[Comments are now open.]
* From the governor’s office…
MARCH 6:
The State of Illinois requested personal protection equipment (PPE) from the strategic national stockpile (SNS) managed by the federal government.
State of Illinois request:
• N95s - 600,000
• Surgical masks - 900,000
• Gloves - 400,000
• Gowns - 24,000
• Goggles - 4,000
• Face shields - 120,000
• Respirators - 4,000
• The following was requested for continuity of government (public safety workers):
o N95s: 600,000
o Gloves: 1.2M
o Goggles: 20,000
MARCH 12:
The State of Illinois received a shipment of PPE from the SNS containing:
• N95s - 123,430
• Face shields - 55,989
• Coveralls - 234
• Gloves - 162,541
• Surgical Masks - 45,649
• Gowns - 45,649
MARCH 20:
The State of Illinois made a request for PPE for public safety workers.
State of Illinois request:
• Gloves - 7M
• N95s - 1.74M
• Gowns - 900,000
• Goggles - 43,500
• Hand Sanitizer - 85,000 bottles
• Disinfectant Wipes - 43,000 Canisters
• MREs (meals ready to eat) – 1,000,000
MARCH 22:
According to IDPH an additional SNS shipment will begin arriving today. The amount of this shipment is expected to be the same as the shipment we received on March 12.
* I put the numbers together for you…
• Respirators requested - 4,000
• Respirators received - 0
• Goggles requested - 67,500
• Goggles received - 0
• Hand Sanitizer requested - 85,000 bottles
• Hand Sanitizer received - 0
• Disinfectant Wipes requested - 43,000 Canisters
• Disinfectant Wipes received - 0
• MREs (meals ready to eat) requested – 1,000,000
• MREs received - 0
• Surgical Masks requested - 900,000
• Surgical Masks received - 45,649 (91,298 if federal promise met today - 3.8 percent of IL’s request)
• Gloves requested - 8.6M
• Gloves received - 162,541 (325,082 if federal promise met today - 5 percent of IL’s request)
• Gowns requested - 924,000
• Gowns received - 45,649 (91,298 if federal promise met today - 5 percent of IL’s request)
• N95s requested - 2.94 million
• N95s received - 123,430 (246,860 if federal promise met today - 8.4 percent of IL’s request)
• Face shields requested - 120,000
• Face shields received - 55,989 (111,978 if federal promise met today - 93 percent of IL’s request)
• Coveralls requested - 0
• Coveralls received - 234 (468 if federal promise met today)
Well, at least we’re all good on face shields and coveralls.
That MRE request is a little scary, by the way.
Comments Off
|
* Press release from Rep. Bob Rita (D-Blue Island)…
URGENT PUBLIC NOTICE: Early this morning, I was contacted by the Governor’s office regarding policing and public safety in Blue Island. I have since learned that Mayor Domingo Vargas made a unilateral decision at 1 a.m. Sunday (today) to suspend all police department activities. At no point did the Mayor’s office contact my office, any member of the City Council or any other local leaders in making this rash decision.
In response to this action by the Mayor, my office has made contact and arrangements with both the Cook County Sheriff and Illinois State Police to ensure that Blue Island residents have police patrolling our community. While this is not a long- term solution, please be assured that there are County and State police available should residents need their help. Residents should still call 911 if an emergency. I am also in frequent communication with the City Council and am calling on our alderman to convene an emergency meeting to address community policing during this crisis.
Our first responders are heroes because they remain on the frontlines during this crisis. In the event that a first responder falls ill with COVID-19 or any other illness, there are state-mandated protocols in place to protect both the employee and any others coming in contact with that person. These protocols are in place to ensure that we can protect both individual officers while not threatening the safety of the general public. Based on current information, these vital protocols were not followed by Mayor Vargas when making his decision.
I am in frequent communication with both local leaders and the Governor’s office and will be providing daily updates as we work through this difficult time. We are also asking that anyone who is in possession of safety masks, gloves or other equipment consider donating those items to the Blue Island police and fire departments as we are facing a national shortage on protective items for first responders. Residents are invited to call my office at 708-396-2822 or email robertbobrita@aol.com with questions or concerns.
Together, as a community, we will get through this.
* I asked the governor’s office for a response. From Jordan Abudayyeh…
The Governor’s Office urges local governments to act responsibly as we overcome the challenges COVID-19 brings us. Police officers are essential employees who do valuable work to protect and serve. The health and safety of all Illinoisans are the Governor’s top priority and the administration is working with ISP to inform local governments on proper protocols. The Governor would urge leaders in Blue Island to follow guidance from the CDC and IDPH.
* Sen. Michael Hastings…
“Our first responders are doing a phenomenal job in the south suburbs responding to COVID-19 calls. I’ve been on daily calls with them regarding planning and potential issues moving forward. Unfortunately, we are already seeing the effect when our law enforcement officials are exposed to this virus. We’ve had exposure at four of our local police and fire departments already.
On a positive note, whether it’s getting PPE or prioritizing testing for first responders, Governor Pritzker has been overwhelmingly understanding and helpful to our requests.
Similar to my experience in Iraq, bad things will occur in this battle. We’re going to have to be one team, one fight regardless of who you are or where you live.
…Adding… One person who’d been home a week and the entire department is shut down?…
Blue Island Mayor Domingo Vargas made the decision Sunday. Vargas told NBC 5 a police department employee tested positive for COVID-19 last week, and although the person hadn’t been at work for at least a week prior to the positive test, officials are looking into whether the individual was in contact with other city or department employees.
Comments Off
|
* Gov. Pritzker began his press conference today by thanking the media…
Today marks the 14th of these daily briefings, two full weeks. So I want to start by saying how appreciative I am to the many members of the media, and to the public who tune in to these press conferences every single day, and help us to get the word out to the broader population of Illinois.
This also feels like an appropriate time to offer an apology to the woman who called my office this week angry that I’ve been interrupting the Bold and the Beautiful, and wanting to know that I too look forward to the days when we can get back to our regularly scheduled programming.
All kidding aside, getting accurate information disseminated and squashing irresponsible rumors is so critically important, as we waged the battle against COVID-19. So thank you to our residents, for sharing the information that I share, every day with your friends and your neighbors your family, and your social media networks. Thank you again to the reporters and the press who are continuing to do this work in such a difficult time.
* He went on to speak about President Trump…
One final thing. I refuse to spend more time on this than it deserves. So I want to quickly address Donald Trump’s tweet today before you asked me.
One of the things that’s been most heartening here in Illinois is the degree to which Republicans from all over our state have reached out to me to ask how they can help. Even people who have had profound political disagreements with me in the past have been among the first to call or text me asking what they could do to help Illinois in her hour of need.
When it comes to volunteerism and charity and stepping up in a crisis, Illinoisans of all political stripes are doing their part.
Now, I’m a pretty even-keeled guy. But even I’m finding it hard to contain my anger with Donald Trump’s response to this national crisis. I have doctors and nurses and first responders begging for masks, equipment and more tests. And I have a floor full of staff who are working day and night to hunt down the supplies that our healthcare workers and our first responders need, and the supplies we know they’re going to need.
We’re doing that because Donald Trump promised to deliver for all the states weeks ago. And so far has done very little.
So apparently the only way to get the President of the United States to pay attention is to go on national television and make noise about it, which I won’t stop doing until we get what we need. I said I would fight for the state and I will with every breath that I have and I meant it.
I said that the other day, that this is a time for serious people, not the carnival barkers that are tweeting from the cheap seats. All I can say is, get to work, or get out of the way.
This will be updated. And please pardon all typos because I’m using Otter for fast transcription.
* On to questions for the governor from the media. Will Illinois be extending the tax filing deadline..
I want you to know that we’re working hard to figure out how we can do that. You know there are challenges for the state of just cash flow right. I mean obviously we receive a lot of those revenues typically in April and they’re planned for spending related to those revenues that come in in April. So we’re trying to figure out whether there’s federal borrowing or federal help that will come down the pike that will help. I think there are a lot of states will have this kind of cash flow issue. If they extend their deadlines to July, I think is when the federal government did, but we are working on it . We think that’s an important thing for us to evaluate and then do something about
* Concerns about the health of older healthcare workers coming back to the profession, as Pritzker asked yesterday…
For those who are older, we certainly want people to take extra care. We wouldn’t want anybody who deems themselves to be at risk or falls into a high risk category to come into the healthcare profession and be exposed to COVID 19.
There are ways for healthcare professionals, even who are older, to participate and help us, and not be as exposed to COVID 19. In other words, there are a number of people who will be in hospitals or in health care centers that don’t have COVID 19 that simply are people who are heart attack victims or have some other condition that that need hospitalization. We’re trying to separate those people out from people who have covered 19, and make sure that we are serving both needs, but not spreading the virus. So, there will be and are places where one can work that are lower risk than just going into a hospital emergency room or serving COVID19 patients.
* We’re hearing a number of employers are giving essential employees documents akin to an affidavit for proving that they are indeed essential or law enforcement requiring this…
No, but let me be clear. You do not need to have papers or a permission from your employer, when nobody’s being stopped on the streets. And unless they are in fact seem to be directly violating the stay at home order in which case, a police officer or somebody else may just ask you please go home or are you in fact going to your job or going somewhere that is essential. Just to encourage people to do the right thing. So there’s no stopping people and asking for papers that’s going on.
* How will you measure how effective the stay home order is…
…One of the things that the doctors have said, the researchers have said is that after about eight or 10 days after the stay at home order’s put in place, we may begin to see the increase in the number of cases reported start to diminish their acceleration. Let’s say, instead of being exponential, maybe they’ll be growing at only a geometric level.
And remember these numbers will grow even after we may have slowed this significantly. They will grow because of more testing being available. We’ll be able to test more and more people know exactly who has it. But we may begin to see and this is up to the statistician and the modelers, we may begin to see it, a bending of this curve, you know, even after less than two weeks and so that’s why we wanted to put this in place for long enough to be able to see what effect we’re having. And we’ll watch it very closely. I mean I want very much as everybody else does, to begin to go back to normal as soon as possible. But let me tell you what the most important thing is that needs to happen. And it’s something that’s a little out of all of our control. But it is in the hands of the tremendous researchers that are here in in Illinois in Chicago, many of them in Champaign, and also all across the United States and the world. And that’s they’re researching treatments and therapies, and they’re getting closer.
There are two or three that have been in trials even now, one of which seems more effective than others but we won’t really know until we get the full results of those tests but the truth is that we’re going to rely upon them to help us with treatments. Once we get treatments I think all of us will feel a little bit of relief that we know that we can save lives. We know that we may be able to, you know, bend this curve, even more. And then of course finally getting a vaccine to protect people entirely from it will be the most important thing we can do
* How much money are we taking out of the state’s rainy day fund to help medical facilities and testing centers…
So I think many of you know that the state for many years didn’t have much of a rainy day fund. And I want to say that we’ve worked hard. So far I’ve been in office now 15 months and we’ve worked hard to look at ways that we could build up that rainy day fund.
Well now as you can imagine in this crisis, there’s no way to build up that fund it’s a very very small fund in the state of Illinois.
Having said that, all the states in the United States need help from the federal government. That’s why you’ve seen in some of these stimulus packages for example support for unemployment benefits, unemployment insurance. As one example but we’re all going to need help with our state budgets because revenues are declining in every state as we have had to slow things down to keep people at home. But also we’ve seen an increase in expenditures because we have social services that we want to make sure we’re providing for people who may be suffering economically, financially from this virus, so we have a lot of needs I would say that we can’t meet with a rainy day fund in our state. And so we’re going to do everything that we can to meet those needs no matter what
* Is there some where people can call to denounce if their place of employment is open and they don’t think it should be…
I would encourage people to call the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity. We have a hotline where people can find out if their business does in fact meet the requirements of an essential business operation in the executive order.
-30-
Comments Off
|
* Press release…
The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) today announced 296 new cases of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Illinois, including an infant. IDPH also announced three deaths. The deaths included a Cook County man in his 80s, a Chicago man in his 80s, and a McLean County woman in her 70s. Jo Daviess, Livingston, Rock Island, and Stephenson counties are now also reporting cases. Currently, IDPH is reporting a total of 1,049 cases in 30 counties in Illinois. The age of cases ranges from younger than one to 99 years.
Health officials are still learning about this new virus and information and guidance is rapidly evolving. At this time, it is still unknown if a pregnant woman with COVID-19 can pass the virus to her fetus or baby during pregnancy or delivery. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, no infants born to mothers with COVID-19 have tested positive for the COVID-19 virus. In these cases, which are a small number, the virus was not found in samples of amniotic fluid or breastmilk.
* Today’s graph…
…Adding… Illinois is up to 8,374 completed tests. Positive movement, but not nearly enough.
Comments Off
|
* The Illinois National Guard is on rumor patrol at its Twitter page…
* Meanwhile, the Illinois Automobile Dealers Association sent this to its members Friday about the governor’s stay at home order…
Importantly, Section 12(e) of the order provides that “Gas stations and auto-supply, auto-repair, and related facilities and bicycle shops and related facilities” are essential businesses that can remain open. In other words, motor vehicle dealerships, both the parts and service department and the related sales department are essential to the health and welfare of Illinois residents and may remain open
* A legislator asked the governor’s office about this topic…
Q: Car dealers appear to think they are essential services? Perhaps being open for service calls but new sales? Where can they receive more guidance?
A: Only auto-repair is considered an essential operation.
*** UPDATE *** Last night’s Q&A updated the position…
Q: Are car dealerships essential services?
A: Car dealerships may stay open for repair and parts. Car dealerships may also remain open by appointment for individuals who need to purchase a car for essential travel. Showrooms should be closed. For further guidance, please call DCEO’s helpline 1-800-252-2923 or CEO.support@illinois.gov.
* Legislators are submitting questions to the governor and his office is responding to them all at once every day. I have asked to be put onto that list so I can post them here. A helpful legislator forwarded a few to me today. That auto dealer guidance was in yesterday’s email…
* March 21
* Stay at home EO FAQ
* March 19
* March 18
* Remember the other day when Liz Uihlein sent an email to legislators complaining about the media overblowing COVID-19 and asked them “at what point do we go back to our normal lives?”
NY Times…
And in the Midwest, Uline, a major distributor of packaging materials and industrial supplies, kept its work force going through the week, despite complaints from employees, including those crowded into its call centers, working side-by-side in cubicles.
“Nothing’s really changed,” one employee said. “It’s just nerve-racking.”
Employees received an email Thursday from the Uihlein Family, owners of the $5.8 billion company and big donors to Republican causes, thanking them for their efforts and saying that the “White House called upon us twice with huge orders” this week.
The same day, a manager at one Uline call center sent a note to employees.
“If you, or family members, are under the weather with cold/allergies — or anything aside from Covid-19,” it read, “please do NOT tell your peers about the symptoms & your assumptions. By doing so, you are causing unnecessary panic in the office.”
* A few headlines from the Tribune’s excellent live blog…
* Chicago groups scramble to change 2020 census plans for ‘hard-to-count’ communities after coronavirus stay-at-home order
4 Elgin firefighters in isolation after contact with 3-year-old with coronavirus
Chicago launches website to help first responders and health care workers find day care
Confirmed COVID-19 cases reported at Loyola University, U of I Urbana-Champaign
Comments Off
|
Keep calm and carry on
Sunday, Mar 22, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The President of the United States has clearly decided to allow governors to take the frontline lead on the COVID-19 battle. His Department of Homeland Security and the CDC have issued several bits of “guidance” to the states, but not orders.
That has resulted in a patchwork-quilt response across the country. Our restaurants and taverns were closed on March 15th, but Wisconsin’s weren’t closed until two days later. Missouri’s governor has still not ordered them closed. That state hasn’t shut down much of anything, although individual school districts and municipalities are making closing decisions themselves.
* Gov. JB Pritzker said this today on CNN…
“These orders that the governors have led on, you know, I led with canceling gatherings of a certain size in our state and then we closed schools,” Pritzker said. “We moved on now to a stay-at home order. These should’ve been done nationally, they haven’t been.”
And then things predictably escalated…
“Governor of Illinois, and a very small group of certain other Governors, together with Fake News @CNN & Concast (MSDNC), shouldn’t be blaming the Federal Government for their own shortcomings,” he tweeted. “We are there to back you up should you fail, and always will be!”
Pritzker tweeted back, “You wasted precious months when you could’ve taken action to protect Americans & Illinoisans. You should be leading a national response instead of throwing tantrums from the back seat. Where were the tests when we needed them? Where’s the PPE? Get off Twitter & do your job.”
* There is zero doubt that the White House has bungled its response from Jump St. and continues to do so. I mean, for crying out loud some supplies are so tight that the CDC issued this horrifying guidance the other day…
In settings where facemasks are not available, HCP [healthcare personnel] might use homemade masks (e.g., bandana, scarf) for care of patients with COVID-19 as a last resort.
So, do we really want that very same White House taking a policy and action lead?
* Plus, Pritzker himself has regularly allowed local institutions to get out in front of him. Some public and private Illinois schools (including the Chicago Archdiocese) shut themselves down before Pritzker acted.
And to this very day, universities are all devising their own individual response policies. The following is the governor’s office response to a legislator’s question…
Q: How are State university employees to interpret whether they are essential or not? Any direction?
A: State University are still internally discussing that process and are encouraged to use discretion as each institution is unique.
Each state is also unique in its own way as well. So it stands to reason that the governor should heed his own advice.
* Governor, if you’re going on national TV again, stop patting yourself on the back and picking fights with the president. Stick to indisputable facts, which are mostly on your side. Presenting cold hard facts is more than enough to make your case that the White House continues to fall far short.
I’ve called you “Gov. Chillax” in the past. When you appear boastful and rattled these days, that rattles me. And if I’m rattled, imagine the message you’re sending to everyone else. /rant
Comments Off
|
* Gov. Pritzker today…
Please remember that the grocery stores and gas stations and pharmacies will all be open tomorrow and Monday and Tuesday and every day after that. And they are being constantly restocked. In fact, you would be better off going to the store on Monday than you are today.
As I said yesterday, so many of us have neighbors who are vital to our future, our nurses our doctors our healthcare workers, our law enforcement officers, our firefighters and the ambulance drivers our grocery workers truck drivers our pharmacists, let’s be good to them. […]
Today I’m issuing a call to action in the fight against COVID 19. We’re in the middle of a battle and we need reinforcements. I’m asking all former physicians, nurses, physician’s assistants, nurse practitioners and respiratory care therapists who have recently left the field, whether for retirement or a new profession, to come back and join the fight against COVID 19. We need your help now.
We’ll be waiving the fees and licensures so you can rejoin the healthcare workforce right away. On Monday, your health care license reinstatement form will be available on the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation website … These applications will be processed on an expedited basis, and we’ll be coordinating with hospitals and healthcare sites throughout the state to deploy these reenlisted medical professionals to the front lines. Also for medical professionals professionals whose licenses may be expiring, we are automatically extending your licenses, through the end of September.
Finally, for healthcare workers living at our borders,who may be practicing in cities outside of Illinois. We’re going to make it easier for you to also practice here. This will allow health systems in places like the Quad Cities and East St. Louis to deploy physicians where they are needed most on either side of the border.
This is hero’s work. And all of you have our deepest gratitude for your willingness to serve.
* Racism spike…
Lastly, let us remember that this virus is not tied to any specific ethnic group or race, people from every demographic every race, ethnicity, gender, or background, have been infected. Suggesting otherwise, or engaging in racist speech or acts is one of the most profoundly unAmerican things that I can think of. Instead, the current crisis should drive home to all of us just how connected we all are. We can choose how we want to come out on the other side of this. Let’s choose to be one Illinois.
* IDPH Director…
I have to share with you the additional cases. Se’ve added 168 new cases. And unfortunately, that includes a death. A gentleman in his 70s, who resided in Cook County.
That brings our total to 753 cases, with a total of six deaths. for each of the families, represented by these fatalities. We all offer our support, and prayers.
* Today’s graph…
* Back to the IDPH Director…
During this unprecedented public health emergency, stocks of personal protective equipment, also known as PPE, are being used rapidly. The availability of critical resources, such as gloves, gowns, eye protection and N 95 respirators is essential to maximize the state’s availability of this PPE. IDPH will release guidance to limit non essential adults’ elective surgery and other medical and surgical procedures, including dental procedures until further notice.
We are encouraging strongly all ambulatory surgery centers and veterinarians to donate PPE that is not immediately needed to assist healthcare workers healthcare facilities and first responders who are on the frontline actively responding to COVID 19.
Remember that I’m using Otter for transcription so I won’t be able to catch all of the typos.
* On to questions for the governor. The first two reporters have apparently not bothered to read the EO or even the press release. They asked some pretty obvious questions about what would and would not be closed. He was also asked again about enforcement, which he went over yesterday…
Well we are certainly asking the residents the citizens of Illinois to enforce themselves, to make sure that they follow the rules. We hope that people who might see somebody else doing something that’s against the order might say something to them. It’s not their job to intercede.
But if the law enforcement officers out on the streets would see something there. They certainly would say something to people there. Their next course of action if somebody were to refuse to comply, would be to get a cease and desist order from a court.
So if it was a gathering somebody’s having a picnic a large group of people who are just disobeying the order around the number of people who should gather which is limited to 10, they might need to go to a court to get a court order to get that party that activity to cease and desist in the extreme circumstance. An officer could charge somebody with reckless conduct, which is a misdemeanor, if they’re truly engaging in reckless conduct.
Most people will simply be making a mistake, they’re not standing six feet away from each other they’re standing a few feet. Those are the kinds of mistakes nobody’s going to hold anybody responsible for and we’re not encouraging police, we’re not looking to put people in jail or to fine them for this kind of activity. What we really want is for people simply to obey the rules.
This is about keeping everybody in our community safe, including the law enforcement officers, including your neighbors and your friends and your family members. But people are still encouraged to go outside and, you know, the weather allows to go on a walk to take your dog on a walk to take your child out, and so on. There’s nothing wrong with going to the grocery store, going to the pharmacy. You know, if you need to check up on a neighbor or friend.
Those things are all, you know, allowed and something that certainly I would encourage. I would especially encourage checking up on, calling your friends or people that you know who our healthcare workers and on the front lines who are our first responders, those are people who are so vital to us, and they should know how grateful you are. And I would hope you would ask them if there’s anything that they need that you might be able to do for them.
* Federal response…
I must admit that we’ve gotten no help from the federal government or, let me say, limited help because we did receive some PPE. When we put in an order we got 25% of what we asked for from the federal government. But I believe that we are acquiring at a reasonable rate, but I have an office of people several of them are dedicated to just this to getting into the supply chain and getting every item that we need to make sure that our healthcare operations and our first responders are covered.
* Recovery rates…
It is true that the vast majority of people will recover from having COVID 19. The problem is that the numbers of people, overall, who are getting COVID 19 are so large that even the small number of people who have trouble recovering is more than our healthcare system may be able to handle. And that’s why we’re all working so hard to make sure that we keep our social distance and that all of you obey the stay at home [order].
* For the IDPH Director: How confident are you about asymptomatic transmission…
Yeah, that’s a great question. So, we know that before you develop symptoms, you have to have the virus in your system. And the virus, you don’t get the virus replicates rapidly so you get the virus, and then it replicates in your system, and then you develop symptoms. So we know that from when you get the virus to when you get symptoms, there could be some time in there, maybe a day or two. And so, the issue is how do we think that virus that’s in your system now gets transmitted to another person. And so from what our best evidence shows, we think the majority of the transmission has to do with droplets coming out from sneezes or coughs potentially from contaminated surfaces, being touched and then introducing that virus into, into your mucous membranes, whether it’s your mouth your nose your eyes. And so that’s why the attention to cleaning surfaces frequently, and to cover your cough, and stay home when you have a cough. So, yes, we know that you could potentially have the virus at say Day Zero, but the likelihood of transmitting at that time is significantly lower which is why we prioritize people with symptoms, because we know the direct method by which people would transfer it to another individual.
* Question for the governor: We are getting tons of questions from people who work in manufacturing asking why they are not shutting down and are considered essential. Can you elaborate on what manufacturing sectors are essential and why…
So again I would direct everybody online to the frequently asked questions into the order itself it actually outlines quite a long list. The intention here is that there’s a supply chain of manufacturing that occurs, not just for the end product that you see on a shelf, but all the way back you know the brand that you see on the shelf is not just the brand itself but there’s a twist tie and there’s a plastic bag that holds the brand. Those are all manufacturers that are necessary in order for that good to end up on the shelf. The same thing is true for bottle makers for pharmaceuticals, for example. It’s not just the pharmaceuticals, but that someone makes the tops, someone makes the bottles, you can see that there’s a whole supply chain behind many of the things that are necessary for everybody’s daily life. And so we want to be, you know, to make sure that essential business operations includes all of the supply chain across the board.
* He was asked about his optimism for the future…
I’m going to try to be measured in my answer to your question because as you know I’ve been deeply concerned. I would say frustrated and sometimes even angry at the failures of the federal government.
Let me say that there are people at levels below the political levels of government, who are working very hard to do the right thing. People have the experience that’s necessary to help us solve the challenges we have in the States, and I talk to them frequently. Sometimes I expressed to them my frustration. I simultaneously tell them you know that that I know that this is not their fault, specifically.
But I have to say that that my optimism has waned.
Honestly, because I said the other day that the federal government is like Lucy with the football and I feel like Charlie Brown. And so this has happened, a number of times now, weeks ago, you could look back at press conferences or comments that I made weeks ago, weeks ago we were promised tests that in fact we were told that right around the corner. I was told by people at the highest levels ‘Right around the corner, we’re going to see more and more tests.’ and then weeks went by. Now, are we seeing more tests? Yes, but not even at the numbers that were promised weeks ago. And now they want to sit you know they want to try to play games, about the numbers.
Pritzker continued…
All I can tell you is that that the great people of the state of Illinois, the people who work in our hospitals, the researchers the laboratory technicians, they’re the ones, the doctors here, they’re the ones who have actually figured out how to test and have spun up testing all across the state.
We, of course, our laboratories the state IDPH laboratories were the real front lines. They’re the ones who they put on a second shift. They’ve been doing more and more tests. I mean, they’ve had to put aside some other testing that they do in order to make sure that we’re getting the COVID 19 testing done.
So, I am frustrated. I mean I’m hopeful in a way that the commercial laboratories, and that the private sector will help us figure this out, because so far the federal government hasn’t.
Just one example, private companies have developed or are developing rapid COVID 19 tests that don’t take four or five hours to get an answer for, but something that takes that you could do on the spot. That would be a revolution here.
And so I’m, I’m hopeful in that regard that we’re going to get help. Because the ingenuity of the people of Illinois, the ingenuity of the private sector the ingenuity of the people working in the laboratories, at the hospitals all across our state is heartening.
-30-
Comments Off
|
* This happened everywhere yesterday afternoon…
After announcing the order, Pritzker spent considerable time trying to reassure people that the state at home order does not mean sealed up in the homes unable to leave.
“You’ll still be able to leave your house to go to the grocery store to get food. You’ll still be able to visit a pharmacy, go to a medical office or a hospital or to gas up your car at a gas station,” Pritzker said. “You’ll still be able to go running and hiking and walk you dog. Many, many people will still go to work. For the vast majority of you already taking precautions, your lives will not change very much.”
Pritzker said that agriculture, the news media, plumbers, Laundromats, banks, roads, bridges and mass transit will remain available.
“You can still pick up dinner from your local restaurant, pick up your prescriptions and just spend time with your family,” he said.
“This is not a lockdown or martial law,” added Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot. “There is no need to change your normal purchasing patterns.”
But even as Pritzker and others were giving their daily update on the coronavirus, photographs were showing up on social media showing throngs in grocery stores stocking up on food and other supplies.
I blame the Chicago Tribune’s headline writers for at least some of that mass panic. The paper decided to run with a scoop about what the governor planned to do instead of waiting two hours to get their story right. The story was incomplete, but the Tribune’s headline used the word “lockdown.” Stores were quickly flooded with people. Inexcusable.
* And then even after the governor’s executive order was released, some media outlets continued using that word…
A totally irresponsible headline intended to drive clicks and make money from inciting panic. It’s a free country and they can do whatever they want. But that means I can also do whatever I want and I choose to call them out. Stop this nonsense before people get hurt.
* This also isn’t a “shelter in place” order, as the PJ Star’s current headline also reads as well as at several other media outlets. That’s for hurricanes and such. From FEMA…
Being prepared for shelter-in-place includes ensuring that the family or individual has a specified shelter-in-place location. When sheltering-in-place, individuals should ensure they have enough water, non-perishable food, blankets, communication equipment (such as radios), alternate power sources (including fuel for generators, first aid supplies, necessary medications, and durable medical equipment [e.g., wheelchairs, canes, and hearing aids] and consumable medical equipment [e.g., medical device batteries, catheters, and wound dressings]) to allow self-sustainment in that location for a minimum of 72 hours and a maximum of 14 days. The family or individual should plan to keep a well-stocked emergency kit available at home, at work, and in the car, to meet all contingencies.
Nobody has been ordered to do anything like that unless they’ve tested positive. And even then, many of those items above do not apply.
* Illinois’ order simply requires you to stay at home unless you need essentials or are performing essential work. And the list of exemptions is really long. So, click here and here if you want to know what you can and cannot do.
Ben Bradley is exactly right and sets the proper tone…
* Anyway, one of their headline writers may be horrible, but the Tribune is doing a fantastic job of updating readers with their live coverage. Here are some headlines from that page, which you should most definitely bookmark and visit often…
Chicago TV shows donate masks, other props for coronavirus treatment: Their doctors may be fake, but it turns out hospital procedurals like “Chicago Med,” “The Resident” and “Grey’s Anatomy,” are awash in authentic medical gear.
CTA bus driver has tested positive for coronavirus, officials say
COVID-19 is having a major impact on Chicago orgs assisting those in need. Here’s how you can help.
Saturday morning content: Keep having that quarantine sex, Chicago.
Coronavirus is keeping people away from animal shelters, so volunteers are needed immediately to foster pets.
‘We feel like we’re in this alone’: Nurses treating coronavirus patients plead for more protective gear
Grocers, delivery services scramble to hire thousands of workers to help with a crush of business driven by the coronavirus
You can order your craft beer for delivery in Illinois, says liquor commission
* Sun-Times…
Illinois cannabis tax revenues that were earmarked for the state’s rainy day fund will now be used to help rural pharmacies in Illinois as the state grapples with the coronavirus outbreak.
The Illinois Comptroller’s office announced Friday that rural and small-town pharmacies being “squeezed” by low reimbursements will receive a combined $946,000 in payments from the state this week.
State Comptroller Susana Mendoza said her office is using cannabis revenues to give the 80 pharmacies servicing rural communities throughout Illinois their payments ahead of schedule.
“Our ongoing effort to support rural pharmacies that are being squeezed out by unfair competition and managed care policies now takes on added importance as communities fight the spread of the COVID-19 coronavirus,” Mendoza said in a statement.
* Here’s Gov. JB Pritzker at Thursday’s White House video teleconference with the nation’s governors…
Mr. President, Mr. Vice President, this is Governor J.B. Pritzker from Illinois. I wanted to first express my gratitude to your staffs and to other working in the administration who we’ve interacted with. They’ve really done yeoman work in being responsive to us. And thank you, Mr. Vice President, for returning calls to us as we needed more help with answers to questions about testing. And, actually, that’s why I wanted to ask a question today.
We understand that there is drive-through testing that’s being stood up across the country. We hope to see it in Illinois — drive-through testing that the federal government has arranged. But we understand that there are only about 5,000 tests that will provided to us in Illinois for these drive-through tests — testing centers. And then there is no more promise after that. And so I wanted to try to understand what — if stand them up, what will happen? That — that’s perhaps, you know, a day or two days of testing. Obviously, that’s on top of the testing we already have now. But what will happen after the 5,000 run out? How will we get more?
* Admiral Brett Giroir, M.D., the Assistant Secretary for Health at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, responded…
And to be very clear, we gave the initial allocation based on what your state told us, but we want you to work through your FEMA system. We have plenty of tests on the back side. We have plenty of supplies on the front side. Work through your FEMA administrator to give your requirements and we will bring those back through the FEMA system to meet them.
There’s been great demand and great enthusiasm among the states for these drive-through centers, primarily for healthcare workers and we want to support you. We can certainly provide more than 5,000, but we didn’t want to give away so much at the beginning until everyone got set up.
That answer was interpreted by one of my subscribers as saying we only got 5,000 tests for drive-throughs because that’s all we asked for and that Pritzker should’ve asked for more. But, clearly, the admiral said the amount of tests were limited “until everyone got set up.”
* Even so I wondered why Illinois only asked for 5,000 tests. Here’s Jordan Abudayyeh…
Our team asked the federal government for 5000 tests because that was the maximum number of tests they offered.
OK, that makes sense. Illinois asked for the maximum.
Abudayyeh continued…
Since the very beginning of this crisis, our administration has demanded our partners at the federal level step up and assist us in our mission to save lives. Because the federal government has been unreliable and slow to act, members of our team are working every avenue in the supply chain to purchase more tests and personal protection equipment for our healthcare workers. What we’ve found is that the federal government has commandeered most of the supply chain and has yet to produce results for states asking for more supplies. Every time a member of this administration gets on the phone with anyone at the federal level we ask for more tests, so if they have more, like they claim, we look forward to our shipment arriving as soon as possible. As of right now, we haven’t seen them deliver on their promises.
Yikes.
Comments Off
|
|
Support CapitolFax.com Visit our advertisers...
...............
...............
...............
...............
...............
|
|
Hosted by MCS
SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax
Advertise Here
Mobile Version
Contact Rich Miller
|