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Detroit, Still Clawing Back From The Financial Crisis, Reels As Coronavirus Claims Lives

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Detroit, Still Clawing Back From The Financial Crisis, Reels As Coronavirus Claims Lives

“It seems like one after another after another, and it’s just hitting close to home,” one city leader said.

By Erin Einhorn

DETROIT — The police officers, high school students and longtime residents who gathered for breakfast March 6 had a common purpose: improve their corner of the city.

Marlowe Stoudamire, a dynamic community leader and entrepreneur, led the discussion at the Police & Pancakes event on the city’s east side. He flashed a daunting list of challenges on a screen — unemployment, domestic violence, drugs, homelessness — then asked the roughly 100 participants to discuss solutions.

“We all agreed that we need to become more involved, more engaged, more vocal and to be supportive of one another,” said Willie Bell, an elected member of Detroit’s Board of Police Commissioners. “It was a very uplifting and positive forum.”

But as people around the country have painfully learned in the weeks since Stoudamire led that community discussion, the list of challenges he named was incomplete.

Not mentioned was the coronavirus that was likely lurking in the room that day. The virus would follow some of the police officers back to their precinct — at least three who attended later tested positive, the Detroit Free Press reported, and dozens were quarantined — and would ride with others that weekend to churches and restaurants and family gatherings.

The coronavirus pandemic has claimed the lives of tens of thousands of people around the world but it has taken a particularly painful toll on Detroit, where the growing list of deaths includes some of its most prominent citizens: state Rep. Isaac Robinson, 44; Capt. Jonathan Parnell, 50, the police department’s homicide chief; and Dwight Jones, 73, a legendary high school basketball coach.

Also on that heartbreaking list is Stoudamire, 43, a champion of Detroit who was a father of two young children. He died March 24.

“It seems like one after another after another, and it’s just hitting close to home,” said Luther Keith, a former columnist and editor for the Detroit News who is now the executive director of ARISE Detroit!, a coalition of 400 churches, block clubs and community groups. “It seems like everybody knows somebody who died.

‘Here we go again’

Michigan has seen a swift and dramatic increase in coronavirus infections over the last week, with the number of confirmed cases and deaths now among the highest in the nation. Those cases have been heavily concentrated in Detroit and its suburbs, with the city recording 97 deaths as of Thursday.

Detroit has seen more deaths than even larger cities such as Los Angeles and Chicago, and some Detroiters say the city’s history makes the crisis feel more personal — and its consequences more severe.

Detroit, rocked by job losses as the auto industry faltered, has seen roughly a third of its population leave in the last 20 years alone, continuing a population slide that began in 1950 when the thriving city had 1.8 million residents. Today, it has fewer than 700,000. Its public schools have been hobbled. Some of its neighborhoods have been hollowed out, replaced by overgrown fields and burned-out homes. In the years before the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history freed the city from some of its most crippling debts, much of Detroit’s 139 square miles were pitch black at night, its streetlights broken and dark. Emergency services were so strained that, for years, residents never knew if an ambulance would come when called.

The people who stayed in spite of all of that weren’t just those without the resources to leave, Keith said. People stayed because they had deep ties to their neighborhoods, their churches and their schools.

Full coverage of the coronavirus outbreak

“Detroit was the last on every list,” he said. “The worst city to live in, the highest crime rate, the highest poverty rate, the lowest education, but all of these people stayed here. They kept working. They kept raising their kids, educating them, trying to maintain their neighborhoods when no one else believed and no one else cared.”

That common experience forged ties across the city, he said, especially among African Americans, who comprise nearly 80 percent of the city’s population.

Many Detroiters have large interconnected networks built through families, churches and schools. So when someone dies, the impact can be felt across the city, Keith said. “It’s very personally jarring.”

The headlines about Detroit had finally begun telling a different story as the bankruptcy brought new money and attention to the city. There were new investments, especially downtown, blight remediation efforts and a newly empowered school board. Now, as the coronavirus has threatened public health, shut down businesses and put huge numbers of people out of work, Detroiters worry that progress could disappear.

“I did feel like we’d turned a corner,” said Al Elvin, who leads the Detroit chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha, the nation’s oldest African American fraternity. “We were starting to get some restaurants and businesses sprouting up, and now here we go again with something like this.”

His fraternity has lost a number of members in Michigan, including Bassey Offiong, a 25-year-old college student who was about to graduate with a degree in chemical engineering. Elvin knows others who have died, are sick or have been hospitalized.

He worries especially about the city’s most vulnerable residents, those who hadn’t yet seen much benefit from the economic turnaround. Even before this crisis, a third of Detroiters were living in poverty.

“A lot of the Detroit community had not recovered from the last crisis before the next crisis is taking them,” said Jeffery Robinson, the principal of Detroit’s Paul Robeson Malcolm X Academy, an elementary and middle school that lost one of its staff members this week.

That staff member was Thomas Fields, 32, who had come back to Detroit after serving in the Navy, determined to help kids at the school he attended as a child, Robinson, who had been one of his teachers, said. “That he was a little boy I met when he was in the fifth grade is adding to the heartbreak.”With the state on lockdown and schools closed, Robinson, 51, can’t easily connect grief counselors with his young students as they cope with the loss. In his own life, he can’t visit his mother, who is in the hospital, fighting the virus, or his sister, who was just released from the hospital to make room for sicker patients.

And the thing that Detroiters have most relied on to get them through past difficulties — coming together as a community to support one another — is much more difficult now than it was before, he said.

Still, Robinson, who is also the pastor of a church on the city’s east side, remains hopeful that the crisis will draw more attention to the urgent needs of people in the city, such as children attending schools that he believes are grossly underfunded. With Michigan schools ordered to remain closed for the rest of the school year, many of those children are now struggling to get enough to eat, let alone keep up with their school work.

“I’m confident that on the other side of this crisis, there will be lessons and experiences that hopefully we learn from and we’ll be better people for it,” he said.

‘We are survivors’

As the number of infected Detroiters has climbed rapidly in recent days, President Donald Trump and national health leaders have flagged the city as a new center of the virus.

That triggered what the city’s mayor, Mike Duggan, called “disturbing” news reports that connected Detroit’s surge in infections to its high poverty rate, or suggested that Detroiters weren’t taking care of their health.

“There is no evidence that the coronavirus checks your bank account before it jumps to you,” he said, listing affluent cities that have been hit hard by the virus.

Public health leaders say lower-income people of color, like many residents of Detroit and of other cities seeing high rates of infections, such as New Orleans, are often disproportionately affected by health and social threats. In Michigan, African Americans comprise just 14 percent of the state’s population but accounted for 35 percent of coronavirus infections and 40 percent of deaths, according to data the state released for the first time on Thursday.

One day earlier, Duggan dismissed the notion that race or economics are the issue. Detroit has been hit hard because “somebody brought the virus into this community early on. It spread in this community before we knew it was happening.”

Download the NBC News app for full coverage of the coronavirus outbreak

Regardless of the reason, that spread has been swift, hitting many parts of the city and infecting city leaders, including City Council President Brenda Jones and police Chief James Craig.

Craig is just one of 106 police department employees who had tested positive for the virus as of Thursday, Duggan said. Another 524 officers and 123 civilian employees are quarantined because they’d had contact with someone who was infected or because they had a fever when they showed up to work.

That’s put roughly a fifth of the police department out of service. And while 911 calls are down significantly because most Detroiters are staying home, these few weeks have been trying for the department.

“We have multiple people that are doing doubles, sometimes three or four days in a row,” said a 911 dispatcher who asked not to be identified because she wasn’t authorized to speak publicly. “It’s mentally exhausting, physically exhausting. Sometimes we don’t get breaks. We don’t eat.”

A 38-year-old 911 operator was one of the first in the city to die from the virus March 23. His death rattled his colleagues, the dispatcher said, making an already stressful job even more so.

“We’re side by side answering the phones, so it’s like a battle in your mind,” she said. “Is this the day I’m going to start experiencing symptoms? Or is this going to be the last day I’m sitting next to this person?”

The police department has peer counselors who work with officers and employees who need support, said Bell, the elected police commissioner who attended the March 6 pancake breakfast.

The department has been hit hard, he said, but he’s been impressed by how well it has handled the crisis.

“We haven’t missed a beat in terms of responding” to calls, said Bell, who served on the Detroit police force for 32 years before retiring in 2003. “They’re deploying officers who don’t normally work patrol. They’ve made adjustments.”

Police are trained to respond to emergencies and will come through this one, he said, adding that the same is true of Detroit itself.

Detroiters “have a different fiber” compared to people from other cities, Bell said. “We are fighters. We are survivors and we have stood the test of time.”

CORRECTION (April 2, 2020, 6:05 p.m. ET): An earlier version of this article stated that O’Neil D. Swanson died of the coronavirus. His cause of death has not been reported.

 

I’M OK; YOU’RE OK; STAY AWAY!

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I’M OK; YOU’RE OK; STAY AWAY

Gavel Gamut By Jim Redwine

When I was a child nobody hugged or kissed anybody unless they were sweethearts or perhaps, occasionally, mother and child. People felt no need to get closer than arms length and nobody breathed on anybody. Then along came bleeding heart liberals and day-time TV shows and voila! Hugging was de rigueur. Suddenly perfect strangers were greeting one another as if they were Romeo and Juliet. I say it’s time to return to those not so thrilling days of yesteryear. It is not like people did not love one another before the 1980’s. After all, the human specie has thrived for thousands of years without faux hugs and kisses and families used to have lots more kids. But no one thought less of you back then if you did not invade their space. Maybe social distancing is a recommendation we can live with. Thank you Tony Fauci!

Peg and I would appreciate it if the rest of the world, except for family and delivery drivers, would stay away for the next few months. Maybe by then we will have a vaccine for COVID-19. One caveat, it is important that computers continue to create funny money pursuant to an on-going Congressional Resolution so that we can receive our Social Security checks. In return, Peg and I will pledge to leave everyone else alone and not attend any public events. No one would be there anyway since the rest of the world will be in their basements watching such enlightening Netflix entertainments as Tiger King.

By the way, I just saw a report on cable news that they may make a movie about Joe Exotic and his big cat petting zoo and crazy conspiracy theories. As announced from prison, Joe wants Brad Pitt to play Joe in the movie. I bet Brad is proud. Actually Peg and I had never heard of the Tiger King until our erstwhile neighbors, Chuck and Bonnie Minnette of New Harmony, Indiana, called to ask us about it. I guess since we recently moved to Oklahoma and there’s hardly anyone out here, the neighbors thought we might know Joe; we do not! 

Regardless, back to the column at hand. Other than cable TV, with the COVID-19 panic about the only social activity left to any of us is contemplation of conspiracy theories such as those of Joe Exotic. I know we Americans have always been able to find boogeymen, et al, everywhere from Salem, Massachusetts to Roswell, New Mexico. But our current situation of a total national shutdown has caused a paradigm shift in our public psyche. 

If the news reports can be credited, some in the Communist Chinese government posited, and maybe actually believed, that the original outbreak of COVID-19 in Wuhan, China in December 2019 was deliberately started by American soldiers. Then some in America floated the idea the pandemic may have been a deliberate creation of the virus as a weapon by China or Iran.

Those two conspiracy theories are about as credible as the reasons given by railroad engineer Eduardo Moreno who, once again according to news media reports, on April 2, 2020 attempted to ram a ship by driving his train’s engine off the tracks to within a few hundred yards of the U.S. naval ship Mercy. The Mercy is a military hospital ship sent by our government to aid the residents of Los Angeles during the COVID-19 crisis. Moreno told the police he believed the ship was part of a government conspiracy to takeover America. I had no idea a train could even travel that far off its tracks. Anyway, I think Mr. Moreno has been watching too much cable TV news.

Then there are the gun rights advocates who see a business lockdown as a government attempt to take away our right to self-defense. Also, there are those Religious Right devotees who see a nefarious plot behind the urgent government push to find an inoculation for the Corona virus. Apparently their fear is that such ideas as espoused by Bill Gates to implant computer chips in people for health reasons is really a cover to allow universal monitoring and control of our lives.

Well, Gentle Reader, you may know of other conspiracy theories. Heck, you may have one or two of your own. I know I sure do. However, as for Peg and me and social distancing, as long as our Social Security checks and the delivery workers keep coming, we are okay with whatever theory floats your boat. That is as long as you keep six feet away and wear a mask. Don’t worry; we promise to neither hug nor kiss you.

For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com

Or “Like” us on Facebook at JPegRanchBooks&Knitting

Indiana SNAP Recipients Will Begin Receiving Maximum Benefit Amounts Next Week

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Indiana SNAP Recipients Will Begin Receiving Maximum Benefit Amounts Next Week

INDIANAPOLIS—The Indiana Family and Social Services Administration announced today that more than 152,000 Indiana households will receive additional Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits when April distributions begin this Sunday. The additional funds are intended to help Hoosiers obtain food and support for their families while Indiana responds to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The federal Families First Coronavirus Response Act gives states the option to provide SNAP households with the maximum SNAP allotment, which is based on household size. SNAP households that are not currently receiving the maximum allotment will receive additional benefits that bring their allotment amount to the maximum. Households already receiving the maximum benefit will not receive additional benefits.

Maximum amounts per household size are as follows:

Number in SNAP household Maximum benefit
1 $194
2 $355
3 $509
4 $646
5 $768
6 $921
7 $1,018
8 $1,164
Each additional person Add $146

Indiana SNAP recipients receive their benefits via electronic benefit transfer according to a schedule based on the first letter of their last name. Each month, distribution starts on the 5th and concludes on the 23rd.

All new applications authorized in April will also receive the maximum allotment for their household size. FSSA is working to inform various partners and stakeholders, including retailers, of the change to help them inform and explain to SNAP recipients the reason for the additional allotment.

The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program provides food assistance to low and no income people and families living in the United States. It is a federal aid program administered by the Food and Nutrition Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Distribution of benefits occurs at the state level. In February 2020, 559,600 Hoosiers from approximately 253,658 households across Indiana received SNAP benefits.

Don’t Fall Victim to COVID-19-Related Scams

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Individuals Be Aware Of Fraudsters Attempting To Steal Economic Impact Payments

INDIANAPOLIS – Hoosiers are facing challenging times to keep their families safe and avoid the spread of COVID-19, and unfortunately scammers are adding additional risk by taking advantage of the current health crisis. Newly-surfaced reports show scammers creating text messages, emails, websites and social media posts to pose as government entities and organizations to obtain financial information from individuals for personal gain.

The Indiana Department of Revenue (DOR) team continues to find ways to assist Hoosiers, which includes helping individuals identify scams to avoid falling victim.

Here are a few key signs of these scams:

  • Emphasizes the terms “Stimulus Check” or “Stimulus Payment.” The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) uses the official term “economic impact payment.”
  • Asks the individual to sign over their stimulus check.
  • Asks by phone, email, text or social media for verification of personal and/or banking information to receive or speed up their stimulus check.
  • Mails the individual a fake check and requests the individual to call a number or verify information online to cash it.

DOR recommends Hoosiers remain vigilant and work hard to identify these scam attempts. Never engage with potential scammers online or on the phone.

Individuals who receive emails, text messages or social media attempts to gather information that appears to be from DOR, the IRS or an organization closely linked to either government agency, such as the Electronic Federal Tax Payment System (EFTPS), should forward it to phishing@irs.gov.

Learn more about reporting suspected scams by going to the Report Phishing and Online Scams page on the IRS website.

Individuals can find official IRS information about the COVID-19 pandemic and economic impact payments on the IRS Coronavirus Tax Relief web page. For information on COVID-19 related changes to DOR operations and ongoing taxpayer relief, visit DOR’s Coronavirus webpage at dor.in.gov/7870.htm.

“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” APRIL 6, 2020

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“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” APRIL 6, 2020

“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” was created because we have a couple of commenters that post on a daily basis either in our “IS IT TRUE” or “Readers Forum” columns concerning National or International issues.
The majority of our “IS IT TRUE” columns are about local or state issues, so we have decided to give our more opinionated readers exclusive access to our newly created “LEFT JAB and Middle Jab and RIGHT JAB”  column. They now have this post to exclusively discuss national or world issues that they feel passionate about.
We shall be posting the “LEFT JAB” AND “MIDDLE JAB” AND “RIGHT JAB” several times a week.  Oh, “LEFT JAB” is a liberal view, “MIDDLE JAB” is the libertarian view and the “RIGHT JAB is representative of the more conservative views. Also, any reader who would like to react to the written comments in this column is free to do so.

Join us for Virtual Platform Meeting

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Vanderburgh County Democratic Party
Central Committee

Edie Hardcastle, Chair; ediehardcastle@gmail.com
Nick Iaccarino, Vice Chair
Alex Burton, Political Director
Cheryl Schultz, Treasurer
Melissa Moore, Secretary

Headquarters
220 N.W. 4th St.
Evansville, IN

We welcome volunteers!
Call 812-453-8949

🔗 Join us for a Virtual Platform Hearing with the Indiana State Democratic Party this Wednesday April 8 at 5pm. This is a REGIONAL event. Everyone is welcome to attend and is not limited to Vanderburgh County.
Open. Inclusive. Collaborative. Help shape the direction of our Party. Join our virtual platform hearing and bring your top policy issues to be included in the Party’s 2020 platform.
❗Please register for the event beforehand using the virtual meeting link below. You do not need a Zoom account to join.

ℹ️ Register in advance for this virtual meeting:

https://zoom.us/meeting/register/u50pcO-urjIs9XT898r6ZOiiSKJKcJB-aQ

**After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

EPD Pension Board Meeting

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Evansville Police Department

Police Pension Board

PUBLIC NOTICE

 

COMBINDED PUBLIC NOTICE of EXECUTIVE SESSION

and RELOCATION of PUBLIC MEETING of the

EVANSVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT PENSION BOARD

The Evansville Police Department Police Pension Board will hold an Executive Session on Thursday, April 9, 2020, at 8:15 a.m.  The Meeting will be held in the Locust Meeting Rooms “BC” of the Old National Events Plaza (“ONEP”), located at 715 Locust Street in Evansville, Indiana.  The Executive Session will be closed for discussion of records classified as confidential by state or federal statute ( I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1(b)(7)) and to receive information about prospective employees (I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1(b)(5)).  Immediately following the Executive Session, a regular Open Session will be held in by the Pension Board.

The public is welcome to attend the Open Session, but, pursuant to the Governor’s Executive Order 20-08 of March 23, 2020, the Statement and General Guidance of the Public Access Counselor Regarding the Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) Event, and CDC and ISDH requirements, public attendance will be limited to a maximum of ten (10) people with first preference given to the media. In accordance with the PAC’s guidance, the following accommodations will be made: 

  • A portion of those individuals present must include representatives from the media or the public. 
  • Access into ONEP will be limited to the Locust 2 Door.
  • No admittance will be allowed until five (5) minutes before the start of the meeting.
  • Admittance into ONEP will be limited to ten (10) persons.
  • Other reasonable restriction on social distancing and movement may be made at the discretion of the Pension Board’s President.
  • Any person attempting to enter may be subject to denial if displaying symptoms of COVID-19.

Notices and agendas for public meetings may be posted solely by electronic means during the duration of the Governor’s Emergency Declaration. 

EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT