Category: Corona Virus

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Joe Biden and Kamala Harris to receive regular coronavirus testing – CNN

August 25, 2020

The campaign intends to make public if either Biden or Harris tests positive for the virus, per a campaign official, and staff who interact with them will be tested regularly as well.

"This announcement is another step demonstrating Joe Biden and Kamala Harris' commitment to turn the page on Trump's catastrophic mismanagement during the worst public health crisis in 100 years," campaign spokesman Andrew Bates said in a statement.

Bedingfield said there were "strict protocols" in place should Biden need to be tested.

"He has not had the virus," Bedingfield told ABC's George Stephanopoulos on "This Week" when asked if he has been tested or contracted the virus. "We have put in place really strict protocols, as I think all of your journalists who attended our convention in Delaware this week saw. We've put in place incredibly strict protocols to ensure that everybody involved, who is around Vice President Biden, who is around Sen. Harris, is undergoing the appropriate testing. The vice president has not had the virus."

Asked if Biden has been tested, she said, "He has not, he has not been tested" and added, "However, we have put the strictest protocols in place and moving forward should he need to be tested, he certainly would be. But he has not been tested yet."

Last month, Biden told reporters he had not been tested for the virus and he told CNN's Jake Tapper in May that he had not been tested because he was not experiencing symptoms. He told Tapper he was following medical advice such as requiring people who enter his home to wear masks and gloves and that he was practicing social distancing.

Biden, 77, is among those considered high risk for the virus, according to guidelines by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The coronavirus can be spread by infected people who are asymptomatic and those who haven't developed symptoms yet.

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Joe Biden and Kamala Harris to receive regular coronavirus testing - CNN

Pinellas sheriff tested negative for coronavirus a week after diagnosis – Tampa Bay Times

August 25, 2020

Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri is feeling better a week after being diagnosed with coronavirus, he said Monday.

The sheriff said he got tested Friday at a community health center and received a negative result on Saturday, a week after his agency announced that he had come down with the virus.

He dealt with some fatigue and headaches, but it was overall a mild case, he said. He still cant taste or smell I cant even smell bleach, he said.

I have a lot of sympathy for those who have moderate and severe cases, Gualtieri said. Its terrible. Im a very lucky one to only experience the minor symptoms I did.

The sheriff added that his wife, Pinellas-Pasco Circuit Judge Lauralee G. Westine, and their teenage daughter also tested negative.

Gualtieri worked from home following his positive result. No other Sheriffs Office employees had to take further action, a spokeswoman said at the time, because personnel had practiced appropriate social distancing in all meetings, and people are either more than six feet apart and/or wearing masks or the meetings are accomplished electronically.

The sheriff said Monday that he will ease back into in-person work. He urged caution as the virus continues to spread in Florida.

Its a nasty illness, he said. You cant figure this thing out. Thats why its so dangerous. You cant figure out how people are going to react to it.

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Pinellas sheriff tested negative for coronavirus a week after diagnosis - Tampa Bay Times

Fans crowd into an indoor concert in experiment on how to return to normality – CNN

August 25, 2020

Leipzig, Germany (CNN) Ever since the coronavirus pandemic shuttered clubs, bars and concert halls around the world, music fans have been dreaming of the day they can once again visit a busy, sweaty venue to enjoy a gig with friends.

With infection rates rising in many European countries, this dream could be far off for now. But some music fans in Leipzig, Germany, have been given the chance to rock for a day in the name of science -- with the help of some glowing hand sanitizer and electronic trackers.

Researchers in the German city of Leipzig staged a 1,500-person experimental indoor concert on Saturday to better understand how Covid-19 spreads at big, busy events, and how to prevent it.

At the gig, which featured a live performance from musician Tim Bendzko, fans were given respiratory face masks, fluorescent hand gel and electronic "contact trackers" -- small transmitters that determine the contact rates and contact distances of the individual experiment participants.

Participants wearing FFP2 protective face masks took part in the Covid transmission risk assessment study in a concert setting in Leipzig, Germany.

Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Using data from the contact trackers, scientists from The University of Halle will monitor the number "critical contacts" had by each participant during specific times and locations, while the residue left by fluorescent hand gel will identify frequently touched surfaces. Researchers hope to use the data to find ways to bring big events, including sports, back safely.

Professor Michael Gekle, the dean of the university's medical faculty and a professor of physiology, told CNN the experiment was being conducted to better prepare authorities on how to conduct events in the upcoming autumn and winter seasons.

Participants wore FFP2 protective face masks during the performance.

Sean Gallup/Getty Images

"We cannot afford another lockdown," he said. "We have to gather the data now in order to be able to make valid predictions," he said.

"There is no zero risk if you want to have life. We want to give the politicians a tool in order to decide rationally whether to allow such an event or not. That means they have to have the tool to predict how many additional infected people such an event will produce," he said.

Researchers directed volunteers to run three scenarios -- one that simulated a concert pre-coronavirus, a second simulating a concert during the pandemic, with improved hygiene measures in place, and a third, with reduced participants. Scientists will gather the data, apply a mathematical model, and evaluate the hygiene interventions, with conclusions ready by the end of the year.

Singer Tim Bendzko performed for volunteers during the study.

Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Researchers believe this is the first time an experiment of this scale has taken place in Europe, but say that different considerations would have to be applied depending on the type of event, the behavior of concert goers and whether patrons were allowed to consume alcohol.

"Of course, a concert with Rammstein would be different," he said.

Gekle told CNN that due to a low prevalence of the virus in the states of Saxony and Lower Saxony, participating in the study was low risk for volunteers, who underwent coronavirus testing 48 hours before participation, and were wearing masks during the show. "It's safer than flying to Majorca," he said.

The number of coronavirus infections in Germany has been climbing again since the end of July. On Saturday, the country saw its highest number of daily infections since April 26, with 2,034 new cases of Covid-19, according to Robert Koch institute, the country's center for disease and control.

The experiment may have been controlled, but for some in the crowd -- despite the lack of alcohol -- it felt like a return to normality.

Participants took a coronavirus test before being allowed to enter the study, and were temperature checked on arrival.

Sean Gallup/Getty Images

"This was our first real applause from the audience in months," Bendzko told CNN. "The atmosphere is surprisingly good -- it almost felt like a real concert.

"I wish that it will be possible to play at big concerts again someday soon," he said. "But we all understand that we now have to live with the virus and we have to take a certain risk."

Elli Blesz, 20, from Leipzig told CNN: "The atmosphere was really great, we all enjoyed the music -- it was nice to listen to live music after six months."

And Kira Stuetz, a 26-year-old student who attended the concert with her husband, said: "It was a little crazy." Recalling one of the pre-coronavirus simulations, where audience members sat together, she said that "at first it almost felt wrong all people came so close together. We thought this 'is a dream' because it's not allowed to be sitting together so close! But then it was really cool. I could not believe it that we were at a real concert again!"

Organizers around the world have been dipping their toes into the water to see when and how live events can be brought back in a world still suffering from the coronavirus pandemic -- in the UK, event organizers trialled concerts at an outdoor, purpose-made socially distant concert venue, where patrons sat in small groups on distant, raised platforms.

Correction: A previous version of this story misstated the number of people who participated in the experimental indoor concert. It was 1,500.

Nadine Schmidt reported from Leipzig, Germany. Amy Woodyatt wrote from London.

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Fans crowd into an indoor concert in experiment on how to return to normality - CNN

Young Philadelphians and coronavirus: ‘Hard-headed’ disregard vs. worry over family – On top of Philly news – Billy Penn

August 25, 2020

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After six months of pandemic quarantine, some of Philadelphias younger residents are no longer content to spend their days isolating themselves from the rest of society.

Were hard-headed, said Monyah McQueen, a 24-year-old visiting friends in the city. We like to do what we want to do.

In multiple neighborhoods over the summer, young adults have been seen partying in groups that number in the hundreds and lack social distancing. They may have heard theyre more likely to survive than older folks if they catch the virus and many seem willing to take the risk.

Im ready to treat everything like its back to normal, Steven Garcia, 18, told Billy Penn and WHYY.

Mayor Jim Kenney and Health Commissioner Dr. Tom Farley have repeatedly cautioned young people against a false sense of security and warned against hanging out in close proximity. In mid-August, Philadelphians aged 20 to 34 made up roughly 30% of new coronavirus cases in the city, according to health department data, more than any other age group.

We are concerned about infections in that younger group, Farley said in July, because they could spread it to older people that theyre in contact with.

Even young adults who have personal experience with the coronavirus are feeling increasingly ready to abandon the precautions.

McQueen is a hospital employee. She herself contracted COVID-19 this spring. Still, at the beginning of August, she walked down South Street without a face mask. People shame me and my friends sometimes for going places, she said. But at the end of the day, were all fine.

It hasnt been easy for young folks. Milestones like graduating high school, attending prom and starting college in a dorm abruptly slipped through their fingers.

And plenty are still taking the pandemic seriously, including millennials raising their own families and gen-Zers desperate to keep their parents safe. Many young Black Philadelphians know the virus has disproportionately affected their communities. Some are immunocompromised themselves.

Its surprising to me, that theres this lack of empathy toward other peoples lives, said Rebeca Cruz-Esteves of Manayunk, 30. People are dying because of it. That should be enough to make you want to stop and think about who you could expose.

One Saturday in mid-August, Refia, 23, walked down South Street with two friends, chatting. One of them had a mask hanging down around their chin. She agreed to speak with reporters if her last name was not used.

At the start of the local lockdown in early spring, Refia said, she was so paranoid. But that changed as the months wore on, and isolation took its toll.

Staying inside one room for like four, five months maybe, its not really healthy, she offered.

The claim about going stir-crazy isnt without merit, but there are ways to get outdoors without endangering other people thats where masks and social distancing guidelines come in.

Lawncrest resident Garcia graduated high school in June. Since then, hes been fine staying at home, he said, getting social contact through multiplayer video games.

His grandparents and his parents all contracted COVID-19 during the past few months, and now appear to have recovered. Health experts are still unclear about the long term effects of the disease, but looking at his relatives, Garcia feels like its time to get back to real life.

Im ready to go to a movie theater thats packed, he said. Im ready to go to a mall. Everyone around us probably developed immunity.

The science on immunity from SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, remains unclear.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced recently that folks whove had the disease can show immunity for up to three months but the longevity of the antibodies beyond that point is unknown. Some whove already contracted the virus managed to catch it a second time.

For much of July and August, Phillys 20- to 35-year-olds saw the biggest increase in new coronavirus cases, higher than any other age group in the city.

Jessica Stern, whos 31 and lives in South Philadelphia, took isolation seriously during the first few months. As its gotten warmer, shes started to cautiously expand her bubble. Shell meet friends in the park, sitting without masks on blankets at least 6 feet apart.

I tend to see the same people who are also taking the same sort of precautions that my partner and I are taking, Stern said.

Her friend Tara Taylor has done some outdoor dining and hit up a few breweries. It was very distanced, she said. It was nice to have a little slice of normalcy and chat with a stranger.

Others say they feel they need to watch out specifically because of their heritage. In the U.S., both Black and Latino people have tested positive at disproportionately higher rates compared to their shares of the countrys total population.

Nikela Roderique, 23, is comfortable leaving the house now so long as shes following guidelines set by the government and local businesses. But as a Black woman, she still feels she has to take the virus seriously.

Its disproportionately harmful to the Black community at the end of the day, so we have to take precaution, Roderique said. We dont have a choice. Its not that were out here doing whatever. Thats not the case.

Some young adults are taking the danger super seriously.

Eighteen-year-old Lamar Reed is starting his first semester at CCP. He lives with his mother and his aunt, whos in her 70s and he recognizes the possibility that he could get them sick. The past few months, he said the only other person hes been physically close to is his girlfriend. He turned down an invitation to an Airbnb birthday party that promised 10 to 15 guests.

I was a little bummed I couldnt go, Reed said. But at the same time, I didnt want to go. Ive been listening to what my moms been telling me. She wants me to stay home, and I want to stay home for her sake.

Rebeca Cruz-Esteves, the 30-year-old from Manayunk, has already dealt with a family member taken by the coronavirus. She watched her fathers otherwise healthy cousin die within two weeks of being diagnosed.

Its really sad, she said. I dont think people realize you really can take someones life from this.

Cruz-Esteves is six months pregnant with her first child, and was recently diagnosed with an autoimmune disorder.

Shes currently planning a virtual baby shower to avoid exposing any of her loved ones. Shes told her father he likely cant be in the delivery room for the birth shes due in December, and she anticipates there might be a winter coronavirus spike.

The many invitations to cookouts and birthday parties she received have all been politely declined.

Ive lost friends during this time, Cruz-Esteves said. Ive had pressure from friends that dont really realize they are putting themselves at risk. Ive seen that on social media, and I cant afford to do that.

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Young Philadelphians and coronavirus: 'Hard-headed' disregard vs. worry over family - On top of Philly news - Billy Penn

Coronavirus outbreak reported at Sanford Fire Department might have spread elsewhere – Bangor Daily News

August 25, 2020

York County has at least four cases of COVID-19 among firefighters and EMS clinicians after the discovery of at least three cases involving the Sanford Fire Department, the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention said Monday.

Among the cases associated with the Sanford Fire Department are individuals who worked with the Buxton and Saco fire departments, spurring the coronavirus testing of all Buxton Fire Department employees, families and others this weekend. Testing for all Saco Fire Department members and other individuals were being arranged on Monday, Maine CDC spokesperson Robert Long said.

Maine CDC classifies an outbreak as three or more linked cases. Union members at the Sanford station first announced the cases earlier Monday. The unions said at that time that the majority of Sanfords firefighters have been tested for the coronavirus, but 10 still had not received results 72 hours after testing.

Everyone here at the Sanford Fire Department has been united in working as fast as we can to mitigate the spread of this virus by ensuring that everyone infected has been quickly removed from service and quarantined in order to protect the health and safety of our department, our families and our community, said Eric Beecher, the president of the Sanford Fire Fighters Association.

Beecher said that firefighters are following coronavirus guidelines when responding to calls, including wearing protective equipment such as N95 masks, gowns, gloves and eye protection.

The coronavirus outbreak at the Sanford Fire Department underscores how critical it is to ensure that our first responders are given top priority in receiving direct access to COVID-19 testing and that they receive their results in a timely fashion, said Michael Crouse, the president of the Professional Fire Fighters of Maine.

As of Monday, there have been 750 total coronavirus cases reported in York County, where Sanford is located, according to the Maine CDC.

It isnt the first recorded outbreak among first responders in Maine. In June, four of Houltons six full-time paramedic and emergency medical technicians and a firefighter tested positive for the coronavirus. That same month, several members of Fort Fairfields fire department and one police officer were believed to have been exposed to the coronavirus, but they later tested negative.

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Coronavirus outbreak reported at Sanford Fire Department might have spread elsewhere - Bangor Daily News

Texas State University reopens campus during the coronavirus pandemic – The Texas Tribune

August 25, 2020

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SAN MARCOS Omar Cruz, a 19-year-old sophomore, stocked up on bottles of disinfectant for himself and his roommate in anticipation of the first day back on campus at Texas State University. He wore two face masks as an extra precautionary measure to his in-person precalculus class.

But Cruz said hes not too worried about catching the new coronavirus from classmates on campus.

Of course with COVID, youd expect people to be nervous, but Im not super nervous, Cruz said.

At 9:45 a.m. Monday, Texas State University looked like a ghost town. The first day of school at the campus, which had more than 38,000 students last fall, is typically bustling with energy and activity, with first-time students walking shoulder to shoulder in search of their new classes and friends reuniting after being separated over the summer.

But Monday was the first day of in-person instruction at the San Marcos campus since the coronavirus pandemic raged across Texas, forcing school officials to reinvent the college experience in an attempt to keep students who would otherwise live, eat and learn together safe and socially distanced.

In interviews with The Texas Tribune, over two dozen students and teachers expressed a range of emotions about the first day back, including nervousness about the pandemic and excitement about the new school year. Some students were unfazed about the possibility of falling ill.

Others expressed doubt that the school would continue face-to-face classes for the duration of the semester.

I feel like all of the school reopening plans are based on models of idealized human behavior as opposed to real human behavior, said Nicole Taylor, associate professor of anthropology. Theyre predicated on the assumption that people will follow the rules.

But nationwide, as other schools have reopened for in-person classes, officials are seeing that college students are partying and gathering in large groups off campus. Already, the University of North Carolina and the University of Notre Dame, after attempting to meet in person, have gone fully virtual because of outbreaks among students.

In Texas, most major public and private universities, including the University of Texas at Austin, Sam Houston State University and Texas A&M university, are charging ahead with in-person returns, opting for a mix of in-person and remote classes, opening campus and dormitories to throngs of people.

By lunchtime at Texas State, campus was still quiet. In a student center, standing 6 feet apart, several students all of whom were wearing masks piled into a Starbucks. Others retreated to a nearby Chick-fil-A, which had markings on the floor to indicate how much distance people in line should keep between one another.

After his seminars wrapped up Monday, Grant Tran, a senior, said that it appeared only a few hundred students at any given time instead of the thousands hes used to were milling about school property.

Campus is 100% more empty, he said.

Approximately 42% of classes are being offered online and 58% are face to face, said Jayme Blaschke, a Texas State spokesperson. A majority of face-to-face classes will include an online or remote component in an effort to reduce classroom density. Enrollment data wont be available until later.

Texas State takes the health and safety of students, faculty and staff very seriously, and making the fall 2020 semester as safe as possible has been the primary concern at the university, Blaschke said.

But the coronavirus has disrupted nearly every facet of the campus experience. Students at Texas State are required to wear face masks, and some in-person instruction is divided up so half of a class section will meet one day a week and the other half will meet a different day. The recreation center, nestled in the northwestern part of campus, is open, but only by reservation.

Outside the LBJ Student Center, a university employee thanked those wearing masks; he offered everyone a sticker with the phrase, WEARING IS CARING. On the perimeter of the nearby Alkek Library, two staff members handed out refillable sanitizer bottles and stickers with the phrase, RESPECT & PROTECT. WEAR A MASK.

A notice taped to the inside of a bus that drove around campus read limited seating available accompanied with a photo of how much space patrons needed to leave between one another.

Outside of a science class, a sign read, Max Occupancy 30. 50% Occupancy 15.

I never imagined my first year of college would be over a computer, said Mia Velez, a first-year business marketing student. We never expected this, and wed rather be learning in person, but we have to adapt to everything. She went to a music class Monday morning donning a maroon and gold face mask.

At Texas State, almost half of the student population identifies as Hispanic or Black, groups that are disproportionately affected by the coronavirus nationwide and in Texas.

San Marcos in Hays County, where the school is located, has become a statewide hot spot; last week the county reported more than 2,500 cases of COVID-19 since the pandemic started. One reason for the rapid spread, experts say, is that the city has a large working-class population that does not have the luxury of living in isolation. Theres also a high number of people without health insurance in addition to the citys bustling tourism industry. Over the summer, Hays County saw surging cases among people in their 20s, who accounted for more than half of all the cases in late June.

Still, theres been a hankering by the university for an in-person return, with the school previously scheduling on-campus summer classes set to begin as early as July 1. Nearly 2,000 students were slated to be in face-to-face courses, but as cases skyrocketed over the summer, the school abruptly changed gears and pushed summer school online.

Eric Schneider, the Hays County epidemiologist, said the start of school is bound to increase the risk of infection. But this time, he said he was more optimistic that the school could keep outbreaks manageable.

Its a concern. Face-to-face classes are a big risk, in my opinion, Schneider said. But as long as proper precautions are taken, with masks and social distancing, it should keep things down to a minimum.

But in some cases Monday, students had a hard time maintaining recommended distance from others.

Twenty minutes before the start of a physical chemistry course, 22 students sat outside a classroom, waiting for the door to open. All were masked, though distancing was tough in the dimly lit hallway.

Tran shook his head as he thought about physically going into classes to take tests or quizzes. He recounted seeing fellow students over the summer in San Marcos wandering around and looking for fraternity parties despite the pandemic.

I get that people in college want to live their best lives, but this is maybe not the best time to do that, he said.

Some faculty members and students said they expect classes to eventually be moved completely online.

I suspect we wont stay face to face very long, said an untenured biology lecturer at the university, who asked not to be named out of fear she could lose her job. There are already pictures circulating around of people having parties with no one wearing masks, and not everyone has moved to campus yet. It will only get more dangerous.

How many of our students, staff and faculty will have their lives forever altered by an extreme case, or may even die? she questioned.

Abbigail Solis, a sophomore, said she felt safe throughout most of the morning, but during a chemistry class, students were, at first, piled on top of each other as they struggled to find their assigned seats. They later spread out and were fine, Solis said.

Solis said she was being extra precautious Monday. Her two brothers ages 21 and 23 previously tested positive for the virus, so shes aware of the dangers that the contagion poses.

It makes me nervous, but Im going to try and stay safe, she said.

Another student preparing for his first day back also vented his frustration.

When you go completely online, thats the perfect time for your computer to act up, 19-year-old Gabriel Polman said behind a tie-dye face mask. Im glad were back in kindergarten and having seating charts.

But a return to attempted normalcy didnt faze all students.

Ian Remmele, a freshman from north of Dallas, wrapped up his university seminar via Zoom on Monday morning and sat by the main entrance to the student center wearing a thin, blue surgical mask. He hadnt met any of his classmates in-person, he said, but was already preparing for an introductory fine arts class he had later in the day.

Im not worried at all, Remmele, 23, said. I mean, its just the flu. Yeah, Im not worried about it.

Jessica Pliley, an associate professor of the history of women, genders and sexualities at the university, received permission to conduct her classes completely virtually. Although her first class wasnt until Tuesday, she worried about how overworked and underpaid fellow faculty members were while having to adjust to new technology thats been unfamiliar until now in a classroom setting.

The learning curve this summer has been profound for professors, she said. But patience, kindness and compassion will be my mantra even when Im cursing at the technology. Worst-case scenario? Everything crashes.

On Monday morning, Zoom experienced a worldwide outage, thwarting virtual learning plans for many educators, parents and students.

Pliley texted, This has been my most immediate fear; beyond the risk of COVID cases spiking.

Raga Justin contributed to this report.

Disclosure: Texas State University, Sam Houston State University, Texas A&M University and the University of Texas at Austin have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

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Texas State University reopens campus during the coronavirus pandemic - The Texas Tribune

Ben Affleck film moves shooting to Canada as Hollywood abandons U.S. without widely available coronavirus testing – CNBC

August 25, 2020

Ben Affleck

Bauer-Griffin/GC Images | Getty Images

Solstice Studios was supposed to begin filming itsnewest feature starring Ben Affleck in Los Angeles back in April. While the film's production was halted by the coronavirus, it's the lack of widely available testing that will keep it from resuming in the U.S. this fall.

"It became quite clear very quickly that it was absolutely impossible,"Mark Gill, president and CEO of Solstice Studios, said.

Instead, the movie will be shot in Vancouver, Canada in October.

Rising Covid-19 cases in California forced the studio to look at Austin, Texas as the new home for the film. Those plans quickly dissolved as cases grew in the Lone Star state and it became apparent that the production would not be able to accommodate the three tests per week for actors and crew that Hollywood guilds were requiring if it remained in the U.S.

"The problem is there is a shortage of tests, a delayed time between the test and the lab result and that would put us in immediate violation of our agreement with the unions who represent that cast and crew," said Gill,whose producing credits include "Pulp Fiction," "The English Patient," "Good Will Hunting" and "Shakespeare in Love."

Gill said the production also looked at the U.K. and Australia as other possible safe havens for production.

Last month, Frank Patterson, CEO of Pinewood Studios in Atlanta, said that the studio had conducted over 1,000 tests and had less than two dozen positive results. The majority of these positive tests were from part-time workers, he said.

When asked for additional information on testing on Friday, Patterson declined to comment.

A limited supply of Covid-19 testing materials has hampered the U.S. response to the coronavirus pandemic since the very beginning, public health specialists say. It's made it difficult for people to get tested in some parts of the country. Delays in processing test results plagued the U.S. throughout the summer as those who could get tested waited days, sometimes more than a week, to get their results making them virtually worthless.

Though national labs say they've recently cut the wait time, the U.S. is currently running around 600,000 tests a day when most epidemiologists say the country needs to process millions a day to truly reopen the economy open.

ProducerShaun MacGillivray, who is the president ofMacGillivrayFreeman Films, which predominantly produces and distributes documentaries, noted that there is no official enforcement of some of union testing guidelines, but there is a massive liability for productions if the rules are not followed and someone gets sick.

For larger studios, the additional costs to secure tests and laboratories to run them are easier to absorb. Independent production companies may have a harder time, MacGillivray said.

"From a budget standpoint, you've got to think about 20% to 25% more expenses to do that," he said.

In Canada, Solstice Studios will have readily available testing and quick lab results. The additional health and safety costs adds up to a couple of million dollars for the studio, which produces films in the low-to-mid-tier range of $30 million to $80 million.

Additionally, Canada has far fewer instances of coronavirus. The country reported an average of less than 400 new coronavirus cases per day, over the past week compared with more than 46,400 in the U.S., according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. The cast and crew will have the quarantine for 14 days after arriving in the country.

"You can't plan for something if you know right now it's not possible," Gill said of productions that are looking to restart in the U.S. this fall. "You have to know now it will be possible in eight weeks or you are just planning for a disaster."

CNBC'sWill Feuer contributed to this report.

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Ben Affleck film moves shooting to Canada as Hollywood abandons U.S. without widely available coronavirus testing - CNBC

Many New Yorkers may be leaving. But reports of the city’s demise are greatly exaggerated – CNN

August 25, 2020

"I was in New York City through 9/11 and Sandy and the recession, and I wasn't about to give up on New York," says the 47-year-old dating app creator who lived in Manhattan. "But there was something about this that was completely different."

Half a year later, Cheek is among a legion of New Yorkers who fled the nation's most populous city following a spring and summer of Covid-19 stay-at-home orders and record death tolls, mass protests and social unrest, and spasms of violent crime.

"I don't see things changing in New York for a very long time," she said.

NYC hit with 'an absolute perfect storm,' mayor says

Some headlines have predicted New York's demise as the city confronts a spate of distressing economic and social indicators.

Interest in moving out of the city has doubled compared with last year, according to United Van Lines.

"I literally talk to people all day long who are now in their Hamptons house ... or in their Hudson Valley house, or in their Connecticut weekend house," Gov. Andrew Cuomo said earlier this month.

"And I say, 'You got to come back. When are you coming back? We'll go to dinner. I'll buy you a drink. Come over, I'll cook.'"

With businesses closing and residents leaving town, those who stayed started to pay more attention to the city's growing homeless population.

To keep those living on the streets safe during the pandemic, the Department of Homeless Services moved more than 10,000 people from group shelters to dozens of hotels.

"There's incidents that are troubling," said city resident Chris O'Connor. "You know, there's a man masturbating in front the Natural History Museum. There's reported drugs being sold and used more commonly now."

And the city has seen a rise in crime in recent months. The NYPD reported the number of shooting victims increased 84% -- from 551 to 1,017 -- compared with last year. Overall, shooting incidents spiked 79% to 833 from 466 in 2019 -- which has led some people to draw comparisons to the crime-ridden '70s and '80s.

"What we got hit with was an absolute perfect storm: a health care crisis and economic crisis, a budget crisis, a social justice crisis of crime uptick -- all at once and all interrelated," Mayor Bill de Blasio said last week. "But this too shall pass, and when it does, the strength of New York City will come to the fore again."

'Diaspora of the elites'

Mitchell Moss, a professor of urban policy and planning at New York University, said reports of the city's demise are exaggerated. He called the exodus of some New Yorkers in recent months a "diaspora of the elites."

"Some of them are kids who are going home to be with their parents or they're students and a lot of people who can work remotely," he said. "Others are families who have left the city for summer rentals ... in the Hudson Valley or Pennsylvania, as well as the normal set of people who go to the Hamptons. The difference is, they went to the Hamptons in March and they haven't come back."

Still, Moss said he would be concerned if many of these families don't return to the city in the fall. Also troubling, he said, was the pandemic's impact on the local economy, particularly with swaths of the city abandoned by office workers.

"This is a very serious," he said. "We have office buildings open, but no one's buying coffee because they're not coming to the office. The entire city of New York street vendor industry has been decimated by the desire of so many of our talented people to work remotely for good reason. We've now got homeless people replacing tourists in hotels."

While Manhattan has suffered during the pandemic, Moss noted that most outer-borough neighborhoods remain intact and stable.

"Those people aren't moving," he said. "They have families and jobs, and they own homes."

'Who knows? I might be back.'

The Extra Virgin Restaurant in Manhattan, like other small city businesses, has struggled of late. It has laid off most of the staff, turned to outside table service and broadly expanded its delivery service area.

"I don't think the city is dying," said the restaurant's general manager, Josip Raspudic. "I think the city is definitely going through a phase where we need to adjust and adapt to new things."

Raspudic is unsure what the winter months will bring for his industry if officials don't restart indoor dining in the city.

"I'm only worried about my job and this restaurant and my life, personally," he said. "When it comes to the city, I think it's gonna be a quiet summer. It's gonna be even a quieter, more quieter winter."

Back in Louisville, Cheek said that while her "soul is still in New York City," she has enjoyed living in "what feels like a mansion" for a third of what she was paying for a tiny, dark apartment in the Big Apple.

"I'm not sure I could go back," she said.

And as the founder of a mobile app, Cheek can work remotely from the rest her team.

"New York will come back on some level, but it's not going to have that magic that I wanted to pay so much money to live there for," she said.

Sill, Cheek did not rule out a return to the city where she spent nearly half her life.

"Who knows? I might be back. I've got that PO Box," she said with a laugh. "I need to check my mail."

This story was reported by Aaron Cooper, Jason Carroll and Ray Sanchez in New York, and written by Sanchez.

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Many New Yorkers may be leaving. But reports of the city's demise are greatly exaggerated - CNN

All of NFL’s positive coronavirus tests from the weekend return negative – ESPN

August 25, 2020

The NFL has cleared all individuals who tested positive over the weekend for the coronavirus, after what its testing partner called an "isolated contamination during test preparation." All of the original test results have been classified as false positives.

Eleven teams were affected by the mistake, with sources telling ESPN that 77 individuals had positive tests, leading to some anxious moments and altered Sunday practice schedules -- but ultimately no evidence of an outbreak. Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen was among those whose initial test resulted in a false positive, forcing him to miss the team's Sunday practice, according to ESPN's Adam Schefter.

According to the sources, the NFL retested the original 77 samples, all of which had been processed at the same BioReference lab in New Jersey. All of the retests came back negative. The league also conducted quicker, point-of-care tests Sunday, and all of those tests also were negative.

According to training camp protocol agreed upon by the NFL and the NFL Players Association, the 77 individuals -- players, coaches and some staff members -- can resume their normal activities Monday.

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BioReference, which the NFL hired to conduct all of its COVID-19 testing, uses five labs around the country to process the league's daily tests. The New Jersey lab was the only one to produce false positives over the weekend.

In a statement Monday morning, BioReference said: "On August 22, BioReference Laboratories reported an elevated number of positive COVID-19 PCR test results for NFL players and personnel at multiple clubs. The NFL immediately took necessary actions to ensure the safety of the players and personnel. Our investigation indicated that these were most likely false positive results, caused by an isolated contamination during test preparation in the New Jersey laboratory. Reagents, analyzers and staff were all ruled out as possible causes and subsequent testing has indicated that the issue has been resolved. All individuals impacted have been confirmed negative and informed."

In an email sent Sunday night to its members, the NFLPA said it has "initiated an investigation into both the testing process at the lab site in question and whether or not all of our protocols were followed."

Three of the hardest-hit teams over the weekend were the Minnesota Vikings, who had 12 individuals produce false positive tests, the New York Jets (10) and the Chicago Bears (nine). Those numbers created immediate alarms after the NFL had produced a low infection rate during the first month of training camp. As of Monday morning, only three players remained on the COVID-19 list.

Cleveland Browns coach Kevin Stefanski said he was among the false positives. A dozen of his players were cleared just ahead of Monday's practice. Stefanski wasn't able to lead Sunday's practice and stayed away from the team's practice facility as he waited to be cleared. Defensive coordinator Joe Woods led the practice instead.

"It's something I take seriously," said Stefanski, who initially found out about the false positive test early Sunday morning, "and our whole goal is to keep everybody safe."

The episode is likely to influence discussions between the NFL and NFLPA, who are working to finalize regular-season testing protocols. The sides must decide whether to continue daily testing, which expires Sept. 5, and create a policy for weeding out false positives when determining eligibility for games.

During training camp, all positive test results are followed by two additional tests over a 24-hour period. If both of those tests come back negative, the original test is classified as a false positive.

Information from ESPN's Jake Trotter was used in this report.

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All of NFL's positive coronavirus tests from the weekend return negative - ESPN

August 22 update: The latest on the coronavirus and Maine – Bangor Daily News

August 22, 2020

A Mainer has died as 32 new coronavirus cases are reported in Maine, health officials said Saturday.

Saturdays report brings the total coronavirus cases in Maine to 4,317. Of those, 3,872 have been confirmed positive, while 445 were classified as probable cases, according to the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

New cases were reported in Androscoggin (4), Cumberland (4), Penobscot (5), York (13), Hancock (1), Kennebec (3), Sagadahoc (1) and Waldo (1) counties state data show.

The death toll now stands at 130. Nearly all deaths have been in Mainers over age 60. The death announced on Saturday was a man in his 70s from Cumberland County.

So far, 408 Mainers have been hospitalized at some point with COVID-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus. Of those, four people are currently hospitalized, with one in critical care and one on a ventilator.

Meanwhile, 20 more people have recovered from the coronavirus, bringing total recoveries to 3,718. That means there are 469 active and probable cases in the state, which is up from 458 on Friday.

Heres the latest on the coronavirus and Maine.

An Aug. 7 wedding and reception in Millinocket that led to a coronavirus outbreak is now linked to 53 cases of the virus along with one previously reported death, the state said Saturday. Lynne Fort, BDN

This spring, motorists began honking as they passed Bayview Manor on Route 1 in Searsport to show support for the facilitys older residents during the coronavirus pandemic. More than four months later, the honking hasnt stopped. Abigail Curtis, BDN

The coronavirus pandemic shut down in-person learning last spring, but 40 students in the University of Southern Maines accelerated nursing program still received their diplomas on Friday. They picked up their degrees and were pinned in a drive-thru ceremony on campus, in front of the Costello Sports Complex. Troy R. Bennett, BDN

Monthly visits to Acadia National Park more than doubled from June to July but still lagged well behind visit totals from 2019, a decline directly attributable to the COVID-19 pandemic. Bill Trotter, BDN

The Class C and D boys and girls soccer state championship games scheduled for Nov. 9 at the Dr. Gehrig T. Johnson Athletic Complex in Presque Isle if they are played at all have been relocated due to the uncertainty related to COVID-19. Ernie Clark, BDN

The Piscataquis Community Ice Arena and the Piscataquis Regional YMCA, both in Dover-Foxcroft, reopened this week after shutting down due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Larry Mahoney, BDN

As of Saturday afternoon, the coronavirus has sickened 5,645,697 people in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands and the U.S. Virgin Islands, as well as caused 175,817 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University of Medicine.

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August 22 update: The latest on the coronavirus and Maine - Bangor Daily News

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