4/4/20: BREAKING NEWS: COVID-19 CASES 4 AND 5 ANNOUNCED BY DARE COUNTY  

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Two more Dare County residents have tested positive for COVID-19, according to bulletins posted today by the Dare County Division of Public Health just three hours apart.

Bulletin No. 29 (fourth positive test): https://www.darenc.com/Home/Components/News/News/6080/1483

Bulletin No. 30 (fifth positive test): https://www.darenc.com/Home/Components/News/News/6082/1483

Dare’s fourth confirmed positive test is of a resident who was tested in the county, but is “currently receiving care at a hospital outside of Dare County,” said Dr. Sheila Davies, director of the Dare County Dept. of Health and Human Services.

According to Bulletin No. 29, public-health officials do not know how this person acquired the coronavirus and are conducting an active investigation into his/her activities. People who are determined to have had direct contact with this person will be notified.

The fifth person to test positive for COVID-19 in Dare County is the spouse of the person whose positive test was the second for the county. Bulletin No. 30 reports that the spouses were tested two days apart, and that neither contracted the virus by community spread. Both spouses are in isolation and are said to be “improving daily.”

The other two Dare County residents who tested positive for COVID-19 are reported to have completely recovered.

Ann G. Sjoerdsma, 4/4/20

4/4/20: LAWYERS WITH HEALTH POLICY EXPERTISE EXPLAIN HOW THE U.S. COVID-19 RESPONSE CAN AND SHOULD BE NATIONALIZED SO THAT STRATEGY IS UNIFIED. Also Dare Bulletin No. 28.

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Homeowners on South Dogwood Trail give a big-banner thank you to “all our heroic health care providers.”

The Beacon is gratified by the positive reader response we received from yesterday’s post about Dr. Harvey V. Fineberg’s six-step national plan to defeat COVID-19 by early June.

Dr. Fineberg, an M.D.-Ph.D. with the independent, nonprofit, and nongovernmental National Academy of Sciences, outlined his eradication campaign in an editorial in The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) titled “Ten Weeks to Crush the Curve.”

See Dr. Fineberg’s article at https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMe2007263?query=featured_home

Today, we offer more expert advice and commentary to help you become more informed about the viral pandemic.

We strongly believe that the choices and decisions we all make—including our public officials—must be based on evidence, not on anecdote, emotion, denial, shaky conjecture, and/or wishful thinking. What we don’t know, we simply don’t know, and we shouldn’t guess or posture.

This pandemic is actually the second one declared by the World Health Organization in the past dozen years. The last one occurred in 2009 when a novel strain of influenza A/H1N1 virus emerged.

(Since then, I have attended two seminars in Washington, D.C., on emerging infectious diseases, including one conducted by Dr. Anthony Fauci, and can tell you that the fear expressed by Dr. Fauci and the other specialist was that a new lethal influenza would emerge. Preparation for such an event is never far from such experts’ minds.)

You may recall when President Obama and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention were encouraging people, especially those over age 65, to get the so-called “swine flu” vaccination to protect themselves from contracting the new influenza subtype.

Fortunately, much was already known then about influenza A viruses, which cause epidemics of disease in the United States every winter (i.e., flu season), and a vaccine to combat the H1N1 strain quickly became available.

Nonetheless, the CDC reported that nationally more than 60 million people were sickened, and 12,469 died, from the 2009 swine flu. The seasonal flu vaccine that people now get includes protection from the H1N1 “swine” virus.

No vaccine was ever developed for the strain of coronavirus that emerged in 2002, however.

Known as severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 1 (SARS-CoV-1), that virus strain was largely contained to Asia. The United States had relatively few cases of SARS—mostly on the West Coast—and no one died here. SARS-CoV-1 had roughly the same incubation period as SARS-CoV-2, but it was much less contagious than the new coronavirus strain threatening us now.

A UNIFIED RESPONSE WILL NOT VIOLATE THE U.S. CONSTITUTION

Today we feature a NEJM opinion column written by two attorneys with doctorates in health policy: Rebecca L. Haffajee of the University of Michigan School of Public Health, and Michelle M. Mello of the Stanford Law School and the Center for Health Policy/Primary Care and Outcomes Research at the Stanford School of Medicine.

In their article, “Thinking Globally, Acting Locally—the U.S. Response to Covid-19,” the authors address “major weaknesses” in the United States’ “federalist system of public health governance, which divides powers among the federal, state and local governments.”

By the federal government, they refer to everyone on the federal level, not just the Trump Administration.

The authors contend that SARS-CoV-2 is “exactly the type of infectious disease for which federal public health powers and emergencies were conceived,” because “it is highly transmissible, crosses borders efficiently, and threatens our national infrastructure and economy.”

But, as we all know, the response to COVID-19 has been on a state-by-state basis, and, in some localities, such as our own, even county-by-county.

Drs. Haffajee and Mello say “strong, decisive national action” is “imperative,” and describe the federal response to date as “alarmingly slow to develop, fostering confusion about the nature of the virus and necessary steps to address it.” States and localities (such as Dare County) have been at the front lines of the response, but, not surprisingly, they have exercised their public health powers “unevenly,” according to the authors.

Although, constitutionally speaking, the states—and through their delegated authority, cities and counties—have primary responsibility for public health, and the federal government’s more limited authority focuses on measures to prevent interstate or international spread of disease, this structure applies only during ordinary times, the authors contend.

In “extraordinary times,” such as we are experiencing now, states and the federal government can “activate emergency powers to expand their ability to act swiftly to protect human life and health.”

Indeed, all 50 states and the federal government have declared emergencies, although not all states have issued stay-at-home orders, and President Trump has so far declined to impose a national stay-at-home order.

The executive powers that result from declarations of emergency can range, Drs. Haffajee and Mello write, “from halting business operations, to restricting freedom of movement, to limiting civil rights and liberties, to commandeering property.”

Unquestionably, the first three restrictive actions have occurred via executive orders, but there is nothing unconstitutional about any of them.

Usually the fear of such restrictions, according to the authors, is that government officials will over-react and impose unduly coercive measures. They give as an example N.J. Governor Chris Christie’s decision to order a nurse returning from Sierra Leone into quarantine during the 2014 Ebola outbreak, even though her case did not merit it under the CDC’s guidelines.

Today, with the COVID-19 outbreak, the authors say, “the federal government has done too little,” and “misleading early statements from federal officials about the gravity of the threat” has encouraged public sentiment against taking steps that would “impose hardship on families and businesses.”

During a public-health crisis, however, hardship and sacrifice are to be expected.

Arguing that the “defining feature of the U.S. response to Covid-19 . . . continues to be localized action against a threat that lost its local character weeks ago,” the public-health specialists urge the federal government to promote a “unified” national response. Just like Dr. Fineberg, they advocate for a national strategy and suggest the following:

*A convening of governors and state directors of public health for the purpose of reaching consensus on a “coordinated set of community mitigation interventions and a timeline.” No one is talking about a realistic timeline based on the best available evidence. (This suggestion is akin to Dr. Fineberg’s step one of establishing unified command.)

*The use of congressional spending power to “further encourage states to follow a uniform playbook for community mitigation that includes measures for effective enforcement of public health orders.” Congress could threaten to withhold some federal funds—e.g., for schools and highways—from states that do not comply.

*The leveraging of Congress’s interstate commerce powers “to regulate economic activities that affect the interstate spread of SARS-CoV-2.” They offer as an example restricting large businesses from having employees travel and operate across state lines in ways that expose them to risk. Those businesses that do not provide their employees with adequate personal protective equipment and paid sick leave, they state, “could be declared a threat to public health.”

Among the other federal actions they recommend is an implementation by the CDC of interstate travel restrictions on those people with known exposure to or symptoms of COVID-19.

“[W]hen epidemiologists warn that a pathogen has pandemic potential,” Drs. Haffajee and Mello conclude, “the time to fly the flag of local freedom is over. Yet national leadership in epidemic response works only if it is evidence-based.”

Going forward, the U.S. response must be both national and rational.

You may access their article at https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp2006740?query=featured_home

(FYI, the National Academy of Sciences is one-third of what is known as the National Academies. The other two-thirds are the National Academy of Engineering and the National Academy of Medicine. The mission of all three is to advise the nation and the world on challenges that they are confronting.)

IN DARE COUNTY TODAY

Today’s Dare County Emergency Management bulletin, No. 28, reminds people of the “uncertainty” of knowing who may be carrying the virus and of the “understanding that this virus is highly contagious.” You are urged to “continue to be vigilant and follow guidelines for practicing social distancing, having direct contact with immediate family members only and good hygiene.”

See https://www.darenc.com/Home/Components/News/News/6075/1483

Ann G. Sjoerdsma, 4/4/20

4/3/20: SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE SUPPORTS COVID-19 TRANSMISSION THROUGH TALKING, BREATHING. NATIONAL MEDICAL EXPERT OFFERS SIX-STEP PLAN TO DEFEAT COVID-19 BY EARLY JUNE. MORE ON THE TOWN COUNCIL’S DECISION TO MEET NEXT WEEK.

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The coronavirus may be spread through an infected person’s breathing and talking, as well as through droplets generated by a person’s coughing and sneezing, according to an expert scientific panel of the prestigious National Academy of Sciences.

In a letter reportedly sent to the White House last night, Dr. Harvey V. Fineberg, M.D., Ph.D., chairman of the Academy’s Standing Committee on Emerging Infectious Diseases and 21st Century Health Threats, wrote: “Currently available research supports the possibility that coronavirus could be spread via bioaerosols generated directly by patients’ exhalation.”

(BREAKING NEWS: While writing this post, we received an updated briefing from The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM). Included in it is an editorial by Dr. Fineberg titled, “Ten Weeks to Crush the Curve,” in which he recommends taking six steps to “mobilize and organize the nation,” in order to defeat COVID-19 by early June.  See below for more details. You may access the article at https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMe2007263?cid=DM89429_NEJM_COVID-19_Newsletter&bid=179900194.)

While research of aerosol transmission is limited, Dr. Fineberg said in his letter that studies in China and at the University of Nebraska suggest that aerosolized droplets produced by an infected person when he or she talks or breathes could be suspended in the air long enough for another person later to inhale them. The second person could have been standing well clear—beyond the currently recommended six feet of physical distancing—of the infected person.

The question, Dr. Fineberg noted, is how long the virus can be suspended in the air—a question that is not yet answerable. No projection on how long the virus may linger has been made yet, but air circulation, he said, is definitely a factor.

“If you generate an aerosol of the virus with no circulation in a room,” Dr. Fineberg wrote, “it’s conceivable that if you walk through later, you could inhale the virus.”

Outdoors, however, he said, “the breeze will likely disperse it.”

Dr. Fineberg, 74, a trained internist, is a former dean of the Harvard School of Public Health and a former president of the Institute of Medicine.

In his NEJM editorial, published April 1, Dr. Fineberg challenges analysts who assume that the COVID-19 pandemic must play out over a period of many months and that economic recovery will take even longer. He writes, instead, that “with a forceful, focused campaign to eradicate COVID-19 in the United States,” we can “crush the curve” we are trying to flatten—just as China did in Wuhan–and we can do it nationwide in 10 weeks.

FINEBERG’S SIX-STEP PLAN FOR ERADICATION

We summarize the six steps outlined by Dr. Fineberg in his NEJM editorial—which laypeople can easily read and understand—as follows:

1) Establish unified command

Dr. Fineberg writes that “The President should surprise his critics and appoint a commander who reports directly to the President.” This person must have the President’s and the American people’s confidence and must carry “the full power and authority of the American President to mobilize every civilian and military asset needed to win the war.”

Dr. Fineberg also asks every state governor to appoint an individual state commander with “similar statewide authority.”

2) Make millions of diagnostic tests available

Everyone with symptoms must be tested, Dr. Fineberg argues. “The nation needs to gear up to perform millions of diagnostic tests in the next 2 weeks. This was key to success in South Korea.”

3) Supply health workers with PPE and equip hospitals to care for a surge in severely ill patients

Dr. Fineberg writes: “We wouldn’t send soldiers into battle without ballistic vests; health workers on the front lines of this war deserve no less. Regional distribution centers should rapidly deploy ventilators and other needed equipment from the national stockpile to hospitals with the greatest need.”

4) Differentiate the population into five groups and treat accordingly

The five groups Dr. Fineberg identifies are:

*People who are infected

*People who are presumed to be infected (have signs and symptoms consistent with infection who initially test negative)

*People who have been exposed to the virus

*People who are not known to have been exposed or infected

*People who have recovered from infection and are “adequately” immune

How he proposes to manage these five groups is somewhat complicated. People with severe disease or at high risk would be hospitalized. He also suggests establishing infirmities by using empty convention centers to care for people who have mild or moderate disease and are at low risk and converting “now-empty hotels into quarantine centers to house those who have been exposed and separate them from the general population for 2 weeks.”

Being able to identify those who have recovered and “are adequately immune,” he says, “requires development, validation, and deployment of antibody-based tests.”

5) Inspire and mobilize the public

Dr. Fineberg writes: “We have begun to unleash American ingenuity in creating new treatments and a vaccine, providing a greater variety and number of diagnostic tests, and using the power of information technology, social media, artificial intelligence, and high-speed computing to devise novel solutions. These efforts should be intensified.”

He also recommends that everyone wear a surgical mask outside of home.

6) Learn while doing through real-time, fundamental research

“Clinical care would be vastly improved by effective antiviral treatment,” Dr. Fineberg says, “and every plausible avenue should be investigated. We did it with HIV; now, we need to do it faster with SARS-CoV-2. Clinicians need better predictors of which patient’s condition is prone to deteriorate rapidly or who may go on to die. Decisions to shape the public health response and to restart the economy should be guided by science.

Guided by science. Period.

The governors of New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Michigan, and California, among others, have been asking the White House for a national plan for coping with and defeating COVID-19 in the United States. Dr. Fineberg has offered one, and it’s based on science and the basic tenets of public health.

“If we act immediately,” he concludes, “we can make the anniversary of D-Day on June 6, 2020, the day America declares victory over the coronavirus.”

THE BEACON’S AND MY OWN PERSONAL RESPONSE

Dr. Fineberg’s report on aerosol transmission supports a position earlier stated by The Beacon that it is too soon to know everything there is to know about the new coronavirus’s transmission.

The restrictions imposed by governors and other elected officials on the strength of what mostly state and local government public-health officials—who are part of a system that has failed—are advising them are not necessarily foolproof. They are based on the best evidence they have to date, but not on all of the evidence.

The six-step plan that Dr. Fineberg outlines in his NEJM editorial is what my late father would have called public health. Dr. Fineberg is trying to build an infrastructure and to give it what it needs to succeed.

Long before he died in 2014, my father was bemoaning the collapse of the public-health system in the United States. He especially abhorred the corruption of the office of the U.S. Surgeon General, who once was an elite scientist-physician in charge of the U.S. Public Health Service, not a partisan political appointee. There was a time when the Surgeon General could have been the commander about whom Dr. Fineberg speaks. But no longer.

My late father was a brilliant scientist-physician, a medical pioneer in the field of clinical pharmacology (drug discovery by rational means, not chance), and a 20-year member of the then-militarized U.S. Public Health Service. He did wondrous things at the National Institutes of Health as a leader in the Heart Institute in the 1950s and 1960s, during what is known as the Golden Age of Research and Development.

He also distinguished himself later in the pharmaceutical industry, overseeing the development, among other therapeutics, of the antihistamine, Allegra. (An aside: He was very familiar with the old anti-malarial drugs that have been in the news. He knew the people who did the clinical trials with them.)

I learned a lot from my father, especially during the six years that I spent researching and writing his biography. He was among the medical elite in this country, as well as internationally—just like Dr. Anthony Fauci, another brilliant scientist-physician at the NIH whom I respect and trust.

I wish my father were here for me to ask him about COVID-19. He was an encyclopedia of medicine and all biological sciences and would give me sound and informed advice.

This much I know: My father always asked of any topic of argument, whether scientific or otherwise: What is the evidence? That’s the critical question. What is known? What are the facts?

Science is about the facts; it is about reason. It is not about supposition and bias.

We don’t know yet what’s in store with COVID-19. We have to follow the scientific evidence, some of which is well-known—for example, the virus’s genome and how it enters the body’s cells—and some of which is emerging, such as why the vast majority of the people dying from COVID-19 are men. We have to make decisions based on reliable evidence, and we don’t make assumptions when evidence is lacking.

We also have to have a well-reasoned, organized, and coordinated national public-health plan, which the President and his coronavirus task force have yet to give us.

SOUTHERN SHORES TOWN COUNCIL: Yesterday, The Beacon addressed the Town Council’s upcoming budget workshop session, which was postponed from March 24 to next Tuesday, April 7, at 3:30 p.m. We spoke about the burdens placed on the public if it wishes to join in the discussions of this meeting, which is top-heavy with important, but non-essential business items, including approval of a beach nourishment project and the implementation of no-left-turn weekends this summer.

(According to Tommy Karole, the chairperson of the cut-through traffic exploratory committee, his committee never finalized and sent a report to the Town Council, nor did it provide cost estimates.)

We characterized this meeting as a business-as-usual meeting being held during conditions that are anything but usual and that are in flux. What we do know for sure is that people are suffering financially, physically, and emotionally now; businesses are shuttered and may remain closed for months yet; and the start and strength of our summer tourist season are in doubt.

I have no doubt that Mayor Tom Bennett and the rest of the Town Council are cognizant of the changed circumstances, especially the economic conditions. Decisions they make on Tuesday may well be conditional on the future state of the Southern Shores and Dare County economies.

If I were on the Town Council, I would be considering a tightening of Town expenses and a tax break for Southern Shores property owners next year—a lowering of the tax rate—not a tax increase.

Also, if I were on the Town Council, I would not attend a meeting in person. The risk of my being exposed to the coronavirus, and then exposing someone else, may be infinitesimal, but I would not take that risk—especially since I don’t have to.

Electronic meetings can be held without much difficulty, and they should be held when essential business must be transacted, but not for business that can be held over to another time, when more evidence will be available to make better-reasoned decisions.

TODAY’S DARE EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT BULLETIN offers resources to people who may be experiencing stress and anxiety during the COVID-19 crisis. See Bulletin No. 27 at https://www.darenc.com/Home/Components/News/News/6071/1483.

Ann G. Sjoerdsma, 4/3/20

 

4/2/20: TOWN COUNCIL: PLEASE READ NEXT TUESDAY’S MEETING PACKET AND GIVE THE BEACON YOUR COMMENTS. PROPOSED COUNCIL ELECTRONIC POLICY SEEKS TO CIRCUMVENT STATE LAW ON PUBLIC HEARINGS.

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The Beacon has much to say about the Southern Shores Town Council’s decision to hold a business-as-usual meeting next Tuesday, at 3:30 p.m., when business now is anything but usual, including the means of “attending” the meeting and otherwise accessing it.

But we will withhold much of our comment until later. Or, at least, we’ll try.

We will note, however, that today’s bulletin from the Dare County Emergency Management cautions people to understand that “the number of positive cases reported [in Dare County] doesn’t give the full picture of what is happening with COVID-19 in our community.” Testing here and elsewhere in the state has lagged.

DCEM’s Bulletin No. 26 encourages people to “focus more on staying at home except for essential work or needs.” That applies to elected officials, too.

North Carolina currently has 1,857 cases of COVID-19 in 83 counties; and 16 people have died because of the coronavirus, according to the bulletin and the N.C. Dept. of Health and Human Services.

See https://www.darenc.com/Home/Components/News/News/6065/398.

Instead, today we ask you to read the Town Council meeting packet that was posted on the Town website yesterday. You will find it at:

https://www.southernshores-nc.gov/wp-content/uploads/minutes-agendas-newsletters/Meeting-Packet_2020-04-07.pdf  (You may need to increase the page size by zooming in. We did.)

We direct you in particular to pages 10-27, which provide data for the financing of four potential beach nourishment projects that range in cost from about $14 million to $17 million; and to page 26, which is a map of the three designated municipal service districts that will pay 75 percent of the Town’s projected costs of the nourishment in tax increases.

You will note that in each case, the Town’s commercial district pays nothing.

It is unfortunate that the packet contains only beach nourishment project financial data, and not a report, which State law requires to be prepared. It is yet another inconvenience for the public to hurdle in already uncertain and stressful times when many are losing income and wealth and face hard economic decisions.

It is quite realistic to imagine that we will not have a summer tourist season.

We also ask that you read the proposed policy on pp. 57-59 about “Electronic Participation in Town Council Meetings” and “Electronic Meetings of Town Council.” It is this policy that will allow two Council members to participate in Tuesday’s meeting “remotely” and still vote. We know of no other beach town that has taken this approach.

We strongly oppose section 2(F)(iii) of the “electronic meeting” policy, which permits the Council to make only a “reasonable attempt to allow for . . . public participation for any public hearings required by law for the decisions being made during the meeting.” (We added the emphasis.)

The Council is inviting legal action with a restriction like this. The Council cannot ignore a State statute with a simple “reasonable attempt” shrug. Town councils don’t have the power to override State law.

POSSIBLE TECHNOLOGICAL FAILINGS

Last night The Beacon tuned into the live stream of the Duck Town Council’s meeting, which dealt largely with emergency concerns, and had an unexpected experience: We couldn’t hear it. There was no audio. Our experience was it didn’t work. (Please note: All five Council members were present.)

Can Mayor Tom Bennett and the Town Council guarantee that the electronic means and the telephone access they are employing to enable the public to join in their meeting next week will work? No, they can’t. The Zoom software, in particular, may pose challenges, especially to people with limited computer skills.

There is also no guarantee that the “remote” Council members will be able to hear the meeting and be heard. Good planning requires anticipation of problems.

If the Town Council is determined to go ahead with a non-essential meeting about costly budgetary business during a national public-health crisis that has yet to peak and has caused extreme anxiety for many people locally, the least it can do is a trial run of the meeting’s “openness.” (Yes, there is critical comment in the preceding sentence.)

Instead, it puts the burden on the public to “download the application from their website at Zoom.us and try it out prior to the meeting,” as stated in the Town’s meeting notice. All the Town offers is a thank you for the public’s “patience and understanding” while we navigate “these uncharted waters together.”

It is inconvenience enough that we are being asked to write and submit our comments in advance of the meeting to the Town Clerk or to rapidly type in our comments on our computer keyboards in real-time (according to Town Clerk Sheila Kane)—you know that won’t work smoothly—we also are given no assurance by the Town that our inconvenience will pay off.

We may be dealing with frozen screens, audio echoes, inaudible voices, and other technological glitches while we strain to exercise our right to participate in municipal government. We even may be dealing with security and privacy concerns because of so-called Zoombombing! Hackers and others determined to do cyber-harm are not on holiday and have always operated well from home.

The Town’s fiscal year 2020-21 budget must be finalized and approved by June 30. The last time we checked, that was three months from now. Much will be known about the COVID-19 spread in the United States and our prospects for economic recovery in just a month from now, or two. But our Town Council just can’t wait.

Ann G. Sjoerdsma, 4/2/20

 

 

4/1/20: DARE COUNTY HAS THIRD POSITIVE COVID-19 TEST, FIRST FOR NCDHHS CASE COUNT. PERSON IS OUT OF STATE, AND FULLY RECOVERED; GAVE DARE ADDRESS WHEN TESTED.

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A third positive COVID-19 test associated with Dare County has occurred, but this person became symptomatic and was tested in another state, according to the Dare County Division of Public Health. He/she gave a Dare County address when tested, however.

The person is fully recovered and has not traveled to North Carolina since “the fall of 2019,” according to Dare County Emergency Management Bulletin 25, which was posted at 5:15 p.m. today.

This case will show up in the N.C. Dept. of Health and Human Services’ case count as Dare County’s first confirmed COVID-19 case because of the Dare County address he/she gave when tested. The other two people who tested positive in Dare County are physically present in the county, but they did not provide Dare County addresses.

The DCEM bulletin did not identify the state in which this third person is residing.

See https://www.darenc.com/Home/Components/News/News/6060/398

Ann G. Sjoerdsma, 4/1/20

4/1/20: WANTED: FOAM TAPE, ELASTIC, PLASTIC SHEETS; RETIRED SOUTHERN SHORES PHYSICIST MAKES FACE SHIELDS AT HOME ON HIS 3-D PRINTER. (Plus Dare County’s Bulletin of the Day Updates the Numbers)

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DIY-ers in Illinois made shield production a family affair.

Retired physicist and longtime Southern Shores homeowner Bob Bateman is making face shields for police and healthcare personnel on his home 3-D printer—joining a growing number of engineers and other do-it-yourselfers nationwide who are using their printers to produce needed protection gear for people on the front lines of the COVID-19 crisis.

Unfortunately, Bob, who has made six shields so far, is running short on materials and needs your help if he is to continue his production and meet the orders he has received from local first responders and healthcare workers.

According to his wife, Ursula, who is working the phones and social media, Bob needs the following three items, which the Batemans cannot find in local hardware stores or online:

Foam tape: ¾-inch wide and ¼-inch thick;

Elastic band: ½-inch wide and 31 inches long (no scraps);

5 mil thick, clear poly sheets: 12 inches by 9 inches.

If you have any of these materials, please contact Ursula at ubateman1617@charter.net. The Batemans will arrange to pick up your supplies and compensate you for them.

Bob’s shield production started when a friend asked if he could help someone on the Duck police force, according to Ursula.

BY THE NUMBERS: TODAY’S DARE COUNTY EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT BULLETIN, NO. 24

According to the COVID-19 update bulletin issued today by Dare County Emergency Management, North Carolina currently has 1,584 cases of confirmed COVID-19 in 79 counties. Nine COVID-19-associated deaths have occurred in the state, and 204 people are hospitalized.

DCEM reports that 53 percent of the COVID-19 cases in North Carolina are people between the ages 18 and 49; 26 percent are people 50-64; and 19 percent are people who are age 65 and older.

The first person who tested positive in Dare County is now fully recovered, according to the bulletin. The other person, whose positive test was reported yesterday, “is doing well and improving each day.” That person is in self-isolation. Both cases have been linked to travel or direct contact, not community spread, according to the bulletin.

See https://www.darenc.com/Home/Components/News/News/6055/1483

 

Ann G. Sjoerdsma, 4/1/20

3/31/20: BREAKING NEWS: TOWN COUNCIL TO HOLD MEETING APRIL 7, 3:30 p.m., AT PITTS CENTER WITH QUORUM, MAX. OCCUPANCY OF 10; PUBLIC CAN JOIN IN ELECTRONICALLY

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There are a number of advantages to videoconferencing, but they apply in the best of times, not during a national public-health crisis.

 

Three members of the Southern Shores Town Council will meet Tuesday, April 7, at 3:30 p.m., at the Pitts Center for a meeting during which they will take up matters previously slated for the March 24 budget workshop, such as beach nourishment, capital street projects, possible no-left-turn summer weekends, and the town pay study.

The meeting will be limited to 10 persons, in accordance with emergency restrictions imposed by the State during the COVID-19 pandemic. The other Town Council members and the public will be able to participate remotely.

According to Town Clerk Sheila Kane, who spoke with The Beacon today, Mayor Tom Bennett and Mayor Pro Tem Elizabeth Morey will attend the meeting, as will Interim Town Manager Wes Haskett, Finance Director Bonnie Swain, and Ms. Kane herself.

Town Attorney Ben Gallop will be participating electronically, Ms. Kane said. She did not know who the third Town Council member would be to make up a quorum, but counting that person, six of the 10 maximum attendees have already been determined.

Neither the police chief nor the fire chief will be giving monthly reports, so there will be room at the Pitts Center for four citizens to attend on what Ms. Kane said would be a “first-come, first-serve” basis.

See the meeting agenda here:  https://www.southernshores-nc.gov/wp-content/uploads/minutes-agendas-newsletters/Agendas_2020-04-07.pdf

The public will be able to join the meeting electronically by using Zoom software through a computer or cellphone. You also may use your telephone to listen to the audio portion of the meeting, without the benefit of video.

According to a notice that was posted on the Town website today, you may join the meeting through Zoom by typing into your Internet browser the URL: https://zoom.us/j/612186193. The ID for the meeting is 612 186 193.

“If you have not used Zoom before, you are encouraged to download the application from their website at Zoom.us,” the Town notice instructs, “and try it out prior to the meeting.”

There is no cost involved with the software or with attending the meeting.

If you choose to join the meeting by telephone, you may call (253) 215-8782 or (301) 715-8592, and when prompted, enter the meeting ID number, 612 182 193, followed by the pound (#) sign. Long-distance charges will apply, as usual.

You will not be able to access the meeting by telephone until it has actually started, Ms. Kane said. You also will not be able to comment by telephone.

SUBMISSION OF PUBLIC COMMENTS

There will be the usual two public-comment periods during the meeting. You may submit your public comments to Ms. Kane before the meeting, and the Mayor will read them into the record, she said. You may email skane@southernshores-nc.gov or send them by U.S. mail. It would be best to email them by 3 p.m. on the meeting day.

You also may submit your comments via Zoom “chat” during the live public-comment period. As Ms. Kane explained, there will be a message board on the right side of your screen in which you can type in your comments and transmit them. The Mayor will read these comments aloud, as well.

In all cases, Ms. Kane requests that you include your name and address with your comments and limit them to three minutes, when read aloud.

See https://www.southernshores-nc.gov/southern-shores-town-council-meeting-april-7-2020-330-p-m/southern-shores-notice-electronic-participation-2/

All N.C. municipalities and schools are using the Zoom software to conduct electronic meetings during the COVID-19 crisis, Ms. Kane explained.

People who attend the meeting should keep a minimum distance of six feet from others before, during, and after the meeting. A recording of the meeting will be posted on the Town website “as soon as possible” after its conclusion.

The meeting packet will be available on the Town website by close of business tomorrow, according to Ms. Kane.

Ann G. Sjoerdsma, 3/31/20

3/31/20: BREAKING NEWS: DARE COUNTY REPORTS SECOND CONFIRMED CASE OF COVID-19; PERSON IS SELF-ISOLATING.

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No sooner had I published my last blog than I received notification from the Dare County Emergency Management that a second person in Dare County has tested positive for COVID-19.

According to the DCEM’s bulletin of today:

“The Dare County Division of Public Health has announced the second positive test result for COVID-19 in Dare County. The first positive test was reported on Wednesday morning, March 25. The two cases are not connected.

“’The individual has been self-isolating since being tested last week and continues to be monitored,’ according to Dr. Sheila Davies, Director of the Dare County Department of Health and Human Services. It is believed the individual acquired the virus through direct contact when out of the area. This is not a case of community spread. The individual’s spouse has also been tested but we have not yet received the test result.

“Similar to the first reported case, this case will not show up as a Dare County case with the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services. Although the test was performed in Dare County, the individual did not provide a Dare County address when being tested. Dare County Department of Health and Human Services will not release further details about the individual to protect [his/her] privacy.

“In accordance with state guidelines for communicable disease reporting, Dare County Department of Health and Human Services staff is conducting an active investigation into this individual’s activity. Anyone who is determined to have had direct contact will be notified by public health staff.

“Dare County Department of Health and Human Services will continue to provide regular updates for our community regarding COVID-19. We appreciate the strong coordination between our agency, North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Dare County Emergency Management, Outer Banks Hospital, and local healthcare providers to identify and manage any person who develops signs or symptoms consistent with COVID-19.

“It cannot be stressed enough how important it is for each of us to do our part by following the social distancing guidance and other recommendations from the CDC and NC DHHS for the protection of public health. Residents are encouraged to rely on credible sources for updated information regarding COVID-19. Visit the CDC website http://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus or NCDHHS at http://www.ncdhhs.gov/coronavirus. For information specific to Dare County, visit www.darenc.com/covid19.

“The Dare County COVID-19 Call Center is open Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. to help address your questions on COVID-19 and can be reached at 252.475.5008.”

Ann G. Sjoerdsma, 3/31/20

 

 

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3/31/20: THE NATURAL WORLD IS INDIFFERENT TO OUR ‘NEW NORMAL’: COASTAL STORM HEADED OUR WAY. Has Anyone Written a Poem?

Dogwoodstorm
A blooming dogwood on East Dogwood Trail is barely visible against the backdrop of this morning’s cloudy sky.

What a difference a day makes. From shorts and sandals to sweaters and warm jackets. From radiant sunshine to turbulent skies.

Forecasts show a coastal storm heading our way, arriving in the area tonight and likely peaking tomorrow morning. It is expected to bring heavy rainfall and strong north-northeast winds—on the order of 40 to 50 mph—that will cause rough surf and pose the threat of ocean overwash.

Soon we will be battening the hatches, as well as hunkering down. But we know this drill.

By now you probably have your own COVID-19 news update drill, too, in what people are calling our “new normal” life.

Besides the local media, I recommend The Raleigh News & Observer for a state roundup, and, not surprisingly, The Washington Post and The New York Times for national news. All three are offering free access to their coronavirus stories.

Dare County Emergency Management issues its daily bulletin by 1 p.m.  See https://www.darenc.com/departments/emergency-management/.

The N.C. Dept. of Health and Human Services daily updates its COVID-19 case count by 11 a.m. See https://www.ncdhhs.gov/divisions/public-health/coronavirus-disease-2019-covid-19-response-north-carolina.

Executive orders signed by Governor Roy Cooper and other news from the Governor’s Office generally are announced after noon and are readily available on the NCDHHS website.

The Governor’s latest executive order, announced yesterday, is No. 122. It is designed to help schools and local governments access state surplus property that they may need during the coronavirus emergency, such as protective equipment for healthcare workers and computers for schools.

See https://files.nc.gov/governor/documents/files/EO122-State-Surplus-Property.pdf.

As you undoubtedly know, Virginia Governor Ralph Northam issued a statewide Stay at Home order yesterday that was effective immediately and included the closure of all beaches, except for “fishing and exercise.”

We are fortunate to be on an island and to be able to better control access to our beaches. Their closure because of public irresponsibility would be a great loss.

The Virginia order is in effect through June 30, unless it is rescinded or modified.

Governor Northam, a pediatric neurologist who served in the U.S. Army Medical Corps, has been criticized for being slow to act, but a week ago at a press briefing, he made clear that he is basing his decisions on science and available medical/scientific data. After consulting with his coronavirus advisory group, he said he expects the new normal with COVID-19 to last months, not just weeks. That is his realistic assessment.

For updates from Virginia and Governor Northam, see https://www.virginia.gov/coronavirus/.

A friend who lives in Florida recently sent me a poem she had written titled “The Pandemic.” It’s made up of four-line stanzas and rather lengthy. She’s no Maya Angelou, but she is thoughtful and perceptive, as well as compassionate and altruistic. My favorite two lines are as follows:

“While sheltered in our homes we step back and give ourselves reprieve;

“To reflect on where we are as a nation, who we are as a people, and in what we believe.”

I would be delighted to publish poetry written about our current situation by any of you. I am not a poet, but I deeply appreciate the art form and welcome your contributions. Please send them to ssbeaconeditor@gmail.com. I will give you the copyright, of course.

The Beacon will keep you up to date with any breaking news about Southern Shores and with important county and state updates, but in the coming days, I also may try to entertain you with stories that you’re not seeing in other media.

Take care during the storm.

Ann G. Sjoerdsma, 3/31/20

3/29/20: STAY HOME. STAY HEALTHY. DON’T CHEAT.

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Stay home. Stay healthy. Don’t cheat.

That is basically the common-sense message of today’s Dare County Emergency Management bulletin about COVID-19, Bulletin No. 20.

See https://www.darenc.com/Home/Components/News/News/6037/1483.

That Dare County felt compelled to issue it is a testament to the apparent lack of common sense being exercised.

It is also the message repeated on the Sunday morning talk shows by state governors, emergency physicians, medical reporters, and others commenting on the “stay at home” orders around the country: Don’t be non-compliant, they all urged. Don’t cheat.

“While the weather is beautiful,” the Dare County bulletin states, “and the therapeutic value of getting outside and enjoying the sunlight and fresh air is immeasurable, we ask everyone to respect the order that is in place and limit your travel.

“We cannot stress enough,” it continues, “that maintaining social distancing is one of the most effective tools we have to reduce the spread of COVID-19. For the safety of you, your family and our community, don’t make exceptions to this order of social distancing. Maintain at least six feet of separation from others (non-family members).”

While The Beacon does not wish to scold, we nonetheless have to wonder in which essential activities all of the drivers that we’ve seen traverse the year-round Southern Shores neighborhood are engaging. Is everyone coming and going to the grocery store? Are the trips they’re making absolutely necessary?

Earlier today, OBX Today reported that the Currituck County Sheriff’s Office has established a vehicle checkpoint at the Duck-Corolla line, where Currituck and Dare counties meet. Sheriff’s deputies may be asking similar questions.

The Town of Nags Head has updated its message to the public, saying it is “essential that the public voluntarily comply with the [stay at home] proclamations for them to be effective in mitigating the spread of COVID-19 in our community. Self-regulation and encouraging others, including friends, family and neighbors, is the most effective way to implement the proclamations.”

Nags Head also makes a request that would seem to be imperative for Southern Shores and other Dare beach towns to make. The Town asks that people not call 911 “if you see someone you perceive to be non-compliant with the proclamations. . . . Concentrate on what you can do for your family and yourself to remain healthy and safe.”

Non-compliance is for law enforcement officers to evaluate and take action to thwart when they encounter it during their patrols. You should call 911 only when you need assistance of an emergent nature.

In today’s bulletin, Dare County reports 1,040 cases of COVID-19 in 69 of 100 N.C. counties, and four deaths associated with the viral infection. These are numbers from the N.C. Dept. of Health and Human Services.

The Beacon does not put much stock in case counts because testing has been inadequate in North Carolina, as well as everywhere else in the county. Many people who may currently be—or once were—infected with COVID-19 may have been advised to stay home and forgo testing or they may have been denied testing. Many others are waiting for long-delayed test results.

While writing this post, we received pop-up news notices of two more COVID-19-associated deaths in the state: one in Buncombe County and the other in Mecklenburg County.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said on CNN this morning that the novel coronavirus could infect millions of people in the United States and kill between 100,000 and 200,000.

He also told a Washington Post reporter in an interview last week: “I’m actually pleading with the younger generation that, although you feel you are invulnerable—which is not true; nobody’s invulnerable—the fight is not only trying to protect yourself. You have a societal, in some respects, moral responsibility to protect yourself so that you don’t inadvertently and unintentionally infect those who are more vulnerable.”

We are still in the early days of the pandemic in the United States. We don’t know yet how well mitigation of the COVID-19 spread will work. Bottom line: Enjoy the beautiful weather, but don’t cheat.

Ann G. Sjoerdsma, 3/29/20