Gov. Andy Beshear showed a version of this chart; current figure was added later by Kentucky Health News. |
Kentucky Health News
Trying to tame the surging coronavirus, Gov. Andy Beshear limited private social gatherings to 10 people, down from the 50 allowed for the last three weeks, and issued a travel advisory saying Kentuckians shouldn't visit states with high positive-test rates -- and if they do, should isolate for two weeks upon return.
“We’re seeing clusters created by our backyard barbecues, by our block parties, and it’s because we let our guard down," he said. "We have a lot of friends over and we know them. We figure they’re probably doing everything right. We take off our masks about half way in between, we relax, we get too close, we stand around while people are grilling -- and we’re seeing some very difficult outcomes because of it."
"Those are 30 people that we love and we care about, and it just shows you that these numbers aren't just numbers," he said. "They represent real people that are put in danger and the higher the number, the more people that are going to be put in danger for the worst."
Restaurant capacity is now limited to 50%, and "I remember how many of our restaurants can’t operate even at 33%,” Beshear said. He urged restaurants, "Please encourage mask wearing. . . . I want to make sure we don’t hit that surge that we have seen in other places so we don’t have to adopt those White House suggestions. One facility doing the wrong thing can hurt everyone else."
He said Monday's action "is us trying to stop this thing before if gets out of control," and that the surge threatens school re-openings. “We gotta make sure that we’re not asking schools to open at a time when cases are increasing significantly,” he said.
Travel is a problem: Beshear's travel advisory calls on anyone who has traveled to a state with a 15% positive test rate or greater to quarantine for 14 days when they return to Kentucky. He can't make it mandatory, under a ruling several weeks ago from U.S. District Judge William O. Bertelsman.
Beshear said travel has been the major cause of case clusters. "We’re not seeing near the number related to bars as related to travel," he said. "I've been begging and pleading for people not to go when we know how much has been brought back."
Asked how long it would take to see impact of Beshear's mask mandate, Stack said. "If people really followed it," at levels of 80 to 90 percent, a decrease could be expected in two to three weeks."
Beshear said, "We know it will have an impact . . . What we’re gonna find out is how much it will."
He added, “Sunday was a rude wake-up call. Sunday is a warning. It’s a shot across the bow. If we don't intervene, then we are going to see the fate here in Kentucky that they are seeing in some of these other states."
Louisville and Lexington had the highest number of new cases Monday, with 93 and 36, respectively. Counties with more than five new cases were Kenton, eight; Shelby and Warren, seven each; Boyd, six; and Campbell, Christian, Daviess, Graves, Hardin and Harlan, five each.
An outbreak among Hazard High School football players has spread to at least 38 people: "18 football players, three coaches and 17 of their family members and close contacts," the Lexington Herald-Leader reports. Kentucky River District Health Department Director Scott Lockard said the outbreak has been traced to one family's vacation to a place he declined to name. But he said the football weight room "was a big part of the transmission. Last week, Beshear mentioned an outbreak in a football weight room but declined to name the school.
A Radcliff couple who refused to sign a self-isolation order when one tested positive for the virus is under house arrest with ankle monitors. Elizabeth Linscott said she refused to sign a form saying she would check in daily, self-isolate and “not travel by any public, commercial or health-care conveyance such as ambulance, bus, taxi, airplane, train or boat without the prior approval of the Department of Public Health.” She said she might have had to do that in an emergency.
The Scott County Detention Center in Georgetown has stopped accepting new inmates for two weeks after finding several cases of the virus in the jail. It has no “safe space” for new inmates, Jailer Derran Broyles wrote on Facebook.
The Louisville Courier Journal summarizes what's at stake as the Supreme Court of Kentucky prepares to consider legal challenges to Beshear's emergency orders and the law he cites in them.
"Dysfunctional politics, a lack of funding for public health and a rush to reopen the economy ignited the resurgence of the virus," The Washington Post says in a comprehensive report: "The country’s ineffective response has shocked observers around the planet. Many countries have rigorously driven infection rates nearly to zero. In the United States, coronavirus transmission is out of control."
"Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s foremost expert on infectious diseases, will throw out the first pitch Thursday to start the abbreviated Major League Baseball season. Fauci, who wore a Washington Nationals face mask when he testified before a House committee in June, was invited by the defending World Series champions, who host the New York Yankees on Opening Day," McClatchy Co. newspapers report.
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