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HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
Gov. Beshear: Safe Reopening Requires Patience, Planning and Perseverance
Gov. Beshear: Safe Reopening Requires Patience, Planning and Perseverance
FRANKFORT, Ky. (April 25, 2020) – On Saturday, Gov. Andy Beshear said Kentuckians must stay vigilant in the fight against the novel coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) in the commonwealth, even as we begin the first small step toward reopening on Monday.
“We will get through this; we will get through this together,†Gov. Beshear said. “The first step was a sacrifice. Now we have to plan and be patient. Last, we’ll need to persevere. This is going to be a challenge until a vaccine comes around, but I know our people are up for it.â€
Unemployment insurance
The Governor said those who applied for unemployment in March should expect to hear from somebody this week. He said this is his administration and everyone is working hard to respond to the claims, which are greater than at any time in our history.
“I want to see significant progress this week and we will be providing updates,†Gov. Beshear said.
Testing sites and eligibility
In addition to some health care facilities, yesterday the Governor said that Kentuckians can now be tested free of charge for COVID-19 at many sites across the commonwealth. For more information on drive-through testing visit kycovid19.ky.gov. The Governor said that the Bowling Green location, which is in partnership with Kroger, is expanding through this Friday and an extra week of testing would be added.
Update on voting in the primary election
Friday, Gov. Beshear and Secretary of State Michael Adams announced new voting guidelines for the June primary. Click here for more information.
Reopening for health care providers and facilities
Thursday, Gov. Andy Beshear announced that Monday, April 27, the state will begin the gradual restart and reopening of our Phase 1 health care services and facilities, although they will operate very differently than they did before the outbreak of COVID-19. For full guidance on criteria for reopening and new best practices, click here.
“The virus sets the timing,†Gov. Beshear said. “While I think we have plateaued, we just have to make sure we take the next best right step. We need each and everyone’s best every single day. We must win. Every decision we make, lives are on the line. We could set ourselves back days or weeks without the following guidance.â€
Healthy at Work
The administration is continuing to update the state’s website, HealthyAtWork.ky.gov, to make the Phase 2 process for reopening businesses clear. Healthy at Work is based on criteria set by public health experts and advice from industry experts. Phase 1 is a state-readiness evaluation. Phase 2 is the business-readiness evaluation. This phased approach will ensure the commonwealth’s citizens can safely return to work while still protecting the most vulnerable Kentuckians.
Census update
Kentucky moved up to 15th place for response rates across the nation, with 55.9% completion. Kentuckians can fill out their Census at my2020census.gov or by phone at 844-330-2020 (English) or 844-468-2020 (Spanish).
Case information
As of 5 p.m. April 25, Gov. Beshear said there were at least 3,905 coronavirus cases in Kentucky, 171 of which were newly confirmed.
Unfortunately, Gov. Beshear also reported five new deaths Saturday, raising the state’s toll to 205 deaths related to the virus.
The deaths include a 79-year-old woman from Adair, an 88-year-old woman from Jefferson, a 93-year-old woman from Jefferson, an 87-year-old woman from Jefferson, and a 92-year old woman from Graves.
At least 1,501 Kentuckians have recovered from the virus.
For additional information, including a complete list of positive cases to date, a count-by-county, race, and ethnicity percentages of cases and deaths, click here.
More information
Read about other key updates, actions, and information from Gov. Beshear and his administration at governor.ky.gov, kycovid19.ky.gov and the Governor’s official social media account Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.
Kentuckians can also access translated COVID-19 information and daily summaries of the Governor’s news conference at tinyurl.com/kygovespanol (Spanish) and tinyurl.com/kygovtranslations (more than 20 additional languages).
HEALTH DEPARTMENT UPDATES STATEWIDE COVID-19 CASE COUNTS
INDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) today announced that 718 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 14,395 the total number of Indiana residents known to have the novel coronavirus following corrections to the previous day’s total. 
A total of 785 Hoosiers have been confirmed to have died of COVID-19. In addition, a total of 87 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, 79,774 tests have been reported to ISDH, up from 75,553 on Thursday. 
Marion County had the most new cases, at 194. Other counties with more than 10 new cases were Allen (27), Bartholomew (23), Cass (60), Clark (16), Delaware (12), Elkhart (27), Hamilton (29), Hendricks (24), Johnson (19), Lake (73), Shelby (22) and St. Joseph (38). 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 www.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. 
State Doubles PPE Orders, Donations with Totals Topping 6.3 Million
Hoosier sewing business launches production of in-demand N95 masks for front-line workers treating COVID-19
Governor Eric J. Holcomb Friday announced that the Indiana Economic Development Corporation (IEDC) has secured commitments for more than 6.3 million pieces of personal protective equipment (PPE) – up from 2.6 million last reported on April 13 – for hospitals, first responders, long-term care facilities and health care providers treating COVID-19 patients. To date, more than 1.17 million items have been delivered to the Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) for distribution.
Of these, more than 2.9 million items, including face masks, face shields, gloves, gowns, goggles and bottles of hand sanitizer, are being made and sourced by 18 Indiana manufacturers. New commitments from Indiana providers include:
After Action Medical and Dental Supply (Marion County), which was started in 2010 by a service disabled veteran, distributes products nationally to health care providers, the Veterans Affairs Medical System, and U.S. Department of Defense. The company is leveraging its supply chain to provide more than 400,000 nitrile gloves.
Cardinal Spirits (Monroe County), which first opened in 2015, is a craft distillery in Bloomington that distributes spirits to more than 200 retail locations in Indiana. The company has paused beverage operations, leveraging its distillery to produce hand sanitizer. It has distributed 50,000 gallons since mid-March.
Sugar Creek Bottling Company (Marion County), which is a full service, hand-crafted e-liquid manufacturing company specializing in private labeling and flavor development. The company has shifted production to provide hand sanitizer.
Hentz Manufacturing (Allen County), a commercial sewing business that pivoted from Cinda B bag production to medical supplies, has already produced and distributed 90,000 pieces of PPE, including isolation gowns, face masks and face shields, in just a few weeks. The company is now producing N95 face mask respirators, filling a critical need for these items that effectively filter out a minimum of 95% of airborne particles. The company, which coordinated with Indiana University Health to ensure proper fit and filtration, will deliver the first batch of N95 masks today and plans to produce 1 million in total. The company is currently hiring for sewers and supervisors to support its efforts to meet increased needs for PPE.
Indiana businesses and organizations continue to donate critical services and supplies as well, with PPE donations now totaling 530,694 – up from 440,000. New contributors include Berry Global, Brooks Life Sciences, Duke Energy, Faegre Drinker Shanghai Office, Indiana State Board of Animal Health, Ivy Tech, Pacers Sports & Entertainment, Rose Apartments and the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office.
In total, the state has secured more than: 2.4 million surgical masks, 1.2 million respirator masks, 963,000 face shields, 720,000 gloves, 143,000 gowns, 10,000 goggles, and 206,000 two-ounce bottles and 80,000 gallons of hand sanitizer through purchases and donations.
To learn more about Hoosier companies across the state stepping up to help in the fight of COVID-19, click here. Hoosiers with smaller quantities of PPE are encouraged to donate items to the nearest local health department, hospital, EMS agency, nursing home or other first responder or public safety agency in their community.
Gov. Holcomb Signs Executive Order Permitting Elective Medical Procedures
Governor Eric J. Holcomb today signed Executive Order 20-24 to allow health care providers and facilities to resume elective medical procedures provided they have sufficient quantities of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) and consult the best practices and recommendations developed by their medical associations or industries.
Providers include hospital, veterinarians, dentists and others listed in Executive Order 20-22.
Click here to see the executive order: https://www.in.gov/gov/2384.htm
Firms With Trump Links Or Worth $100 Million Got Small Business Loans
Firms With Trump Links Or Worth $100 Million Got Small Business Loans
The government’s $349 billion small business lending program was designed to keep merchants afloat during the COVID-19 crisis. But critics say the structure of the program allowed the haves to scoop up aid meant for the have-nots, shutting out small merchants who were desperate for cash and awarding funds to public companies that could have raised money from investors.
While the government has not yet identified the entities that received the funding under the program, an in-depth analysis of almost 200 recipients by NBC News raises questions about some of them.
The analysis shows three companies with ties to the Trump administration received a total of $18.3 million under the program.
Another recipient received a loan from a bank that previously employed its board’s chairwoman. Four companies received more than $10 million maximum by applying for multiple loans through subsidiaries. Four other companies receiving more than $20 million in aggregate have wealthy investor board members in common.
“The entire program was set up to benefit well-connected, well-banked businesses,” said Amanda Ballantyne, executive director of the Main Street Alliance, an advocacy group for small businesses. She called on policymakers to change the program to “prioritize actual small businesses.”
The Small Business Administration has said its initial program helped more than 1.6 million small businesses across 50 states. Another $320 billion plan has passed Congress.
Still, the program ran dry on April 16, less than two weeks after its launch. Legions of merchants applied for assistance, hoping to secure funds to pay workers, utilities, and other operating costs. Many got nothing.
Through public company filings made with the Securities and Exchange Commission, NBC News has identified 173 loans totaling almost $600 million under the program.
At least 15 companies that reported receiving money under the program have stock market values of at least $100 million, according to a report from Morgan Stanley — even though Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said Tuesday the program was not meant to benefit “big public companies that have access to capital.”
Among them is Zagg Inc., a maker of cellphone protective gear that received $9.4 million. Zagg’s board is chaired by Cheryl A. Larabee, a lecturer at Boise State University’s College of Business & Economics. Larabee was previously a high-level executive at KeyBank, the institution that made the loan to Zagg.
NBC News asked KeyBank and Zagg if Larabee had been involved in securing the PPP loan. Jeff DuBois, a spokesman for Zagg, said, “As chairman of the board, Ms. Larabee plays no role in finance negotiations, including with KeyBank. These funds will play a critical role in ensuring we have our team in place as the economy reopens.”
KeyBank did not immediately reply to an email seeking comment.
BK Technologies Inc., a maker of public safety communications gear, received $2.196 million. Its board shares three directors with another recipient, Ballantyne Strong Inc., a holding company with cinema products and digital signage operations. Ballantyne received $3.174 million under the program.
Representatives of both companies did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Hallador Energy, a coal company in Denver that snared $10 million under the program, is among the recipients with ties to the Trump administration. Last year it hired Scott Pruitt, a former administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency under Trump, to lobby on its behalf, disclosure records show.
A lawyer for Pruitt told NBC News, “Please be advised that any inference that Mr. Pruitt had knowledge of or involvement in whatever Hallador may have submitted … is false.”
In an email, Pruitt said he had not had any involvement with Hallador Energy since May 2019. “I advised and represented them with regard to policy discussions exclusively as a subject matter expert regarding Indiana’s public utility commission and Indiana statutes,” he said.
Hallador also shares a director in common with another loan recipient, Ramaco Resources, SEC filings show. Ramaco, a coal producer in Lexington, Kentucky, received $8.4 million under the loan program. Ramaco is one of the companies receiving PPP funds with a valuation of at least $100 million.
Hallador and Ramaco did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Crawford United, a holding company based in Cleveland, Ohio, received a $3.7 million loan. Edward F. Crawford, a board member of the company since 2012, was sworn in as U.S. ambassador to Ireland last June. He resigned from his board position at that time.
Reached by NBC News, the company’s chief financial officer, Kelly Marek, did not immediately provide comment.
Flotek Industries, an energy services company in Houston, said it received a $4.6 million loan. Richard Grenell, Trump’s acting director of national intelligence and ambassador to Germany, had worked as a consultant for Flotek, disclosure records filed in 2017 show. The documents did not say when Grenell last worked for the company.
A Flotek spokeswoman said Grenell had no involvement arranging the loan, and that the company, with 118 employees, needs the money as it reels from a weakened petroleum market as well as the economic fallout of the pandemic.
The SEC filings analyzed by NBC News also show three related hotel property companies and one restaurant concern that received more than the $10 million maximum under the program. They did so by applying through subsidiary companies, which the rules do not prohibit
The Dallas-based hotel owners — Ashford Inc., Ashford Hospitality Trust, and Braemar Hotels & Resorts — received a combined $58.7 million. The companies, which own hotels throughout the country, trade separately on the stock market and are each chaired by Monty Bennett. The companies needed the money because of the sharp decline in the hotel industry, and sought it “exactly how the government intended at the time as the mechanism to help hotel companies that have been hit so hard,” said spokesperson Jordan Jennings.
The Nashville-based restaurant chain J. Alexander’s, which received $15.1 million, did not respond to requests for comment.
The parent company of Ruth’s Chris Steakhouses received $20 million but announced Thursday it was returning the money.
Other recipients under the program also stand out.
MiMedx Group, a maker of skin grafts that received $10 million, is trying to move forward after settling with federal investigators over its accounting and sales practices. Three weeks ago it agreed to pay $6.5 million to settle Justice Department accusations it had overcharged hospitals run by the Veterans Administration. The settlement did not include admission to the allegations.
MiMedx’s former chief executive, Parker H. Petit, was Donald Trump’s finance chairman in Georgia in 2016. Petit is under indictment for securities fraud and awaiting trial in the southern district of New York. He has pleaded not guilty.
A MiMedx spokeswoman said the loan was “needed to sustain the company’s operations” and would not be used to pay the Justice Department settlement costs. In an email, Petit said he had nothing to do with helping his former company get the government-backed loan.
MiMedx is one of the companies receiving PPP funds with a valuation of at least $100 million.
Cinedigm Corp., a Los Angeles-based entertainment concern, received $2.15 million in small business loans. The company is controlled by a Chinese investment firm, Bison Capital Holding Co. Ltd., and provides digital content distribution in China and the United States. The Trump administration has long complained about policies that benefit Chinese companies.
A company spokeswoman did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Asked for comment about the first round of PPP funding, Treasury referred NBC News to previous comments by Treasury Secretary Mnuchin and SBA Administrator Jovita Carranza. Mnuchin had said at a White House press briefing that 1 million small businesses with fewer than 10 workers had received support through PPP. In a press release earlier this month, Mnuchin and Carranza said, “The PPP enjoyed broad-based participation across the country from lenders of all sizes and a wide array of industries and businesses. … The vast majority of these loans — 74 percent of them — were for under $150,000, demonstrating the accessibility of this program to even the smallest of small businesses.”
A senior Treasury official noted that Treasury and SBA had launched the program in just one week and that SBA had processed “more than 14 years’ worth of loans in less than 14 days.”
Some merchants are hoping the government’s second fund of $320 billion may reach more Main Street businesses. That’s possible because the new program assigned $30 billion to small banks and community development financial institutions serving low- and moderate-income communities.
Darrin Williams heads Southern Bancorp, a community development institution operating in Arkansas and Mississippi. His company secured 553 loans totaling $82 million for local businesses under the first PPP program. None went to a public-traded company, he said.
Companies employing between 1 and 10 people received 61 percent of Southern’s loans, Williams said. The smallest loan was for $600, he added, the largest $4.2 million.
“Our philosophy is centered around helping customers build net worth,” he told NBC News.
Among the recipients of loans through Southern Bancorp was H & T Truss Mill in Arkadelphia, Arkansas, and A Healthy You Medical Clinic, a minority-owned business in Clarksdale, Mississippi.
Dr. Lulu Hoskins and her husband Greg own the medical clinic. Greg told NBC News that the loan they received through Southern Bancorp meant meeting payroll for their five employees.
“So many people got loans that didn’t need them and it hurts people like me who are a small business,” Hoskins said. “We were so fortunate. You just don’t know how big of a help that was for us and our business.”
FOOTNOTE: Rich Gardella reported from Washington.
The City-County Observer post this article without bias, opinion, or editing.