INDIANAPOLIS —The Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) today reported 23 new positive cases of COVID-19, bringing to 79 the number of Hoosiers diagnosed through ISDH, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and private laboratories. Two Hoosiers have died.
The new cases involve residents of Allen (1), Boone (1), Floyd (1), Grant (1), Hamilton (3), Johnson (1), Lake (2), Marion (6), Shelby (1), St. Joseph (3), Tippecanoe (1), Vanderburgh (1) and Vigo (1) counties. The list of counties with cases is included in the ISDH COVID-19 dashboard at https://www.in.gov/coronavirus/, which will be updated daily at 10 a.m. Cases are listed by county of residence. Private lab reporting may be delayed and will be reflected in the map and count when results are received at ISDH.
Additional updates on the state’s response to the COVID-19 outbreak may be provided later today.
In order to maintain the business continuity of the campus and address staff concerns and well-being, on Monday, March 23, 2020 OCU will operate with essential staff and remote work for two weeks. The university plans to resume normal staff operations on Monday, April 6, 2020. During this period, campus offices will be closed to the public.
The university believes this action is warranted in order to sustain the mental well-being of our employees and to support those with childcare concerns during this global pandemic.Â
Those staff designated Essential will be expected to come to campus to complete their work, although they may operate on an alternative schedule as assigned by their supervisor. Â
Those employees designated as Remote will need to complete their tasks from off-campus, however, they may be required to come to campus for some tasks. Please utilize video conferencing (Teams or Zoom) for necessary meetings along with telephone and email. Communication is key, so err on the side of over-communicating during this time. Â
Employees that are designated Other will not have daily responsibilities but should be in an on-call mentality should the need arise to assist or take-over essential responsibilities within their department. The campus will remain open for campus personnel and students. Staff should come to campus as their responsibilities require. Â
All employees will be paid for the hours they would have normally worked during this time for our organization. It is our hope that this two-week period will help to relieve some of the worries that our employees are experiencing during this time and assist many who are struggling to find adequate childcare. The university will continue to monitor the local situation and adjust our response accordingly.
The residence halls and food services remain open to our students who choose to remain on campus. Our scheduled spring break is March 21-29. When students return to campus they will be relocated to individual rooms for the remainder of the semester. The university believes this will aid in social distancing and any need for self-isolation. Our food service will continue to offer take out for students during the two week Essential/Remote period. During Spring Break week, there will be a brunch and dinner option. Â
As a Christian university, we believe in the power of prayer. We continue to pray for our nation and our world. Many people are experiencing financial hardships, loneliness, sickness, and death. In our executive office morning bible reading and prayer, I read from Philippians chapter 2 so “if you have any encouragement from being united with Christ.â€Â Many people do not know Christ and cannot take comfort from the peace that He brings. Pray that they will come to know the peace of Christ Jesus during this crisis.
Gov. Eric J. Holcomb, Secretary of State Connie Lawson and the chairs of the Indiana Republican and Democratic parties will host a media briefing to provide an update on Indiana’s primary election.
WHO:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Gov. Holcomb
Secretary of State Connie Lawson
Indiana Republican Party Chairman Kyle Hupfer
Indiana Democratic Party Chairman John Zody
WHEN:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â 11:30 a.m., Friday, March 20
We hope that today’s “IS IT TRUEâ€Â will provoke honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way?
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IS IT TRUE that the Center For Disease Control And Prevention (CDC) is the final authority for Public Health and not politicians? Â …we are told that the general public is getting really tired of elected officials upstaging of our medical professionals when they attempt to give accurate and detailed updates concerning the CORONAVIRUS to the masses?
IS IT TRUE the CORONAVIRUS virus is only 4 months old, and scientists still have a lot to learn about it?
IS IT TRUE the CORONAVIRUS survives a long time on steel and plastic (~3 days); it doesn’t last a day on cardboard, and only 4 hours on copper?
IS IT TRUE five  (5) cheers for the Governor of Florida for declaring to the many thousands of college students enjoying their spring break that the party is over?  …when the students get back home they should get tested, stay away from their grandparents, parents, siblings, neighbors, and friends and to voluntarily quarantine themselves?
IS IT TRUE that we give five (5) cheers to Dr. James Porter President of Deaconess Hospital for being candid about the current status of testing for the Coronavirus locally?  …we now waiting for the CEO at St. Vincent/Ascension to make a similar declaration?
IS IT TRUE if Coronavirus is contained the politicians will take all the credit for it? Â …if the virus can’t be contained then the politicians will blame the medical professionals for the failure? Â
IS IT TRUE if the deadly Coronavirus is allowed to get out of control it will be a career-ender for many incumbent politicians?
IS IT TRUEÂ in order to survive the CORONAVIRUS Â crisis we shouldn’t let it manage us but we should manage it? Â …in order to get a grip on the CORONAVIRUS, the authorities need to test, separate and then treat?
IS IT TRUEÂ one of the reasons why CORONAVIRUS is considered to be deadly is because currently there are no known vaccines to protect us against it? Â …its a known fact it could take a 6 months to year to develop an effective and safe CORONAVIRUS vaccine?
IS IT TRUEÂ it’s a known fact when more Coronavirus tests are done it will produce more positive Coronavius results? Â …many tests have now being conducted and thats way we are seeing more positive test results?
IS IT TRUE we are getting tired of hearing politicians referring to the Coronavirus as the Chinesevirus?  …we find this kind of remarks to be insulting, divisive and a blatant act of racism?  …the Coronavirus is no longer a foreign disease but is now an American disease?
IS IT TRUE we find it extremely interesting that politicians have forgotten that the money the Federal Government is using to bail out big corporations is our hard-earned tax dollars?
IS IT TRUEÂ that elected officials are the stewards of the public trust and so far some in Washington, D. C. hasn’t been acting like it?
IS IT TRUEÂ one of the reasons why Coranvius is considered to be deadly is because currently there are no known Vaccines to protect us against It?
IS IT TRUE Â the Coronavirus fight has entered into a new phase this week? …top U. S Health Officials just warned that it has moved past the “containment” Â stage and into the “mitigation” stage?
IS IT TRUE that the Coranvius doesn’t discriminate against natural origin, race, color, creed, educational background, gender, blue or white-collar workers, religion, political affiliation, age, sexual preference, rich or poor, type of neighborhood you live in, or mental or physical challenges?
IS IT TRUE if the Evansville water and sewer rates keeping going up the cost of a gallon of water will be more than a gallon of Jack Daniels?
IS IT TRUE that the Vanderburgh County Superior Court Judge Richard G. D’Amour is doing an outstanding job for the citizens of Vanderburgh County?
IS IT TRUE we would like to thank a long-time supporter and friend Joe Wallace for his help with the City-County Observer during the time that our publisher was facing serious health problems? Â …that Joe Wallace is a shining example of what true friendship is all about?
IS IT TRUE we would like to thank Kalah Hirsch, Records Specialist Asst. and IDACS Coordinator with the Evansville Police Department for sending us the daily EPD Police report in a timely manner?
IS IT TRUE we would also like to thank Ray Simmons, Director of Athletic Communications at USI for sending current sports happenings at that fine University?
Today’s “Readers Poll†question is: Who do you considerer the most effective spokesperson concerning given updates on the Coronavirus?
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INDIANAPOLIS — We are defined these days by numbers.
The number infected. The number dead. The number of businesses shuttered and unemployment claims filed. The number of testing kits available and number of tests completed. The number of days our children will be out of school.
Mary Beth Schneider
Most tallies, sadly, are only growing, with more sick, more dead, more unemployed.
One number, for Indiana, is shrinking: The number of days until the May 5 primary election.
Today, it remains an open question whether that election will take place that day and whether voters will even go to the polls or instead make their choices by mail in an unheard-of expansion of absentee balloting.
The election may seem the least of our problems, and the life-and-death tragedies the world is facing in this pandemic changes our perspective on almost everything.
But in a nation of government “of the people, by the people, for the people,†the right of the people to make their choices is no trivial matter. When voters are seeing parts of government failing them, and parts of government rising to address a crisis unlike any we’ve faced before, it might be more important than ever to ensure that democracy isn’t considered a luxury we cannot afford.
This week, Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett announced that absentee ballot applications will be sent to every registered voter in Marion County. It’s an unprecedented step at a time when unprecedented steps are becoming the norm. And in a rare show of bipartisanship, Indiana Republican Party Chairman Kyle Hupfer and Indiana Democratic Party Chairman John Zody issued a joint letter asking the Indiana Election Commission to temporarily suspend the rules on who can apply for an absentee ballot to let anyone, for any reason, vote by mail.
“Maintaining the integrity of our elections and preserving a citizen’s right vote, even under difficult circumstances, is the bedrock of our republic,†they wrote.
An emergency meeting of the commission — comprised of two Republicans and two Democrats — was set for Friday, then canceled. And Gov. Eric Holcomb, in his Thursday coronavirus briefing, made no announcement, as many had expected him to do.
Asked about the primary by reporters, Holcomb said Secretary of State Connie Lawson was in ongoing discussions with Zody and Kupfer to find consensus.
“I personally support postponing the primary election,†Holcomb said. “I say this out of, first, concern for county officials that have to conduct these elections, for poll workers and voters themselves. The details have to be worked out.â€
On the table: Moving the primary to June 2 or even as late as August.
So far, Democrats at least have not agreed to that, preferring instead to expand mail-in voting.
Time is running out to make a decision. Printing and mailing that many absentee applications and ballots cannot be done overnight.
Indiana doesn’t want to be Ohio, where the decision to postpone that state’s primary until June 2 was made the day before its March 17 scheduled date, after a court fight over whether the governor had the power to make that decision.
And we don’t want to be Illinois, which went ahead with its March 17 primary election only for some voters to find their polling places closed or opening late when poll workers failed to show up.
Anthony Long, a Democrat who has served on the Indiana Election Commission for decades, told me Thursday that he is glad to see Holcomb trying to reach a bipartisan agreement.
Holcomb may have no choice, despite his declaration of a state of emergency. Indiana law says the primary “shall†be held on the first Tuesday in May and puts emergency powers regarding elections in the hands of the election commission, not the governor. Given that it would require a unanimous decision by the commission, it makes bipartisanship a necessity, not a nicety.
Many Democrats have started to fret that President Trump will try to postpone the November election if the pandemic is still disrupting America.
While Long said he’s not had anyone raise that concern with him, he said that’s one reason why “it’s so important that there are (bipartisan) discussions at all levels.â€
“There just has to be open communication,†he said. “If either side at any time starts doing this on their own, without joint participation, then it’s a real recipe for disaster.â€
We’re already in a health and economic disaster.
We don’t need a democratic one too.
FOOTNOTE: Mary Beth Schneider is an editor at TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalists.
FOOTNOTE: ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published.
Soon after he offered public assurances that the government was ready to battle the coronavirus, the powerful chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Richard Burr, sold off a significant percentage of his stocks, unloading between $628,000 and $1.72 million of his holdings on Feb. 13 in 33 separate transactions.
As the head of the intelligence committee, Burr, a North Carolina Republican, has access to the government’s most highly classified information about threats to America’s security. His committee was receiving daily coronavirus briefings around this time, according to a Reuters story.
A week after Burr’s sales, the stock market began a sharp decline and has lost about 30% since.
On Thursday, Burr came under fire after NPR obtained a secret recording from Feb. 27, in which the lawmaker gave a VIP group at an exclusive social club a much more dire preview of the economic impact of the coronavirus than what he had told the public.
Burr is not a particularly wealthy member of the Senate: Roll Call estimated his net worth at $1.7 million in 2018, indicating that the February sales significantly shaped his financial fortunes and spared him from some of the pain that many Americans are now facing.
He was one of the authors of the Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness Act, which shapes the nation’s response to public health threats like the coronavirus. Burr’s office did not respond to requests for comment about what sort of briefing materials, if any, on the coronavirus threat Burr may have seen as chair of the intelligence committee before his selling spree.
He warned that companies might have to curtail their employees’ travel, that schools could close and that the military might be mobilized to compensate for overwhelmed hospitals.
The luncheon was organized by the Tar Heel Circle, a club for businesses and organizations in North Carolina that are charged up to $10,000 for membership and are promised “interaction with top leaders and staff from Congress, the administration, and the private sector.â€
Burr’s public comments had been considerably less dire. In a Feb. 7 op-ed that he co-authored with another senator, he assured the public that “the United States today is better prepared than ever before to face emerging public health threats, like the coronavirus.†He wrote, “No matter the outbreak or threat, Congress and the federal government have been vigilant in identifying gaps in its readiness efforts and improving its response capabilities.â€
Burr was one of just three senators who in 2012 opposed the bill that explicitly barred lawmakers and their staff from using nonpublic information for trades and required regular disclosure of those trades. In opposing the bill, Burr argued at the time that insider trading laws already applied to members of Congress. President Barack Obama signed the bill, known as the STOCK Act, that year.
Stock transactions of lawmakers are reported in ranges. Burr’s Feb. 13 selling spree was his largest stock selling day of at least the past 14 months, according to a ProPublica review of Senate records. Unlike his typical disclosure reports, which are a mix of sales and purchases, all of the transactions were sales.
His biggest sales included companies that are among the most vulnerable to an economic slowdown. He dumped up to $150,000 worth of shares of Wyndham Hotels and Resorts, a chain based in the United States that has lost two-thirds of its value. And he sold up to $100,000 of shares of Extended Stay America, an economy hospitality chain. Shares of that company are now worth less than half of what they did at the time Burr sold.
The assets come from accounts that are held by Burr, belong to his spouse or are jointly held.
Inside the Pro-Trump Facebook Group Where First Responders Call Coronavirus a Hoax
In a private Facebook group, firefighters and paramedics shared memes and conspiracy theories doubting the pandemic, raising concerns that they aren’t taking precautions to protect themselves and others.
In a 27,000-member private Facebook group for first responders who support President Donald Trump, firefighters and paramedics have posted thousands of comments in recent weeks downplaying the coronavirus pandemic that they are responsible for helping to handle.
Posts in the group, which is called IAFF Union Firefighters for Trump and has been endorsed by Trump, scoffed at the seriousness of the virus, echoing false assertions by Trump and his allies comparing it to the seasonal flu. “Every election year has a disease,†read one meme, purporting to be written on a doctor’s office whiteboard. “This is a viral-pneumonia being hyped as The Black Plague before an election.â€
As of Monday, there were 4,464 cases and 78 deaths in the U.S., according to researchers at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security.
As confirmed cases and deaths expanded and officials began shutting down mass gatherings and public places, the posts intensified their attacks on Democrats and the media. “I believe this is all by design,†wrote a Texas firefighter whose identity was corroborated by ProPublica. “Democrats have wanted to slow down and even kill the economy. It’s the only hope they have of beating Trump. Sad and disgusting the depths of shit the Democrats will descend to in order to gain power.â€
Screenshot of a Facebook post obtained by ProPublica, with identifying information redacted.
Posts containing factual information or firsthand experiences with the virus were met with more accusations of plots to harm Trump’s reelection. When a Florida firefighter said action was required now to prevent a crisis like is currently underway in Italy, where 27,980 have been infected and 2,158 have died, because the virus spreads at an exponential rate, the first reply was poop emojis and “Trump2020.â€
Some comments promoted a baseless conspiracy theory that the virus is a biological weapon developed by the Chinese in collaboration with Democrats.
“By the Chinese to stop the riots in Hong Kong,†one member wrote.
“[Y]ou are absolutely correct,†another replied. “I said that in the beginning. Democrats saw an opportunity to use it against Trump and get rid of older people which they have been trying to do for a while.â€
Commenters contacted by ProPublica declined to answer questions or didn’t respond to messages. ProPublica reviewed hundreds of screenshots provided by co-workers of members of the group who asked to be anonymous, fearing retaliation. Those people said the social media posts are not idle online venting — they reflect real-world attitudes that are leading some first responders to potentially shun special plans and protective equipment. That dismissiveness, the people said, could put first responders and others at risk as they attend to emergency calls with potentially infected people.
Screenshot of a Facebook post obtained by ProPublica, with identifying information redacted.
Leaders at the International Association of Fire Fighters are also concerned. “I’ve read the social media. I know there are going to be accusations that this is all hype,†Jim Brinkley, IAFF assistant to the general president for technical and information resources, said in a video that the union posted online. “If we ignore it, if we take it lightly, we will set a new standard in the wrong direction for infectious disease in this country.â€
Firefighters and paramedics, who jointly respond to 911 calls in most places, are among those at the greatest risk of encountering the coronavirus, and their exposure could endanger others if they have to be quarantined and are no longer available to work. Dozens of firefighters who responded to the nursing home in Kirkland, Washington, that was a hot spot of the outbreak had to be quarantined for weeks.
“There’s never been this much hoopla given to the other things,†Hallman said. “They’re doing it to crash the economy and make Trump look bad.â€
Hallman’s view hasn’t changed as Trump went from calling concerns over the coronavirus a “hoax†on Feb. 28 to declaring a national emergency on Friday. Hallman said Trump has had to address fears stirred up by the media.
“If you had to point a finger at why the leftist media and the left in general has a smile on their face about this whole thing, it’s the Dow,†Hallman said, referring to the historic decline in stock prices. “My wife and kids are scared, they’re believing what they’re seeing on TV. And I’m trying to tell them it’s not as bad as the media makes it out.â€
Screenshot of a Facebook post by President Donald Trump encouraging supporters to join the group.
Public health experts are unified in calling for drastic measures to contain and mitigate the spread in the U.S. “When you’re dealing with an emerging infectious diseases outbreak, you are always behind where you think you are,†Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said at a White House press conference on Monday. “It will always seem that the best way to address it would be doing something that looks like it might be an overreaction. It’s not an overreaction. It’s a reaction that we feel is commensurate with what is actually going on in reality.â€
The government’s guidelines, Fauci said, “will fail if people don’t adhere to them.â€
IAFF spokesman Doug Stern said views like those expressed in the Facebook group reflect the minority of first responders, citing conversations with local leaders who are eager for more information about how to prepare for the coronavirus.
“Our leadership is aware of this issue, and we are taking it seriously because we know how important it is,†Stern said of COVID-19. Most important, Stern said, is for 911 callers to tell the dispatcher if anyone is experiencing flu-like symptoms so responders can wear protective gear and send a smaller team.