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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Jun 22 2020

Full Issue

States Continue To See Record High Number Of Cases As Leaders Hold Steady On Reopening Plans

Media outlets take a look at how the pandemic looks in states across the country, including the dozen or so that are seeing record highs in cases.

A dozen states have seen record highs of new COVID-19 cases since Friday, an ABC News analysis has found. The states that saw the increase were Florida, Texas, Utah, South Carolina, Nevada, Georgia, Missouri, Montana, Arizona, California, Tennessee and Oklahoma, according to the analysis of state-released data compiled by the COVID Tracking Project. (Deliso and Mitropoulos, 6/21)

The pressure is on for local leaders to respond to regional Covid-19 spikes and records, and some are turning to mask mandates. Statewide, Californians will be required to wear face coverings in indoor public places, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Thursday. To the north, Oregon Gov. Kate Brown announced a similar mandate for seven counties beginning June 24. Similar measures are being considered in North Carolina and Arizona, where Scottsdale Mayor Jim Lane is developing an ordinance with a legal team. (Holcombe, 6/19)

Former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Scott Gottlieb warned Sunday that coronavirus outbreaks in several states, including Texas, Florida and Arizona, could overwhelm local health care systems if not properly handled. 鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing a resurgence in the south and the southeast, they really never got rid of their epidemics,鈥 Gottlieb said on CBS鈥 鈥淔ace the Nation.鈥 鈥淎 challenge that was once facing some regions of the country is now facing every region of the country, and the worry is they鈥檙e going to tip into exponential growth.鈥 (Budryk, 6/21)

William Boyd was at the funeral Saturday morning for a relative who had died after contracting the new coronavirus when he got the call with the news. His brother had also passed away from COVID-19. 鈥淭he virus is real. It鈥檚 real. If they don鈥檛 know it鈥檚 real, they can come and walk with me to the cemetery,鈥 said Boyd, the owner of a Montgomery car lot. (Chandler, 6/21)

Infectious disease experts expressed alarm Sunday over the pace of new coronavirus infections in several states in the South and Southwest, with one likening the spread in parts of the country to a 鈥渇orest fire.鈥 At the same time, President Trump鈥檚 surrogates insisted he was joking on Saturday when he told rally-goers he had ordered a testing slowdown because the results painted an overly dire picture of the pandemic. (King, 6/21)

The Navajo Department of Health has reported 69 new cases of coronavirus on the Navajo Nation and four more known deaths. That pushes the totals to 6,963 positive COVID-19 cases and 334 known deaths as of Saturday night. Tribal officials also said preliminary reports from 11 health care facilities indicate about 3,470 people have recovered from COVID-19 with more reports still pending. (6/21)

Controversy is stirring in Oklahoma Indian country over decisions made regarding the distribution of about $1.9 billion in federal coronavirus relief funds designated for 38 Oklahoma tribes. The Shawnee Tribe, which is headquartered in Miami, filed a federal lawsuit against U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Thursday, alleging the tribe was shortchanged about $6 million in CARES ACT relief funds. (Ellis, 6/21)

When Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey extended the state's stay-at-home order into mid-May, Pinal County Sheriff Mark Lamb countered that the policy had gone on long enough. "The numbers don't justify the actions anymore," he told The Arizona Republic in early May. "Three hundred deaths is not a significant enough number to continue to ruin the economy." Lamb said he would talk to residents in the jurisdiction near Phoenix about complying with the order. But he wouldn't criminally enforce it. (Kaur, 6/18)

Days before President Trump's first rally in over three months, on June 20 in Tulsa, city officials and politicians are worried, as the number of COVID-19 cases in Tulsa County rise to record levels. While Trump supporters lined up with their lawn chairs and umbrellas outside the BOK Center in Tulsa, the city's Republican mayor said he will not be attending President Trump's rally on Saturday. (Sganga, Bidar and Watson, 6/18)

As President Trump prepares to hold his first major election rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, this weekend, health experts have issued strong warnings about the coronavirus risks posed to attendees as all of Oklahoma sees a rise in cases. Gov. Kevin Stitt rolled back the state's coronavirus precautions for businesses on May 1, when the state's health department said there were 3,748 total cases. As of June 18, there were 8,908 confirmed cases throughout Oklahoma, according to the health department. (Pereira, 6/18)

As Arizona contends with a record spike in coronavirus cases amid the state's move to reopen, one grief-stricken daughter is pleading for the public and government leaders to take safety more seriously.聽Lina Washington's father, Robert Washington, died of COVID-19 a week ago, and barely a month after returning to his job as a security guard at the Gila River Hotels & Casinos - Lone Butte in Chandler, Arizona. "My dad called me on May 16 fearing for his safety," she tweeted on Sunday. "He said no one was social distancing and few wore masks." (Gibson, 6/18)

Los Angeles County public health officials on Sunday reported 1,784 new cases of the coronavirus and 11 related deaths. The county now has recorded more than 83,000 cases of the virus and over 3,120 deaths. The continued rise in new cases came amid the first weekend of more businesses sectors reopening, as bars, card rooms and some personal care services were given the green light to resume operations Friday, provided they take certain precautions. (Wigglesworth, 6/21)

From Macy鈥檚 鈥淢iracle on 34th Street鈥 store to the World Trade Center鈥檚 office towers, New York City hits a key point Monday in trying to rebound from the nation鈥檚 deadliest coronavirus outbreak. For the first time in three months, New Yorkers will be able to dine out, though only at outdoor tables. Shoppers can once again browse in the city鈥檚 destination stores. Shaggy heads can get haircuts. Cooped-up kids can finally climb playground monkey bars instead of apartment walls. Office workers can return to their desks, though many won鈥檛 yet. (Peltz, 6/22)

New York City, the original epicenter of the U.S. coronavirus pandemic, has seen enough progress in its battle against the virus that phase 2 of reopening is slated for next week, Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Mayor Bill de Blasio said. Cuomo said in his daily briefing on Thursday he will officially decide Friday on the reopening, but all indicators point to New York City entering the next stage. (Pereira, 6/18)

New York City will allow companies to reopen their offices on Monday after a three-month lockdown from the pandemic. Few employees seem ready or willing to go back. Most companies are taking a cautious approach. Some are keeping offices closed, while others are opening them at reduced occupancy and allowing employees to decide if they prefer to keep working from home. Mary Ann Tighe, chief executive for the tri-state region at real-estate services firm CBRE Group Inc., said many New York City clients don鈥檛 plan on being fully back in the office before Labor Day. And maybe only then if schools have reopened. (Putzier, 6/21)

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said at his聽coronavirus聽briefing Thursday that people in states with rising coronavirus cases could get on a plane and land in New York City, "and this could start all over again." "You look at what's going on across the nation and people should be concerned," he said. "You're seeing the virus go up across this country." (Baldwin, 6/18)

Parking garages are hoping for a surge in business as tens of thousands of office workers return to Manhattan during New York City鈥檚 reopening, which is expected to enter its second phase Monday. About 10% of white-collar workers, or 130,000 people, could be back by mid-August, according to a survey of firms conducted by the Partnership for New York City, a business group that represents some of the city鈥檚 largest private-sector employers. (Berger, 6/21)

As New York City looks to reinvent itself for the post-pandemic era, lower Manhattan offers a few lessons on how to recover from disaster. Once largely a 9-to-5 financial center, the district has changed since the Sept 11, 2001, terrorist attacks into a walkable neighborhood that has more than doubled its residential population. Officials鈥 determination to transform the area made it more resilient to the sort of economic shocks the entire city now faces: widespread job losses and the threat of people leaving because they don鈥檛 feel safe (back then because of terrorism, now because of disease). (King, 6/20)

More than 100 days ago, buildings across New York shut their doors and companies sent their workers home. As the coronavirus pandemic swept across the city, lockdown orders left offices dormant, stores shuttered and streets and sidewalks all but abandoned. On Monday, two weeks after it began easing restrictions, New York City marks another major milestone when it enters a much larger reopening phase, allowing thousands of offices to welcome back employees for the first time since March. (Gold and Closson, 6/22)

After three months off, D.C. residents, apparently, are ready to hit the gym.The 6聽a.m. slots at all five Vida Fitness locations are completely booked for Monday, said founder David von Storch, whose facilities are among the businesses that will reopen then as the District joins the rest of the region in the second phase of its coronavirus recovery plan. Phase 2, announced last week by Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D), will also bring the return of indoor dining, retail, camps and worship services 鈥 but with strict social distancing requirements. (Chason and Shapira, 6/21)

Coronavirus cases in Texas have surged, and childcare centers are no exception. As of Friday, 410 total cases of coronavirus 鈥 267 staff members and 143 children 鈥 had been reported at 318 licensed child care operations across the state, according to the Texas Health and Human Services Commission. That鈥檚 a sharp increase from the 339 cases the agency reported Thursday and the 210 it shared with KVUE-TV in Austin on Monday. (Hoyt, 6/19)

Starting Saturday, businesses must start requiring customers and everyone on the premises to wear a mask to contain the spread of COVID-19 as cases continue climbing. Dallas County commissioners voted 3-2 Friday to pass the mask order 鈥 which goes into effect at 11:59 p.m. Friday 鈥 after a fiery debate. The order follows similar rules put in place in other parts of the state earlier this week. Seven of Texas鈥 10 most-populous counties have put face mask orders in place on businesses. (Manuel, 6/19)

For Black-owned businesses, the hurdles are even higher as the economy reopens, especially given the racial wealth gap, the higher unemployment rate during the crisis among African Americans and the lack聽of access that many minority businesses have聽to traditional loans, even including聽the new Payment Protection Program.聽Already some small businesses lost the battle. About 3.3 million small businesses shut their doors,聽or 22%, from February until April, according to a report by the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research. (Tompor, 6/19)

After five months of tough negotiations, unionized residents, interns and fellows at Michigan Medicine have overwhelmingly ratified a three-year contract that its executive director says is the best since 2013, when the state's right-to-work law went into effect. The contract for 1,300 staffers negotiated with the University of Michigan House Officers Association includes a total salary increase of 8.66 percent along with a 10 percent base pay increase in November they can take as lump sum payment or toward their retirement plan to encourage savings, according to union and hospital officials. (Greene, 6/20)

A new program at聽a local public defender聽office will allow thousands of people who can't afford an attorney in Wayne County to get legal help聽before their first day in court.聽Leaders with the聽Neighborhood Defender Service聽in Detroit say they hope their聽community intake program announced Friday, on Juneteenth,聽will聽level the playing field聽for their indigent clients, 70% of whom are Black.聽(Jackson, 6/19)

A federal judge in Kalamazoo聽has asked the Michigan Supreme Court to clarify Gov. Gretchen Whitmer's emergency powers during the coronavirus pandemic. The request from U.S. District Judge Paul Maloney could cause Michigan's high court to reconsider its earlier rebuff of a request to give speedy attention to constitutional questions raised by Whitmer's use of emergency powers since the pandemic hit Michigan in March. (Egan, 6/19)

As Gov. John Bel Edwards prepares to announce whether Louisiana can continue its phased reopening, the coronavirus is spreading throughout the state, in some places at an alarming clip. At the same time, the state鈥檚 public-facing dashboard for statistics related to the virus has been hobbled by a series of data glitches, making it almost impossible to chart the virus鈥檚 progress region by region. (Karlin, 6/20)

Maine鈥檚 unemployment rate declined slightly in May after more than tripling amid the coronavirus pandemic, according to information released Friday by the state and federal labor departments, though the number doesn鈥檛 reflect the true extent of the hardship. The rate declined to 9.3 percent, or by 1.3 percentage points. Cumberland, Franklin, Oxford and Somerset counties all had rates topping 10 percent. The Portland-South Portland area continued to be the most affected by the coronavirus-related downturn, with 84 percent as many jobs in May as there were in February. (Valigra, 6/19)

Health and social services officials told Maine lawmakers on Friday that the coronavirus has caused urgent financial problems as they asked for a share of roughly $1 billion in federal stimulus money to recover from the pandemic. A $2.2 trillion stimulus bill passed by Congress in March gave Maine $1.25 billion for the virus response. The state has committed only $411 million of it so far, with the biggest $270 million chunk going to backfill an unemployment insurance system exhausted by the pandemic. (Shepherd, 6/19)

California lawmakers and Gov. Gavin Newsom could reach a deal on the state budget in the next few hours, Newsom told reporters Friday. 鈥淲e鈥檙e in final throes ... so we鈥檙e hoping today,鈥 Newsom said during a trip to Sacramento restaurant Queen Sheba where he helped cook meals for seniors. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of labor negotiations, a lot of pieces, a lot of moving parts. It鈥檚 a tough budget for all of us. The magnitude of the shortfall is unprecedented.鈥 Lawmakers approved a budget Monday, the constitutional deadline. But the bill they passed represented agreement only among lawmakers, not with the governor, so negotiations have continued. (Bollag, 6/19)

By some estimates, as many as 1.4 million Georgians may lose employer-sponsored health insurance due to the pandemic. The impact will range from upheaval to ruin. (Hart, 6/21)

The Georgia Senate passed a state budget on a party-line vote Friday that cuts $2.6 billion in spending during the upcoming year. That means in fiscal 2021 鈥 which begins July 1 鈥 $1 billion less would be sent to local districts to fund k-12 schools. Millions of dollars would also be cut from a host of health care programs, forcing staff furloughs in the agency that for the past three months has been fighting the coronavirus pandemic. (Salzer, 6/19)

The fall semester will be a pivotal time for HBCUs as they balance renewed interest in their missions during a time of racial unrest with surviving in the midst of a health crisis. Many administrators anticipate enrollment declines this fall and planned social distancing guidelines due to the coronavirus pandemic may limit how many students can actually take in-person classes. So, even if more students want to enroll, the colleges may have no room for them. (Stirgus, 6/21)

Given that the number of new COVID-19 cases and deaths have declined over the past two weeks, Governor Gina M. Raimondo says Rhode Island could be ready to move to Phase 3 of its re-opening plan by the end of the month. Rhode Islanders got a taste of a return to normal life when the state launched Phase 2 on June 1, which reopened many of the businesses that had been closed during the pandemic, with restrictions. (Milkovits, 6/19)

New data released Friday by the Baker administration reveal the stark racial divide in Massachusetts surrounding illnesses and deaths from COVID-19, providing in more granular details just how significantly and disproportionately the virus has hit Black and Hispanic communities. For instance, the numbers indicate that Hispanic residents make up 12 percent of the population, but their rate of positive cases is nearly 30 percent. (Lazar and Prgnano, 6/19)

A trio of Boston city councilors are proposing a crisis response system that would divert nonviolent 911 calls away from police. Councilors Michelle Wu, Lydia Edwards, and Julia Mejia said the ordinance, filed on Friday, would offer 鈥渁n alternative response from non-law enforcement agencies.鈥 (McDonald, 6/19)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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