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Pritzker praises volunteers - Dr. Ezike bemoans “significant increase in calls to the Illinois Poison Center” - “Injecting, ingesting, snorting household cleaners is dangerous” - Ezike says state ran 11,985 tests in last 24 hours - Dr. Ezike asked about rumors - Encourages those who’ve had it to donate plasma - Reporter asks question posed by front group - Yet another question about summertime activities - Asked about boating - Ezike says she’s looking at allowing drive-in theaters - Pritzker counters WIND reporter: “We actually never closed dentists or doctors offices” - Says lakefront and city golf reopening is up to mayor - Reporter mischaracterizes memo - Says why county-by-county approach won’t work - Still no humidity guidance - Talks about limitations on rapid test machines - Says workers’ comp commission revisiting emergency rule - Deflects gotcha question on Trump - Dr. Ezike again explains nursing home reporting system - No housecalls for hairdressers - Says it’s possible state could allow independent pharmacies to do tests - Pleads for more federal help for small businesses

Saturday, Apr 25, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. JB Pritzker began his briefing today urging Illinoisans to fill out their Census forms online. He then went on to plug the state’s Call for Calm hotline. The governor also singled out several local groups to praise them for stepping up during the crisis. “Today marks the last day of National Volunteer Week,” the governor said. “And I want to honor the thousands of volunteers across the state,” including Kimee Armour of Auburn, who was profiled in the SJ-R yesterday.

Dr. Ezike

Following the governor’s charge to make sure that we have more and more testing in the state of Illinois, Riverside Healthcare has stepped up and is offering free COVID-19 testing to residents of Pembroke township in Kankakee County on Tuesday, April 28, and Sun River Terrace on Friday, May 1.

Pembroke township and sun river terrace residents can contact Riverside healthcare to make an appointment and get themselves tested.

Remember to pardon all transcription errors.

* And then Ezike went on to say this…

I hate to have to do this, but I’d like to address some of the myths, rumors and general misinformation about how to protect yourself from COVID-19 injecting, ingesting, snorting household cleaners is dangerous. It is not advised and can be deadly.

In the past two days there’s been a significant increase in calls to the Illinois Poison Center, compared to this same time last year, associated with exposures to cleaning agents. Some recent examples include the use of a detergent solution for a sinus rinse and gargling with a bleach and mouthwash mouthwash mixture in an attempt to kill coronavirus. […]

Please do not try home remedies that involve ingesting cleaners or disinfectants.

* Hospitalization and testing numbers…

As of midnight, 4699 individuals were hospitalized with COVID-19. Of those roughly a quarter or 1244 patients were in the ICU, and of those in the ICU there were 763 who were on ventilators. […]

Over the last 24 hours we ran 11,985 tests. We have been ramping up testing. This will allow us to make more informed decisions moving forward. So for now, let’s continue to join together, not literally, of course, and follow the science that shows that social distancing or physical distancing does work.

* On to questions for the governor and Dr. Ezike. The first one is based on a couple of rumors: We received a tip today that a nurse at UIC hospital has died from COVID-19 complications and that another nurse is now in the ICU who works there. Also, the tipster said that 35% of hospital staff inside UIC has tested positive. Have you heard anything about the situation?…

Dr. Ezike: I don’t know about these recent developments that you shared. My heart is going out to the family of those who have recently lost their struggle, especially people who have put their lives, to try to save others. We know that we’ve had thousands of healthcare workers who are among the positives and we’ve had deaths in our healthcare workforce.

It’s a sad and sobering truth that the people who are doing the most to protect the society as a whole are also falling victim, and so we think we thank them and we also be praying for the family members who are going to be affected by this loss as well as the whole medical community.

* A patient at alexian brothers Medical Center, I believe it’s Hoffman estates. We were told that he was part of a new trial of the convalescent plasma therapy and that the doctor said that he really had a big turnaround. What are your thoughts at this point on using plasma as a potential treatment and if that goes well, how would we implement something like that on a broad level?…

I think all of us are just hoping that we can find a cure sooner rather than later. We know that that will help limit the amount of lives lost, the morbidity, so we’re supportive of all the trials that are going on whether it’s IV medicines, oral medicines or whether it’s going to involve plasma and the antibodies from people. So, again we have recommended and we still recommend that people go to a blood center. If people who feel that they had the disease or maybe confirm that they have this disease, if they can go to a blood donation center and are willing to donate their blood that will help more studies and more research to be done on on their on the plasma to see if these antibodies can be an important part of our treatment arsenal.

* The Illinois Business Alliance is urging you to pull the graduated income tax off the November ballot saying that, you know, businesses being shut down now that once they’re allowed to reopen they’ve been hit so hard that implementing that graduated tax would hurt them even more. What are your thoughts on that? [That group is not an established organization, by the way.]…

They don’t fully understand how income taxes work. You only pay income taxes based upon getting net income. And so it is certainly true that people have much lower net income this year as a result of the economic challenge that COVID-19 has brought to everybody. Companies included. And so, that’s my response. People are not, you know people who are either going to break even or lose money this year won’t pay any income tax and people who make less than they would normally would pay a lower income tax. And then I finally would say that actually I think as I said before now more than ever, we need to have a fair tax system for the state of Illinois.

* Yet another question about summer activities and sports…

I’m anxious to find out the answers to those things, but those answers just aren’t clear yet. And I know that everybody would like a definitive answer. Believe me I wish I had one, even if I brought the two doctors behind me, and others here I don’t think that they could fully answer that question. But I’m working very hard to try to move us forward with testing and contact tracing so that we can begin to open things up.

* We had heard some people wanting clarification on the boating, that’s going to be allowed starting May 1, two people per vessel, people were wondering. Is that two unrelated people what if it’s say husband wife and kids that all live in the same home, can there be more than two people in the boat if they are direct family members?…

[He answered and then went back to clarify.] It is restricted to two people per boat You can’t have five people or 10 people in a boat. It is restricted to two, but not necessarily restricted as to whether they’re related to one another.

* A very long question about drive-in movie theaters…

Dr. Ezike: We’re still looking at that. I actually have been thinking about that and we’re trying to find ways that people can get some level of normalcy back. We know that the hardship that this really necessary measure, and the extension of it, what it has done to people. So we’re working really hard trying to think through, trying to take creative solutions in terms of how we can make things available to people without putting additional people at risk and so we’re not actually done thinking about tha,t because potentially there is a way to do this, you know maybe with no concession stands, nobody coming up to the window. So I’m really still trying to think about that and really trying to see how we can make people have a little bit of the comforts that they’re used to while keeping everyone safe.

* The Illinois State dental society has sent you a letter asking to be considered an essential business. Since you need a dental exam before some elective surgeries are you considering letting them reopen?…

We actually never closed dentists or doctors offices in the EO. They have the ability to operate but, I know that many dentists have chosen not to open because the challenge, as I understand, having talked to a dentist about this is that the aerosolization of someone’s saliva when they’re being worked on makes it very difficult to protect the dentist and therefore, many dentists have just been open only for emergency dentistry.

* On May 1 you’ll allow Illinois to fish classical open golf courses, does that mean parts of the lakefront will reopen, can voters use Lake Michigan and can people golf at Waveland?…

That entirely will be up to the city of Chicago, to the mayor.

* Greg Bishop says a memo to the appellate prosecutor says their deputy director says is less than confident in your order to close businesses, block church services and other restrictions without legal muster. [That’s actually not true. The letter was simply telling state’s attorneys what they might expect in lawsuits. I’ll get to it tomorrow.] Are these restrictions and the coming orders things you’ll enforce with criminal penalties or are these guidelines?…

Well they’re part of an executive order, they are enforceable although as you have heard me say time and time again, Greg. I have suggested that people should simply self police and that certainly law enforcement officers have the ability, and I would encourage them to remind people of what their obligations are

* Under what circumstances would you consider a county by county or regional approach to reopening?…

Remember, the coronavirus does not have boundaries that it follows. So, therefore, this idea of saying county by county isn’t a, it’s a sort of a false narrative.

Instead what I would say is that infection rates, how fast is the virus moving, what’s the doubling time, these are all things that need to be looked at because you could have a sparsely populated county where infections are doubling very frequently and in fact there are in Illinois infection rates in certain counties that are at a higher rate than in urban areas of the state.

So I just want to keep people safe, obviously when we look at you look at what we did with regard to elective surgeries. It’s going to be more available in some areas than others based upon hospital bed availability, because what we don’t want to do is fill hospital beds with elective surgeries and find out that there’s an outbreak that you can’t manage because there are no hospital beds or ICU beds available so we’re trying to manage all those things.

But I absolutely recognize the difference between rural areas and the number of infections that are happening there versus urban areas. But again,this virus knows no boundaries, it isn’t saying to itself ‘I’m going to go after people in an urban area,’ it simply can get transmitted anywhere.

* William Bryan at the Department of Homeland Security pointed to a new study that heat, humidity and sunlight could considerably shortened the viruses half life. Have you given some thought as to how that could help congregate settings?…

Dr. Ezike: We’re trying to find out as much as we can about this novel virus and so as we learn more that will play into some of the rules or restrictions that we promote.

I also want to add just for our testing sites. We are in attempt to liberalize and in appreciating the the new information that’s been coming up with COVID-19, we also are trying to identify people who are in that pre symptomatic or asymptomatic phase. So if someone is an especially high risk environment where they’re a healthcare worker or they work in a nursing home, and we know that they have been exposed, we are trying to get those people tested as well so we really want to promote testing. We’re trying to ramp up our capacity as much as possible, so that we can offer testing to as many people as possible and see if we can catch people who are in those high risk settings, even before they start manifesting symptoms

* Is the state pursuing more than the 15 initial Abbott rapid testing machines we got several weeks ago or any other quick test to be deployed for staff at more congregate care facilities? What can they do to mitigate false negatives from those rapid tests. Would you recommend having staff arrive extra early to a shift at a prison or a DHS facility and have them do multiple tests just to be sure?…

There’s nothing we can do to mitigate the false negatives or false positives, so that’s a challenge.

I would also point out that we were given very few of the testing supplies that are necessary which are unique for the Abbott rapid test. So it makes it more difficult to use those machines, even though we got 15 of them, they’re difficult for us to really operate because we don’t have the supplies which are unusual as compared to the other less rapid testing. But there are other companies I might add like Sufyan that I understand have rapid testing capability we were not given those by the federal government. And so, you know, we’re going to look into all of those but what we try to do whenever we get some new fangled tests that gets proposed and and in this case, the Abbott test is we try to verify the test on our own by doing a test through the Abbott machine, and then doing one through our normal methodologies, the swab of that’s taken the specimen doing running in two different ways so that we can verify the test that obviously would negate the speed of a rapid test. But, we want to make sure that we get the proper number of of positive and negative, or the proper results rather of positives and negatives.

And by the way, running it twice through the same machine does not actually help. If you have a low positive or very low verification level. So that’s a challenge but, but, you know, but we certainly want to be able to rapid test people. And we certainly want to be able to use those machines to keep people safe, especially in those healthcare environments that you’re referring to.

* Is the withdrawal of the workers compensation emergency rule an acknowledgement that the workers compensation commission did overstep its rulemaking authority?…

No. I think what they are now looking to do is to simply revisit it and see what they can do, what they feel like you know is appropriate, and then they intend to reissue an order, but I don’t know the timing of that or what the results of that would be.

* Your expert spokesperson earlier this week said quote we don’t watch the President’s press conferences because they are not a source of factual information. Yesterday you said, what the President suggested yesterday is dangerous and he clearly wasn’t making any facial expressions and made it appear that he wasn’t joking in any way. How do you reconcile those statements. Are you actually watching Trump’s press briefings or aren’t you?…

You know I do watch the news, however. And so as you know they clip parts of the press conference and play them on the news.

* We reported yesterday on an outbreak at a Madison County long term care facility that has killed 12 and infected 54 people so far. The public had not been informed before yesterday afternoon and local officials did not make themselves available to answer questions. Should Madison County and others do more to let the public know sooner about outbreaks?…

I’ll just say that that it is true that the local County Department of Public Health is responsible for gathering information, reporting that information. The local nursing home is the first line of communication, however they are the ones who are required to let family members know.

And so I would be, I am surprised to learn if that’s the case that they did not notify family members that there was coronavirus in the facility.

Dr. Ezike: First and foremost, I think the role of, as the governor mentioned, is that we want the people in the facility to be taking care of the patients. So they were trying to have them take care of the patients. We know that even in the long term care facilities, their work force has been decimated or, more in terms of people falling ill, and so they’re trying to take care of the residents with fewer people.

But they do understand and it’s that they have to report to the family members what is going on that there’s a COVID case in the facility that their loved one has COVID. Sometimes I’ve run into that, where people have had us follow up on certain situations where you know there’s, there might be a next of kin that is identified that might not be every member of the family. And so sometimes you’ll have other members of the family that say they were not notified but maybe they weren’t the one designated.

But in terms of the first contact between a nursing home that’s experiencing an outbreak would be with their local health department and this is not an excuse, but we have to know that public health has not been seen as a priority. And so many of these public health departments at the local level, even at the state level, don’t have the full breadth of resources that they have for a pandemic, for sure. And so as the local health departments are assisting and doing what they can to support the nursing homes, their first priority is to try to give the nursing homes the support that they need. And then finally, they do have to report, through our electronic reporting system they need to put information in through the databases so that we at the state have that information. But again, you can imagine the normal process is that after you know an outbreak is over, then you’re updating all the information on the website. So, given how stretched every one of the local health departments arem even at the state level we’re completely stretched. We know that if between taking care of an acute outbreak, and then putting the information in, there might be a lag. And so I think people have to be patient and understand that people are caring for people, the reporting will happen but there definitely will be a lag. And in terms of at the state level, our information is only updated once a week so if we do get it and depending on where in the week that information came in, it might be another few days before it’s updated on our website. As we can’t spend all of our time with that part because we have so much that we are trying to do to actually affect all the different parts of this pandemic disease.

* Some hairdressers have been messaging clients offering to do house calls. Does this fit within the spirit of the stay at home order as it stands to the end of May?…

No.

* Governor Andrew Cuomo is signing an executive order to allow independent pharmacies across New York to become collection points for Cova tests. Any chance that could happen here?…

It’s possible. I think we want to make sure that we’ve got enough testing and swabs and specimen collection for that to be something useful, but absolutely possible for us to make that you know independent pharmacies a place where, you know, a vial of with a specimen is dropped off for, for sending I think that’s what’s being suggested off to a commercial lab

* Chicago-based Potbelly just said they are giving back stimulus money through the PPP program. Should other public companies in Illinois and elsewhere do the same, what is the state doing from a small for small businesses that have not seen PPP money yet?…

Yeah. So first of all I think companies that don’t need the PPP money should not accept it. And so I would encourage companies that don’t need it in order to keep their operations or their employees paid and on payroll or their operations going, that those entities, I think, should, that they have an obligation here as to what we’re doing.

It’s true that the Federal PPP program has been very difficult for small businesses to access and I frankly I’m very concerned about that. That’s something I’ve spoken with our federal representatives about, because it is really the small businesses in our state that create most of the jobs. And we want to make sure we support them.

And so at the state level we diverted we took $90 million at the Department of Commerce and made that available through programs to support in grants, not loans, but grants to companies across the small companies, small businesses across the state.

It’s not enough. I mean there’s no way that the state can do what the federal government can do, and that’s why those federal programs are so important. It’s why it’s important for the federal government to fund the state, because we know better than the federal government apparently, that small businesses under, you know 200 employees that don’t have an accountant and don’t have a lawyer on staff and so on, you know, to go get it that federal PPP money, those are the ones we need to preserve, right the ones under 200 are a very very important part of our economy. And so I am very focused on trying to keep those small businesses alive and support them and want to do it with state programs. And I’m going to be talking to the legislature, our legislature about implementing a program that will support them, small businesses but I also think the federal government needs to step up to the plate here.

-30-

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2,119 new cases, 80 additional deaths

Saturday, Apr 25, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) today announced 2,119 new cases of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Illinois, including 80 additional deaths.

    Coles County: 1 male 70s
    Cook County: 1 female 30s, 2 females 40s, 2 males 40s, 1 male 50s, 2 females 60s, 8 males 60s, 3 females 70s, 7 males 70s, 5 females 80s, 9 males 80s, 2 females 90s, 3 males 90s, 1 female 100+
    DuPage County: 1 female 90s, 1 male 90s
    Jersey County: 1 male 50s
    Kankakee County: 1 female 80s, 1 female 90s
    Lake County: 1 male 50s, 3 females 70s, 1 male 70s, 1 female 80s, 2 males 80s, 1 female 90s, 1 male 90s
    Macon County: 1 female 80s
    Madison County: 1 male 90s
    McHenry County: 1 female 90s
    Monroe County: 1 female 80s, 1 female 100+
    St. Clair County: 1 female 60s, 1 male 70s, 1 female 80s, 1 male 80s, 1 female 100+
    Whiteside County: 1 male 50s
    Will County: 1 female 60s, 1 male 60s, 1 male 70s, 1 female 80s, 2 males 80s
    Winnebago County: 1 female 100+

Currently, IDPH is reporting a total of 41,777 cases, including 1,874 deaths, in 96 counties in Illinois. The age of cases ranges from younger than one to older than 100 years.

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Mission accomplished for Bailey, and others start to chime in

Saturday, Apr 25, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Remember back in February when Rep. Darren Bailey (R-Xenia) was caught on tape bragging that filing legislation to kick Chicago out of Illinois would do this?

You find out sometimes when… you’re being a legislator that sometimes you can introduce a bill, then you get some attention.

Well, he’s getting plenty of attention now…

* Illinois House Republican Sues Pritzker Over Emergency Powers

* State lawmaker files lawsuit challenging Pritzker’s stay-at-home order

* Lawmaker sues Illinois Governor JB Pritzker, alleges improper use of emergency powers

* Lawmaker Sues Over Illinois Governor’s Stay-At-Home Extension

* Representative Darren Bailey: ”When the expansion was issued, I believed that was an abuse of power”

* Southern IL lawmaker files lawsuit against Gov. Pritzker

* Downstate Republican sues Pritzker over stay-at-home order — but president could prove governor’s trump card

* On to Molly Parker at the Southern Illinoisan

The Harrisburg City Council on Tuesday will consider a proposal that would extend city permission to retail establishments to open to in-store customers. Doing so would be in direct opposition to the stay-at-home order that Gov. J.B. Pritzker extended to May 30.

“That’s a pretty bold statement, isn’t it,” said Harrisburg Mayor John McPeek, who called for the meeting.

Harrisburg is in Saline County. Gov. Pritzker was asked about this yesterday…

That would be a violation of the stay at home rule and there, certainly I have enforcement mechanisms available to me but I would look forward to not having to do that.

* Douglas County Sheriff Joshua Blackwell claims he won’t enforce the May 1 stay at home order

When asked by The News-Gazette whether he himself would cover his face while in a public indoor space come May 1, he said “no” and further questioned the constitutionality of Pritzker’s order.

“Enough is enough,” Blackwell, who was elected sheriff in 2018 after winning a four-way Republican primary, wrote in his letter. “Downstate Illinois doesn’t have the same issues as Chicago. Mr. Pritzker and (Chicago Mayor) Ms. (Lori) Lightfoot can keep their liberal selves and agenda in the city of Chicago.”

Blackwell went on to add that he would not “be enforcing any of (the order) unless there is a court order issued.”

While it was a question about enforcement that prompted Pritzker’s response Friday, the governor said a day earlier that “we’re not encouraging police officers to stop people and arrest them or take drastic action” if found in violation of the mandate that masks be worn in all indoor public places and any other public place where 6-foot social distancing isn’t possible.

Pritzker’s response from yesterday

Well, I can say that, then the sheriff is going to let people get sick and they’re going to be people who end up in the hospital and maybe even people in ICU and on ventilators. So, I feel badly for the people of that county that they have somebody who doesn’t recognize that this is a worldwide and very virulent virus, that is, you know, has is among us, it’s not going away. And we’re going to have to follow the rules in order for us to get through this and keep people alive and reopen our economy. […]

People, whether your Sheriff is enforcing it or not, you know what you need to do to keep yourself safe. We’ve laid it all out you can go to the IDPH website and read all about you know why you should wear a face covering and why it is important that you stay home and that we’ve only kept a central businesses open, plus the other ones that we’ve added on for May. So I think I would just encourage the people of that county to protect themselves

* Back to the Southern

In Southern Illinois, Energy Police Chief Shawn Ladd and Jefferson County Sheriff Jeff Bullard made similar public declarations on Friday, both claiming that they believe the orders are unconstitutional. Ladd said he believes in the rule of law and order and its obligation to protect the peace, and the lives of people and property, but said officers are also “honor bound to protect the people we serve from tyranny and government overreach in pursuit of these goals.”

Bullard said that he believes the health guidance is important, but said it’s important to respect the opinions of others. He said that if a person or private business believes they should follow the public health order because they believe that’s what’s best for them, that should be respected.

“On the flip side, if someone who poses no imminent threat to anyone and they choose to exercise their freedom of choice to only follow some or none of the public health order, that should also be respected,” he said in a roughly nine-minute Facebook video post. “Remember, if you harass someone because they don’t share your belief system, that is a crime, and that’s something my office will respond to.” […]

Bullard did not address one of the key purposes of the stay-at-home order: that people who do not know they have the virus or experience only mild symptoms can pass it on to others who are more severely affected, possibly resulting in their death.

Go to Molly’s story for links to the full statements.

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*** UPDATED x1 *** Workers’ Comp Commission to withdraw controversial rule after judge issued TRO

Saturday, Apr 25, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From IRMA and the IMA…

The Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission filed notice that they will meet on Monday and formally withdraw the emergency rule that created a presumption that the workplace was the cause of a COVID-19 infection. This action to withdraw the rule was taken after the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association and Illinois Retail Merchants Association filed a lawsuit on Tuesday on behalf of two-dozen organizations and won a Temporary Restraining Order on Thursday afternoon blocking the rule from taking effect. A Sangamon County judge issued the TRO on the grounds that the Commission exceeded its rulemaking authority.

The notice is here.

However, members of the the biz community were warned today that the Commission “will create a task force to work on a new rule and there will likely be legislation filed in the General Assembly.”

So, it ain’t over yet.

*** UPDATE *** Jordan Abudayyeh…

The Governor believes we must ensure our essential workers are protected as they continue showing up to work amid this pandemic. Whether it’s by administrative rule or legislation, we need to stand up for our front-line workers.

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*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Saturday, Apr 25, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Apr 24, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* As usual, I’ll be covering the governor’s press conferences this weekend, but comments will remained closed until Monday. Take care and, please, be safe

Hey Bobby Marley
Sing something good to me
This world go crazy
It’s an emergency

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Pritzker announces huge increase in testing capability over past 24 hours - Latest batch of positive tests drop to 17 percent from average of 21 - Vows to continue push test numbers up - Says state now has 112 public testing sites - Governor says scientists skeptical of antibody tests and state won’t rush in - Dr. Ezike announces hospitalization numbers, says 37 longterm care facilities have received test materials - Says he’s not saying people shouldn’t have antibody tests if they want - Hopes baseball returns - Explains IDES hiring process, federal mandates - Says he’s unaware that nursing home wants National Guard - Ezike explains lack of recovery numbers - Compares mask mandate to shoes in restaurant mandate - Calls Bailey lawsuit “a political maneuver” - Says sheriff who won’t enforce order is “going to let people get sick” - No plan to re-check autopsies from earlier - Explains that new EO language counters false claims and rumors - Mayors can make more stringent local rules - Confident test results will continue coming back quickly - Says EO won’t impact legislative session - Calls out “ridiculous” argument against $600 unemployment boost - Says workers with underlying conditions who are ordered back should call IDOL - Says he hopes no one listened to Trump’s disinfecant injection talk - Talks about Illinoisans coming together - Answers odd question on special session - Debunks rumors - I MESSED UP MY OWN QUESTION - Warns Harrisburg city council against violating order - Explains where to get info about masks - Confirms gown shortage - Says he expects to sustain 10K tests per day

Friday, Apr 24, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pritzker with some good news for a change…

We had tested 5660 people in the preceding 24 hours on Wednesday. And yesterday, we surpassed 9000 tests. Today, we met our goal of 10,000 daily tests. In fact we surpassed it with 16,124.

* More interesting news…

The overall positive rate for today’s batch of tests is about 17%, which is well below our cumulative average of 21%.

It’s too early to say whether this is a result of expanded testing criteria, versus an indicator of flattening the curve, but it’s a positive sign nonetheless for everyone when more people are getting tested and there is a lower ratio of positives

Please pardon all transcription errors.

* Pritzker continued…

Surpassing 10,000 tests is a very important milestone, not only because it allows us to isolate more of those who are COVID positive so that they don’t spread the infection, but also because it moves us in the direction of expanding our surveillance for outbreaks.

More testing means we can potentially lower the infection rate. So we’re going to continue to push that number up. Our ability to test and get results quickly is key to our ability to map the presence of this virus, and to gradually reduce our mitigation measures and get more people back to work.

* Public testing sites…

We now have 112 public testing sites in every one of IDPH’s 11 regions, including eight sites in the Rockford region, eight sites in the Peoria region, four sites in the Springfield region, four in the Edwardsville region, 31 sites in the Marion region, eight sites in the Champaign region, 22 sites in the city of Chicago, nine sites in the southwest suburbs, three sites in the west suburbs, five sites in the northwest suburbs and 10 sites in the north suburbs.

Remember, those are only the sites that are available to the public and the tests at those locations are entirely free. Beyond those 112 locations, there are healthcare providers that conduct tests for their own existing patients, the full list of public testing sites with hours, testing parameters and contact information is available on our coronavirus website, coronavirus.illinois.gov.

* Antibody tests…

I also want to talk briefly today about antibody tests, which have been in the headlines recently and have created a lot of buzz. I want to make sure that people have the facts about whether and how these tests are useful.

In theory, these tests could be an effective tool. We’re craving answers in an uncertain time and antibody tests offer the potential for more security. But I’m afraid we’ve seen many of these tests promoted in a way that errs on the side of irresponsible.

To be clear, these tests are not quite where we need them to be to offer a true metric of immunity in Illinois. This is not an Illinois specific problem. As of today, there still are no antibody blood tests certifiably proven to accurately and consistently diagnose COVID-19 antibodies. There are several reasons for that.

First, no one yet knows the true sensitivity and specificity of these tests. That is how accurate or inaccurate they are. Obviously you want to test to be accurate and not offer many false positives or false negatives. That kind of accuracy is in part tied to how long it’s been since a person, potentially had the virus, since it takes, each of us time to produce antibodies, and it’s in part tied to the quality of the test.

Second, this is a novel virus, entirely new. So researchers don’t yet know the extent to which having COVID-19 antibodies equals, having immunity. That’s a question whose answers will only be revealed over weeks or months, and maybe even years, for example, is there a certain exposure level at which antibodies don’t protect you. Or, if you can become immune. How long would immunity last?

Third, it’s not yet confirmed that these tests are able to explicitly identify COVID-19 antibodies versus Corona viruses that cause things like the common cold. The test must, must definitively identify antibodies for COVID-19, and nothing else for them to be fully effective. […]

We’re monitoring those studies and we’re planning how we could deploy those tests when they’re ready. As soon as they prove themselves accurate and reliable, I will make it a priority to get them into our communities as widely as we can. What I won’t do is run full speed ahead with these tests before they’re proven. Because, among other things, we will be offering people a false sense of security. I’ve said since the beginning that here in Illinois, we will rely on factual data, and we will lead with the science. That, and the goodwill of the people of Illinois, will be what sees us through this pandemic.

* Dr. Ezike…

4828 people were hospitalized across our state. 25% of those patients or 1225 were in the ICU, and 58% of those ICU patients or 709 patients were on ventilators

* More from Dr. Ezike…

IDPH is pushing testing materials to more and more long term care facilities. Since last Friday, we have pushed testing materials to 37 different long term care facilities, some who are actively experiencing outbreaks and some that had not identified a single case. Our hope is that by testing staff and residents in the long term care facilities located in areas with high levels of community transmission, we can detect cases earlier and potentially before an outbreak occurs.

* On to questions for the governor. So the phases that you mentioned yesterday. Obviously stay at home, extended through the end of May, the phases that you mentioned are those to come during May or they come in June? (Are we there yet?)…

They’ll come as soon as we possibly can. And in order to get to the next phase, we really need to see our peak and begin to move downward for, I think the suggestion of 14 days is the right one. And so seeing a downward movement 14 days in a row would give us a pretty good indication that we’re heading in the right direction on a consistent basis

* Are you suggesting people just kind of hold off for right now and not get antibody testing done?…

No. I’m just explaining why we’re not rushing ahead with massive antibody testing. The fact is that verifying those tests has been difficult for everybody. And we don’t want people to get false negatives or false positives that would lead people to believe that they’re immune or that they’re not immune and mistakenly so. W e just want to make sure that we have the right information that is available with the tests that actually are effective. And so we’re not going to plunge into that ourselves at the state level. Having said that there are hospitals and other people who are using serology tests, and they’re working with the you know the fact that there’s some percentage of those that are going to be negative or positive falsely.

* Baseball. Do you think baseball will be played here in Chicago this summer?…

I hope so. But I don’t know

* Can you give us the exact number of people being hired to help IDES with the unemployment claims? We’ve gotten news tips from Chicagoans asking how they can apply for those jobs…

Yeah. So we certainly want people to reach out to IDES that would be the best way to find out. They go through a process as you know when you get hired for the state. We’ve tried to speed that process up through for CMS. But as you know, we also hired an outside firm to help us with some overflow of calls and so on. So, I’ll be sure, we’ll be sure and make it so, we’ll be sure to have IDES post on its website how people could apply for any available positions. It’s an excellent point, if it’s not already available on the website I’ll make sure that it is.

* Why not open the phone lines longer for longer hours until the IDES bottleneck kind of slows down?…

Yeah, so one of the things I explained a little while ago when I was talking about unemployment as one of the featured topics for the day was that the federal government actually has requirements of training, and that training requirement is rather lengthy process.

And because people are giving their personal information to somebody over the phone, and you wouldn’t want to give that to somebody who might misuse that information or doesn’t understand how private that information really is. And so it’s very hard to expand the workforce, we’re doing it, but very hard to do it. And so, when you say leaving it open longer, people are working overtime. But in terms of running a second or third shift. Again, you would need more people and the training is really a gating issue again have. Having said that, we’ve expanded the phone lines, and the number of people that are covering those phones, who are already IDES employees but have been repositioned so that there are, as I recall the last time I looked at the statistics and I look at them reasonably frequently, we’re doing about three to four times the number of calls now in a day that we were doing at the beginning of this, let alone last year where it’s an even larger multiple.

* The Symphony of Joliet nursing home says that they need the National Guard to assist them in conducting conducting tests, the more we can test the more we can prevent the spread of virus is the governor’s office looking in to doing this at this facility or any others?…

Indeed, the whole point of expanding testing across the board has been so that we can go in starting with people who are very vulnerable. Also our first responders, making sure that we really cover the waterfront so to speak of everybody that is in let’s say a priority one status, nursing home residents and the staff and nursing homes are certainly in that category. And indeed, Dr. Ezike talked about I think yesterday or the day before the fact that we’ve that we’ve been going in, in fact we’ve identified the nursing homes. We’re going in ratably I guess is the right word, every day to test a new nursing home to make sure we get everybody there tested in the ones where there are no COVID positives already to make sure that we can keep it from getting COVID positive and then in the ones where there are COVID we’re assuming everybody is infected right i mean we’re treating it as if everybody is infected. … If they have made a special request for Illinois National Guard, we probably would have fulfilled it

* It seems to be harder to find numbers on COVID-19 recovery or hospital releases here in Illinois opposed to some other states. Maryland it’s listed with the rest of the daily numbers. We know that you’ve explained the difficulty and getting this data before but why are there states reporting daily, and we aren’t?…

Dr. Ezike: Well we have been trying to share with recovery data. Itry to update that once a week, in terms of us being able to pull out the hospital data. That is something again that we have to have the input before we can put the output. And so when we have missing pieces of data and if you push that out, it actually creates more questions than it offers answers in terms of if the numbers don’t match but we’re working with all of our partners to try to get as much data, put in and updated in a timely basis. A lot of times, even if we put out some data, there would be additional inputs that would come that would make us have to update the data and I know that can be a little bit confusing as well but we have nothing but the goal of being transparent but it’s also important to be able to put out trusted and and reliable data as well.

* Should grocery stores and other businesses turn people away if they’re not wearing a face covering some employers have safety concerns about such confrontations?…

I understand, but we have put in a requirement for people to wear face coverings. And so I, you know, just like with everything else you’re not allowed to go into a restaurant without wearing shoes.

So it’s perfectly acceptable to tell people that you’re not allowed in if you’re not wearing a face mask. Remember a face covering is protecting other people. So this person is being not just disrespectful to everybody in the grocery store, but also potentially infecting other people, by not wearing a face covering so I would suggest that be the language that’s used when you’re talking to somebody who’s not using a face guard first to just ask them please would you get a face covering and explain to them you can even use a T shirt. There are plenty of examples of how you can create a face covering for free, out of your own clothing or other items you may have in your own home or apartment.

* Reaction to the lawsuit filed by state representative Bailey claiming a violation of civil rights?…

Well, first as you know I have relied on science and research and doctors and advice. You know models from the experts to address this pandemic and it is a pandemic it is an emergency, it has been named such by the federal government we are in a state of emergency now federally. We are in a disaster proclamation for the state of Illinois. And for as long as we have the number of 2700 people getting infected in a day, people that are being that are their fatalities. And that’s happening on a somewhat consistent basis, thousands of people.

We are in an emergency so frankly, I think that a lawsuit about whether or not this is an emergency is a political maneuver. At a time when we probably shouldn’t be dealing with politics but rather simply addressing the emergency that no matter what political party you belong to.

* Should we assume June 1 the stay at home order will end, even if it’s gradually? (Are we there yet?)…

I’ve talked a lot about the way we would do that phasing in, back into the economy and again, I think that the new normal that occurs here, and I hope that it could occur before the end of May, but again it will be all based on whether people are getting sicker and where we are in the curve.

* A sheriff in Douglas County says he doesn’t intend to enforce your modified order. In such cases, how do you intend to enforce your order if it’s crucial to saving lives?…

Well, I can say that, then the sheriff is going to let people get sick and they’re going to be people who end up in the hospital and maybe even people in ICU and on ventilators. So, I feel badly for the people of that county that they have somebody who doesn’t recognize that this is a worldwide and very virulent virus, that is, you know, has is among us, it’s not going away. And we’re going to have to follow the rules in order for us to get through this and keep people alive and reopen our economy. […]

People, whether your Sheriff is enforcing it or not, you know what you need to do to keep yourself safe. We’ve laid it all out you can go to the IDPH website and read all about you know why you should wear a face covering and why it is important that you stay home and that we’ve only kept a central businesses open, plus the other ones that we’ve added on for May. So I think I would just encourage the people of that county to protect themselves

* Following reports that COVID was already in the United States before the first reported case, California Governor Newsome plans to order medical examiner’s to go back and look at autopsies for December in January. Do we plan on doing that as well?…

No. I know when our first case was identified was the second case in the US. Of course it begs the question, you know, that individual was not on a flight that came in after any travel restrictions and screenings were in place. So, for sure, if we think that this virus you know originated in, [garbled] and people were traveling to the US, it is possible or very likely that cases individuals who have this had come before are first diagnosed cases so potentially there have been other illnesses that were not appreciated. And I know that maybe there will be request by families maybe medical examiners will be reviewing some of their records, we wouldn’t stop any of that. If they identify new cases we will have to adjust our case counts, and we will absolutely do that to update our data.

* Many garden centers that also sold landscaping needs were already allowed to stay open. What specifically does this modification change?…

Actually nothing. It just makes it much more explicit. There were people who didn’t understand the order, they were spreading rumors that you couldn’t keep your garden center open or that we had somehow prohibited people from selling seeds. I don’t know where that is anywhere in this order prior and so we just put some language in there to make sure that people understood it completely.

* Are mayors and towns able to make their own decisions on what should remain closed, even if they conflict with your modifications?…

Anybody can be more stringent than the modifications that we’ve made that’s absolutely true that if you have a golf course in your area or you have a business that we’ve said could do curbside pickup, and you’ve decided that’s not safe in your area where that business isn’t safe, doing what they’re doing that is completely up to local officials to be to enact more stringent regulations than the ones we’ve put forward.

* You said the state expanded agreements with private commercial labs, do you have assurances that test results will come back faster than the seven to 12 days you’ve complained about before?…

Yes indeed in fact we, that’s one of our biggest concerns. So we tried to focus on commercial labs, the ones that we have agreements we’ve tried to focus on commercial labs that are in our area. Number one where we could have an agreement where we knew that they would return those test results quickly. And what what Hannah is referring to, just for everybody else, is that the large commercial laboratory companies which are not located here they may have a small location here but they’re generally not located here. Most of their testing capacity, they are returning their tests in seven to 12 days we just find that too long for most people. Nevertheless, there are doctors here in the state who are sending their tests to those labs and not getting those returned test results in that quite that that very long time.

* It’s been several days since the state began listing nursing home deaths and cases we’ve been seeing clusters of elderly dying in Cook County every day. Are we seeing an uptick, are there any other precautions in place to try to limit the number of cases and deaths in the state’s nursing homes?…

I think we’ve both been speaking towards this, we’re trying to identify, of course we’re aggressively working with places where cases have already been identified. And with our strike teams with our consultants with our infection control, preventionist, but we’re also trying to reach into neighborhoods where we know that there are cases in the community. But yet, an establishment in which there isn’t identified cases so that’s when we’re going in and testing all the staff and all the residents, so that we can maybe get a jump on identifying a positive case and then do the appropriate isolation and segregation. For those who identify, so our pre emptive proactive approach of mass testing we’re hoping is a way to get ahead of that, but yes we’re absolutely trying to fortify our strategies to try to get ahead of the outbreaks.

* Politico: The new stay at home order won’t allow the state legislature to return at all to Springfield to meet its May 31 budget deadline. Can you detail how lawmakers will adjust to the new order? [This is a basic separation of powers issue. The EO doesn’t apply to the GA. He can’t prevent the GA from meeting. Let’s move along.]

* What do you say to business owners who say that their workers are making more on unemployment and are choosing to remain off work until their benefits run out, even though they could go back to their jobs in many cases?…

That’s, I just, I don’t know what to say. That was an argument that Senator Graham made when they were trying to pass the bill. And I just think that’s a ridiculous argument.

People want to get back to work. They do have the opportunity to earn more money at work than they do with the extra $600 that’s being provided to them per month is, that’s not enough to make a difference for these families.

* What should someone with an underlying condition do is told to either return to work under the relaxed at home order or be fired especially in light of the recent restraining order issued by a Sangamon County judge in the workman’s compensation case?…

They should report to the Department of Labor for the state of Illinois. They also have their their own union. There are other authorities on a local level. In particular, the Department of Public Health in their local county. But the Department of Labor certainly is an important place for them to go.

* What are some of the key differences between Illinois and other states in the Midwest path when it comes to reopening the economy?…

There are a lot of differences between these states. First I’d tell you we have the best people in the entire country here in Illinois. And then the next best are those in the Midwest. But the fact is that we have different infection rates across the different states. We have different characteristics. Some states like Ohio have multiple sort of medium to large sized cities, Illinois has Chicago which is a massive city, and some medium sized cities. So there are a lot you know so you see infection rates are different and and regionally different and so on. So, there are a lot of differences but there are also a lot of things in common and again, when we’re thinking about reopening the economy we’re talking about looking at industries, and many of the industries in the Midwest are similar.

* What are your thoughts about President Trump’s advocacy of disinfectant injections as possible treatment for COVID-19? And what do you make of Trump’s contention today he was only being sarcastic with those comments?…

I don’t know if you’re goading me with that question. I mean it’s dangerous what the President suggested yesterday was dangerous. And he clearly was not making any facial expressions or any discussion that would make it sound as if he was joking in any way. And I think he’s, you know, all I can say is I hope to God that nobody listened to him yesterday.

* On life after the pandemic, what elements of the pandemic life will stay with us afterward and what parts of our pre pandemic lives are probably gone?…

I don’t think that I can think that far into the future i mean I have a hard time imagining what what the fall will look like.

But I certainly know that one effect of the pandemic is that Illinoisans have really pulled together to support each other. It’s amazing. I don’t know who, you know, in Cook County in Chicago if you, if you are even in your apartment or your house at eight o’clock at night. The entire city in fact the entire county are out cheering for our health care workers, cheering for our first responders, cheering for all the essential workers because of the risks that they’re taking. And I mean, that’s just one example, people in downstate, there are people delivering meals to seniors at their homes because seniors are afraid sometimes to go out and certainly are vulnerable and people are bringing meals and putting them in their front at the front door and ringing the bell and leaving so that you know they don’t have any contact or any transmission. And I just think it is testament to the greatness of the people that the state of Illinois to the kindness of the people in the state of Illinois. So, I don’t know, maybe that was already here but it’s so much more evident now, and I think maybe one lasting legacy of this is that we will have demonstrated to each other that you know that we are all in this together and that we will stand up for each other when things get tough.

* By moving the general assembly into special session, if that’s a way for the Democratic leadership to strong arm an agenda with the three fifths majority requirement? [Huh?]…

No.

Nothing’s been decided about how the legislature would meet. And so I look forward to having more conversations as I already have had with the leaders, and certainly their input about whether we would end up in a special session or a regular session, you know helpful, but the legislature is going to have to make its own decisions at this point.

* Can you debunk some of the persistent rumors about your order? Are any businesses connected to you profiting from the pandemic, do hospitals get more money based on their number of COVID cases?…

I heard the first part of this, what was the do hospitals make more money on COVID-19? No in fact hospitals lose money.

Hospitals make money on elective surgeries. That’s true. And one of the reasons that we allowed some hospitals in regions that have enough bed availability to have elective surgeries, is we wanted to make sure that they could pay their bills, many of them, particularly downstate are dependent upon elective surgeries to balance their budget to just keep the lights on. And so we wanted to make it easier and also there are people who have had to put off surgeries for all of this time, because we wanted to make sure there were enough beds available. We didn’t know how virulent this virus was going to be and whether we were going to have every hospital full. And so after five weeks, it’s clear that in some areas of the state there is real danger of that in other areas of the state there’s not and so that is allowing elective surgeries now with some restrictions. I think was the right thing to do.

As to whether I own anything that’s making any money during this, I mean, first of all, I am everything that I have is in a blind trust, and I’m trying to think of anything that I was involved with before, but no.

* I MESSED UP MY OWN QUESTION!. Mayor Lightfoot unveiled her city’s recovery plan yesterday, when do you expect to do the same for the state of what might it look like? [I meant to say recovery plan committee, but goofed!]…

I don’t think a recovery plan was issued yesterday, that committee was put together. And so, the state will do this differently than the city will. And I’ll be doing as I have been doing, speaking with mayors and and leaders from around the state, from Southern Illinois, in Central Illinois and around Chicago and of course in The Rockford area too, and Western Illinois and making sure that we’re taking into account the real diversity of the state, and all the industries and the differences between those industries manufacturing will have a very different set of rules for reopening than, let’s say restaurants or bars would. And so, this is something, it’s a complex endeavor. I don’t see it as one where you can get one committee of people together to make decisions about the entire economy.

* The Harrisburg city council has called a special meeting for Tuesday to consider a proposal to open up some retailers to in-house customers on May 1 despite your extension. Your thoughts on this, would there be consequences?…

That would be a violation of the stay at home rule and there, certainly I have enforcement mechanisms available to me but I would look forward to not having to do that.

* How can people get masks if they don’t have credit cards to order online? What masks and vendors do you recommend?…

I actually would suggest to people that there are a lot of ways to use a free mask. I certainly am not going to recommend a particular mask maker. But I saw a video of how somebody can take a T shirt and use it to make a mask with tying it behind their head and and so on. But, you know, I’m not gonna recommend, I think there are lots of ways to do it. I would recommend somebody go online and just type in homemade mask or homemade face covering. And they’re much less expensive than trying to buy one online.

* Much of the concern has been around masks, but in some areas now there are an insufficient number of gowns being a problem. Has acquiring and supplying gowns or any other type of PPE become a problem here in Illinois?…

I wouldn’t call it a problem in the sense that we’ve run out of them entirely in the state or in any particular place. However, you are correct, each one of these things as you can imagine, has been in shortage in fact, all of them at the beginning, we’re in massive shortage.

But we’ve been able to bring, first it was masks, we wanted to make sure that we had N95 masks that are very hard to acquire. We’re still acquiring them but we’ve had a pretty good success at that. We wanted to have other kinds of face coverings like surgical masks or general medical masks. G owns are in shorter supply and indeed I spoke about this with our team this morning. Because we have actually a number of gowns, lots of gowns that are on order now and I don’t know what date they will arrive, but we do have them on order. And I know that you know our expectation is that we will not run out of gowns in the state.

* Now that you’ve met the 10,000 tests goal for a single day is this level of testing sustainable for the long term is there any benchmark to aim for?…

You know the challenges in the supply chain in order to get us to 10,000 were immense. And indeed, this was raised on a call that we had today with the White House task force that everybody wants to expand. I heard one of the governors saying they have 4000 tests today, and they’re having trouble expanding from that to 6000 a day. So everybody’s having trouble. Having said that, my expectation is that we will be able to sustain 10,000 again it will let you know like many other things depend upon how many people go to a testing site on any given day.

How many tests we get done is dependent on how many people go and get a test done, in part, and then on the supplies, so my expectation is that we’ll be able to maintain this level. My hope and expectation and then of course this isn’t enough. And so the idea here is we’ve got to keep going. And we will.

-30-

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2,724 new cases, 108 additional deaths

Friday, Apr 24, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) today announced 2,724 new cases of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Illinois, including 108 additional deaths.

    Boone County: 1 male 60s
    Clinton County: 1 female 100+
    Cook County: 1 male 30s, 1 female 40s, 3 males 40s, 1 female 50s, 5 males 50s, 4 females 60s, 7 males 60s, 14 females 70s, 15 males 70s, 10 females 80s, 11 males 80s, 4 females 90s, 5 males 90s
    DuPage County: 1 female 60s, 1 male 80s, 3 females 90s, 2 males 90s
    Jefferson County: 1 male 70s
    Kankakee County: 1 female 50s, 1 female 80s
    Lake County: 1 female 50s, 1 male 50s, 1 female 60s, 1 male 60s, 1 female 90s
    Madison County: 1 female 80s, 1 male 80s
    McHenry County: 1 male 50s
    Sangamon County: 1 male 70s
    Whiteside County: 1 unknown 90s
    Will County: 1 male 20s, 1 female 70s, 1 female 80s, 2 males 80s

Currently, IDPH is reporting a total of 39,658 cases, including 1,795 deaths, in 96 counties in Illinois. The age of cases ranges from younger than one to older than 100 years.

Huge increase in testing today.

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More about increasing humidity as a possible step to mitigating some of this mess

Friday, Apr 24, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Click here for some background in case you missed it last weekend. Here’s William Bryan, the temporary head of science and technology at the Department of Homeland Security, speaking at yesterday’s White House briefing

First, let me tell you what a half-life is. We don’t measure the virus as far as how long will it live on a surface. We have to measure the decay of the virus in terms of its half-life because we don’t know certain-… That has a bearing on how long the virus is going to be alive and active. So, we measure it in half-life because half-life doesn’t change.

So, if you look at an 18 hour half-life, what you’re basically saying is that every 18 hours the life of the virus is cut in half. So, if you start with 1000 particles of the virus, in 18 hours you’re down to 500, and 18 hours after that you’re down to 250 and so on and so forth. […]

So, the virus is dying at a much more rapid pace just from exposure to higher temperatures and just from exposure to humidity. If you look at the fourth line, you inject the sunlight into that, you inject UV rays into that, the same effects on line two as 70 to 75 degrees with 80% humidity on the surface and look at line four but now you inject the sun, the half-life goes from six hours to two minutes. That’s how much of an impact UV rays has on the virus. […]

So, in summary, within the conditions we’ve tested today, the virus in droplets of saliva survives best in indoors and dry conditions. … look at the aerosol as you breathe it, you put it in a room, 70 to 75 degrees, 20% humidity, low humidity. Half-life is about an hour, but you get outside and it cuts down to a minute and a half. Very significant difference when it gets hit with UV rays. […]

(I)ncreasing the temperature and humidity of potentially contaminated indoor spaces appears to reduce the stability of the virus, and extra care may be warranted for dry environments that do not have exposure to solar light.

Translation: Open the windows and turn up the heat in congregate settings like nursing homes, retail establishments, offices, etc. And even if turns out this doesn’t work, it’s not going to do any harm. Fresh air is fresh air.

* More on indoor humidity

Several studies support the idea that indoor humidity plays a role in seasonal disease transmission. When someone coughs or sneezes, they release tiny droplets into the air (if they’re sick, these droplets will contain virus). The bigger droplets typically fall before they get very far, but the tiniest droplets, called droplet nuclei, can go much farther. In humid conditions, these tiny droplets don’t evaporate as much, so they drop down more quickly than they would in dry conditions. Virus-containing droplets that travel farther are more likely to infect a new host.

* Outside might be a different thing, however

Bryan warned it would be “irresponsible” to say the warmer summer months will eliminate the virus. But he said that time period would provide an “opportunity to get ahead” of the pandemic.

* Bryan also said this, by the way

We’re also testing disinfectants readily available. We’ve tested bleach, we’ve tested isopropyl alcohol on the virus specifically in saliva or in respiratory fluids and I can tell you that bleach will kill the virus in five minutes. Isopropyl alcohol will kill the virus in 30 seconds and that’s with no manipulation, no rubbing. Just bring it on and leaving it go. You rub it and it goes away even faster.

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COVID-19 roundup

Friday, Apr 24, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This national story has an Illinois angle

An idea that might seem outlandish at first is gaining some ground as a way to speed development of a coronavirus vaccine: intentionally infecting people with the virus as part of a trial.

The idea, known as a “challenge trial,” would deliberately infect a few hundred young, healthy volunteers, who were first given either the potential vaccine or a placebo. Those picked would be well informed about the risks.

That would allow the effectiveness of a vaccine to be determined faster than a traditional clinical trial, which would require that researchers wait for some of the participants to become infected in the course of their daily lives.

Supporters say the challenge trial could save several months in the search for a vaccine, which is widely seen as critical for people to feel confident again with social gatherings.

A group of 35 House lawmakers, led by Reps. Bill Foster (D-Ill.) and Donna Shalala (D-Fla.), a former secretary of Health and Human Services, wrote to the Food and Drug Administration this week lending their support to the idea.

* On to the Tribune’s live blog

Nursing home group criticizes state response to COVID-19: Aaron’s conference call came in the wake of complaints from nursing home workers that managers are not providing adequate gear and training while failing to share information on outbreaks. Aaron said his peers in the industry were being blamed unfairly.

New executive order by Pritzker waives some graduation requirements for high school seniors, 8th graders

Aurora Public Library to consider employee furloughs due to pandemic

After reported BBQs and picnic gatherings, parking lots at ‘too popular’ Cook County Forest Preserves to be closed during weekend, Preckwinkle says

For Chicago-area Muslims without traditional mosque access, a remote Ramadan isn’t a new concept

Mayor Lori Lightfoot to preside over City Council meeting after opponents blocked COVID-19 emergency spending powers

Unexpected ripple effect of COVID-19: Important work to restore parts of Cook County forest preserves put on hold

* From the Sun-Times live blog

Lightfoot outlines plan for post-pandemic recovery

Rogers Park man battling coronavirus wakes up in hospital to learn that wife, son have died of the disease

Trump signs $484B coronavirus relief bill designed to aid businesses, hospitals

FDA warns of risks of treating coronavirus with Trump-promoted malaria drug

Struggling entrepreneurs count losses as Pritzker extends stay-at-home order: ‘It is doing a tremendous amount of damage to my business’

Lysol issues warning against injecting disinfectants after Trump raises the idea

Latest sign of the coronavirus times: drive-thru wakes

The Chicago Police Department now has 380 confirmed cases of COVID-19. Of those, 361 are officers and 19 are civilian employees.

Another employee at the Cook County Circuit Court clerk’s office has tested positive for COVID-19, bringing the overall total to 20.

* Roundup…

* Six new coronavirus symptoms just officially added to CDC list. What are they?

* U.S. coronavirus death toll surpasses 50,000: Just 10 days ago, the number of recorded deaths stood at 25,000

* Meatpacking union warns of meat shortages if worker safety is ignored

* The Tax-Break Bonanza Inside the Economic Rescue Package - As small businesses and individuals struggle to obtain federal aid, the wealthiest are poised to reap tens of billions of dollars in tax savings.

* Trump says he will block aid for U.S. Postal Service if it doesn’t hike prices immediately - The president said the cash-strapped postal agency should quadruple its prices, threatening, “I’m not signing anything.”

* How to Protect Civil Liberties in a Pandemic

* The anti-vaccine and anti-lockdown movements are converging, refusing to be ‘enslaved’

* Suburban Chicago closing in on Florida for number of COVID-19 deaths

* Cook County Government Braces For Big Budget Gap Due To COVID-19 - Preliminary projections show the county expects to have a shortfall of least $200 million this budget year.

* Attorney General Reveals Names of Mayors/Village Presidents Who Don’t Want to Abide by the Freedom of Information Act

* Downstate hospitals with few COVID-19 cases still feel crush of pandemic

* Possible coronavirus cases have increased daily at Belleville long-term care center

* Framework released to reopen Adams County: Red flags that could cause the plan to pause would be an increase of community transmission, multiple cases in a workplace or congregate living facility, a decrease in PPE or gatherings outside of the governor’s executive order. Simon said the hope is that moving ahead to the second phase of the plan — possibly in June — is that residents can move responsibly with the return of restaurants and bars in a limited capacity.

* As they’re urged to reopen, movie theaters say it is too soon.

* A Chicago nurse returned to work after recovering from coronavirus. His cough came back. He tested 2 more times and got different results.

* Some state parks will reopen gradually – not Starved Rock

* Illinois Courts Are Functioning During COVID-19 By Doing The One Thing They Try Never To Do

* During COVID, is your food safe? Experts weigh in: On the one hand, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have concluded that the novel coronavirus can’t be spread from food and its packaging, Anderson said. On the other hand, if respiratory droplets from the mouth or nose of someone with COVID-19 are on the package and someone else handles that package shortly thereafter, that person could be at risk.

* Peoria County Sheriff: Just looking for mask compliance

  16 Comments      


What the media is missing about the governor’s clemencies

Friday, Apr 24, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This is a story about reporters more interested in collecting incendiary quotes than looking at the context or the actual facts.

Let’s first get some background from a Center Square article on the governor’s recent commutations

“If any of these folks re-offend and hurt somebody else, I will hold J.B. Pritzker personally responsible and I will make it my mission in life to ensure that the family members know that it was J.B. Pritzker that caused them this harm as well,” Cabello said. […]

Some of those commuted include Kwayera Jackson, a former football standout in Southern Illinois, who was convicted of murder in the death of his infant son. Supporters of Jackson have petitioned for his release, saying Jackson killed his son attempting to perform “strengthening exercises” on the 5-month-old boy. The document shows Jackson was released on April 10.

* Alton Telegraph

“It’s very disturbing,” said Bethalto Mayor Alan Winslow, who was the lead investigator in the case. Jackson was convicted in the 1998 killing and sentenced in 2000. Under truth-in-sentencing laws, he was to serve all 40 years.

“He showed no remorse,” Winslow said. He said Jackson, now 40, beat the child to death then told two different false stories to cover his acts.

* The Bethalto mayor went on to complain to a local radio station

I think that whoever represented the government or the governor in making this decision did not do any due diligence on this case. I think there was a lot of political issue to this. And I think it’s wrong, and quite honestly, I hope to see the system change.

* Back to the Telegraph

Illinois Sen. Jason Plummer (R-Edwardsville) said Friday that state Senate Republicans could get behind granting temporary furloughs for prisoners with non-violent crimes who are also at risk for health complications — within a transparent system involving the say of law enforcement.

“This not the case of a non-violent offense,” he said of Jackson’s release.

“The governor is not answering questions, and is not being open to law enforcement, or the judiciary, or the media, or the public at-large,” Plummer added.

“The transparency is completely non-existent,” he said. “I have talked to prosecutors, and I have talked to law enforcement officials who have been involved in multiple of these cases. None of them have heard anything from the governor’s office or the governor.”

First, the governor has sole authority over clemencies granted to him by the Illinois Constitution. No governor is obligated to talk to anyone, including Republican state legislators. And, as you’ll see in a moment, local law enforcement officials had a chance to speak up on this particular case and missed it.

* Gov. Pritzker has said that the majority of the prisoner releases are handled by the Illinois Department of Corrections under statutory guidelines which were modified by an executive order. All of his clemencies, he said, are run through the Illinois Prisoner Review Board. He has reportedly granted 17 clemency petitions since March 11.

So, I called PRB Chairman Craig Findley, who has served on the PRB since 2001. He did a 15-month stint as chairman when he was first appointed and was then reappointed chairman in 2015 by Gov. Bruce Rauner.

Findley told me that the clemency process has always been confidential. “We don’t explain them and the governor has no obligation to explain them,” he said, adding that he doesn’t know of a single governor who has talked publicly about individual commutations (except maybe when George Ryan cleared out death row). And he very politely (the man has always been a gentleman) refused to answer questions about individual cases.

* I also reached out to the governor’s office. Here’s Jordan Abudayyeh..

There is a clear process that has been used for decades when governors exercise their clemency powers. The Prisoner Review Board makes confidential recommendations to the governor who reviews clemency petitions and takes action. The Governor is a strong believer in criminal justice reform and that means carefully and thoughtfully considering petitions for clemency from those who have demonstrated a commitment to rehabilitation while serving their sentence. The Governor takes the PRB’s recommendations to heart as he weighs these decisions.

She also added this…

Mr. Jackson’s petition was considered by the PRB in July 2019, and provided an opportunity for public comment and for the Madison County State’s Attorney to submit a response, which it did not do. [Emphasis added.]

In other words, this clemency process appears to have started about a year ago and nobody, including Bethalto’s mayor, Sen. Plummer and Rep. Cabello, apparently spoke up.

  32 Comments      


“I want the entire pool scrubbed, sterilized and disinfected!”

Friday, Apr 24, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* CBS 2

Illinois Department of Public Health Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike said Thursday that using swimming pools during the coronavirus pandemic is not a good idea – with a gross-out reason as to why.

“IDPH does regulate pools, and if we want to get into the different microbes that exist within pools – different swimming pools – we can do that. But definitely, the practice of obviously being in a swimming pool, unfortunately, we do know that there is some fecal shedding of this coronavirus,” Ezike said, barely able to stop herself from laughing as she did so.

There are other reasons that swimming pools should not be opened for now, Ezike said.

“You would have locker rooms with which people would need to change, so you would have more people congregated in the same setting, so for a myriad of reasons, that wouldn’t be conducive to promoting social distancing and decreasing community spread,” Ezike said.

That last part turns out to be the most important (and it’s a critical reason not to allow public pool use right now) because the first part doesn’t quite match up to the CDC’s guidelines.

* Fecal shedding

The virus that causes COVID-19 has been found in the feces of some patients diagnosed with COVID-19. However, it is unclear whether the virus found in feces may be capable of causing COVID-19. There has not been any confirmed report of the virus spreading from feces to a person. Scientists also do not know how much risk there is that the virus could be spread from the feces of an infected person to another person. However, they think this risk is low based on data from previous outbreaks of diseases caused by related coronaviruses, such as severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS).

* Can the virus be spread in pools?

There is no evidence that the virus that causes COVID-19 can be spread to people through the water in pools, hot tubs, spas, or water play areas. Proper operation and maintenance (including disinfection with chlorine and bromine) of these facilities should inactivate the virus in the water.

While there is ongoing community spread of COVID-19 of the virus that causes COVID-19, it is important for individuals as well as owners and operators of these facilities to take steps to ensure health and safety:

    Everyone should follow local and state guidance that may determine when and how recreational water facilities may operate.

    Individuals should continue to protect themselves and others at recreational water venues both in and out of the water – for example, by practicing social distancing and good hand hygiene.

    In addition to ensuring water safety and quality, owners and operators of community pools, hot tubs, spas, and water play areas should follow the interim guidance for businesses and employers for cleaning and disinfecting their community facilities.

Headline explained here.

  34 Comments      


About that mask requirement

Friday, Apr 24, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* NBC 5

Under the stay-at-home order, individuals must wear a “face-covering or mask when in a public place where they can’t maintain a six-foot social distance.” It applies to anyone over the age of 2 “who are able to medically tolerate a face-covering or a mask.” […]

Pritzker said police should remind people who aren’t wearing a mask of the order and all businesses must require people to have one in order to enter.

“People should wear a mask and it should be they should be reminded if they’re not wearing a mask that they’re not,” he said. “And private establishments do need to require that people who enter their establishment wear a mask.”

* Block Club Chicago

Nearby suburbs and other major cities, including New York City, have implemented similar requirements. The Centers for Disease Control has recommended people wear cloth face coverings, as well.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot, speaking during a Thursday press conference before Pritzker’s announcement, said the city would work to ensure all Chicagoans have access to coverings and won’t punish those who struggle to comply.

“I do worry a little bit about that [availability], though, and the ability of our residents, particularly in poorer neighborhoods, to be able to access materials,” Lightfoot said. “Once we see what the guidance is from the governor, we’re gonna work hard to make sure we can actually give our residents the ability to comply. We’re not gonna ticket and arrest people because they don’t have face coverings, but it is to their benefit … .”

As the story notes, the CDC has some guidance on how to make your own cloth masks. Click here for that.

Whenever anyone has asked me, I’ve sent them to Etsy. If you click here, I’ve set up a search for masks that are ready to ship in 1-3 days, organized by buyer ratings. Also, I saw on Facebook yesterday that Rickey Hendon is selling KN95 masks, just in case you’re interested or brave.

* Related…

* Illinois wants all shoppers to wear masks at the grocery store. Enforcing that rule is trickier.

  55 Comments      


Open thread

Friday, Apr 24, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Are we having fun yet?

  71 Comments      


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

Friday, Apr 24, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Friday, Apr 24, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

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