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HEALTH DEPARTMENT UPDATES STATEWIDE COVID-19 CASE COUNTS

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The Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) today announced that 669 additional Hoosiers have been diagnosed with COVID-19 through testing at ISDH, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and private laboratories. That brings to 17,835 the total number of Indiana residents known to have the novel coronavirus following corrections to the previous day’s total.

A total of 1,007 Hoosiers have been confirmed to have died of COVID-19, an increase of 43 over the previous day following the removal of one duplication. Another 107 probable deaths have been reported. Probable deaths are those for which a physician listed COVID-19 as a contributing cause based on X-rays, scans and other clinical symptoms but for which no positive test is on record. Deaths are reported based on when data are received by ISDH and occurred over multiple days.

                                                      To date, 94,998 tests have been reported to ISDH, up from 91,550 on Wednesday.

Marion County had the most new cases, at 238. Other counties with more than 10 new cases were Allen (33), Cass (40), Delaware (17), Elkhart (10), Hamilton (10), Jackson (10), Johnson (16), Lake (60), Madison (14), Montgomery (27), Morgan (12), Orange (12) and St. Joseph (14). The Lake County totals include results from East Chicago and Gary, which have their own health departments.

The complete list of counties with cases is included in the ISDH COVID-19 dashboard at coronavirus.in.gov. 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. The dashboard will be updated at noon each day.

 

Gov. Holcomb to Provide Updates in the Fight Against COVID-19

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Gov. Eric J. Holcomb, the Indiana State Department of Health and other state leaders will host a virtual media briefing to provide updates on COVID-19 and its impact on Indiana.

 

WHO:             Gov. Holcomb

Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch

State Health Commissioner Kristina Box, M.D., FACOG

Department of Workforce Development Commissioner Fred Payne

 

WHEN:           2:30 p.m. ET, Thursday, April 30

 

Media RSVP

Please register HERE by 1 p.m. ET Thursday, April 30. Late requests will not be accepted. One confirmation will be sent per media outlet. If you are confirmed to attend the event, you will receive additional logistics in a separate email.

 

Logistical questions can be directed to agray@gov.in.gov.

Detached Trailer Collides into Vehicle on SR 57, Driver Arrested for DUI

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Indiana State Police responded to a crash on SR 57 north of SR 64 in Oakland City that resulted in one driver being arrested for driving under the influence of methamphetamine and for possession of meth.

Preliminary investigation revealed Maklaine Conner, 23, of Petersburg, was driving her 2008 Chevrolet Tahoe northbound on SR 57 north of SR 64 near the Diplomat Motel when she observed a detached trailer traveling south. The trailer crossed the center line into Conner’s path. After impact with the trailer, Conner’s vehicle became airborne and rolled over onto the guardrail along SR 57. She was checked by EMS, but refused medical attention at the scene.

The driver of the truck that the trailer had detached from was identified as Jarrod Bruce, 47, of Oakland City. He was traveling south on SR 57 in his 2002 Toyota when his trailer detached from his truck. It was determined the trailer’s safety chains were not being used. Troopers noticed Bruce was displaying signs of impairment at the scene and he failed field sobriety tests. When troopers searched his vehicle they found a clear glass smoking device and two baggies containing methamphetamine. Further investigation at Gibson General Hospital in Princeton revealed he was under the influence of methamphetamine. Bruce was arrested and taken to the Gibson County Jail where he is currently being held on bond.

Arrested and Charges:

  • Jarrod L. Bruce, 47, Oakland City, IN
  1. Possession of Meth, Class 6 Felony
  2. Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated-Endangerment, Class A Misdemeanor
  3. Possession of Paraphernalia, Class C Misdemeanor

Arresting Officer: Trooper Jordan Lee, Indiana State Police

Assisting Officers: Sergeant Kylen Compton, Senior Trooper John Davis and Trooper Hunter Manning.

Assisting Agencies: Gibson County Sheriff’s Office and Oakland City Police

Gov. Holcomb announces contact tracing plan for COVID-19 cases

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Governor Eric J. Holcomb today announced the state is partnering with Maximus to centralize contact tracing and investigations for Hoosiers who test positive for COVID-19. This move, in tandem with a previously announced partnership with Optum to significantly expand testing across the state, is an essential component of efforts to safely reopen Indiana.

“As we fight the spread of COVID-19, we need the ability to rapidly contact positive patients and their close contacts to determine who else might have been exposed,” Gov. Holcomb said. “Centralizing this work will allow us to quickly identify individuals who need to be quarantined, reduce the risk of additional infections and take actions to ensure our schools, workplaces and public settings are safe.”

Contact tracing involves identifying individuals who have tested positive for an illness and asking questions about who they were in contact with during their infectious period, then notifying those close contacts of their exposure. Historically, local health departments have led this function, with assistance from the Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) when requested.

“Our local health departments have been doing an incredible job with contact tracing for COVID-19, but we know that as the number of cases increases, the strain on local resources will be significant,” said State Health Commissioner Kris Box, M.D., FACOG. “This centralized approach will free up local health departments to connect people with supportive services in their communities, help with large outbreaks in congregate settings and continue to provide other essential public health services, such as immunizations.”
Plans call for hiring at least 500 employees, who will be trained in contact tracing and investigations by ISDH subject matter experts. The call center is expected to be operational around May 11.

EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT

“IS IT TRUE” APRIL 30, 2020

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IS IT TRUE that the esteemed Mayor of Evansville Lloyd Winnecke has become a famous person all over the nation since his “No Haircut Hero” article was published in USA Today that is a part of the Gannett family of newspapers just like the Evansville Courier is?…since the wooly warrior appeared nationwide his hair must have grown another inch or so and he is likely looking like a fellow who went fishing in the north woods for three months?…we know this makes the mayor uncomfortable not being perfectly coiffed so we have an idea for Mayor Winnecke to do something else that is sure to get some national attention?…there is an organization called Locks of Love that takes donations of hair and makes that hair into wigs for people who are having medical situations that cause their hair to fall out?…the City-County Observer would like to humbly suggest that Mayor Winnecke donate that mop of hair he must be sporting now to Locks of Love to put it to better use?…we also think Winnecke could show his leadership characteristics by calling on mayors and city council members all across the nation to donate their COVID19 hair to Lock of Love?…that would show solidarity among all local elected officials to show up for their first council meeting after opening the country with a John Friend Locks of Love hairdoo?

IS IT TRUE that the City of Evansville will raise our taxes in 2020?…we wonder how on earth can a city that has ZERO population growth and minimal wage growth feel that they can collect more tax money from its huddled masses than it did the year before?
IS IT TRUE that a late great professor from the University of Evansville once said, “come to the revolution all of this $%#! will cease?”…the obsession with fun and game spending is what has led the sheep to this unsustainable abyss?
..   …the other agenda item is asking for the approval to ratify an agreement with Lawman Security Consulting and the City of Evansville (DMD) to provide security at Sartor Retreat House that is currently housing homeless persons needing to isolate due to COVID-19 epidemic?  …if approved Lawman Security Consulting will submit an invoice for reimbursement from FEMA due to COVID-19 Emergency fund in the amount of $30,000.00 a month? …we wonder why the above requests aren’t put on the Evansville City Council agenda for discussion and approval?

 

IS IT TRUE that Americans have always been called the  “STEPUP” people

IS IT TRUE that the national testing program will last for at least 6 months?

IS IT TRUE that the Flu epidemic killed 24,000 people and the COVID-19 virus has so far killed 43,000 Americans

IS IT TRUE several years ago the Indiana State Legislature approved “Sports Book Gaming” in Indiana?  `…we still wonder why they didn’t include “SIMULCAST HORSE RACING”?

IS IT TRUE that the Evansville City Council doesn’t have a revenue problem? …they just have a spending problem?

 

Many Newspapers Want Coronavirus Stimulus. Four Out of Five Can’t Get It.

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Many Newspapers Want Coronavirus Stimulus. Four Out Of Five Can’t Get It.

7:30 am ET April 27, 2020 
By Keach Hagey, Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg and Lindsay Wise
Seattle Times Co. received a nearly $10 million loan last week as part of the federal government’s rescue program for small businesses. The money is helping the publisher avoid layoffs and payroll cuts for its staff of 700, despite a plunge in advertising revenue during the coronavirus pandemic.
The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette is in essentially the same financial distress as the Times, with a similar size workforce among its parent’s publications. Yet it isn’t eligible for the aid and had to furlough or cut pay for 10% of its 900 employees this month.
The reason: its parent company, WEHCO Media Inc., has more than 1,000 employees — the Small Business Administration’s maximum size for newspapers to qualify for the forgivable loans.
Across America, most of the newspaper industry is in the same boat as the Democrat-Gazette, while the Times is one of the exceptions. Papers representing more than 80% of U.S. circulation are disqualified from the government’s Paycheck Protection Program because of the way their companies are structured, according to data from the Alliance for Audited Media.
The issue has prompted a bipartisan push in Congress to either amend PPP rules to make an exception for local news or get news organizations other forms of aid in the next stimulus bill.
“Without it, you are going to see a significant number of newspapers closing,” said Seattle Times Co. President Alan Fisco.
The steps many struggling papers took over the past 15 years to stay afloat — round after round of mergers and consolidation, selling to private-equity buyers, taking on mountains of debt — now prevent the industry from getting meaningful federal help.
While many local papers are now owned by big chains or other conglomerates, they still see themselves as local businesses, staffed by local journalists, reliant on local business for advertising, and driven by a mission that advocates say has grown more important amid the pandemic.
The thirst for local information during the pandemic has boosted web traffic and subscriptions at many news outlets. But the shuttering of the retail businesses that have long been their biggest advertisers has sent revenue into free fall.
Layoffs, furloughs, and pay cuts have affected roughly 33,000 news organization employees nationwide since the start of the crisis, according to a tracker compiled by the NewsGuild-CWA, the largest journalists’ union. The U.S. has lost 2,100 newspapers — or one in four — since 2004, leaving 1,800 communities without a news source, according to research from the University of North Carolina. Shriveling print ad revenue and difficulty competing for digital ad dollars with tech giants was pushing even more outlets to the brink before the coronavirus crisis exacerbated the situation.
Proposals for government aid range from directing federal ad dollars to local media to loosening rules for local papers that belong to larger conglomerates.
Lawmakers in both parties pushed unsuccessfully to include the latter provision in the most recent coronavirus aid package. In the Senate, Sens. Maria Cantwell (D., Wash.), John Kennedy (R., La.), Amy Klobuchar (D., Minn.) and John Boozman (R., Ark.) sent a letter to Senate leadership calling the viability of local news “essential to public health,” but the provision ultimately didn’t make it into the bill.
Loosening the rules got tougher after brand-name restaurant chains drew outcry after obtaining forgivable loans intended primarily for smaller businesses, according to people familiar with the negotiations. Some companies returned the money last week. The Treasury Department has updated its guidance for PPP loans, saying big public companies with access to capital were “unlikely” to qualify.
“I think the sympathy for local news remains,” said David Chavern, chief executive of the News-Media Alliance, which represents nearly 2,000 news outlets. “We are going to keep pushing the point into the next stimulus bill.”
Big newspaper companies could be eligible for assistance Congress provided for larger corporations in its emergency relief efforts. But unlike the PPP loans, which can be forgiven if used to keep employees on the payroll, those other loans would have to be repaid. “They are just a lot less attractive,” Mr. Chavern said, adding that many newspaper companies already have a lot of debt.
Some publishers are uncomfortable about getting help from the federal government.
“We are always open to considering ways to sustain journalism. However, we would never allow ourselves to be perceived as dependent on or influenced by government funding,” said an executive at Gannett Co., the country’s largest chain, with 261 daily papers.
Gannett, which wouldn’t qualify for a PPP loan and didn’t apply for one, anticipates a roughly 30% decline in second-quarter advertising revenue, according to people familiar with the matter. Already, it has announced furloughs, pay cuts and layoffs across its staff of more than 20,000, although Gannett says the layoffs are part of its continuing integration process and unrelated to the coronavirus pandemic.
Gannett is a good example of a large company for whom raising new debt — whether from the government or in private-capital markets — can be costly. To finance its recent merger with New Media Investment Group Inc., Gannett took on $1.8 billion in debt financing at an interest rate of 11.5%.
Some news outlets are ineligible for PPP loans because their parent company owns large businesses unrelated to the news. The Star Tribune in Minneapolis is ineligible because it is considered an “affiliate” of businesses controlled by owner Glen Taylor, including the NBA’s Minnesota Timberwolves, according to the paper’s publisher and chief executive, Michael Klingensmith.
The Star Tribune’s ad revenues from the current quarter are down more than 40% year over year, he said, leading the company to institute furloughs affecting about 500 employees.
Walter Hussman Jr., the publisher of the 200-year-old Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, thought this would be the year the paper returned to profitability. Instead, ad revenue is down more than 50% in April. “Before this, newspapers were really struggling,” he said. “The question now is whether they are going to be able to survive.”
Mr. Hussman opposes a newspaper-specific bailout, though he supports changing the small business rules so that newspapers like his would qualify.
The idea of directing federal advertising dollars — for publicizing things such as the census and new programs — to local media has gained momentum. A majority of House and Senate members have signed a bipartisan letter calling for such a measure.
“Any advertiser regardless of their government affiliation would be helpful to us at this time,” said Grant Moise, publisher of the Dallas Morning News, which is owned by A.H. Belo Corp.
Others in the industry and Congress, including Sen. Richard Blumenthal, (D., Conn.), are pushing for a pool of public funding that would be granted directly to local news organizations in the next aid package. Sen. Blumenthal described that funding pool as potentially hundreds of millions of dollars. “We’re really investing in democracy,” he said in an interview.
For newspapers that were able to get PPP help, it immediately saved newsroom jobs. Paul Tash, chairman, and chief executive of Times Publishing Co., which owns the Tampa Bay Times, said his company received an $8.5 million PPP loan. “The money comes with no strings on our journalism,” he said.
Mr. Tash said the paper’s advertising revenue is down by about half since early March; as a result, the Tampa Bay Times publishes print editions only on Wednesdays and Sundays.
The parent company of the daily newspaper and website LNP/LancasterOnline in Lancaster, Pa., got its PPP loan distribution April 19. But the newspaper, which has about 69,000 subscribers, had already furloughed or laid off about 30 people, according to Robert Krasne, chairman and chief executive of Steinman Communications Inc. The stimulus money won’t be used to hire them back but will prevent further cuts — for now.
“The long term impact of the virus is going to be more far-reaching than we can imagine,” Mr. Krasne said.

Pandemic Unemployment Assistance Application Process

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written by Ryan Hatfield

Indiana State Representative-District 77

Recent federal legislation provides an estimated $260 billion in enhanced and expanded unemployment insurance to millions of workers throughout the country who are being furloughed, laid off, or finding themselves without work through no fault of their own because of the COVID-19 pandemic and the public health response to it.

One of the programs that were created by federal legislation is Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA). The PUA is in addition to Indiana’s traditional Unemployment Insurance (UI). PUA provides emergency unemployment assistance to workers who are left out of regular state UI or who have exhausted their state UI benefits.

Those eligible for PUA include self-employed workers, including independent contractors, freelancers, workers seeking part-time work, and workers who do not have a long enough work history to qualify for state UI benefits.

PUA will provide income support to many workers who are shut out of state UI systems in this country. In fact, workers who are eligible for state UI are not eligible for the PUA program.

PUA applications are now available on Indiana’s Department of Workforce Development UI application system (Uplink) to those who have already applied for and been denied regular UI benefits. PUA applications will be available to others as soon as they apply for and are denied regular UI.

If you applied for traditional UI after April 4, 2020, and got denied, go to the DWD Uplink and apply for PUA.

If you have not applied for UI or PUA yet, first apply for traditional UI on the DWD Uplink at unemployment.in.gov. If you are rejected for traditional UI, apply for PUA (available in Uplink). Even if you know you will be rejected for traditional UI, you must apply before applying for PUA. PUA is only available if you are ineligible for traditional UI.