Category: Covid-19

Page 513«..1020..512513514515..520530..»

Rev. Jesse Jackson Hospitalized With Covid-19, Was Vaccinated In January – Forbes

August 23, 2021

The Rev. Jesse Jackson (L) has along with his wife, Jacqueline, tested positive for Covid-19 and ... [+] been admitted to Northwestern Hospital in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Yesterday, the Rainbow Push Coalition, which the Reverend Jesse Jackson had founded in 1996, issued a statement about Jackson, 79, and his wife, Jacqueline, 77. Both have tested positive for the Covid-19 coronavirus and apparently have been admitted to Northwestern Hospital in Chicago, Illinois.

Heres a tweet from the Rainbow Push Coalition with that statement:

As you can see, the statement didnt provide a whole lot of information about the Jacksons conditions and why exactly they were hospitalized. Presumably this means that the Jacksons have more than a mild case of Covid-19. Both are at higher risk for more severe Covid-19 since they are over 65 years of age. Plus, the Reverend Jackson does have a chronic medical condition. Back in 2017, the long-time civil rights leader who had run for the Democratic Presidential nomination in 1984 and 1988 revealed that he had been diagnosed with Parkinsons disease, as I previously covered for Forbes.

On the flip side, Jackson does have a big thing in his favor and it rhymes with Mr. Bean, Dancing Queen, and Charlie Sheen: the Covid-19 vaccine. Jackson has already been vaccinated. In fact, in January, Jackson got a dose of the Pfizer/BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine in a televised event, as this Associated Press video showed:

Jackson was hoping that the event would encourage other Black Americans to get vaccinated. A recent Kaiser Family Foundation report revealed that the vaccination rate for Black people is less than 50% in 33 of 42 reporting states, including 6 states where less than a third of Black people have received one or more doses. And across 40 states, the percent of White people who have received at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose (50%) was roughly 1.3 times higher than the rate for Black people (40%) and 1.1 times higher than the rate for Hispanic people (45%) as of August 16, 2021.

Many on social media have offered their best wishes for the couple. For example, Bernice King, daughter of civil rights leaders Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King and CEO of The King Center, tweeted the following:

And here is what Senator Bernie Sanders (D-Vermont) twote:

Ah, but predictably, some on social media, including anonymous accounts, used the occasion to claim that Jacksons being hospitalized for Covid-19 shows that the Covid-19 vaccines dont work. For example, one tweet from an anonymous Twitter account said, Why are the Democrats pushing a racist vaccine onto everyone, even though people of a wide range of races and political leanings have gotten the vaccine so far. Another tweet from a different anonymous account asserted, So if the vaccine helped shorten his illness, why is Jesse Jackson in the hospital? Bunch of lies! Bet Abbott never had it. A tweet reply from yet another anonymous Twitter account claimed, Fully vaccinated Jesse Jackson in the hospital with Covid oncee again PROVING that the vaccines DO NOT WORK. What this tweet did prove that the lack of spell check can oncee lead to some typos.

Any claims that Jacksons case proves that Covid-19 dont work would be wrong, wrong as a sandpaper thong and equally irritating. Would you ever point to a leaking roof and say, see that shows that you should never have a roof or a rip in your pants and claim, this PROVES that pants DO NOT WORK?

Remember, no real medical experts have ever said that the Covid-19 vaccines would be 100% effective. The vaccines are not like full body concrete condoms. While they can significantly reduce your risk of getting severe Covid-19, getting fully vaccinated should not be a license to play Twister with strangers or to start panting on each other. As long as the virus continues to spread widely, it will be important to maintain other Covid-19 precautions, such as social distancing and face mask wearing, even if you are already fully vaccinated. While the pandemic remains a public health emergency, Covid-19 precautions are about layering on different protections, rather than just choosing one and forsaking others. After all, would you ever say before a job interview or a date, since Ive got underwear on, why wear the pants or the shirt, right?

Experts always expected breakthrough infections to occur. A breakthrough infection is an infection in a fully vaccinated person. Even when a breakthrough infection happens, though, immunity offered by the vaccine can still help reduce the severity of the infection. Just because a breakthrough infection happens and its severe enough to land you in the hospital, doesnt mean that the vaccine didnt work. An analogy would be wearing a seat belt during a car accident and exclaiming, darn, shouldnt have worn that seatbelt, or having your pants fall down, ugh, that underwear was useless. Quite the contrary. The underwear was actually on the ball, so to speak.

Hopefully, getting vaccinated will provide the Jacksons (assuming that his wife was vaccinated as well) with enough protection to weather the Covid-19 storm. Vaccination should have exposed Jacksons immune system to the spike protein that normally studs the surface of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), making the virus look like a spiky massage ball. Seeing this spike protein in advance should have better prepared Jacksons immune system for when the real virus came along, sort of like preparing a team for the playoffs by showing them a scouting report or game film of their opponents in advance.

Jackson, whos been known for his fiery civil rights speeches, probably didnt go into his speeches completely unprepared, Similarly, his immune system didnt go into this fight with the Covid-19 coronavirus unprepared either. And that can make a big difference.

Read more:

Rev. Jesse Jackson Hospitalized With Covid-19, Was Vaccinated In January - Forbes

Maryland Reaches Vaccination Goal, But The Fight Against COVID-19 Is Not Over Yet – CBS Baltimore

August 23, 2021

BALTIMORE (WJZ) Maryland has reached its goal of vaccinating 80% of the population against COVID-19 before Labor Day.

But the fight against this virus is not yet over.

Gov. Larry Hogan is still working on a number of steps to protect Marylanders and expand the vaccination campaign.

Hogan said with Maryland among one of the most vaccinated states, were much better prepared to handle the surge in cases.

And he also pointed out that 100% of hospitalizations and deaths are unvaccinated people, and he hoping to turn that number around.

Were doing better than just about any other state, Hogan said during an appearance on CBS Face the Nation.

On Sunday morning, Hogan announced 80% of all Maryland adults have received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine.

Were the second lowest case rate and positivity rate in America, Hogan said.

This comes as the state reported just under 1,000 new COVID-19 cases and five deaths Sunday.

Were very concerned about the spread of the Delta variant, our numbers are going up, but theyre going up from a very low place, Hogan said.

The governor said his administration is pressing the federal government to make booster shots available immediately for seniors and vulnerable populations, advance full FDA approval of the vaccine and expedite approval of vaccines for 5- to 11-year-olds.

The bottom line is, the higher the rate of the vaccination in a particular surrounding, whether its a school, a community, a state, the level of spread is going to be much lower than without vaccination, Dr. Scott Krugman, of Sinai Hospital in Baltimore, said.

With many students heading back to the classrooms next week, and some already in school, doctors are recommending students ages 12 and up who can get a shot to do so.

Right now, immunocompromised people can get a third COVID-19 booster shot. Hogan, a cancer survivor, said he already received his booster shot last week and is feeling great.

See the article here:

Maryland Reaches Vaccination Goal, But The Fight Against COVID-19 Is Not Over Yet - CBS Baltimore

Pediatricians concerned over rise in COVID-19 cases among children – WPTV.com

August 23, 2021

PALM BEACH COUNTY, Fla. A South Florida pediatrician is worried about the continued rise in COVID-19 cases among children, especially now that the new school year is underway.

Palm Beach Pediatrics has three locations and all are seeing an increase of COVID-19 cases among children. Just this past week, they were at a 17% positivity rate among their patients -- testing only the children who have symptoms. But things weren't like this before.

According to Dr. Shannon Fox-Levine, president at Palm Beach Pediatrics, since October their offices had a low positivity rate of 5% to 6%. It even got to a 2% positivity rate in June 2021. But in the middle of July is when everything changed. There were more diagnoses of COVID-19 in children just within their medical offices.

"The delta variant that was hitting the area in July is something that is more contagious and causing more children to be symptomatic," said Fox-Levine. "We have seen an increase with all of the kids going to camp over the summer and then restart school."

The American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children's Hospital Association also confirms that new coronavirus cases in children nationwide have been increasing since July after a period of decline in the early summer.

Fox-Levine said the spike of cases among children is due to the contagious delta variant.

"It is the perfect storm," said Fox-Levine. "We had the increase in rates just as the kids were starting to go back to school. So, two to three weeks before school started, our office started calculating the percentage increase and we were seeing some days upwards of 40% positivity rate from their sick kids that we were testing."

Fox-Levine recommends vaccination and masks until the spread of the virus is under control.

"If your house is on fire, do you question the firemen when they arrive to put out the fire? I don't think so," said Fox-Levine. "I think we would all stand back and hope that they save our family members and they put out the fire and our pets right. So this is what we have to do, so please trust your medical community."

See original here:

Pediatricians concerned over rise in COVID-19 cases among children - WPTV.com

Why We Need To Change How We Talk About Covid-19 Vaccines – Forbes

August 23, 2021

Its critical to resist over-optimism as the Delta variant spreads

Dr. Joshua Liao discusses how framing can be used to combat over-optimism about vaccination, which contributed to premature decisions to drop masking and social distancing requirements and public confusion.

Covid-19 vaccines play a key role in curbing the pandemic. But concerted efforts to promote vaccination over the last nine months also offer a cautionary lesson for the future: enthusiasm about vaccines can easily lead to over-optimism which can backfire.

From a behavioral perspective, humans are prone to overestimate their chances of experiencing positive events and underestimating the risk of negative ones. Studies show that people can suffer from this optimism bias in different aspects of their careers (e.g., earning potential, likelihood of business success) and personal lives (e.g., avoiding divorce). My colleagues in the Value and Systems Science Lab and I have observed optimism bias in many health decisions.

As I noted last year, over-optimism about Covid-19 vaccines could distort peoples risk perceptions and encourage unsafe behaviors that prolong Covid-related suffering. At the time, I worried that even if vaccines proved efficacious, optimism bias could still create a mismatch between expectation and reality; and that an inflated sense of security would embolden leaders and citizens to prematurely stop masking and distancing as burdensome, unnecessary measures under assumed immunity.

Unfortunately, weve seen this occur. For example, as more Americans were vaccinated this spring, the CDC relaxed its guidance by suggesting vaccinated people could participate in most activities without masking or physical distancing. There was rationale for the change: vaccines conferred strong protection in early scientific studies, and leaders wanted to incentivize vaccination by highlighting the associated freedoms.

But there were also open questions. What did immunity mean not being infected, not passing the virus to others, or both? How long would protection last, and how could we tell? How should we account for people with weak immune systems, or children who couldnt get a shot? Would the answers to any of these questions change with emerging variants?

Facing those uncertainties, dropping masking and distancing precautions reflected incredible optimism over-optimism, even about Covid-19 vaccines. Were now paying for that rosy outlook as we grapple with added public confusion, distrust, and resistance about the shift back to indoor masking.

Leaders, companies, and citizens could talk about masks and distancing as ongoing parts of our pandemic response, not just temporary stop-gap measures.

Its critical to avoid similar mistakes and resist over-optimism as the Delta variant spreads. One solution is intentionally re-frame how we talk about Covid-19 vaccines in everything from public health messaging to company communications and personal conversations. Doing so leverages the power of framing effects, and the fact that peoples decisions can be affected by how information is presented.

For instance, many promote Covid-19 vaccines based on their very high efficacy and reference infections among the vaccinated as breakthrough cases. These framings are implicitly anchored in optimism, connoting that protection is somehow defective at times when it should be nearly absolute. In reality, none of the Covid-19 vaccines are 100% efficacious; vaccines that permit mild infection while preventing severe disease are still valuable; and infections are infections, whether in the vaccinated or unvaccinated.

A better way to convey these messages would be to reframe how we talk about the extent of vaccine protection (substantially greater compared to no vaccine, rather than nearly perfect in an absolute sense); the nature of protection (good for preventing severe illness, rather than bad for permitting mild illness); and infections among vaccinated people (unfortunate but expected occurrences, rather than unanticipated defects).

As another example, leaders, companies, and citizens could talk about masks and distancing as ongoing parts of our pandemic response, not just temporary stop-gap measures. This framing would not only set better expectations, reduce confusion, and avoid the health and psychological costs of repeatedly changing public health guidance. It would also reflect the fact that masking and distancing guidelines were in place during Covid-19 vaccine trials, and could have played roles in those study results.

Of course, changing how we talk about Covid-19 vaccines isnt enough by itself. Public and private messaging needs to keep pace with the rapid advancements in Covid-related science produced in and outside of America. Persuading people to get vaccinated also begins with the hard but important work of understanding why they arent.

Nonetheless, we should recognize the risks of over-optimism and acknowledge how it can undercut our efforts to curb the pandemic. We have an opportunity to learn from prior experience and do better headed into the fall. We can start by reframing how we talk about Covid-19 vaccines.

Full coverage and live updates on the Coronavirus

See the original post:

Why We Need To Change How We Talk About Covid-19 Vaccines - Forbes

COVID-19 and heart problems: Cardiologist talks prevention, lasting effects for cardiac patients – Austin American-Statesman

August 23, 2021

Getting 'COVID-carded and what to do if you've lost yours

Getting 'COVID-carded is becoming more of a requirement for businesses, events and venues.

Buzz60, Buzz60

Dr. StanleyWang, a cardiologist at Austin Heart and Heart Hospital of Austin, has been sending his patients the same message for months: If they get COVID-19, they are among the highest-risk patients for severe disease and hospitalization.

Most are listening and have been vaccinated, andhe's continuing to have the conversation about what they can do to lessen their risks:

Wang says he has frank conversations using statistics, such as being unvaccinated makes you eight times as likely to get the delta variant of COVID-19 and 25 times more likely to be hospitalized or die.

Somepatientsworry about the small percentage of people who have had heart inflammation after avaccine (mostly younger men).Wang reminds them that a COVID-19 vaccination has a tiny risk of complications, but people with preexisting heart conditions are two to three times as likely to havecomplications from COVID-19, and those complications could continue for years.

He's also talking to some of them who have advanced heart disease orhave a suppressed immune system about getting a third shot, which was just approved for this group of people. (The rest of us will probably wait until eight months after our second dose if the FDA and CDC approve a third dose for everyone.)

A third dose: Should you get a third COVID-19 shot? Who needs a booster and why it's recommended

There is a correlation with COVID-19 causing elevated blood pressure as well as blood pressure that is difficult to control, Wang said.

"COVID is a disease of inflammation, and that can overlap with high blood pressure, causing the body to go into overdrive and bad things to happen," he said.

People who already have high blood pressure need to have it well-controlled with medication to put themselves in the best position to fight COVID-19 or any other infection.

Right now, because of the strain the delta variant is putting on the hospital systems in Central Texas, even a facility like Heart Hospital of Austin is full as other hospitals have sent cardiac patients there to free up space for patientswith COVID-19.

Hospitals are still able to handle heart attacks or strokes, but for Wang, the COVID-19 surge has meant that some of his patients who needroutine cardiac surgeries or other proceduresare having to wait. Gov. Greg Abbott has asked hospital systems to voluntarily postpone what he calls "elective" surgeriesbut should be thought of as nonemergency procedures. Central Texas' three hospital systems were already doing this before the governor's request because of the limited hospital capacity.

At the hospitals: Austin-area hospitals react to Gov. Greg Abbott's request to postpone surgeries because of delta COVID surge

Wang and other cardiologists have noticed the long-term effects the pandemic is having on their patients. It's not uncommon for patients to come in weighing 15 to 20 pounds more than a year ago, he said.

"The weight is still going to be a problem down the road," he said.

Many are not exercising as much and have become socially isolated, which is affecting mental health.

This pandemic also might increase the need for previously healthy people to see a cardiac specialist.

"We worry about long-term consequences diabetes, heart attacks, strokes all things expected from unhealthy behaviors," Wang said.

COVID-19 heart health: Coronavirus fears causing Austinites to delay care for heart attacks, stroke

Wang and his colleagues now are seeing people recovering from COVID-19who were previously not cardiac patients. The strain of having COVID-19 has caused them to have heart attacks or strokes, or they have lasting inflammation in their heart, or their heart was weakened by the virus.

They are not necessarily people you would think of as having heart problems, Wang said. One patient is a man in his 20s who Wang said "barely made it," and now his heart is 10% weaker.

"There is early evidence that some of the COVID patients with cardiac complications are more likely to have serious complications down the road," he said. "We don't know what they will look like in five years. It's too early to tell."

More here:

COVID-19 and heart problems: Cardiologist talks prevention, lasting effects for cardiac patients - Austin American-Statesman

Covid cases overwhelm the Gulf Coast, leaving region with no I.C.U. beds. – The New York Times

August 23, 2021

Coronavirus UpdatesAug. 22, 2021Updated

Aug. 22, 2021, 6:58 p.m. ET

The Gulf Coast, a tourist haven that draws throngs of revelers to beaches across several Southern states, has been sorely afflicted as the Delta variant tears through the region, which has relatively low rates of vaccination and often lax safety measures.

But even compared to other parts of the South that are struggling against the latest wave of the virus, the Gulf Coast stands out like an angry red scar on maps that depict coronavirus hot spots and hospitalizations.

The average per person hospitalization rate for Panama City, Fla.; Mobile, Ala.; and Gulfport, Miss.; is considerably higher than that of their states as a whole, even though they are three of the four states with the highest rates in the country, according to data compiled by The New York Times. The per person average case rates in the surrounding counties are all more than twice the national average. The vaccination rate in all three counties is well below 40 percent, according to federal data.

It is almost like whats going on in the West, where you have lots of fuel, a source of ignition and then you end up with a large fire, said Dr. Bernard H. Eichold II, the health officer of the Mobile County Health Department. More than 90 percent of the countys 461 hospitalized Covid patients on Thursday were unvaccinated, he said.

The people inundating the hospitals along the Gulf Coast are not the high-risk, often older ones who were most vulnerable in the earlier waves of the pandemic. The Delta variant is spreading among younger people, many who thought they had nothing to fear and did not get vaccinated.

Weve had 44 year olds, 45, 35, that have died, said Tiffany Murdock, a hospital administrator for Singing River Health System, which operates three hospitals in coastal Mississippi. Ive been a nurse for 15 years, and Ive never seen anything like it.

The regions thriving tourism industry, widespread opposition to masks and low vaccination rates collided with the contagious Delta variant earlier this summer and case numbers have surged since then.

After Fourth of July is when everything kind of went to hell in a handbasket, said Ms. Murdock, noting that casinos in coastal Mississippi are open with no mask mandates and the beaches are packed.

While a growing number of Democratic-led states and cities nationwide have moved to require masks and vaccinations, Republican governors in hard-hit states like Florida, Mississippi and Alabama have resisted such mandates, despite the surge in cases.

As of Friday, 142 people were hospitalized with Covid-19 across Singing River Healths network, including 39 in I.C.U., and 94 percent were unvaccinated, officials said. The surge has prompted a shortage of I.C.U. beds and left staff overwhelmed.

If you walked into our emergency department right now you would be like, What is happening. Every single hallway has beds in it with patients, every chair, said Ms. Murdock, describing the systems hospital in Gulfport, where staff have converted a surgical recovery room into an overflow I.C.U.

Last week, a husband and wife in their 40s, neither of whom were vaccinated, died within days of each other, she recalled. An unvaccinated 48-year-old nurse died on Monday. We had five people die, like room after room after room after room, just last Friday, she said.

In neighboring Alabama, Gov. Kay Ivey reinstated Alabamas state of emergency last Friday, which had expired in early July, in an effort to expand hospital capacity. But Alabama ran out of I.C.U. beds earlier this week.

The surge worries Sara Miles Agee, a mother of young children in Mobile, where she said few people bother to wear masks and just 33 percent of residents are fully vaccinated.

Its just really frustrating, she said. Were in dire straits down here. We have no I.C.U. beds. I dont know whats going to make people do the right thing.

Dr. Vivek Murthy, President Bidens surgeon general, renewed the administrations attack on coronavirus misinformation of Sunday, two days after The New York Times reported that Facebook had shelved a study showing that its most-viewed link during the first three months of the year was to an article that suggested a link between a Covid-19 vaccine and a Florida doctors death.

The speed, scale and sophistication with which it is spreading and impacting our health is really unprecedented, Dr. Murthy said of coronavirus misinformation during an appearance on CNN on Sunday. And its happening largely, in part, aided and abetted by social media platforms.

The Biden administration has aggressively and publicly pressured social media companies such as Facebook to share more data about false and misleading information on the site, and to tamp down its spread. Mr. Biden at one point accused Facebook of killing people by allowing false information to circulate widely, before later softening his position.

For his part, Dr. Murthy has issued a formal advisory in which he declared misinformation an urgent threat to public health.

Facebook which has pushed back by publicly accusing the White House of scapegoating the company this week released its first quarterly report about the most viewed posts in the United States for the quarter that includes April, May and June.

But only after The Times reported Friday that the company had prepared a similar report for the first three months of the year did the company produce that initial report.

The report showed that the most viewed link on the platform was a news story with a headline suggesting that a coronavirus vaccine was at fault for the death of a Florida doctor. Misinformation peddlers used the article to question the safety of the Covid-19 vaccines on Facebook. It also revealed that a Facebook page for The Epoch Times, which routinely spreads misinformation, was among the 20 most popular pages on the social network.

Dr. Murthys remarks on the issue of misinformation and its spread came after he was asked about reports of people taking an anti-parasite drug in order to treat Covid-19. It is costing us in terms of peoples health, he said.

Asked specifically about Facebook having disclosed the popularity of the news article that was seen to reduce confidence in the coronavirus vaccines, Dr. Murthy said it reinforced the fact that there is a lot of misinformation circulating on these sites.

I will readily say that the sites have recognized that this is a challenge, and theyve stepped up to do some things to reduce the spread of misinformation. And I credit them for that, he said. But its not nearly enough.

There are people who are superspreaders of misinformation, he added. And there are algorithms, still, which continue to serve up more and more misinformation to people who encounter it the first time. These are things that companies can and must change. And I think they have a moral responsibility to do so quickly and transparently.

Executives at Facebook, including Mark Zuckerberg, its chief executive, have said the platform has been aggressively removing Covid-19 misinformation since the start of the pandemic.

Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas announced on Saturday that he had tested negative for the coronavirus, four days after testing positive. He said he will continue to quarantine at the recommendation of doctors.

In a video posted on Twitter, Mr. Abbott, 63, credited vaccines with protecting him from serious illness.

Im told my infection was brief and mild because of the vaccination I received, he said, So I encourage others who have not received the vaccination to consider getting one.

He added that Cecilia Abbott, his wife, continues to test negative.

Mr. Abbott, who did not experience symptoms from his infection and who began receiving monoclonal antibody treatment after his positive result, has been a vocal opponent of mask and vaccine mandates. In the days before he announced his test result, the governor attended multiple maskless indoor public events, including a crowded indoor political gathering hosted by a Republican club in Collin County, a hotly contested area of the fast-growing suburbs north of Dallas.

In Saturdays video, Mr. Abbott said he would continue working from the governors mansion, and planned to focus on opening facilities across the state where coronavirus patients can receive monoclonal antibody treatments. Texas health officials are hoping such centers can prevent patients from becoming seriously ill and alleviate pressure on overwhelmed hospitals across the state as infections reach levels not seen since January.

Phil Valentine, a prominent conservative radio host in Tennessee who refused to get vaccinated, then urged his followers to get a shot after being hospitalized with Covid-19, has died, his station said on Saturday.

Mr. Valentine scoffed at the need for vaccines, writing on his blog that his chances of dying from the virus, should he become infected, were way less than one percent.

He announced his Covid-19 diagnosis on July 11 and pledged to return to his show within a day or two.

Unfortunately for the haters out there, it looks like Im going to make it, he wrote. Interesting experience. Ill have to fill you in when I come back on the air. Im hoping that will be tomorrow, but I may take a day off just as a precaution.

Less than two weeks later, his radio station, 99.7 WTN, announced that the Nashville host was hospitalized in very serious condition, suffering from Covid pneumonia. The statement said Mr. Valentine had had a change of heart and urged others to get a vaccine.

Phil would like for his listeners to know that while he has never been an anti-vaxer he regrets not being more vehemently pro-vaccine, and looks forward to being able to more vigorously advocate that position as soon as he is back on the air, which we all hope will be soon, the station said.

Some people responded to the announcement with words of support for Mr. Valentine, while others said he deserved to get sick.

On Saturday, the station announced on Twitter that Mr. Valentine had died, urging followers to keep the Valentine family in your thoughts and prayers.

The Rev. Jesse Jackson and his wife, Jacqueline, have been hospitalized after testing positive for Covid-19, Mr. Jacksons Rainbow PUSH Coalition said on Saturday in a statement.

Both were being treated at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago, The Associated Press reported.

Doctors are currently monitoring the condition of both, the statement read. No further details were available about their condition. Mr. Jackson is 79, and Jacqueline Jackson is 77.

Mr. Jackson got vaccinated in January. He has been campaigning to convince more Black Americans to get inoculated.

Vaccination is imperative to save lives, particularly for African Americans, disproportionately the greatest victims of the virus, he said at the time.

He revealed in 2017 that he had been diagnosed with Parkinsons disease.

Mr. Jackson has been a civil rights advocate for more than 50 years and sought the Democratic presidential nominations in 1984 and 1988. He was a close associate of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

The British government is starting an antibody surveillance program for adults who test positive for the coronavirus in order to develop a better understanding of its vaccine campaign and the immune response to different virus variants.

The program, which the U.K. Health Security Agency said would begin on Tuesday, will allow for up to 8,000 participants each day who book a P.C.R. test through the National Health Services test and trace program. However, the antibody tests, which will be free, will be sent only to those who test positive for the virus.

The information gathered will help gauge reinfection rates for those who had previously caught the virus, as well as measure breakthrough cases, and also study those who did not mount an immune response.

The British health secretary, Sajid Javid, said in a statement on Sunday that those who take part in the new public program would help strengthen our understanding of Covid-19 as we cautiously return to a more normal life.

Previously, antibody tests were mostly available for only clinical or research purposes.

The Health Security Agency said that it hoped that the data collected from the initiative would improve its understanding of the protection provided by antibodies after either infection or vaccination. It said the data could also provide insight about those who do not develop an immune response.

Upon testing positive for the coronavirus, those who have opted into the new program limited to those 18 and over will be sent two finger-prick antibody tests. The first must be done as soon as possible after the P.C.R. result, before the body has time to generate antibodies in response to the current infection, and the second 28 days later.

The intruder stalks its prey with stealth and precision, preparing to puncture its quarrys armor. Once inside, the aggressor forces its host to produce more intruders, and then causes it to explode, spewing out a multitude of invaders who can continue their rampage on a wider scale.

The drama, depicted in a microscopic video of SARS-CoV-2 infecting bat brain cells, provides a window into how the pathogen turns cells into virus-making factories before causing the host cell to die.

The video was produced by Sophie-Marie Aicher and Delphine Planas, virologists at the Pasteur Institute in Paris who won honorable mention in a microscopic video competition sponsored by Nikon, the photography company.

Filmed over 48 hours with an image recorded every 10 minutes, the footage shows the coronavirus as red spots circulating among a mass of gray blobs the bats brain cells. After they are infected, the bats cells begin to fuse with neighboring cells. At some point, the entire mass bursts, resulting in the death of the cells.

Ms. Aicher, who specializes in zoonotic diseases those that can be transmitted from animals to humans said this infectious juggernaut was the same in bats and humans, with one important distinction: Bats ultimately do not get sick.

In humans, the coronavirus is able to evade detection and cause more damage in part by preventing infected cells from alerting the immune system to the presence of the invaders. But its special power is the ability to force host cells to fuse with neighboring ones, a process known as syncytia that allows the coronavirus to remain undetected as it replicates.

Every time the virus has to exit the cell, its at risk of detection so if it can go straight from one cell to another, it can work much faster, Ms. Aicher said.

She said she hoped the video would help demystify the virus, and make it easier for people to understand and appreciate this deceitful nemesis that has upended billions of lives.

Its important to help people get past the scientific jargon to understand that this a very sophisticated and clever virus that is well adapted to make humans sick, she said.

As the fourth wave of the coronavirus swells across the United States, driven by the highly contagious Delta variant, people who had booked late summer travel are now facing a familiar quandary: Should they once again cancel their plans?

For many among them, those who are vaccinated, headed to high-risk areas and concerned about breakthrough infections the answer is yes. New data shows that although vaccines provide strong protection against severe illness and hospitalization, even vaccinated people are at risk of contracting the virus and spreading it, and getting sick themselves.

But while the slowdown is puncturing hopes of a rebound after the travel industrys worst year in recent history, the dip in bookings is for now relatively small, according to travel advisers and hospitality companies. The hope is that the current situation will be more of a speed bump than a stoplight.

This week is the start of a new academic year at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

Most classes will be in classrooms after a year disrupted by the pandemic, with students and professors breathing the same air. And most people will be vaccinated.

The campus last week was just really just really thriving with excitement, said Robert J. Jones, the universitys chancellor.

During the 2020-21 academic year, the university implemented an ambitious experiment in virus surveillance. It included testing, two to three times a week, of tens of thousands of students, faculty members and staff members.

We still know of no hospitalizations or deaths caused by spread on our campus, said Martin D. Burke, a chemistry professor who led the universitys testing strategy.

A paper by Dr. Burke and other scientists argues that the universitys efforts benefited people beyond campus in the bordering towns of Champaign and Urbana. They reported the finding in a paper that has not yet been accepted for publication in a peer-reviewed journal.

The analysis calculated the number of deaths expected for counties that are home to universities in the Big Ten athletic conference between July 6 and Dec. 23 last year, largely based on federal data but making adjustments for the social and economic makeup of the communities. For the University of Illinois, the number of deaths in Champaign County was significantly lower than expected, the researchers said, by 14.6 percent.

The Big Ten universities all imposed similar requirements for social distancing and masks, so the researchers argue that the comprehensive testing program at Illinois uniquely resulted in a protective effect for the communities in Champaign County.

Alex Perkins, a professor of biological sciences at Notre Dame, praised the paper overall but said the mortality analysis was not particularly convincing or conclusive.

A detailed analysis, Dr. Perkins said, would need to take into account the history of how the pandemic had played out in each community as well as nearby areas. I think it would take quite a lot of additional analysis to see how well that conclusion holds up, he said.

University officials acknowledge that during the year, there were missteps and that lessons were learned.

Carl T. Bergstrom, an infectious-disease expert at the University of Washington who had praised Illinoiss plan last year, said of the final tally, Its good, but its not great.

He added, It underscores how difficult control is in that kind of environment.

University officials are now grappling with the uncertainty arising from the Delta variant and how much testing and other measures will be needed.

Were still taking some of the same precautions, just to be on the safe side, Dr. Jones said. If the data and if the science says something different, we will turn on a dime. Absolutely.

Read the original here:

Covid cases overwhelm the Gulf Coast, leaving region with no I.C.U. beds. - The New York Times

COVID-19 concerns have NASCAR Cup Series drivers worried ahead of playoffs – ESPN

August 23, 2021

BROOKLYN, Mich. -- Joey Logano was taking every possible precaution to keep COVID-19 from eliminating him from NASCAR's impending playoffs.

He said he watches where he goes and who he's with and this week canceled three public appearances. He also went a step further and got vaccinated.

Corey LaJoie became an example of what can happen to unvaccinated NASCAR drivers: He missed Sunday's race at Michigan because the rules state that unvaccinated competitors who were exposed to someone who tested positive for COVID-19 must quarantine for seven days.

The playoffs begin in two weeks, and if a title-contending driver is simply exposed to a person with the coronavirus, that will end his championship chances.

The vaccine is suddenly a topic in NASCAR, though many drivers don't want to discuss it.

"That's like me asking you if you've had a vasectomy," said Aric Almirola, one of 14 drivers who already has clinched a playoff spot.

Two spots remain open and regardless of whether they've qualified, most of the top 20 drivers opted not to discuss their vaccination status Sunday.

William Byron was an exception. He confirmed he got jabbed earlier this year in part because he wanted to prevent putting his mother, Dana, at risk while she is treated for a brain tumor. Besides, Byron said, most hospitals require visitors to be vaccinated or quarantined.

But Logano, the 2018 Cup champ, made the most compelling case in favor of vaccination.

"There's one thing I learned when we won [the championship]: It affects so many people's lives with bonuses and other stuff," he said. "So if I get COVID and miss the race, then I'm taking away food from other people's families."

Missing any of the 10 playoff races could knock a driver out of title contention.

NASCAR does not have a vaccine mandate for its competitors. It used stringent protocols and a "bubble" to become one of the first major sports league to resume competition just three months into the pandemic, and the first to complete its 2020 season in November.

Series officials started loosening those restrictions this season and fully reopened garages to guests in late May.

The IndyCar Series still required anyone entering Gasoline Alley during May's Indianapolis 500 to be fully vaccinated or tested daily. The result: There's a 90% vaccination rate throughout the entire paddock.

NASCAR began retightening its rules this week as the number of virus cases has surged due to the highly contagious delta variant. Reporters were required to wear masks, inside or outside, when interviewing drivers, and the series' trademark hauler limited inside occupancy to only four people because of social distancing rules.

Some teams also have jumped on board by limiting contact in their suites.

Rather than issue a vaccination mandate, though, NASCAR adopted a different set of rules for those who are inoculated and those who are not.

Proponents of the rules are hard to find.

"I look at all of that stuff as very personal, very choice-driven, and nobody needs to know what people's choices are. But now everybody's asking for vaccination status cards and everything and where you go, so I guess HIPAA doesn't exist any more," said two-time Cup champ Kyle Busch, referring to the federal law restricting release of medical information.

While LaJoie did not test positive, he explained on Sirius XM NASCAR radio that a person inside the studio where he tapes his weekly podcast did.

That was enough to force LaJoie out of this race and ignite the debate.

Most drivers said Sunday they believed a negative test should be good enough for NASCAR to greenlight a competitor. Austin Dillon noted there are many ways to isolate drivers from teams in racing, including the use of a helmet.

Still, not everyone is concerned. Kyle Larson, a five-time Cup race winner this season and the points leader, said he hasn't changed anything yet.

"I'm here doing media availability, so all is normal," he said before trying to win Sunday's race, his fourth of the week.

But in a sport where caution can be costly, Logano believes there's only one option for the playoffs when it comes to COVID-19: playing it safe. That's why he got vaccinated.

"I think it pushes you whether you want to or not," he said, noting how severe the consequences could be if he's merely around someone who tests positive. "If that happens two weeks from now, your whole season is gone."

Read more from the original source:

COVID-19 concerns have NASCAR Cup Series drivers worried ahead of playoffs - ESPN

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott tests negative for COVID-19 four days after positive test – The Texas Tribune

August 23, 2021

Sign up for The Brief, our daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott says he has now tested negative for COVID-19, four days after testing positive for the virus.

I am told that my infection was brief and mild because of the vaccination I received, Abbott said in a video he posted on Twitter Saturday afternoon. So, I encourage others who have not yet received the vaccination to consider getting one.

Abbott said he will continue to quarantine as recommended by doctors and that the first lady, Cecilia Abbott, continues to test negative.

Abbott contracted the virus as the pandemic surges across Texas, with new cases and hospitalizations increasing to levels not seen since the wave in the winter, and the state nearing its previous pandemic peak.

The governor received Regeneron's monoclonal antibody treatment after testing positive. He said in the video statement he would continue working to open additional antibody therapy centers across the state. Texas recently opened nine antibody infusion centers statewide in an effort to reserve hospital capacity for the most serious cases and prevent hospitalizations.

Regeneron antibodies are recommended to treat mild to moderate COVID-19 for people 12 years and older who have tested positive and are at high risk for progressing to severe COVID-19.

When Abbott announced he tested positive, he said he was not experiencing any symptoms. He did not say whether he experienced any symptoms throughout the past four days.

Join us Sept. 20-25 at the 2021 Texas Tribune Festival. Tickets are on sale now for this multi-day celebration of big, bold ideas about politics, public policy and the days news, curated by The Texas Tribunes award-winning journalists. Learn more.

Original post:

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott tests negative for COVID-19 four days after positive test - The Texas Tribune

Miss. health officer: COVID-19 isolation order includes fully vaccinated people who are infected – Clarion Ledger

August 23, 2021

State Health Officer Thomas Dobbs frustrated with unvaccinated in Mississippi

State Health Officer Thomas Dobbs addresses the state of COVID-19 and vaccines from a field hospital at University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, Miss.

Barbara Gauntt, Mississippi Clarion Ledger

Any Mississippian, regardless of vaccination status, who tests positive for COVID-19 is required to immediately isolate at home, according to an orderissued Friday by State Health Officer Thomas Dobbs.

The statewide order that iseffective immediately, came the same daythe Mississippi State Department of Health reported 5,048 new infections the highest one-day case count since the virus first arrived in the state in March 2020.

Record high: Mississippi daily COVID cases top 5,000 again

Dobbs released asimilar missivein August 2020, however, this newisolation order includesfully vaccinated people who test positive and guidance for Mississippi's K-12 students and faculty.

For those in Mississippi diagnosed with the coronavirus, they need to adhere to the following isolation guidelines:

Failure to comply is,at a minimum, a misdemeanor that carries a fine of $500,six months imprisonment or both, according to the order. If a life-threatening disease is involved, disobeying the order of a health officer is a felony, carrying a $5,000 fine,fiveyears imprisonment or both.

While in isolation, those infected should:

There is no set expiration of the state health officer order.

In 'as bad of a situation as can be': Miss.health officials on COVID-19 outbreaks

A week of COVID: Mississippi records over 25,077 COVID-19 cases, 207 deaths

Have a health story? Or a health-related tip? Send it along toshaselhorst@gannett.com, onTwitter at @HaselhorstSarahor call 601-331-9307.

Read the original here:

Miss. health officer: COVID-19 isolation order includes fully vaccinated people who are infected - Clarion Ledger

Who’s minding the store on COVID-19 relief spending? – Press Herald

August 23, 2021

Maine state, county and local governments are distributing an unprecedented $4.5 billion in federal COVID-19 relief funding, but concern is building that the windfall will create enormous potential for waste and abuse.

The money is intended to help repair the severe economic damage wrought by the pandemic. If mishandled, though, the torrent of funding could saddle future taxpayers with the costs of maintaining programs established with a one-time influx of aid. Some critics worry that the money could be squandered or used to build up programs that wont be able to sustain themselves.

The amount of aid is huge. The states share of ARPA funds, for example, is equal to roughly 25 percent of state government spending for an entire year, and the city of Portland will get an amount equal to about 23 percent of its current budget. Under the rules for ARPA allocations, county governments may receive up to 75 percent of their annual budgets.

It will cost state government $25.6 million just to administer the funds from the federal American Rescue Plan Act under spending plans approved by the Legislature and Gov. Janet Mills earlier this summer. That figure includes funds flowing to state government entities, direct aid earmarked for specific projects or organizations, and the funds the state will pass down to cities, towns and counties.

That spending covers the cost of dispensing, tracking and then reporting to federal officials on where the money went.

Of the total $4.5 billion, $500 million will be distributed to county and local governments. And oversight on how those dollars are spent will be largely left to local officials county commissioners, city councilors and boards of selectmen who are still trying to figure out how they can use the funding, while adhering to rules that are still being written.

Our members are very cognizant of the restrictions on the uses of this funding and how important and unprecedented it is, and they are doing the groundwork to ensure every one of these federal dollars is spent wisely and appropriately, said Kate Dufour, director of state and federal relations at the Maine Municipal Association.

Democratic legislative leaders and Mills have heralded the federal funds and their plans to spend them as a once-in-a-generation opportunity to transform Maines economic landscape. In addition to responding to the public health emergency created by COVID-19 and supporting businesses impacted by the pandemic, the federal funds also can be spent on water, sewer and broadband infrastructure.

Some critics, however, worry that the money could be squandered or used to build up programs that will be unable to sustain themselves in the future.

Its not hard to find examples of fraud, misuse or wasted opportunities when government cash is flowing fast. For example, a recent report from a federal watchdog agency estimated that as many as 55,000 ineligible businesses may have received up to $7 billion in forgivable loans from an earlier COVID-19 relief package.

MAINE COUNTIES IN LINE FOR $260 MILLION

ARPA will provide $350 billion to state, county, city, municipal and tribal governments this year and next. Governments report to the U.S. Treasury Department how those dollars are spent. Maines 16 counties are expected to receive up to $260.7 million, while towns and cities are slated to receive up to $233.2 million, in amounts ranging from a few hundred dollars for unorganized territories with a handful of residents to $48.2 million for the city of Portland.

Jurisdictions that receive more than $5 million a list that includes Portland, Bangor, Lewiston, Auburn, Biddeford and all but one county will have to file quarterly reports, while towns and smaller counties will report annually. In Maine, the state and Cumberland County also will have to file annual recovery plan performance reports detailing the goals of the expenditures and key performance indicators to measure success.

It is unclear how much detail those reports the first of which are due August 31 will contain, or how the Treasury Department will vet tens of thousands of reports filed by states, communities and counties nationwide. Treasurys most recent compliance and reporting guidance document is 35 pages long.

There is every reason to believe Treasury wont be a stickler, but there are basic requirements, said Jared Walczak, the vice president of state projects at the Tax Foundation, a nonpartisan, nonprofit Washington, D.C., research center. They might deny expenditures if they are clearly out of scope but in terms of scrutiny and oversight, Treasury just doesnt have the capacity to engage that closely.

Maine cant use the money to offset revenue shortfalls caused by COVID-19 because the state like many others had a budget surplus, thanks to previous federal relief programs, such as the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act. Walczak pointed out that spending deadlines under the CARES Act were extended by a year because states were struggling to find ways to spend the $150 billion in aid the law provided.

It was clear that most states needed little, if any, additional assistance by the time ARPA came along, Walczak said. He said state and local governments will need to avoid creating new long-term spending commitments.

With this free money there will be a temptation to be extravagant, going after speculative projects and programs, Walczak said. But by doing so, it will be the state who will end up paying the piper in just a few years.

FREE MONEY AND NEW FRIENDS

Kennebec County administrator Robert Devlin has pushed back against suggestions or perceptions among those angling for a slice of the pie that ARPA funding is free money that can be spent on anything.

Getting $23 million, I have found all kinds of new friends, Devlin said with a laugh. My response to people has been: Read the law. Its not as broad as people think it is.

For instance, Devlin said the money cant be used for road repairs or most other infrastructure except water and wastewater systems. But projects that seek to address problems caused or exacerbated by COVID-19 such as mental health support services, substance use treatment programs, affordable housing and upgraded HVAC systems in the county jail or other buildings would be eligible.

He and other county leaders are talking with municipal officials about partnering with them to meet their needs. Devlin also is setting up a formal application process to vet potential projects and help with paperwork on the back end.

That is something that I dont think people understand: This is federal money. It comes with a lot of hooks and a lot of procedures, he said.

In Maine, the Department of Administrative and Financial Services will be responsible for dispensing the roughly $1 billion headed to the states coffers and acting as a pass-through agency for the $500 million earmarked for local and county governments. The department also will handle all compliance auditing and reporting of state expenditures but municipalities and counties will be responsible for filing their own reports.

The department expects to hire several limited-period positions and may contract with private consultants to oversee the state and federal reporting requirements on the funds, according to spokeswoman Kelsey Goldsmith. Goldsmith said DAFS had yet to determine the number of additional workers it may need to handle that work.

This will include coordination, processing, tracking, reporting, reconciling, compliance, auditing, and program guidance monitoring and summarizing as well as monitoring federal guidance and best practices throughout the period, Goldsmith said in a statement. Significant reporting will be needed to meet federal requirements, as well as consistent, transparent updates for the Maine Legislature and citizens.

DAFS has published the names of recipients and amounts of previous COVID-19 relief grants as well as the amounts on a Bureau of Budget website. Goldsmith said the agency plans to publish comparable information about the ARPA funding on the web also.

PLANS FOR OVERSIGHT

Flaws in the underlying federal law have been the subject of conservative criticism. The Tax Foundation pointed out in March that ARPA appropriates more than $2 billion to county governments in New England that dont actually exist and would be unable to even receive the funds.

The report by Walczak shows $691 million in funding was appropriated to counties in Connecticut, where there are no formal county governments, and another $942 million was earmarked for eight counties in Massachusetts that were formally disbanded in the 1990s.

While that is not the case for Maine, the issue highlights gaps in the law and how it may be managed and the funds it spends accounted for at the federal level.

State Sen. Cathy Breen, D-Falmouth, the Senate chair of the budget committee, said she expects public updates on how the funds are being used in January and again in April 2022.

Part of our job is oversight of the executive branch, Breen said. There is a lot of money between the hefty revenues that we had that went into the budget and then almost $1 billion of ARPA money. I think it is just generally good practice that the legislative branch be in a position to see what the administration is doing with those funds.

Breen said the Legislature is prepared to return to a special session as soon as this month if the Treasury Department disallows any parts of the ARPA spending plan passed by the Legislature.

Everybody pretty much agreed that was appropriate, Breen said. If we learn in August that some of those things are black and white, not going to work or something is amiss, then a special session to fix it would be needed.

Republicans who opposed the plan for spending the ARPA funds wanted to put more of the money toward what they saw as clearly allowable uses, including adding $20 million to the states unemployment trust fund.

Sen. Jeff Timberlake, R-Turner, the Senates minority leader, said Republicans erred during the legislative session by not pushing for a requirement that ARPA spending be subject to approval by two-thirds of the Legislature.

It could have been done better, Timberlake said of the legislative negotiations on the ARPA bill. I dont think the people of Maine got what they deserved.

PREVIOUS ABUSE LESS THAN EXPECTED

Past experiences with federal stimulus packages offer reasons for concern about misuse of funds.

In 2009, as the Great Recession wracked the U.S. economy, the Obama administration created a Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board to track more than $800 billion in stimulus spending. A key part of the boards work was Recovery.gov, a publicly available website that reported who received money, how it was spent, how many jobs were created or preserved, and other performance metrics.

There was fraud and abuse of that economic stimulus money, but much less than experts expected. In the end, the Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board reported more than 1,600 convictions, pleas or judgments yielding $157 million in returned or forfeited funds.

By comparison, more than $5 trillion has been authorized by Congress in response to the COVID-19 crisis. The CARES Act also created the Pandemic Response Accountability Committee that has a website, http://www.pandemicoversight.gov, where information on awards to prime recipients is tracked.

With so much money gushing out of the federal Treasury amid a deadly pandemic, it is inevitable that a portion will be misspent or stolen. And while many incidents wont come to light for years if they ever do others have already prompted federal investigations and charges.

In January, the U.S. Small Business Administrations Office of Inspector General determined that nearly 55,000 forgivable loans totaling roughly $7 billion were paid to potentially ineligible businesses through the Paycheck Protection Program. A subsequent investigation by the news organization ProPublica that examined just one of the thousands of financial institutions that processed PPP loans found the online lender sent $7 million to 378 fake businesses, many of them nonexistent farms.

As of March, the U.S. Department of Justice had charged 474 individuals with fraudulently obtaining or attempting to obtain more than $569 million in COVID-19-related funds.

A Colorado physician, for instance, was charged in April with allegedly stealing nearly $300,000 in COVID-19 relief funds intended for medical providers and, instead, spending some of it on travel and home improvements. In another case, federal investigators allege a Missouri medical clinic operator received or sought nearly $900,000 in reimbursement for thousands of COVID-19 tests that were already paid.

LULL GIVES TIME TO WEIGH OPTIONS

The 69-page Maine law that divvies up the federal cash among state departments is one of two bills passed into law that moves ARPA funds. The other law allows the state to accept and pass on the federal funds to local municipalities and tribal governments. Breen said oversight of how cities and towns spend ARPA funds will be a matter between them and U.S. Treasury.

And while some cites in Maine have the staff capacity to track and document the use of the funds, others will not.

Maine-based critics of the states ARPA law say the investments could cost taxpayers in the long run.

Jacob Posik, of the right-leaning Maine Policy Center, said his organization is particularly concerned that federal funds meant to expand broadband access in rural Maine will be funneled out to create government-owned or quasi-municipal broadband utilities in places already served by high-speed internet.

Government-owned networks put local taxpayers on the hook for future costs of maintaining the infrastructure, Posik said. These systems could be entirely obsolete in five, 10 or 20 years in terms of broadband delivery method. In our view, building out additional broadband infrastructure in areas already served is a wasteful use of broadband funds.

He said investing the money inefficiently or on infrastructure like building out optic fiber networks that could be quickly surpassed by future technologies would also be wasteful. If we invested billions in expanding DSL 20 years ago, wed look pretty stupid today, Posik said. This sector is already innovating in ways we never could have predicted think Starlink from SpaceX.

But Dufour, with Maine Municipal Association, said municipal leaders are still waiting for final rules from Treasury on use and tracking of funds. In the meantime, they are exploring options and seeking feedback from citizens, with some communities establishing special subcommittees.

The Maine Municipal Association is strongly urging community leaders to consider collaborating and pooling their funding to tackle larger, regional issues such as affordable housing, substance use disorders or even telehealth access. For all but a few of the larger communities, funding is not expected to arrive until the fall.

And unlike earlier COVID-19-related stimulus programs, which had tight use-it-or-lose-it deadlines, governments have until 2024 to obligate funding and then a few more years to spend it.

This lull or wait-and-see (period) is actually providing the time necessary to explore the opportunities and giving municipalities the time to discuss their priorities, not only among municipal officials but also among citizens, Dufour said. There is plenty of time and we have been telling municipalities from the get-go that you dont need to spend this money right away.

Invalid username/password.

Please check your email to confirm and complete your registration.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.

Previous

Next

Latest Articles

Local & State

Local & State

The Maine Forecast

Biddeford-Saco-OOB Courier

Biddeford-Saco-OOB Courier

See the original post:

Who's minding the store on COVID-19 relief spending? - Press Herald

Page 513«..1020..512513514515..520530..»