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Pritzker says state received over 1,100 applications to rejoin healthcare service here - Ezike: “As we develop more cases, we are going to have more deaths” - Should people wear masks? - 45 percent positive rate for Stateville tests - Addresses concerns at Shapiro - ICU shortage in Taylorville - Talks about possible session - Easter service should be online - Unable to project budget changes

Wednesday, Apr 1, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pritzker began his press conference by urging people to fill out their census forms and then turned to healthcare. Here’s some actual news

I also want to provide an update on our search for new or renewing healthcare workers. We have now received over 1100 applications from both former health care workers looking to rejoin the fight and from out of state professionals who want to help Illinois, many of whom are Illinois residents who happen to practice in a border city in another state. Right now, those numbers are running about half and half, with more applications coming in every day. It’s really incredible to watch the people of this state are truly so deeply genuinely caring. […]

We’re also hard at work, exploring options to allow some of our fourth year medical students and nursing students at the end of their programs to join the fight against Cova 19.

As always, please pardon all typos.

* On to questions for the governor. It sounded like the question was yet another “when will we be there” query…

It is very hard to know to be honest with you. I mean I think you’ve seen that as I put in a stay at home order and when we started with the closing of schools and so on. You know, we were relying upon what we knew at that time which seemed like it was just weeks perhaps that were necessary. We’re continuing to follow the science to know what date we ought to be extending to there are states who have chosen different dates for their stay at home order. And so, we’re looking at all of that if there was a definitive answer I would hope that the CDC would put that forward to everyone. It’s unclear, to be frank with you. And so we’re listening to the best minds that we can get the right answer, right now we’ve extended our stay at home and all of the other orders to April 30, but as I have said, we’re going to continue to evaluate every day whether we’ll need to extend that at any point. But right now I think that that seems like the right period of time. Again, not knowing exactly when we might peak income off of that peak, which is a very important point at which will be making new evaluations.

* IDPH Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike was asked about the rise of deaths…

I have said every day that we knew we would see more cases and we knew we would see more deaths. So as we develop more cases, we are going to have more deaths. I can’t tell you, I can’t predict exactly the number that it will be obviously each day, but we know generally from following data that we have from around the world unfortunately we have a lot of information from all the situations all the cases from around the world. We know that approximately 20% end up requiring hospitalization and more severe care, and that about five 5% require ICU care. We know that the mortality rate is somewhere between, maybe one and 3%. So I think our numbers are unfortunately, going to bear that out, and we will see growth in the number of decimals, most, unfortunately, until we get to that peak and hopefully we have done all that we’ve can all that we can in terms of staying home and doing all these mitigation efforts so that the peak is lower than what was originally anticipated.

* Dr. Ezike was also asked about the public wearing masks…

So, of course, the best way to not get ill is to stay at home … wash your hands twice a day. You’re doing a great job if you wash your hands five times, 10 times a day. You’re doing an even better job if you clean frequently touched surfaces. So all of these measures, obviously, are helpful.

When we say cover your cough, the point of covering your cough is that you’re not letting those droplets go on to the person standing in front of you, go on to the person that you’re in front of you so the covering your cough covering your sneeze and the social distancing are essentially similar to the advice of wearing the mask. The idea of wearing the mask as you said would be to keep those droplets potentially from spraying on others so I understand what you’re saying that that is logical. And so we want everybody to do the most that they can to prevent potentially infecting others before they know it. And we know that covering your cough staying away from people, and potentially some kind of covering of your mouth and nose would also potentially be helpful as well.

* Gov. Pritzker on masks…

I want to add to something that Dr Ezike said that while the question about is it effective to wear a mask. I’m sure it’s more effective than not wearing a mask. But it does not replace staying at home. Staying at home is the best mitigation strategy, please stay home. […]

In fact, I think that there’s some evidence to show that it can be effective. A are we thinking about changing policy again, we’re evaluating these things every day.

* Are you considering taking action to delay the deadline for the second installment for property tax payments currently around August 1, or do you think that is one deadline the state cannot afford to push back?…

That is not a state function to, just to be clear. … These are functions of local governments and county government, the state does not collect property taxes and those decisions have been made by local governments county governments.

* Director Ezike, can you please explain the numbers in a more clear fashion for people on the cases at Stateville…

We have tested 127 individuals, 80 of those samples were sent to a university lab, another 47 were sent out elsewhere, of the 80 that we were able to get back, we had 36 were positive, which gave us about a 45% positivity rate. We have 19 individuals who are hospitalized and at multiple different hospitals throughout the state. And we’re continuing to monitor other individuals that are still in the facility

* 12 of the cases in Kankakee County are from the Shapiro Developmental Center. What do you say to the families…

Not only do we have a very strong PPE policy, but we also provide significant amounts of PPE. Look, there is no doubt and you’ve heard this from our medical experts that sometimes congregate facilities are difficult because of the very nature of people living in the same facility. And who have felt like you know we are actually running it reasonably well, doing the right things at the right time sometimes you know that this virus is so it’s an invisible virus you know you just don’t know where it’s going to come from we’re doing everything we can to try to separate people out, who may have contracted the virus to detect it. You just heard, General Neely talk about, you know, taking temperatures and checking people’s medical situation before they enter a facility we’re trying to do that in as many places as we can.

So you know we’re doing the best we can. We’re certainly trying our best to take care of our, our seniors our children, people who are you know in our care as prisoners too. So we’re addressing it as best we can and again. In each of these situations, our number one concern is the welfare of the people who are in our care.

* We may not have as many confirmed cases downstate, but already clusters of cases at a senior home and Taylorville outnumber the available number of ICU beds at the hospital in town. What is your administration doing to coordinate the response in rural areas with critical access hospitals and should county officials make those numbers of available ICU beds public?…

As we move towards the peak of this, we are going to be filling up ICU beds across the state. It isn’t the same in every area, there are critical access hospitals that may have fewer ICU beds. There are other hospitals and other areas of the state that may have more availability just as a percentage of what they’ve got. […]

We’re trying to make sure that we’re either offloading the non acute people who are in the hospital, the patients in the hospital or we’re providing additional facilities for people to have ICU capability.

* Are you considering calling the General Assembly to meet someplace else, or to meet virtually?…

The General Assembly leaders are talking about how they might be able to accomplish a general assembly legislative session.

It is something that I think may be very important to do. It’s hard to do, there are 177 members of the General Assembly and we’re asking people to stay home and not congregate in groups of more than 10. So some Governor’s might think this is a dream that you can’t get your legislature together, but we have things that we need to get done in the state of Illinois. So I’m hoping that we’ll be able to figure out how we might be able to get them meeting. And I know that the leaders are thinking about that as well.

* How would you recommend churches handle Easter Sunday services?…

Well, I would suggest that many people need to attend services online, that the churches should try their best to provide a connection on the internet. It may be the best way in order to make sure that you’re abiding by the stay at home rule, which is so vitally important. I understand how important worship is and especially in these moments, but it can be done virtually, and I would suggest that people should never, you know, despite the desire on Easter to get together to celebrate together to worship together. I would still tell people, please stay home please stay home and contact your pastor to find out if they have services online that you can participate in or at least view it.

* Have you been in contact with the legislative leader leaders and budget committee chairs to talk about a revised FY21 budget, and what if any major changes from your original budget proposal, do you think the state will need?…

Well, I don’t think I could list all the changes that would need to be made to the original budget. Our budget proposal was put together in January, presented in February, weeks and weeks before the coven crisis came upon us, or at least we were all aware of how serious it was.

I have had conversations with various members of the General Assembly and leaders, just to begin, we are obviously working to figure out what is the revenue shortfall, what are the challenges that we’re going to go through, when do we think that we’ll begin to see revenue return. And trying to make estimates of that as you can imagine, at this moment are very difficult when I couldn’t tell you two days ago that we were going to extend the stay at home rule that we put in place. So, we’re still working on it. There’s no doubt that it will be a vastly different budget.

-30-

  14 Comments      


986 new cases, 42 additional deaths

Wednesday, Apr 1, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) today announced 986 new cases of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Illinois, including 42 additional deaths.

    - Carroll County: 1 male 80s
    - Cook County: 1 male 20s, 2 males 30s, 2 males 40s, 1 male 50s, 1 female 50s, 3 males 60s, 2 females 60s, 5 males 70s, 3 females 70s, 3 male 80s, 4 females 80s, 1 female 90s, 1 female 100s. (5 incomplete data)
    - DuPage County: 1 female 60s, 1 female 70s
    - Kane County: 1 female 90s
    - Lake County: 1 male 50s
    - Sangamon County: 1 male 90s
    - Will County: 1 male 60s
    - Winnebago County: 1 male 60s

Massac and Vermilion counties are now reporting cases. Currently, IDPH is reporting a total of 6,980 cases, including 141 deaths, in 56 counties in Illinois. The age of cases ranges from younger than one to older than 100 years.

  11 Comments      


JCAR meets during pandemic

Wednesday, Apr 1, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Hannah Meisel at the Daily Line

The Joint Commission on Administrative Rules met in the Stratton Building in Springfield despite federal recommendations banning large gatherings and Gov. JB Pritzker’s own executive orders

Commission Co-Chair State Sen. Bill Cunningham (D-Chicago) said the lawmakers had no choice but to meet and extend emergency rules before they expire in the coming weeks in order to avoid possible legal battles down the road. […]

One of the most pressing set of emergency rules JCAR needed to vote to extend were ones approved by the Illinois State Board of Education in November after Tribune/ProPublica Illinois investigation into the use and potential abuse of isolation rooms in school settings for children who are deemed disruptive in classroom settings. The new rules prohibit the use of locked seclusion rooms and stop schools from using prone restraint. […]

“We would open things up to all sorts of legal debate about us renewing a rule after it was already expired,” Cunningham said. “Do we have ability to extend rule that already expired?”

The other emergency rule they extended was to collect parking tax revenues.

JCAR can meet, but the Joint Commission on Ethics and Lobbying Reform can’t.

Only 8 of JCAR’s 12 members attended, but a handful of staff were also in the hearing room. The public was not allowed into the room.

* Here’s something from Hannah’s story that I had missed

A spokesperson for the Secretary of State’s office, which controls the Capitol Complex in Springfield — said the Capitol, the Stratton Building and the Howlett Building are closed to the public, though lawmakers, members of the media and state employees with identification are allowed in.

The SoS office closed the Capitol Complex to large groups on March 12. The entire complex was closed to the public on March 17.

  6 Comments      


National Guard to help with medical care at Stateville

Wednesday, Apr 1, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tina Sfondeles and Carlos Ballesteros at the Sun-Times

The Illinois National Guard is sending 30 service members to help with medical care at Stateville Correctional Center, where one inmate has died from the coronavirus and at least 32 more have tested positive.

The service members are medics from the Illinois Army National Guard’s 33rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team based in Urbana and will be setting up medical tents, triaging and providing medical care for inmates at the Crest Hill-based correctional center, according to Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s office.

Lt. Col. Brad Leighton, a spokesman for the Illinois National Guard, said the medics should arrive by the end of the week. […]

The medical help is intended to assist inmates who need care but not hospitalization. The medical tents will be “fully operational there before the end of the week,” Pritzker spokeswoman Jordan Abudayyeh said.

* Speaking of which, the ING’s Twitter account remains on point. More agencies need to be doing rumor patrol…


* From the other day

The Illinois National Guard announced Monday that Governor JB Pritzker had activated about 115 additional Illinois National Guard Soldiers and Airmen in support of COVID-19 response operations.

About 80 of these additional Illinois National Guard members will help with communications and reporting between county health departments throughout the state and the State Emergency Operations Center. Another 30 Illinois National Guard Airmen will assist in the establishment of a medical facility at McCormick Place.

  7 Comments      


Question of the day

Wednesday, Apr 1, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My phone started buzzing loudly yesterday morning when I received this text…

State needs licensed healthcare workers to sign-up at IllinoisHelps.net to fight COVID-19

* The Question: What was your first reaction when you received that emergency alert?

  55 Comments      


Learn something new every day

Wednesday, Apr 1, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Um

A virtual press conference hosted by Chicago politicians was cut short after someone hijacked the conference call and started streaming pornographic images.

On Tuesday morning, Ald. Brian Hopkins (2nd), Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25th), and Illinois State Reps. Theresa Mah and Ann Williams held a private press conference with organizers, health officials and reporters on popular teleconferencing platform Zoom.

The leaders aimed to call on Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Gov. JB Pritzker to close metal scrappers polluting Chicago neighborhoods including General Iron in Lincoln Park and the Sims Metal Management in Pilsen, particularly because of the respiratory nature of COVID-19.

But 16 minutes into the Zoom chat, that push was interrupted by a person who said: “Yeah, I don’t care.”

As confusion set in, a pornographic video that included images of a woman who was not fully clothed began playing on the video call.

I work alone from home when the General Assembly is not in session and I’ve never used Zoom or anything like that until last week when several pals and I connected over some cocktails to celebrate a birthday. All of this is new to me.

* It could’ve been worse. From the FBI

As large numbers of people turn to video-teleconferencing (VTC) platforms to stay connected in the wake of the COVID-19 crisis, reports of VTC hijacking (also called “Zoom-bombing”) are emerging nationwide. The FBI has received multiple reports of conferences being disrupted by pornographic and/or hate images and threatening language.

Within the FBI Boston Division’s area of responsibility (AOR), which includes Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island, two schools in Massachusetts reported the following incidents:

    • In late March 2020, a Massachusetts-based high school reported that while a teacher was conducting an online class using the teleconferencing software Zoom, an unidentified individual(s) dialed into the classroom. This individual yelled a profanity and then shouted the teacher’s home address in the middle of instruction.
    • A second Massachusetts-based school reported a Zoom meeting being accessed by an unidentified individual. In this incident, the individual was visible on the video camera and displayed swastika tattoos.

As individuals continue the transition to online lessons and meetings, the FBI recommends exercising due diligence and caution in your cybersecurity efforts. The following steps can be taken to mitigate teleconference hijacking threats:

    • Do not make meetings or classrooms public. In Zoom, there are two options to make a meeting private: require a meeting password or use the waiting room feature and control the admittance of guests.
    • Do not share a link to a teleconference or classroom on an unrestricted publicly available social media post. Provide the link directly to specific people.
    • Manage screensharing options. In Zoom, change screensharing to “Host Only.”
    • Ensure users are using the updated version of remote access/meeting applications. In January 2020, Zoom updated their software. In their security update, the teleconference software provider added passwords by default for meetings and disabled the ability to randomly scan for meetings to join.
    • Lastly, ensure that your organization’s telework policy or guide addresses requirements for physical and information security.

  19 Comments      


COVID-19 roundup

Wednesday, Apr 1, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Lynn Sweet

Speaking from his backyard deck in Springfield, Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., said Wednesday that Gov. J.B. Pritzker is calling the CEOs of major airlines to organize an airlift to haul personal protection equipment from China to Illinois.

Durbin also said Pritzker told him about an Illinois company with COVID-19 supplies to sell — yet was “playing hard to get” while seeking a better price from another state for this equipment now referred to in shorthand simply as PPE. […]

In an interview on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” Durbin said, “I talk to the governor almost every day and yesterday he said he felt like a shipping clerk. He was calling the major airlines that he knew the CEOs to be available, asking and begging them to help Illinois secure goods from China, PPE from China. […]

Durbin said the Illinois company was profiteering on the disaster and that was “unacceptable.”

* Elena Ferrarin at the Daily Herald

Work to turn the shuttered Sherman Hospital site in Elgin into a facility for non-acute COVID-19 patients will take place as quickly as possible, officials said.

“We are in a race against time right now to see what we can get done in next three to four weeks as a relief valve for existing hospitals,” U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Col. Aaron Reisinger said Tuesday.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Chicago District has been assigned to work on the rehabilitation of three hospital sites, including the one in Elgin and MetroSouth Medical Center in Blue Island, Reisinger said.

* Cities have the right under the state disaster declaration to restrict access to any geographic area within their boundaries

Some Chicago police officers Tuesday were assigned to check the identification of anyone who wanted to enter four historically violent West Side blocks in an effort to tamp down gang gatherings.

Under the order, issued by Harrison District Cmdr. Darrell Spencer, only people who live on those blocks would be able to enter them.

Several police officers said they were hesitant to follow those orders out of concern that the directive was not constitutional. […]

“Following 89 dispersal orders in the 11th District on Monday alone, the Department temporarily closed certain streets as part of a strategic and public health effort to disrupt the open-air drug market in the area and prevent excessive gatherings of people,” Guglielmi said in a statement. “During this time, only residents who reside on the streets are permitted to enter while others are directed to alternative routes.”

It’s akin to sealing off areas that have been slammed by a hurricane. Whether it’s wise to do it in this instance is another story.

* Press release…

Mayor Lori E. Lightfoot today joined Governor JB Pritzker to announce a new ‘Arts for Illinois Relief Fund’ to provide financial assistance to artists, artisans and cultural organizations impacted by COVID-19. The fund is a partnership between the City of Chicago, the State of Illinois and the broader philanthropic community. Arts for Illinois Relief Fund is administered by Arts Alliance Illinois in partnership with 3Arts and Arts Work Fund. To date, more than $4M has been committed from public and private sources to seed an upcoming statewide campaign that will provide additional funding to meet the growing and critical needs of the state’s creative sector.

Grant applications for artists, artisans and cultural organizations open today. The City of Chicago’s Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events (DCASE) has contributed $1 million to the relief effort, along with leadership gifts from Walder Foundation and John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Fundraising activities will be co-chaired by First Lady MK Pritzker and First Lady Amy Eshleman, with support from other civic leaders. Individuals, corporations and charitable foundations are encouraged to donate to the Arts for Illinois Relief Fund by visiting www.artsforillinois.org.

* I’ve posted this UFCW press release before…

Local 881 workers must be designated as first responders for the remainder of the COVID-19 crisis. Governors in Minnesota, Michigan, and Vermont have taken this position, which will make retail workers eligible for free childcare, provide coverage for all coronavirus treatments, tests, and medicines if diagnosed or quarantined, and ensure that they have adequate access to PPE.

These minimum benefits come at a pivotal time as our members are working to sustain the food supply when demand is high, and schools are closed. Like the rest of us, grocery store, pharmacy, and food processing workers have children who are no longer attending school and are themselves at risk of getting sick. Everything must be done to ensure they can work and come home safely to their families.

I’ve been asking the governor’s office about it and received a reply yeserday afternoon…

The Governor is deeply grateful for the dedication our grocery store workers have displayed during this crisis. He is working with advocates and industry to ensure we’re implementing best practices to keep workers and consumers safe. National shortages in PPE have resulted in tough decisions being made between bad choices and less bad choices. The Governor is urging the federal government to step up, utilize the Defense Production Act, and work to end the national shortage of PPE we’re all dealing with.

So, the answer, apparently, is “No.”

* Related…

* U.S. emergency medical stockpile nearly out of protective gear as demand rises -officials

* A global ‘free-for-all’ to buy and sell face masks emerges amid coronavirus battle

* ‘They should assume their neighbors have it,’ officials say of COVID-19 pervasiveness

* County maps reveal suburban spread of coronavirus infections. Some of the highest numbers are in the northern suburbs.

* A crying doctor, patients gasping for air and limited coronavirus tests: A look inside a triage tent in Chicago

* Shuttered soup kitchens make life even tougher for homeless: ‘No sandwiches. No dinners. No nothing.’

* No layoffs in city government due to declining revenues and rising costs, Lightfoot says

* ‘Doing the best they can’: Southern Illinois towns give distance governing a go as COVID-19 limits interaction

* SIU culinary workers speak out about COVID-19 concerns after two students test positive

* Reaching Out in Crisis: 2 Altamont CNAs head to Chicago to aid COVID-19 patients

  25 Comments      


Tiny green shoots

Wednesday, Apr 1, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This is a hugely important step

Scientists are starting to roll out new blood tests for the coronavirus, a key development that, unlike the current diagnostic tests, will help pinpoint people who are immune and reveal the full scope of the pandemic.

The “serological” tests — which rely on drawn blood, not a nasal or throat swab — can identify people who were infected and have already recovered from Covid-19, including those who were never diagnosed, either because they didn’t feel particularly sick or they couldn’t get an initial test. Scientists expect those individuals will be safe from another infection for at least some time — so the tests could signal who could be prioritized to return to work or serve as a frontline health worker.

That story was from last week.

* Yesterday

Two US companies have launched a rapid antibody test for the coronavirus, which can be used to detect if a person’s immune system has Covid-19 or has recovered from it.

BD, a large medical technology company, and BioMedomics, a North Carolina-based clinical diagnostics company, announced a new point-of-care test that can detect evidence of past or present exposure to the virus in as little as 15 minutes.

But

BD plans to make a million tests available in the coming months, distributing through its partner healthcare supplies company Henry Schein.

Without a vaccine, the only way we can start getting people back to work after the peak is to find out who may be immune.

We need reliable tests and we need to get production scaled up fast. That’s why the Defense Procurement Act is so important in times like these

Invoking the Defense Production Act is hardly a rare occurrence. As recently as last summer, the Department of Defense used it to obtain rare earth metals needed to build lasers, jet engines and armored vehicles.

The Defense Department estimates that it has used the law’s powers 300,000 times a year. The Department of Homeland Security — including its subsidiary, FEMA — placed more than 1,000 so-called rated orders in 2018, often for hurricane and other disaster response and recovery efforts, according to a report submitted to Congress in 2019 by a committee of federal agencies formed to plan for the effective use of the law.

The law, which was used frequently by previous administrations as well, does not permit the federal government to assert complete control over a company. The federal government can, however, use it to jump ahead of other clients or issue loans so a company can buy all of the supplies it needs to complete the government’s order by a specific date. A rarely used authority of the law also allows the administration to control the distribution of a company’s products and determine where such materials go.

  15 Comments      


Support For Fair Maps Gains Momentum

Wednesday, Apr 1, 2020 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Leadership counts more than ever. Every voter’s voice is at risk if nothing is done to improve the remap process before May 3. Failure to improve redistricting will leave communities un- or under-represented.

CHANGE Illinois is proud to work with these organizations, and many others, in the Illinois Redistricting Collaborative.These are just some of the dozens of groups that have endorsed the Fair Maps Amendment (SJRCA18/HJRCA 41):

    ● Asian-Americans Advancing Justice – Chicago
    ● Chicago Coalition for the Homeless
    ● Chicago Urban League
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    ● Common Cause Illinois
    ● Indivisible Chicago
    ● John Howard Association
    ● Latino Policy Forum
    ● League of Women Voters Illinois
    ● Mujeres Latinas en Accion
    ● NAACP Chicago – South Side Branch
    ● National Rainbow PUSH Coalition
    ● Workers Center for Racial Justice

The Illinois Redistricting Collaborative includes 33 organizations fighting for a fair and equitable redistricting process. Gerrymandering is voter suppression. It needs to stop.

Lawmakers can stand with Illinois voters and our diverse, statewide coalition by sponsoring HJRCA41 and SJRCA18 and by calling on leadership to allow votes. Together, we can bring equity to Illinois representation.

Learn more by visiting changeil.org/get-involved.

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Is it starting to work?

Wednesday, Apr 1, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Lisa Schencker and Joe Mahr at the Tribune

The number of COVID-19 cases in Illinois could exceed 19,000 a little more than a week from now, according to a new analysis by experts at Rush — but that’s far less than the 147,000 cases the state could have seen by then if residents had not retreated to their homes. […]

The Rush calculator, which includes four growth models, projects how the number of Illinois cases might increase over the next week or so, depending on how fast the illness spreads. It also includes forecasts as far as 30 days out, but Hota said those more distant forecasts are far less reliable.

According to the calculator, Illinois could have expected to see 146,581 cases by April 9 if cases had continued growing at the fast pace seen earlier in March.

In the earlier stages of the illness’s spread, Rush University Medical Center saw a doubling of cases every two to three days, Hota said. But the growth rate in new cases has slowed, and the medical center is now seeing a doubling every five to six days.

However, testing is still spotty and private labs are overwhelmed and unable to provide timely results.

Just do your best and stay at home.

  7 Comments      


U of I won’t publish March Flash Index

Wednesday, Apr 1, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

For the first time in its quarter-century history, the University of Illinois Flash Index will not be published for March because the COVID-19 pandemic has compromised the components of the index. The index, which stood at 105.7 in February, is derived using receipts from the state’s sales tax, personal income tax and corporate income tax.

“The sudden, unprecedented near-shutdown of economic activity from the coronavirus is clearly causing huge, but as yet unmeasured, economic damage,” said economist J. Fred Giertz of the U of I System’s Institute of Government and Public Affairs, who has compiled the monthly Flash Index since 1997.

“The shutdowns and the stay-at-home orders clearly have had an immediate impact on economic activity that would show up in declining state tax receipts,” said Giertz. “However, the state’s response in granting deferrals in tax payments will further depress revenues for March.”

Due to the unexpected closures of businesses caused by the pandemic, the state provided extra time to pay sales taxes, and has conformed to federal changes that moved the personal and corporate income tax filing deadlines to July 15.

The value of the Flash Index has been the availability of nearly contemporaneous information about the economy from tax receipts, but the pandemic turned this advantage into a liability for the index, Giertz said. Adjustments have been made for ad hoc problems that have arisen in the past, but they were much more minor, affecting only one of the three kinds of tax receipts, he said.

“The saying ‘It’s different this time’ is almost always wrong. But this time, it’s accurate,” Giertz said. “The economic effects of the suddenness and severity of the current crisis are unprecedented and will take some time to understand fully.”

Wild times.

That most recent Flash Index of 105.7 was the ninth highest February rating since 1984 and the highest month since the beginning of 2017.

  1 Comment      


Controversial Champaign testing put on hold

Wednesday, Apr 1, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Yesterday

Dr. Tom Pliura, an independent physician, has obtained thousands of COVID-19 tests and will be offering tests to the public at a drive-through test site in Champaign starting at 9 a.m. Wednesday.

The tests will be available to anyone, he said. […]

Pliura, a LeRoy-based doctor and lawyer who owns CampusTown Urgent Care at 631 E. Green St., C, said he has 8,000 tests available to start, and can get 8,000 more. He’ll be working with two private labs, Quest and LabCorp, which will be processing the tests and turning around results — he expects within three-to-four days, he said.

That was such an odd story. How did he get those tests? And shouldn’t those tests be going to hospitals and first responders or where they are most needed? Plus, private testing labs are being widely criticized for taking on more tests than they can quickly process. The backlogs are enormous and growing, so how could he expect results in three or four days?

* Today

“In the interest of serving our local community, First Christian Church initially partnered with a local health care clinic to provide a mobile test site for COVID-19. After further conversation with the Champaign-Urbana Public Health District and medical officials, we have been advised to postpone this partnership.” […]

Champaign-Urbana Public Health District Administrator Julie Pryde said the church staff asked for her professional advice about going ahead with the drive-through, and she advised waiting until several questions that have been raised are answered.

“First of all, there is just no unfettered access to testing in this country,” she said.

“Among questions are tests done outside the guidelines, insurance coverage for testing and what people may wind up paying. Just because Dr. Tom Pliura has promised he won’t bill anyone without coverage doesn’t mean the private labs processing the tests won’t, she said. “There’s no reason they can’t hold off until the questions are answered,” she said.

  21 Comments      


Open thread

Wednesday, Apr 1, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the other day…


Ain’t that the truth.

As always, please be nice to each other and stick to Illinois topics. Thanks.

  17 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Wednesday, Apr 1, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

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*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Wednesday, Apr 1, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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