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US Rep. Rodney Davis has tested positive for COVID-19

Wednesday, Aug 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

U.S. Rep. Rodney Davis (R-Ill) released the following statement on his positive COVID-19 test:

“This morning, I tested positive for COVID-19. Since the beginning of this pandemic, I have taken my temperature twice daily because serving in Congress means I interact with many people, and it’s my duty to protect the health of those I serve. This morning, my temperature clocked in at 99 degrees Fahrenheit, which is higher than normal for me.

“Because of the high temperature, my wife and I received a test this morning. While my test came back positive, my wife’s test came back negative. My staff who I’ve worked with in-person this week have received negative tests as well. Other than a higher-than-normal temperature, I am showing no symptoms at this time and feel fine.

“Having consulted with the Office of the Attending Physician (OAP) of Congress and local county health officials, our office is contacting constituents I have met with in-person within the previous 48 hours, per CDC guidelines.

“My staff and I take COVID-19 very seriously. My wife is a nurse and a cancer survivor, which puts her in an at-risk category like so many Americans. My office and I have always followed and will continue to follow CDC guidelines, use social distancing, and wear masks or face coverings when social distancing cannot be maintained.

“I will postpone public events our office has planned for the coming days until I receive a negative test. I will continue to serve my constituents virtually from home while I quarantine. Our district offices throughout central and southwestern Illinois remain open for constituents as well.

“During these challenging times, protecting the public health is my highest priority. If you’re out in public, use social distancing, and when you can’t social distance, please wear a mask. All of us must do our part. That’s what it will take to get through this pandemic.”

Get well soon, Rodney.

…Adding… A bit of context…


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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to Tuesday’s edition

Wednesday, Aug 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Why is HFS still stonewalling?

Wednesday, Aug 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Here are the broad guidelines for the state’s Business Enterprise Program (BEP)

• At least 51 percent owned and controlled by persons who are minority, women or designated as disabled

• Must be a United States citizen or resident alien

• Annual gross sales of less than $75 million

Rep. Chris Welch, who chairs the House Executive Committee, has been asking the Department of Healthcare and Family Services to provide him BEP spending by Managed Care Organizations. The department has sent him the overall numbers, but Welch wants those numbers broken down by category (race, gender and disabled).

Welch sent HFS Director Theresa Eagleson this polite yet firm letter a couple of days ago asking for more information. He has yet to hear back…

Director Eagleson,

Thank you for your response to my request for information. It was not exactly what I was requesting, but it provided some initial insight into the BEP spending by MCOs. I think we would both agree that while there has been some progress in the last year, compliance is woefully inadequate.

I would like to take this opportunity to commend you and your staff for taking steps to increase compliance with the BEP requirements. Your letter to the MCOs was direct and expressed the necessary urgency. It’s a solid beginning. My goal is to work with you to resolve this issue. Together, we can help develop a new generation of minority entrepreneurs.

I would appreciate some additional information to help me better understand the scope of the problem. In particular, I would like to be provided the following:

    1. The BEP spend for each MCO by breakdown of the subgoals in the contract: minority-owned, female-owned, disability

    2. All BEP Utilization Plans and letters of intent for each MCO provided to HFS from January 1, 2018 to present. Please also include any waivers that have been granted or any other communication between HFS and the MCOs regarding BEP for same time period.

    3. Outreach and Special Initiatives Document (or deck/document in any form) for each MCO from January 1, 2018 to present (includes but not limited to the contracting activity, report on subcontracts, progress towards overall contract goal, outcomes, etc.

    4. The MLR calculations, including but not limited to the administrative percentage, for each MCO for FY18, FY19, & FY20. Pursuant to 305 ILCS 5/5-30.1 the MCO MLR info is supposed to be on the website, but I just haven’t been able to find it. Thank you!

    5. All quarterly reports to DCMS (or HFS) from the MCOs reporting in on BEP vendor payments for FY18, FY19 & FY20. As you know, I have been frustrated by the lack of timely response to my request for information.

    6. The actuarial certification or other documents showing the “administrative allowance” calculation of the capitation. The contracts look like the BEP is only applied to the “administrative allowance”. It would be helpful if you please list both “care management” and “healthcare quality initiatives” amounts separately for each MCO. Please also provide everything that has been excluded from the calculation.

    7. You provided the compliance letter HFS sent to BCBS. Can you please provide the corresponding letters you sent to each of the other MCO’s.

As you know, I have been frustrated by the lack of timely response to my request for information. It took 4 weeks just to get the chart your staff provided on Friday. I would hope that this request would be provided in a more timely manner. In the interest of time, please provide these documents as you get them, rather than waiting for the full package to send at one time

As evidenced by your letter to the MCOs, you feel as strongly about this issue as many of us in the Black Caucus. I am anxious to work with you to achieve our mutual goals by bringing the MCO’s into full compliance.

Sincerely,

Emanuel Chris Welch
State Representative - 7th District

Gov. Pritzker has repeatedly said he wants to help create wealth in Black and Brown communities. The BEP program is one way the state can do that, but we have no way of measuring its effectiveness unless and until state agencies start releasing this information. And it cannot be successful if agencies like HFS don’t start enforcing the contracts and clawing back the money which isn’t spent through BEP participants, which apparently isn’t being done.

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Pritzker: “I can’t imagine” COVID-19 vaccine mandate for schools

Wednesday, Aug 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The governor was asked today whether a COVID-19 vaccine (if/when it is developed) would be mandatory for students who want to return to school

No, I can’t imagine that. What I do think is that once a vaccine is available, I think many, many people will want to get vaccinated. We obviously want to get to herd immunity. We have for example with the measles vaccine just to give you an idea about, I think 95% coverage in the state of Illinois, people actually getting the measles vaccine measles vaccine or at least above 90, actually I think we’re at 98.

Um, vaccines are already mandatory for public school attendance. Why wouldn’t this one be?

…Adding… It has been pointed out that there’s no vaccine testing being done on children and the approval process for kids could take longer. Still.

  27 Comments      


Question of the day

Wednesday, Aug 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Mary Schmich…

Every mask tells a story. What’s yours?

Obviously, this question presumes that you have a mask and use it, in which case, you’re not the prime target for the new Illinois ad campaign that comes with the slogan “It Only Works if You Wear It.” The $5 million campaign, which the governor announced Monday, is aimed at the mask resisters, the legions whose behavior is one reason a killer virus continues to stalk the land.

But if you do wear a mask when you should — generally indoors in public spaces, outdoors when you can’t keep proper social distance — you probably have a story, and that story makes the mask easier to wear. You can recount where you got it, when and why, maybe who made it.

“What’s the story of your mask?” I often ask people. It’s a good conversation starter, and I always learn something about the person that goes beyond the mask, often something about their relatives, friends, passions.

* The Question: Do you have a story about your mask(s)?

  44 Comments      


Archdiocese of Chicago plans to reopen schools for in-person learning

Wednesday, Aug 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* As we discussed yesterday, CPS has decided to start the school year with remote learning. Catholic schools in the city, however, are taking a much different approach…

August 5, 2020

Dear Catholic School Parents and Guardians,

This morning, Chicago Public Schools (CPS) announced a change in their planned reopening of school buildings. They have chosen to conduct classes via full-time remote learning for the first 10 weeks of the fall.

The Archdiocese of Chicago believes strongly that our reopening plan, which provides for full-time in-person learning, is in the best interests of children and our mission. In-person learning is essential for the intellectual, emotional, physical and spiritual growth of our students. Our reopening plan maximizes the safety of our students and employees while allowing the resumption of in-person learning. It is therefore our intention to remain committed to our plan to offer five-day, in-person learning in addition to a remote, e-learning, option for those students who are unable or whose parents are unwilling to return to classrooms.

In designing our reopening plan, we consulted guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as well as input on safely reopening and important mitigation efforts from the Chicago Department of Public Health (CDPH), state health officials and infectious disease experts on our own task force. CDPH has recognized that our school system is different from CPS and supports our specific plan to reopen. If this guidance were to change, we would adjust our plan accordingly.

In the meantime, schools are working hard to implement health and safety requirements ahead of the start of the year. Schools are also preparing a virtual learning option with support from the Archdiocese. More information about virtual learning will be released to parents in the days ahead.

I realize this is a time of anxiety and stress. Know that we deeply care about the needs of our child and are looking forward to the year to come. If you have questions, I encourage you to contact your school’s principal or the Archdiocese at ReopenSchools@archchicago.org.

Thank you for your partnership and trust.

Yours in Christ,

Jim Rigg, Ph.D.
Superintendent of Catholic Schools
Archdiocese of Chicago

* In related news…

Illinois Federation of Teachers President Dan Montgomery released the following statement on Chicago Public Schools’ decision to start the 2020-2021 school year remotely:

“We applaud the Chicago Teachers Union for their continued dedication to students, teachers, and the community. Their commitment to equity and justice prevented Chicago schools from becoming COVID-19 hot spots.

“COVID-19 lifted the veil on the disparities that exist among our students and families, especially our Black and Brown students, who have been disproportionately impacted by the virus. The decision to start the 2020 school year remotely presents many challenges, but it is the safest path for our students, teachers, and staff as COVID-19 cases are surging in Chicago. This moment requires stability and equity for our families and children, so we call on the Chicago Public Schools to provide wide broadband access and devices. We acknowledge that remote learning will create logistical and financial challenges for thousands of Chicago parents. For this reason, we continue to ask that all educational institutions work to identify the families that need childcare and work to provide opportunities with local partners and organizations in helping fill gaps during the instructional day.

“We call on Illinois school districts to follow Chicago’s lead and base their decision on science. In the current environment, the safest option for students and staff is to start school remotely.”

* Also from the IFT…

Hundreds of faculty, staff, and students from 42 Illinois institutions logged on to Zoom last night to participate in a virtual town hall hosted by a coalition of higher education unions statewide. The hour-and-a-half conversation included a presentation and commentary by a panel of expert scientists followed by a Q&A session.

John Miller, President of the University Professionals of Illinois, IFT Local 4100, and an organizer of the event was sympathetic but frank: “The desire to return to normal should not take the place of science.” Columbia Faculty Association President and event organizer Diana Vallera introduced the purpose of the event: “To ensure faculty, staff, students, and parents have the scientific information needed… so that we can all make informed decisions when it comes to safety.” Vallera also had good news to share on Columbia College specifically: after major collective action on the part of the CFAC union, college administration announced new safety measures and the movement of more classes to an online setting. “This is a start,” said Vallera.

  42 Comments      


A sea of red ink

Wednesday, Aug 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Peter Hancock at Capitol News Illinois

Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza is adding her voice to those warning that the state will face dire consequences if the federal government does not approve an economic aid package for state and local governments. […]

Mendoza, a Democrat who has served as comptroller since December 2016, noted that the state began the fiscal year on July 1 with a backlog of past-due bills totaling nearly $5.4 billion. But that was only because the state borrowed $1.2 billion from the Federal Reserve’s Municipal Liquidity Facility – money that has to be paid back in its entirety, with 3.52-percent interest, during the current fiscal year that ends June 30, 2021.

She also noted that the state has borrowed another $400 million from the state treasurer’s office and the state’s general revenue fund still owes about $763 million that it borrowed from other funds in previous years, which has to be repaid in installments through 2024.

She said the total amount due in the current fiscal year between borrowing from the Fed, the treasurer’s office and interfund borrowing is $1.63 billion.

* House GOP Leader Jim Durkin spoke at an online Paul Simon Public Policy Institute event yesterday

Durkin faulted Pritzker and majority Democrats for pushing ahead on a new state budget that relies on $5 billion in borrowing from the Federal Reserve while lacking significant spending cuts to reflect the economy’s decline due to the pandemic.

“We should not have spent at that level the governor asked for, plain and simple. You don’t ask for more spending when you are in an economic downturn, and that is my biggest fault with the governor and how he’s handled the economics of the state during this crisis,” he said.

“I’m not sure how we’re going to repay that $5 billion that was taken out unless the feds come back and bail us out on that, but I don’t expect that anytime soon,” Durkin said, reflecting deadlocked talks between congressional Democrats and Republicans on a new coronavirus relief package.

Borrowing that money was a gigantic risk on the governor’s part. No doubt about it. But economic downturns are precisely when government spending is so important. We found that out the hard way during the Great Recession when inadequate federal aid to states and cities made the economic problems worse.

So, hopefully the leader has called his congressional allies and asked them to help out his state. Maybe the governor could pick up the phone and ask him.

  34 Comments      


1,759 new cases, 30 additional deaths, 3.9 percent positivity rate

Wednesday, Aug 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) today announced 1,759 new confirmed cases of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Illinois, including 30 additional confirmed deaths.

    Carroll County: 1 male 80s
    Clark County: 1 male 60s
    Coles County: 1 female 80s
    Cook County: 1 male 40s, 3 males 60s, 2 males 70s, 1 female 80s, 1 female 90s
    DuPage County: 2 females 80s
    Gallatin County: 1 male 70s
    Jefferson County: 1 female 70s, 1 female 80s
    Kane County: 1 male 50s, 1 female 70s, 1 male 80s
    Lake County; 1 female 40s, 1 male 70s, 1 male 80s
    LaSalle County 1 male 90s
    Rock Island County: 1 female 80s
    St. Clair County: 1 female 40s, 1 male 50s, 1 female 90s
    Union County: 1 female 70s
    Will County: 1 male 50s
    Winnebago County: 1 male 90s

Currently, IDPH is reporting a total of 186,471 cases, including 7,573 deaths, in 102 counties in Illinois. The age of cases ranges from younger than one to older than 100 years. Within the past 24 hours, laboratories have reported 46,668 specimens for a total of 2,896,063. The preliminary seven-day statewide positivity for cases as a percent of total test from July 29 – August 4 is 3.9%. As of last night, 1,552 people in Illinois were reported to be in the hospital with COVID-19. Of those, 368 patients were in the ICU and 129 patients with COVID-19 were on ventilators.

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Illinois Supreme Court transfers several DeVore cases to Sangamon County

Wednesday, Aug 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The governor filed the motion to consolidate the cases

This cause coming to be heard on the motion of movant, Jay Robert Pritzker, due notice having been given, and the Court being fully advised in the premises;

IT IS ORDERED that the motion to transfer and consolidate pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 384 is allowed.

Pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 384, Kirk Allen et al. v. Governor Jay Robert Pritzker, etc., Edgar County No. 20 MR 45, Thomas DeVore v. Governor Jay Robert Pritzker, etc., Bond County No. 20 MR 32, Steve Gorazd et al. v. Governor Jay Robert Pritzker, etc., Clinton County No. 20 MR 79, and Daniel English v. Governor Jay Robert Pritzker, etc., Richland County No. 20 MR 48, are transferred to the Circuit Court of Sangamon County and consolidated with Riley Craig et al. v. Governor Jay Robert Pritzker, etc., Sangamon County No. 20 MR 589.

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ComEd pleads not guilty

Wednesday, Aug 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Megan Crepeau and Jason Meisner at the Tribune

ComEd pleaded not guilty to an expansive federal bribery charge Wednesday during what will likely be its final court hearing until 2023.

The plea was a formality, since the company has entered an agreement to defer prosecution. ComEd will pay a record $200 million fine and cooperate in the ongoing probe of its lobbying practices in Springfield in exchange for the charges being dropped at the end of the agreement period.

* More…


…Adding… Steve Daniels at Crain’s

Exelon CEO Chris Crane said [yesterday] the company will decide early next year whether to close nuclear plants in Illinois, even as he acknowledged the company’s standing in Springfield had been damaged by the revelations of corruption at its Commonwealth Edison unit.

Crane in his comments during the quarterly earnings call with analysts attempted to walk a line between contrition for ComEd’s recent acknowledgements of paying off close associates and lieutenants of House Speaker Michael Madigan and the pressure tactics he’s used before to win state support for subsidies.

“We will not run plants and lose free cash flow or earnings on assets that are not supporting themselves,” Crane said.

“It’s reality,” he added. “We’ve shut two units down in recent years if we could not see a path to sustainability of those assets in the portfolio. Not the greatest decisions we’ve ever had to make, and we understand the impact of that on communities we serve and the environmental goals and economic impact of the states. But maintaining an investment grade (rating) that can support the remaining facilities is our main focus.”

Good luck with that, dude.

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*** UPDATED x1 - Pritzker responds *** Will County judge says Clay County rulings “bereft of any meaningful legal analysis,” as Rep. Bailey asks Clay County judge to hold Pritzker in contempt, toss him in jail

Wednesday, Aug 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* June

A group of landlords have accused Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker of overstepping his authority by extending his hold on evictions statewide amid the COVID-19 pandemic. The landlords say Pritzker has illegally interfered with their private contracts, unconstitutionally seized their property, and forced them to subsidize housing for tenants – including some who simply have refused to pay. […]

In short, the landlords said, the public health emergency that was used to justify the eviction moratorium no longer exists, or at least has abated to the point that the moratorium should now be considered illegal.

In addition, the plaintiffs claimed the evictions moratorium exceeded the governor’s authority.

* Circuit Judge John Anderson has ruled against the plaintiffs. The copy I have doesn’t allow for copy and paste, so I’ll summarize.

Judge Anderson noted that five federal judges and “virtually every” Illinois state court judge have upheld the governor’s authority to issue the executive orders. Just one judge, in Clay County, has ruled against the governor.

Anderson then went on to write that the Clay County judge’s rulings are “bereft of any meaningful legal analysis, and are wholly unpersuasive for that reason.” He also pointed out that the Clay County judge’s rulings, “like other trial court rulings,” aren’t binding on his court.

Heh.

The judge then went on to explain why he felt the other rulings by judges outside Clay County were persuasive and rejected the plaintiffs’ motion for a temporary injunction on all but one count, which he said didn’t look like a strong argument. It’s worth a read.

* Now, on to Clay County

Illinois Governor JB Pritzker is now facing an Indirect Civil Contempt Motion in the Darren Bailey lawsuit to include a request he be placed in custody in the county jail.

The motion is based on the fact the Governor has ignored the Court’s prior orders and continues to issue Executive Orders as it relates to COVID-19.

The motion requests that Pritzker “be placed in temporary custody within the Clay County Jail until he purges himself by rescinding the above-mentioned executive orders.”

*** UPDATE *** The governor was asked about the Clay County filing today

All I can say is the rulings out of Clay County have been ridiculous. There’s no other court that has ruled as they have on the matter that they ruled on. And in fact there’s a judge on Friday who specifically pointed to Clay County and said that the decision by that judge was bereft of any legal analysis. And I think that’s accurate.

  45 Comments      


Treasurer returned $1 billion in unclaimed property over past five years

Wednesday, Aug 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I checked and the amount of unclaimed property returned by the treasurer’s office during the previous five years was $700 million. So, this is a significant increase…

A record-shattering $1 billion in unclaimed property has been returned to Illinoisans and their families in the past five years, Illinois State Treasurer Michael Frerichs said today.

It is the most that has been returned in any five-year period in the program’s 58-year history.

“Government needs to work smarter. The numbers show our improvements to the unclaimed property program created a faster, better, and more efficient service,” Frerichs said.

Unclaimed property refers to property or accounts within financial institutions or companies in which there typically has been no activity for several years. In Illinois, the state treasurer is tasked with safeguarding unclaimed property, such as unpaid life insurance benefits, forgotten bank accounts and unused rebate cards. The state treasurer is legally required to return the property to the rightful owners no matter how long it takes.

Frerichs inherited a cumbersome, paper-driven system upon becoming treasurer in 2015. The $1 billion milestone was possible because Frerichs prioritized changes in technology, efficiency and state law to streamline the unclaimed property process, which also is known as I Cash. Key to these enhancements was securing bi-partisan support to change state law. This included enacting Money Match, which allows the automatic processing of one-owner claims of up to $2,000 when records confirm the claimant’s identity and connection to the property.

“While $1 billion is a significant achievement that only could be obtained by working collaboratively with our staff and state lawmakers, it is the stories behind the unclaimed property that I find most memorable,” Frerichs said.

    • A Chicago-area woman adopted two children after their family perished in an auto accident. Years later, the state treasurer’s office obtained more than one hundred thousand dollars for the woman after auditors discovered an unpaid life insurance policy.

    • A Chicago man, World War II Army veteran and life-long bachelor left nearly $2 million to several Chicago-area philanthropies. These monies were from an investment account that languished because the decorated soldier’s surviving family members passed away before he did.

    • The Carver Community Center in Peoria received $19,000 from The (Richard) Pryor Foundation. The legendary comic is a Peoria native who spent time at the Carver Center as a youth.

    • Orphans of the Storm animal shelter in Riverwoods received $19,000, nearly all of it from the life insurance policy of a Rolling Meadows woman who worked as a secretary at Ford Motor Company.

    • Monument of Faith Evangelistic Church in Chicago received $38,000 from a church member’s life insurance policy.

An estimated one-in-four people in Illinois have unclaimed property. Currently, there is more than $3.5 billion in the unclaimed property fund. Individuals can search the state treasurer’s database for their name or the name of their business or non profit atwww.illinoistreasurer.gov/ICASH. Because unclaimed property is surrendered to the treasurer’s office twice each year, it is recommended individuals check the database twice each year; for example, on a birthday and six months later.

The guy takes this program seriously.

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Protected: *** UPDATED x1 *** SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Aug 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Unclear on the concept

Wednesday, Aug 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Southern

According to IDES, the scam involves filing unemployment claims using false identities and then attempting to have the payment method switched from the debit cards that people receive when they qualify for benefits to a direct deposit account to which scammers have access.

On July 6, the FBI reported that, “U.S. citizens from several states have been victimized by criminal actors impersonating the victims and using the victims’ stolen identities to submit fraudulent unemployment insurance claims online.” Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul and U.S. Rep. Mike Bost are among those who have received prepaid debit cards issued by KeyBank who didn’t apply for unemployment benefits. […]

[Rep. Terri Bryant, R-Murphysboro] said she asks herself if the fraud cases are actually spread throughout all 50 states or if they are in states where Deloitte holds the contract for the unemployment assistance tools. “I cannot get that question answered,” she said.

Well, maybe if you’d stop asking yourself and ask the Google or something you’d get an answer, Representative.

This has nothing to do with the state website or system contractor. The contractor isn’t being hacked. The victims’ identities were already stolen and those identities are then used to apply for unemployment benefits. She’s putting the cart before the horse here.

* From the FBI

The FBI has seen a spike in fraudulent unemployment insurance claims complaints related to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic involving the use of stolen personally identifiable information (PII).

U.S. citizens from several states have been victimized by criminal actors impersonating the victims and using the victims’ stolen identities to submit fraudulent unemployment insurance claims online. The criminals obtain the stolen identity using a variety of techniques, including the online purchase of stolen PII, previous data breaches, computer intrusions, cold-calling victims while using impersonation scams, email phishing schemes, physical theft of data from individuals or third parties, and from public websites and social media accounts, among other methods. Criminal actors will use third parties or persuade individuals who are victims of other scams or frauds to transfer fraudulent funds to accounts controlled by criminals.

Many victims of identity theft related to unemployment insurance claims do not know they have been targeted until they try to file a claim for unemployment insurance benefits, receive a notification from the state unemployment insurance agency, receive an IRS Form 1099-G showing the benefits collected from unemployment insurance, or get notified by their employer that a claim has been filed while the victim is still employed.

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Is it time to rethink the way we’re testing people?

Wednesday, Aug 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Harvard Magazine

“At the moment, the United States has no semblance of public-health testing” for the coronavirus, says Michael Mina, an assistant professor of epidemiology at both Harvard Medical School and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. What does Mina—an expert in viral testing protocols—mean by that?

Current tests for active infection with SARS-CoV-2 are highly sensitive—but most are given to suspected COVID-19 patients long after the infected person has stopped transmitting the virus to others. That means the results are virtually useless for public-health efforts to contain the raging pandemic. These PCR (polymerase chain reaction) tests, which amplify viral RNA to detectable levels, are used by physicians, often in hospital settings, to help guide clinical care for individual patients. In general, members of the public have not had access to such tests outside clinical settings, but even if they did, would find them too expensive for frequent use.

Furthermore, such tests detect tiny fragments of viral RNA even after the patient has recovered. Mina says that means “the vast majority of PCR positive tests we currently collect in this country are actually finding people long after they have ceased to be infectious.” In that sense, a positive result can be misleading, because the results can’t be relied on to guide the epidemiological efforts of public-health officials, which are focused on preventing transmission and controlling outbreaks: “The astounding realization is that all we’re doing with all of this testing is clogging up the testing infrastructure,” with results arriving a week or more after tests are administered, “and essentially finding people for whom we can’t even act because they are done transmitting.” In fact the testing backlog is so dire, and so “absolutely horrendously useless as a system for public-health surveillance,” that Mina believes the United States should at the very least throw away the millions and millions of samples that are waiting to be tested—and perhaps even halt the current testing regime and just start over.

“We need to change the whole script of what it means to test people,” he says. “In our country, we have always assumed that testing belongs in the clinical sphere, in the diagnostic sphere, and has to be run by laboratories or diagnosticians. The result is that we have a system for coronavirus testing…which is flailing, with raging outbreaks occurring.” What the country needs instead are rapid tests, widely deployed, so that infectious individuals can be readily self-identified and isolated, breaking the chain of transmission.

To do that, Mina says, everyone must be tested, every couple of days, with $1, paper-based, at-home tests that are as easy to distribute and use as a pregnancy test: wake up in the morning, add saliva or nasal mucous to a tube of chemicals, wait 15 minutes, then dip a paper strip in the tube, and read the results. Such tests are feasible—a tiny company called E25Bio, and another called Sherlock Biosciences (a start-up spun out of Harvard’s Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering and the Broad Institute in 2019) can deliver such tests—but they have not made it to the marketplace because their sensitivity is being compared to that of PCR tests.

Mina says that is beside the point. “Imagine you are a fire department,” he says, “and you want to make sure that you catch all the fires that are burning so you can put them out. You don’t want a test that’s going to detect every time somebody lights a match in their house—that would be crazy: you’d be driving everywhere and having absolutely no effect. You want a test that can detect every time somebody is walking the streets with a flame-thrower.”

Go read the rest.

* Meanwhile

Most classes at Illinois State University will be online-only when the fall semester begins later this month, officials announced Tuesday.

President Larry Dietz said in an email to students and faculty that the university learned late last week it would not receive some testing equipment and supplies that were expected before classes started. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services “reallocated” the equipment and supplies to other agencies, he said. HHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday.

Yeah, that federal government. Always doing the right thing by the people. Yep.

  27 Comments      


Cairo finally gets its due

Wednesday, Aug 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WPSD

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker made several stops in southern Illinois on Tuesday. One of those stops was in Cairo, where the governor announced the state will provide $40 million through the Rebuild Illinois capital plan for a port at the confluence of the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers.

Cairo has been working on the port development for eight years. Now, the community is one step closer to making the project a reality. The port project is expected to create at least 500 jobs and bring in more than $100 million in economic activity.

The development will be one of the largest investments in southern Illinois in decades. Leaders hope the project will make Cairo a national hub for the shipping industry.

“This port project has the potential to represent the very best of our state’s future. This is more than just a port. It’s fuel for new jobs and economic prosperity all across the region. A region that’s been left out and left behind for far too long,” said Pritzker.

* The Southern

Pritzker and State Sen. Dale Fowler, R-Harrisburg, said there were real dollars coming with Tuesdays announcement. Fowler remarked that the port project is a real line item in the state’s recently-passed capitol bill, which allots funds for various development and improvement projects throughout the state.

Immediately, the state will give $4 million in grants for the project, but a total of $40 million has been allocated to fund the design and development of a river port that has been in the works for nearly a decade. This is about $35 million short of the $75 million that was hoped for, but, as previously reported by The Southern, the rest will be leveraged by private investors. […]

[Pritzker] added that 80% of the country’s river traffic passes by Cairo every day, making it an ideal shipping and transportation hub.

Fowler, since being elected to his seat in 2016, has taken Cairo’s revitalization as a personal project. He has said on more than one occasion, Tuesday included, that the port will be a shot in the arm not just to the city but for the region. A total of 500 direct jobs will be generated when the project is complete, Fowler and Pritzker said Tuesday.

Sen. Fowler deserves so much credit for pushing this project forward. While the concept predates his legislative service, he’s turning it into a reality. He’s a throwback to a time when southern Illinois politicians worked hard to bring things back to their districts. And Cairo isn’t exactly Republican turf. Good for him.

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* Perhaps I’m being overly optimistic. Your thoughts?

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