks.

The dynamic has left many business owners and customers to decide for themselves what they think is safe.

It is still a little scary, considering we dont exactly know what this is, said Ipakoi Grigoriadis, whose family owns Pops Family Restaurant in Milford, Conn., a diner that reopened its outdoor seating on Wednesday morning.

It is quite exciting to see our customers we havent seen in a while, she said. But it was not business as usual: Pops, like other Connecticut restaurants, now offers only outdoor seating and plans to gradually ramp up to 50 percent capacity. Servers are gloved and masked, and patrons are expected to wear masks as well, except when they are eating and drinking.

In New Jersey and many parts of New York State, the reopening has been more limited, with only curbside pickup at retail stores and allowances for certain industries.

Governors are increasingly facing intense pressure to reopen, as millions of Americans have lost their jobs and the unemployment rate reached a staggering 14.7 percent. But reopening in Texas, where businesses have been allowed to operate at 25 percent capacity for weeks, looks far different than it does in Illinois, where stores are still limited to curbside pickup.

States in the Northeast and on the West Coast, as well as Democratic-led states in the Midwest, have moved the most slowly toward reopening, with several governors taking a county-by-county approach. (In Washington, D.C., a stay-at-home order remains in effect until June.) By contrast, a number of states in the South opened earlier and more fully. Though social-distancing requirements were put in place, restaurants, salons, gyms and other businesses have been open in Georgia for several weeks.

In a medical research project nearly unrivaled in its ambition and scope, volunteers worldwide are rolling up their sleeves to receive experimental vaccines against the coronavirus only months after it was discovered.

Companies like Inovio and Pfizer have begun early tests of candidates in people to determine whether the vaccines are safe. Researchers at the University of Oxford in Britain say they could have a vaccine ready for emergency use as soon as September.

In labs around the world, there is now cautious optimism that a coronavirus vaccine, and perhaps more than one, will be ready sometime next year.

Scientists are exploring not just one approach to creating the vaccine, but at least four. So great is the urgency that they are combining trial phases and shortening a process that usually takes years, sometimes more than a decade.

What people dont realize is that normally vaccine development takes many years, sometimes decades, said Dr. Dan Barouch, a virologist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. And so trying to compress the whole vaccine process into 12 to 18 months is really unheard-of.

If that happens, it will be the fastest vaccine development program ever in history.

More than one hundred research teams around the world are taking aim at the virus from multiple angles.

A prototype vaccine has protected monkeys from the virus, researchers reported on Wednesday, a finding that offers new hope for effective human vaccines.

Scientists are already testing virus vaccines in people, but the initial trials are designed to determine safety, not how well a vaccine works. The research published Wednesday offers insight into what a vaccine must do to be effective and how to measure that.

To me, this is convincing that a vaccine is possible, said Dr. Nelson Michael, the director of the Center for Infectious Diseases Research at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research.

Scientists are engaged in a worldwide scramble to create a vaccine against the new virus. Over a hundred research projects have been launched; early safety trials in humans have been started or completed in nine of them.

Next to come are larger trials to determine whether these candidate vaccines are not just safe, but effective. But those results wont arrive for months.

In the meantime, Dr. Dan Barouch, a virologist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, and his colleagues have started a series of experiments on monkeys to get a broader look at how coronaviruses affect monkeys and whether vaccines could fight them. Their report was published in Science.

In one series of experiments, each monkey received pieces of DNA, which their cells turned into viral proteins designed to train the immune system to recognize the virus.

Most coronavirus vaccines are intended to coax the immune system to make antibodies that latch onto the spike protein and destroy the virus. Dr. Barouch and his colleagues tried out six variations.

Some of the vaccines provided only partial protection, but other vaccines worked better. The one that worked best trained the immune system to recognize and attack the entire spike protein of the coronavirus. In eight monkeys, the researchers couldnt detect the virus at all.

I think that overall this will be seen as very good news for the vaccine effort, said Dr. Barouch. This increases our optimism that a vaccine for Covid-19 will be possible.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention quietly released more detailed guidance for schools, businesses, transit systems and other industries hoping to reopen safely amid the coronavirus pandemic after fear that the White House had shelved the guidelines.

The 60-page document, which a C.D.C. spokesman said was uploaded over the weekend, but which received little notice, adds great detail to six charts that the C.D.C. had released last week. The guidance provides specific instructions for different sectors to detect and trace the virus based on exposure and risk after the pandemic. Here are some key elements.

If a person in a school building tests positive, schools should evaluate the risk and consider a brief dismissal of about 2-5 days, to clean and disinfect the building, coordinate with local health officials and contact trace. The C.D.C. offers different measures based on the level of community spread.

As restrictions across the country on restaurants and bars ease, the C.D.C. recommends owners give workers at a higher risk of getting sick a job that limits the persons interaction with customers. The agency also suggests opening with limited seating initially to allow for social distancing. Once fully reopened, the C.D.C. recommends having a clear policy about when employees should stay home if sick and rules on hygiene, including at times wearing face coverings.

When mass transit resumes its full service, the agency recommends being prepared to adjust routes based on the different levels of virus spread and to coordinate with local health officials about prevention strategies, such as wearing a face covering.

For businesses that provide child care during the pandemic, the C.D.C. recommends having plans in place, for example, to have substitute workers if staff members are sick, and requiring staff and children older than two to wear face coverings.

The guidance describes the balance of slowing the viruss spread with the economic threat of shuttering most businesses, and largely mirrors a draft version that was previously shelved by the White House, but with some changes.

The document omits a section on communities of faith that had troubled Trump administration officials and also tones down the guidance in several instances. For example, language that initially directed schools to ensure social distancing became promote social distancing, and the phrase if possible was added in several sentences.

Severe flooding struck central Michigan on Wednesday after two dams were breached by rain-swollen waters, forcing the evacuation of thousands of residents at a moment many had been wary of leaving their homes amid the pandemic.

Gov. Gretchen Whitmer implored residents to take the threat seriously and evacuate immediately, but added that they should continue to observe precautions related to the virus, including wearing masks and maintaining social distancing something she acknowledged would be difficult in the temporary shelters that had been set up.

To go through this in the midst of a global pandemic is almost unthinkable, she said. But we are here, and to the best of our ability we are going to navigate this together.

There have been at least 52,337 cases in Michigan, and at least 5,017 people have died.

The failures on Tuesday of the Edenville Dam and the Sanford Dam, about 140 miles northwest of Detroit, led the National Weather Service to issue a flash flood warning for areas near the Tittabawassee River. Residents in nearby towns, including Edenville, Sanford and Midland, were evacuated

As news of the disaster spread Wednesday morning, Mr. Trump took to Twitter and threatened to withhold federal funds to Michigan if the state proceeded to expand vote by mail efforts. (He made a similar threat against Nevada.) The president then followed up with a Tweet saying that the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the military had been deployed to Michigan to assist with disaster response.

The president is scheduled to visit a Ford Motor Co. plant that is manufacturing ventilators in Ypsilanti, Mich., on Thursday. This is his first trip to the state since January, and comes at a time when his campaign advisers are increasingly concerned about his chances there.

President Trump on Wednesday escalated his assault against voting by mail, making false claims about recent steps taken by Michigan and threatening to withhold federal funds from both states if they continue to expand vote-by-mail efforts.

The presidents latest broadside, on Twitter, came as the pandemic has raised concerns around the nation about how people can vote safely.

The president inaccurately accused Michigan of mailing ballots to its residents. In fact, its secretary of state sent applications for mail ballots, as election officials have done in other states, including those led by Republicans. A few hours later he sent another tweet correcting the earlier one, noting that Michigan had sent absentee ballot applications, but repeating the threat to withhold funding. He also threatened to withhold funds from Nevada, where the Republican secretary of state declared the primary an all-mail election, and where ballots are being sent to voters.

As most states largely abandon in-person voting because of health concerns, Mr. Trump, along with many of his Republican allies, have launched a series of false attacks to demonize mail voting as fraught with fraud and delivering an inherent advantage to Democratic candidates despite there being scant evidence for either claim.

Michigan sends absentee ballots to 7.7 million people ahead of Primaries and the General Election, the president tweeted Wednesday morning. This was done illegally and without authorization by a rogue Secretary of State. I will ask to hold up funding to Michigan if they want to go down this Voter Fraud path!

His threat to withhold federal funding cam as the state was grappling with a devastating flood; soon after he announced that the federal government would help.

An hour later he made a similar threat against Nevada, saying the state had created a great Voter Fraud scenario and adding If they do, I think I can hold up funds to the State.

Mr. Trumps outbursts come as the White House and his re-election campaign are confronting polls showing the president trailing his Democratic rival, Joseph R. Biden Jr., both nationally and in key swing states. The White House did not respond to requests for comment or elaboration.

Michigans secretary of state, Jocelyn Benson, quickly clarified on Wednesday that the state is not mailing ballots to all Michigan voters. On Wednesday she began mailing ballot applications to all registered voters.

I think that even at this time of stress and when people are so anxious and so confused, I think those religious ceremonies can be very comforting, he said. But we need to find out how to do it, and do it safely and do it smartly.

It is particularly significant for Jewish congregations, where a minyan, defined as 10 people over the age of 13, is required for a worship service.

Mr. Cuomo also released the results of antibody testing in some of low-income New York City neighborhoods hit hardest by the virus.

In many of them, more than 1 in 3 residents tested positive for antibodies, a far higher rate than citywide rate of about 20 percent, he said. In two neighborhoods, Brownsville in Brooklyn and Morrisania in the Bronx, more than 40 percent of people tested had antibodies.

Another public health hazard has surfaced in New York City amid the pandemic: Vaccination rates for childhood disease whooping cough, measles, chickenpox have dropped precipitously, putting children at risk, the mayor said.

The Justice Department warned California this week that it believed the states restrictions to combat the virus discriminated against religious institutions.

In a letter to Gov. Gavin Newsom, department officials complained that the states reopening plan allowed for restaurants and shopping malls to reopen before religious institutions could hold worship services. They also objected to the states current policy limiting how members of the clergy could be classified as essential workers.

Simply put, there is no pandemic exception to the U.S. Constitution and its Bill of Rights, said the letter from the head of the departments Civil Rights Division and the four U.S. attorneys in California.

The officials also said that while the department does not seek to dictate to California, they insisted that any restrictions must treat secular and religious activities equally.

A spokesman for Mr. Newsom, a Democrat, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Federal judges previously declined to block Mr. Newsoms restrictions on religious gatherings. In one case, brought by a church in Lodi, a Federal District Court judge denied a request for a temporary restraining order and wrote that in unusual circumstances like a pandemic, the judiciary must afford more deference to officials informed efforts to advance public health even when those measures encroach on otherwise protected conduct.

The Justice Departments missive to Mr. Newsom was not connected to any specific case, but it represented another phase of its efforts to curb state and local restrictions especially around religious institutions during the pandemic. Last month, the department went to court in support of a Baptist church in Mississippi that had challenged local restrictions.

Less than a week after lawmakers approved a major rule change, Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Wednesday formally initiated the remote work period for the House, jump-starting a 45-day period when remote voting can be used in the chamber.

With the move, the House will now be able to use proxy voting, which allows lawmakers to give specific instructions on each vote to a colleague authorized to vote on their behalf. Votes are expected in the chamber next week, and several lawmakers had previously expressed frustration with the need to travel to Washington during the coronavirus pandemic.

The announcement came after the Sergeant-at-arms, in consultation with Dr. Brian P. Monahan, the Capitol physician, sent Ms. Pelosi a letter formally notifying her of an ongoing public health emergency due to a novel coronavirus.

In direct contrast, however, Senator Mitch McConnell, on Wednesday highlighted the Senates ongoing presence in Washington, outlining how over here in the United States Senate, the lights are on, the doors are open, and we are working for the American people.

Mr. McConnell, the majority leader, thanked Dr. Monahan a Navy doctor whose office is responsible for the care of both chambers and the Supreme Court for his continued guidance, saying that it has allowed the Senate to operate smartly and safely during the pandemic.

The shuttering of the American education system severed students from more than just classrooms, friends and extracurricular activities. It has also cut off an estimated 55 million children and teenagers from school faculty whose open doors and compassionate advice helped them build self-esteem, navigate the pressures of adolescence and cope with trauma.

But the challenges hard-wired into online learning present daunting obstacles for the remote guidance counselors office, particularly among students from low-income families who have lost jobs or lack internet access at home. And mental health experts worry about the psychological toll on a younger generation that was already experiencing soaring rates of depression, anxiety and suicide before the pandemic.

Not every kid can be online and have a confidential conversation about how things are going at home with parents in earshot, said Seth Pollak, director of the Child Emotion Lab at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Desperate to safeguard students emotional well-being amid the isolation and financial turmoil, teachers are checking in during video classes, counselors are posting mindfulness videos on Facebook and school psychologists are holding therapy sessions over the phone.

Hospital executives and doctors, wary of what comes next, are asking whether this is a lull before a new wave of cases or a less chaotic slog. At hospitals, staff members are preparing for both possibilities.

Elmhurst is decontaminating rooms as managers try to persuade residents to come in now for emergencies and elective surgery as soon the governor lifts a ban imposed in March. Brooklyn Hospital Center is nervously waiting for those numbers to rise again.

At the same time, a new survey of nearly 23,000 nurses across the country shows continued concern over inadequate personal protective equipment as well as a lack of widespread testing among health care workers.

Many nurses remain fearful of becoming ill because they do not have the equipment they need to remain safe, according to the union that conducted the survey, National Nurses United, which has more than 150,000 members in the United States.

The survey, conducted from April 15 through May 10, includes responses from both union members and nonunion nurses in all 50 states. It found that a vast majority of nurses, 87 percent, reported having to reuse personal protective equipment, including respirators, a practice that the nurses said would not have been allowed before the pandemic.

More than 100 nurses have died of the disease, according to the union, and at least 500 of those surveyed said they had already tested positive. Eighty-four percent of those surveyed reported they had not yet been tested.

The aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt is set to return to sea in the next day or so after its deployment to the western Pacific was derailed by the outbreak, military officials said.

The Roosevelt has been docked in Guam for nearly two months, with much of its crew isolated in hotels and on the U.S. naval on the island. About 1,100 sailors from the Roosevelt have been infected since the outbreak began in March.

It is unclear whether the Roosevelt will return to Guam after its initial stint at sea; it might continue with its deployment that is set to end in July, officials said. If Navy officials choose the latter, the sailors left on Guam to recover from the illness are likely to be sent back to the United States, leaving the crew of the nuclear-powered carrier with only about 3,300 of its more than 4,800 crew members.

Navy officials said on Sunday that more than a dozen sailors on the ship had retested positive after they seemed to have recovered. The virus has forced the crew to take extraordinary measures to combat its spread in their cramped quarters: Sailors can be punished for not wearing masks, areas are cleaned at least twice a day, and if a crew member shows any signs or symptoms, they are promptly whisked off the ship.

Specialists including Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the governments top infectious disease expert say the jury is still out on whether the drug might help prevent infection or help patients avoid hospitalization. Mr. Trumps frequent pronouncements and misstatements he has praised the drug as a game changer and a miracle are only complicating matters, politicizing the drug and creating a frenzy in the news media that is impeding research.

The virus is not Democrat or Republican, and hydroxychloroquine is not Democrat or Republican, and Im just hopeful that people would allow us to finish our scientific work, said Dr. William ONeill, an interventional cardiologist at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, who is studying hydroxychloroquine as a prophylactic in health care workers.

The worst thing in the world that would happen, he added, is that at the end of this epidemic, in late September, we dont have a cure or a preventive because we let politics interfere with the scientific process.

As he laid out his plans for the fall semester, the president of Purdue University, Mitch Daniels, said in an interview with CNN on Wednesday that young people faced essentially zero lethal risk from Covid-19.

The remarks from Mr. Daniels, who served two terms as Indianas governor, drew criticism online, as there is still much that is unknown about how the virus affects younger populations and how they might unknowingly spread the virus.

In March, data from the C.D.C. showed that nearly 40 percent of patients sick enough to be hospitalized were between 20 and 54 years old. More recently, neurologists in New York, New Jersey, Detroit and elsewhere have reported a sudden increase in unexplained strokes among younger patients that may be linked to the virus.

Mr. Daniels said that Purdue, in West Lafayette, Ind., would carry out a new hybrid approach to teaching that would protect both its staff members and students during the fall semester.

Weve learned over the past two months where the real risk and danger reside. That will be our area of focus with everything we do from physical facilities to the way we teach, Mr. Daniels said. Were going to have to work as hard on the cultural aspects as the physical.

New measures include having fewer people in classrooms, requiring masks for all students, building plexiglass barriers for teachers to stand behind and having students take at least one course online.

Students will also be expected to maintain social distancing, practice good hygiene, have their temperature taken daily and self-quarantine if they experience symptoms. The university will also be conducting testing and tracing, he said.

But amid C.D.C. warnings that the United States can expect multiple waves of infections until the development of a vaccine, the nearly 500,000-student California State University system announced last week that it would keep all of its 23 campuses mostly closed in the fall, holding classes primarily online.

Hundreds of migrant children and teenagers have been swiftly deported by American authorities during the pandemic without the opportunity to speak to a social worker or plea for asylum from the violence in their home countries a reversal of years of established practice for dealing with young foreigners who arrive in the United States.

The Trump administration is justifying the new practices under a 1944 law that grants the president broad power to block foreigners from entering the country to prevent the serious threat of a dangerous disease. And on Tuesday, it extended the stepped-up border security that allows for young migrants to be expelled at the border, saying the policy would remain in place indefinitely and be reviewed every 30 days.

In March and April, 915 young migrants were expelled shortly after reaching the American border, and 60 were shipped home from the interior of the country.

During the same period, at least 166 young migrants were allowed into the United States and afforded the safeguards that were once customary. Customs and Border Protection has refused to disclose how the government was determining which legal standards to apply to which children.

The fact that nobody knows who these kids are and there are hundreds of them is really terrifying, said Jennifer Nagda, policy director of the Young Center for Immigrant Childrens Rights. Theres no telling if theyve been returned to smugglers or into harms way.

As lockdowns are lifted, bacteria that built up internally in stagnant water, especially in the plumbing, may cause health problems for returning workers if the problem is not properly addressed by facilities managers. Employees and guests at hotels, gyms and other kinds of buildings may also be at risk.

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Coronavirus Live Updates: All 50 States Have Begun to Reopen - The New York Times

Illinois Threatens to Fine Defiant Businesses as Reopening Tensions Rise Nationally – The New York Times

May 19, 2020

Heres what you need to know:

Illinois makes it a misdemeanor for business owners who flout pandemic restrictions.

The owners of restaurants, bars and other establishments in Illinois that open too soon can now be charged with a Class A misdemeanor under a measure enacted by the governor.

Gov. J.B. Pritzker, a Democrat, filed an emergency rule on Friday that his office said was intended to prevent the spread of the coronavirus as a growing number of businesses defy stay-at-home orders across the country.

In Illinois, where a stay-at-home order remains in effect through May, a Class A misdemeanor carries a punishment of up to a year in jail and up to a $2,500 fine. The rule also applies to businesses such as barbershops and gyms, according to Mr. Pritzkers office.

Jordan Abudayyeh, a spokeswoman for Mr. Pritzker, said in an email Sunday that the measure provided an additional enforcement tool for businesses that refuse to comply with the most critical aspects of the stay-at-home order.

As of Sunday, 4,177 people had died from Covid-19 in Illinois, according to state health officials, and there have been 94,191 confirmed cases of the virus.

Conservative state lawmakers have criticized the measure. Senator Dan McConchie, a Republican and a member of the Senates Public Health Committee, called it an affront to the separation of powers in a Twitter post on Sunday.

Ms. Abudayyeh, the governors spokeswoman, said that bringing misdemeanor charges against business owners was not a first resort.

Law enforcement has relied heavily on educating business owners about the order and always first discusses the regulations with business owners to urge compliance, she said. Only businesses that pose a serious risk to public health and refuse to comply with health regulations would be issued a citation. The rule gives law enforcement a tool that may be more appropriate and less severe than closing the business altogether.

In neighboring Wisconsin last week, the state Supreme Court struck down the states stay-at-home extension, siding with Republican legislators in a high-profile challenge of the emergency authority of a statewide official during the pandemic.

Governors struggle to find the right balance on reopening.

The pain of the coronavirus shutdown, in terms of wrecked economies and shattered lives, has been unmistakable. Now, governors across the country are contemplating the risks of reopening, particularly if it produces a surge of new cases and deaths.

This is really the most crucial time, and the most dangerous time, Gov. Mike DeWine of Ohio, a Republican, said on the CNN program State of the Union on Sunday. All of this is a work in progress. We thought it was a huge risk not to open. But we also know its a huge risk in opening.

The push to reopen has been fueled by swelling frustration, as unemployment soars, businesses declare bankruptcy or announce they cannot survive the shutdowns, and fears intensify about enduring economic devastation. Some businesses have even reopened in defiance of state orders.

Gov. Gavin Newsom of California, a Democrat, said on CNN, I deeply understand the stress and anxiety that people have, that entire dreams have been torn asunder because of the shutdowns, their savings account depleted and their credit ratings destroyed.

The question is, he added, how do you toggle back and make meaningful modifications to the stay-at-home order?

But governors also acknowledged concerns about a fresh resurgence of the coronavirus, and they are haunted by images of restaurants and stores packed with patrons with uncovered faces.

This is a virus were still learning a lot about, Mr. DeWine said.

The response to the virus has been defined by the balance between trying to curb the viruss spread and trying to minimize the economic harm. In much of the country, the pendulum has swung toward favoring the economy.

The shift has come as the national figures for reported new cases of the virus have declined in recent weeks, and as more states have allowed a wider array of businesses to return to operation. More than two-thirds of states have relaxed restrictions significantly. California, New York and Washington are among those partially reopening on a regional basis. Illinois, Michigan and New Jersey remain fully shut down.

This economy will recover; it may take a while.

Jerome H. Powell, the chairman of the Federal Reserve, said that while he expected the U.S. economy to recover from the sharp and painful downturn brought about by the coronavirus, that process would take time potentially until the end of 2021.

This economy will recover; it may take a while, Mr. Powell said in a preview of the CBS program 60 Minutes, which is scheduled to air Sunday evening. It may take a period of time, it could stretch through the end of next year, we dont really know.

Asked whether the economy could recover without an effective vaccine, Mr. Powell suggested that it could make a start, but not get all the way there.

Assuming that theres not a second wave of the coronavirus, I think youll see the economy recover steadily through the second half of this year, he said. For the economy to fully recover, people will have to be fully confident, and that may have to await the arrival of a vaccine.

The interview with Mr. Powell, which CBS said was recorded on May 13, follows a blunt speech he gave the same day, warning that the economy may need more financial support to prevent permanent job losses and waves of bankruptcies.

Wondering what a coronavirus test is like? Watch Cuomo get swabbed on live TV.

transcript

transcript

Im going to show you how fast and easy it is to take the test. And demonstrate why there should be no reluctance. This is Dr. Elizabeth Dufort, who is in the appropriate P.P.E. wear. Nice to see you, doctor. You make that gown look good. Head up a little bit. Head up. Close your eyes. Close my eyes. Why do I need to close my eyes? You can question the doctor. Thats OK. Why do I need to close my eyes? For comfort. Comfort. It might make you tear a little bit. If I fall asleep? Then well have you sit down. Thats it? Thats it. Nothing else. Told you. Thank you very much, doctor. That is the whole test. Im not in pain. Im not in discomfort. Closing my eyes was a moment of relaxation. There is no reason why you should not get the test.

Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo provided a lasting image on Sunday for fellow New Yorkers who may be apprehensive about getting tested for the coronavirus he invited a doctor to stick a swab up his nose during his live news briefing on the pandemic.

It is so fast and so easy that even a governor can take this test, Mr. Cuomo said.

Mr. Cuomo then stood up and turned to a doctor, who was holding a cotton swab and was wearing coveralls, a face shield and gloves. Camera shutters clicked furiously as the doctor guided the swab up the Mr. Cuomos nostril.

Thats it? he said. Thats it? Nothing else?

New York has the capability of conducting 40,000 tests per day at 700 sites, said Mr. Cuomo, who noted that testing would be critical to monitoring the spread of the virus as the state begins to reopen.

There is nothing about this test that should intimidate people from not taking this test, he said.

Calling into a golf broadcast, Trump says he wants big, big stadiums loaded with people.

In a telephone appearance during a televised charity golf exhibition Sunday, President Trump said he enthusiastically supported the return of live sporting events during the pandemic.

We want to get sports back, we miss sports, Mr. Trump said during NBCs broadcast of a skins game match involving Rory McIlroy, Dustin Johnson, Rickie Fowler and Matthew Wolff. We need sports in terms of the psyche of our country. And thats what were doing.

While Sundays exhibition was contested without spectators, Mr. Trump said he hoped that future events would be teeming with fans.

We want to get it back to where it was, we want big, big stadiums loaded with people, he said.

He later added, We want to get back to normal where you have the big crowds where theyre practically standing on top of each other, not where theyre worried.

I would love to be able to have all sports back, Dr. Fauci said. But as a health official and a physician and a scientist, I have to say, right now, when you look at the country, were not ready for that yet.

Thirteen sick sailors seemed to recover. Then they tested positive again.

Thirteen sailors aboard the virus-stricken aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt have retested positive for Covid-19 after seeming to have recovered from the disease, Navy officials said on Sunday.

The infected sailors, who had all tested negative twice before reboarding the Roosevelt in recent days, have been removed from the warship to self-quarantine. The Roosevelt has been docked in Guam since March 27 as Navy officials wrestle with how to deal with sickened sailors, disinfect the vessel and prepare for it to resume operations in the Western Pacific.

Navy officials have said they are aggressively screening and testing as crew members return to the Roosevelt after quarantining at the U.S. military base in Guam, as well as at hotels and in other lodging there. Officials on the ship are requiring masks and repeatedly cleaning and sanitizing to prevent another outbreak of the virus, which has infected about 1,100 crew members since March. One sailor has died.

About 2,900 of the 4,800 crew members are now back on board. They are under strict orders to report to doctors the slightest cough, headache or other flulike symptom. In the past week or so, the new testing even turned up a sailor who tested positive for tuberculosis. That set off a wild contact-tracing scramble that found no other cases on board, Navy officials said.

The results of the Navys latest investigation into events surrounding the Roosevelt are due by the end of this month.

Recent research in South Korea suggested that dozens of patients there who had tested positive a second time after recovering from the illness appeared to be false positives caused by lingering but likely not infectious bits of the virus.

You could feel it going through your veins. A teens battle with a virus-linked syndrome.

When a sprinkling of a reddish rash appeared on Jack McMorrows hands in mid-April, his father figured the 14-year-old was overusing hand sanitizer not a bad thing during a global pandemic.

When Jacks parents noticed that his eyes looked glossy, they attributed it to late nights of video games and TV.

When he developed a stomachache and didnt want dinner, they thought it was because I ate too many cookies or whatever, said Jack, a ninth-grader in Woodside, Queens, who loves Marvel Comics and has ambitions to teach himself Stairway to Heaven on the guitar.

But over the next 10 days, Jack felt increasingly unwell. His parents consulted his pediatricians in video appointments and took him to a weekend urgent care clinic. Then, one morning, he awoke unable to move.

He had a tennis ball-size lymph node, raging fever, racing heartbeat and dangerously low blood pressure. Pain deluged his body in a throbbing, stinging rush, he said.

You could feel it going through your veins and it was almost like someone injected you with straight-up fire, he said.

Jack, who was previously healthy, was hospitalized with heart failure that day, in a stark example of the newly discovered severe inflammatory syndrome linked to the coronavirus that has already been identified in about 200 children in the United States and Europe and killed several.

Colorado offers an alternative, much lower, count of its Covid-19 deaths.

What is the difference between deaths among Covid-19 cases and deaths due to Covid-19? In Colorado, that distinction in wording changes the total by about 30 percent.

Until Friday, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment had been including anyone who had Covid-19 at the time of death in the official total, a practice consistent with the C.D.C.s counting criteria. By that reckoning, Colorado had 1,192 deaths as of Friday.

But the state said it would now also report a lower figure those for whom the disease is considered the sole cause of death, with no other complicating factors. Counting that way knocks the states total down to 892.

Gov. Jared Polis, a Democrat, defended the change on Sunday.

The C.D.C. criteria include anybody who died with Covid-19, he said on Fox News. What the people of Colorado and the people of the country want to know is how many people died of Covid-19.

Health experts have warned for weeks that inconsistent reporting protocols and insufficient testing have led to an undercounting of coronavirus deaths nationally. North Dakota and Alabama have both experimented with death counts similar to Colorados new approach, but have continued to report the C.D.C.s way.

Mr. Polis acknowledged that the virus, which he called a bad bug, can be particularly dangerous for older people and people with underlying medical conditions those who would be most likely to be excluded from the states sole-cause count.

As Alaskas salmon season opens, another coronavirus case adds to concerns.

A second fisheries worker in Alaska has tested positive for the coronavirus, adding to fears that the isolated fishing towns that have so far avoided infections could face challenges as thousands of seasonal workers pour in for the start of Alaskas summer seafood rush.

State officials said the positive case was identified Friday in the city of Dillingham. The infected worker, an employee of Trident Seafoods, had recently arrived and tested positive at the end of a mandatory 14-day quarantine.

Earlier this month, a worker who had arrived in the fishing community of Cordova also tested positive.

Some locals have expressed concern about the fishing season, which began in Cordova with the pursuit of the famed Copper River salmon. In Dillingham, hospital leaders at the Bristol Bay Area Health Corporation had requested that the fishing season remain closed, arguing that the arrival of thousands of outsiders put the community at risk.

To prepare for the influx of workers, state and local government officials have put in place strict quarantine procedures, social-distancing requirements and aggressive testing. Some companies are requiring their workers to stay on site, where the seasonal crews often sleep in bunkhouses.

State officials said the worker who tested positive in Dillingham was removed from the area. None of that persons contacts in the city have so far tested positive.

Congress appears no closer to a deal on further stimulus spending.

The passage of a $3 trillion stimulus package by the House on Friday appeared to bring Congress no closer this weekend to a deal on coronavirus aid, as pleas for more assistance collided with a conservative push to wait and see whether staggered state reopenings and previous aid packages arrest the economic free-fall.

The Republican-controlled Senate is not expected to take up the legislation that the Democratic-controlled House approved on Friday. Instead, the Senate will turn to a number of pending nominations before an expected Memorial Day recess. Speaker Nancy Pelosi urged Republicans to reconsider.

Time is of the essence, she said in an interview aired Sunday on the CBS program Face the Nation. In the past bills, they put forth their proposal, and then we worked in a bipartisan way that we anticipate now.

They may think its OK to pause, but people are hungry across America, she added. Hunger doesnt take a pause.

Republican leaders have played down what Democrats say is an immediate need for relief, arguing that it was too early to allocate additional funds after Congress previously passed close to $3 trillion in relief.

Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, has laid down a red line, saying that strengthening liability protections for health workers and businesses moving to reopen must be part of any future package.

Ms. Pelosi said on Sunday that she had no red lines, but she singled out a provision in the bill passed on Friday that would strengthen federal protections for essential workers.

The best protection for our workers and their employers is to follow very good OSHA mandatory guidelines, she said, referring to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. That protects the workers, protects their lives, as well as protects the employer if they follow the guidelines. Remember, when people go to work, they go home.

The legislation the House passed on Friday, which Democratic leaders acknowledged amounted to an opening offer, faces some opposition from within their party, including in the Senate.

I think what Pelosi did in the House it is significant, said Senator Bernie Sanders, a Vermont independent who caucuses with the Democrats. I have some disagreements with it, and I want to see the Senate improve on it.

Fall school openings are shrouded in uncertainty.

A major question on the minds of many parents is whether their childrens schools will reopen in the fall. So far the plans and guidelines that have emerged are a patchwork, and state leaders are divided about whether it is possible to have the schools ready in time and what it will take to do it safely.

Gov. Jared Polis of Colorado said on Sunday that starting the school year open would not guarantee that they stayed that way. There might be times, if theres an outbreak at a school, that it has to convert to online for a period of weeks until its reasonably safe to return to school, he said on Fox News Sunday.

Governor Polis said his state was considering measures like staggering start times, class schedules and breaks to minimize crowds in hallways.

California will proceed slowly and methodically in allowing crowds to gather again anywhere, including schools, Gov. Gavin Newsom said on Sunday, and that may mean that some schools in the state reopen while others remain closed.

Its all predicated on data, on science, not just observed evidence, he said on CNN. Each part of California is unique.

Both governors noted that while children were not often affected as severely by the virus as adults are, they were potential spreaders.

This is no question from an epidemiological perspective that this is a less severe, almost infinitesimal fatality rate for kids, Mr. Polis said. But the thing is, kids live with parents, they live with grandparents, kids are around teachers, so thats where it gets a little bit more complicated.

Health issues that affect minority groups are making the pandemic worse, Azar says.

Alex M. Azar II, the secretary of health and human services, suggested in televised remarks on Sunday that the high death toll from Covid-19 in the United States, compared with other nations, was due at least in part to the prevalence of underlying health issues in minority communities.

Unfortunately, the American population is very diverse, and it is a population with significant unhealthy comorbidities that do make many individuals in our communities, in particular African-American minority communities, particularly at risk, Mr. Azar said on the CNN program State of the Union, adding, That is an unfortunate legacy of our health care system that we certainly do need to address.

The host, Jake Tapper, pressed Mr. Azar on whether he was trying to place the blame for the pandemic on its victims. I want to give you an opportunity to clear it up, Mr. Tapper said, because it sounded like you were saying that the reason that there are so many dead Americans is because were unhealthier than the rest of the world, and I know thats not what you meant.

Mr. Azar responded: We have a significantly disproportionate burden of comorbidities in the United States obesity, hypertension, diabetes these are demonstrated facts that make us at risk for any type of disease burden, of course, but that doesnt mean its the fault of the American people.

The federal agency that issues visas is almost broke.

The United States Citizenship and Immigration Services, the federal agency that administers the countrys lawful immigration system, says it could be insolvent by summer, and has asked Congress for $1.2 billion to stay afloat.

The rest is here:

Illinois Threatens to Fine Defiant Businesses as Reopening Tensions Rise Nationally - The New York Times

One in nearly four-thousand: NM prison COVID-19 testing shows strikingly low positive rate – New Mexico Political Report

May 17, 2020

New Mexico appears to have bucked another national trend.

Just one of the nearly 4,000 inmates and staff tested in the states 11 prisons is positive for COVID-19, the respiratory illness caused by the new coronavirus, according to results released by the state Corrections Department on Friday.

The lone positive result, according to a news release from department spokesman Eric Harrison, was for a correctional officer at the Otero County Prison Facility in Chaparral, near the U.S. border with Mexico.

The officer is now in self-quarantine at home, Harrisons release said.

Across the nation, prisons and jailshave emerged as hotspots for COVID-19, with incarcerated populations and those who work to supervise them testing positive at alarmingly high rates in some places.

Many inmates suffer from pre-existing health conditions that make them particularly susceptible to the often fatal consequences of COVID-19, leaving prisons with some of the most vulnerable populations in the U.S. as the pandemic continues its march.

And with thousands of staff testing positive, the threat has pushed beyond the walls and into the American communities where detention centers sit.

In nearly every prison system around the country, when officials conduct wide-scale testing, they find high volumes of virus, according to data compiled by The Marshall Project, a nonprofit news organization focused on criminal justice issues.

But in New Mexico, the results released Friday amount to a near-miracle.

At a virtual news conference on Friday, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and Human Services Department Secretary Dr. David Scrase attributed the nearly 0 percent test rate in the prisons to what they called early action by state officials particularly the decision to cut off visits from attorneys, families and others in the prisons in March.

Because we closed down swiftly, it meant that we had lower transmission rates and risks in a number of communities, the governor said in response to a question from NMID.

Still, the results just one positive case do raise questions.

Previously, the Corrections Department said four of its staffers tested positive two at the Northwest New Mexico Correctional Center, one at the Western New Mexico Correctional Facility and one at the Guadalupe County Correctional Facility.

Harrisons release did not say whether those staffers had since tested negative.

And in a Thursday news release from Lujan Grishams administration, officials said 24 inmates had tested positive at the Corrections Departments privately operated Otero County Prison Facility.

Harrison said those inmates are in federal custody and are housed in a different part of the prison than state inmates.

The state tested 3,954 people including prison staff and inmates concluding on May 8, Harrisons release said. The effort was part ofNew Mexicos participation in a federally-backed sentinel and surveillance testing program.

On Wednesday, Harrison told New Mexico In Depth that 1,678 inmates and 2,486 staff had been tested, and that all tests were complete. That would make a total of 4,164 tests 200 more than his Friday news released indicated.

On Friday, he said 2,248 staff and 1,706 inmates had been tested.

Harrison did not explain the discrepancy.

Staff were tested in each of the states 11 prisons, Harrison wrote in an email to NMID. He did not provide a breakdown showing where the inmates tested are incarcerated.

The process for selecting (inmates) to test was done through coordinating with facilities to identify vulnerable individuals, new intakes, and possible symptomatic individuals, Harrison wrote.

Staff were tested May 7 and 8, he said in an email, and inmates were tested May 9, 10 and 11. Wexford Health Sources, Inc., the private health care provider New Mexico contracts with for the prisons, administered the tests using nasal swabs, and TriCore Laboratories processed the results.

Lujan Grisham described the prisons as a high-risk environment and that she wasnt sure whether the uncannily low positive test rate would hold.

In collaboration with the New Mexico Department of Health, (the Corrections Department) will continue to conduct contact tracing and surveillance testing within prison facilities, Harrison wrote in his release.

Lujan Grisham praised her administrations efforts to reduce the prison population, citing what she called joint efforts with our partners like the ACLU and others to make sure we can do a safe, early release for folks who are scheduled.

As of this week, just 35 people have been released under an executive order the governor signed last month. A report from the nonpartisan New Mexico Sentencing Commission from last fallidentified nearly 300 people who could be released early under state law.

The ACLU of New Mexico has been critical of the paltry release numbers and, alongside the Law Office of the Public Defender and the New Mexico Criminal Defense Lawyers Association, unsuccessfully petitioned the state Supreme Court to force Lujan Grisham to release more people.

Meanwhile, leadership of the union that represents many Corrections Department officers and staff responded to Fridays announcement with cautious optimism.

Connie Derr is executive director of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, Council 18. The union represents more than 900 corrections officers and Corrections Department staff more than a third of those tested for COVID-19.

Corrections officials did not share any test results with the union before releasing them to the press on Friday, Derr said.

Wow. That doesnt even smell right, Derr said when NMID read her the results in Harrisons news release.

She was writing an email to Corrections Secretary Alisha Tafoya-Lucero when NMID reached her by phone Friday, she said.

There has been no communication from the department, Derr said. I was writing her to ask what the follow-up plan is. Whats the plan to re-test? Whats the plan to test the rest of the inmates. If its good news, why wouldnt they want to tell the union to reduce anxiety among our members? Its been a big abyss.

Council 18filed a complaint on May 1with the state Labor Relations Board, accusing the Corrections Department of violating its collective bargaining agreement by, among other things, failing to detail contingency plans for sick workers or blunt the spread of the virus inside the states prisons.

Derr questioned how four staffers could have beenpositive for COVID-19 early last weekbut negative by weeks end.

Still, she said, Fridays announcement represents a possible massive relief.

If theyre correct, it is, indeed, great news, Derr said. I am very happy if officers and staff are not testing positive. It is surprising, though, given what we are seeing elsewhere. And they did not introduce testing until the last couple weeks, so I still have questions. Its kind of shocking.

New Mexico is one of just 11 states thats releasing information on how many prison officers and staff are being tested, according to data collected by The Marshall Project.

As of May 8, according to the Marshall Projects data, more than 6,100 prison staff have tested positive for the virus nationwide; 22 of them have reportedly died from COVID-19.

Those figures do not include the numbers released by New Mexico officials for the prisons here.

Editors note: This story has been updated to include state Corrections Department responses to NMID questions about testing dates, administration and processing.

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One in nearly four-thousand: NM prison COVID-19 testing shows strikingly low positive rate - New Mexico Political Report

We May Never Have a COVID-19 Vaccine and Have to Live With The Disease Forever – India.com

May 15, 2020

Scientists around the world are in continuous fear that we may never be able to produce an effective vaccine against COVID-19 and have to live with the permanent risk of contracting the novel virus. Also Read - Coronavirus in Delhi: His Cook Positive, Supreme Court Judge Goes in Self-Quarantine With Family

Currently, more than 100 vaccines are undergoing pre-clinical trials and a few have entered the human trial stage. Still, the researchers fear that the vaccines may not be able to cross the last hurdle and be available for the common people. This is because of the nature of this new coronavirus. According to the scientists, COVID-19 virus may change its structure in a few months when we hopefully have a vaccine but the change in its anatomy can turn the entire development, scientific processes and result futile. Also Read - Coronavirus in Karnataka: Passengers Refuse Institutional Quarantine, 19 Sent Back to Delhi

According to a CNN report, in which Dr. David Nabarro, World Health Organizations COVID-19 special envoy was quoted saying, There are some viruses that we still do not have vaccines against. We cannot make an absolute assumption that a vaccine will appear at all, or if it does appear, whether it will pass all the tests of efficacy and safety. Also Read - Sri Lanka to Impose Nationwide Day-long Curfew Again on Sunday to Check Coronavirus Outbreak

Notably, vaccine development is a very long procedure. And as per reports, 37 per cent of vaccines fail in the first phase itself. Whereas 69 per cent fail in the second stage. And 42 per cent go futile in the third phase. Only 10 per cent of total vaccines manage to reach the last stage and get approval.

Even after the approval, we are not sure if a vaccine would be effective in the general population. One of the examples for this is the dengue vaccine that came in 2015. It was found out to have severe negative impacts on the people in the Philippines. Instead of providing immunity against the virus, the vaccine made people critically ill with severe symptoms of the disease.

Also, it has been nearly four decades now but we still do not have a vaccine against HIV, which has caused around 32 million deaths till now.

According to a statement given by the UKs Chief Medical Officer, Christopher Whitty to a Parliamentary committee, there is enough concerning evidence that shows, we may not able to develop a COVID-19 vaccine. One of the bases for this negative possibility is the reinfection. This means, getting the infection once is not making a person immune to it for a prolonged period.

Even the World Health organisation recently hinted towards the possibility of never be able to deal with the virus. If that happens, the only way the human race can survive is by developing herd immunity but in the process, a huge number of people will lost their lives.

With Inputs From IANS

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We May Never Have a COVID-19 Vaccine and Have to Live With The Disease Forever - India.com

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