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HOTJOBS IN EVANSVILLE
HEALTH DEPARTMENT ANNOUNCES 35 NEW COVID-19 DEATHS, UPDATES STATEWIDE CASE COUNT
The Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) today announced that 656 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 13,680 the total number of Indiana residents known to have the novel coronavirus following corrections to the previous day’s total.
A total of 741 Hoosiers have died to date. Deaths are reported based on when data are received by ISDH and occurred over multiple days.
To date, 75,553 tests have been reported to ISDH, up from 72,040 on Thursday.
Marion County had the most new cases, at 136. Other counties with more than 10 new cases were Allen (13), Bartholomew (12), Cass (56), Clark (14), Elkhart (15), Grant (10), Hamilton (27), Hancock (17), Hendricks (15), Johnson (33), Lake (98), Madison (20), Orange (17), Porter (10) and St. Joseph (42) . 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
Gov. Eric J. Holcomb, the Indiana State Department of Health and other state leaders will host a virtual media briefing in the Governor’s Office to provide updates on COVID-19 and its impact on Indiana.
WHO:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Gov. Holcomb
U.S. Sen. Mike Braun
State Health Commissioner Kristina Box, M.D., FACOG
WHEN:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â 2:30 p.m. ET, Friday, April 24
Media RSVP
Please register HERE by 1 p.m. ET Friday, April 24. 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.
Media outlets that wish to broadcast the press conference live are encouraged to use the high quality livestream. The livestream is also available to the public. Direct Link:Â https://livestream.com/accounts/18256195/events/9054752/player?width=960&height=540&enableInfoAndActivity=true&defaultDrawer=feed&autoPlay=true&mute=false
Gov. Holcomb Signs Executive Order To Expedite Appeals of Unemployment Insurance Claims
Governor Eric J. Holcomb today signed an executive order to speed up the review of unemployment insurance claim appeals during the fight against COVID-19.
The executive order 20-23 allows the Department of Workforce Development to hire additional staff to review the appeals.
The executive order also waives paperwork requirements to help businesses apply for federal assistance under programs such as the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) and Economic Injury Disaster Loans (EIDL), and temporarily waives requirements for documents connected to certain alcohol permits.
Additionally, the executive order extends the business personal property tax deadlines to June 15, 2020.
Click here to see the executive order: https://www.in.gov/gov/2384.htm
STATE HEALTH DEPARTMENT, IU PARTNER ON COVID-19 STUDY
The Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) is collaborating with the Indiana University Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health at IUPUI to conduct a scientific study to measure the spread of COVID-19 throughout the state.
The closely monitored study will include random sample testing for SARS-CoV-2 viral infections and antibodies in Hoosiers.
ISDH and IU will perform scientifically valid random sampling of Hoosiers in tests conducted in four phases during the next year, beginning Saturday. In total, at least 20,000 Hoosiers will be tested for the study. Select members of the public are being asked to participate by invitation only to ensure that the sampling is representative of the population.
The scientific study will enable the state to take a critical step forward in understanding how COVID-19 is affecting Hoosiers.
“Data is key in guiding our response in the fight against COVID-19, and our partnership with Fairbanks School of Public Health researchers will provide high-quality information to help shape our decision making,†Governor Eric J. Holcomb said. “I want to encourage Hoosiers who are selected to participate to step forward and help us gather the critical information for this groundbreaking scientific study.â€
The first round of testing will begin this weekend with a pool of at least 5,000 Hoosiers randomly selected from across Indiana’s 10 emergency preparedness districts. The study will include conducting both nasopharyngeal swabs and blood draws. Nasopharyngeal swabs will be tested for COVID-19 within 72 to 96 hours, while the blood samples will be tested at a later date for antibodies to determine if an individual has had COVID-19 in the past.
Indiana University Health and Eli Lilly and Co. will process nasal samples and report them back to ISDH. Participants can choose the method by which they receive their results when they register. Registration and delivery of results will be managed by Indianapolis-based Zotec Partners.
Additional phases of testing will take place in late May, in October 2020 and in April 2021.
Led by the Fairbanks School of Public Health, an interdisciplinary team of IU scientists, physicians and epidemiologists has designed the study and developed the scientific plan for execution by state agencies. The IU team will also analyze the study results and provide scientific interpretations of the data to the state.
“This is a critical step toward understanding how COVID-19 has affected the population of Indiana,†said Nir Menachemi, professor and Fairbanks Endowed Chair in the Fairbanks School of Public Health and principal investigator on the study. “Our results will contribute valuable information to the complex considerations necessary for relaxing the stay-at-home order and other social-distancing policies.”
State Health Commissioner Kris Box, M.D., FACOG, said the study is key to understanding the impact of the virus among Hoosiers.
“Having the ability to not only test for the presence of this virus, but also to learn more about people who have been exposed in the past and might have antibodies that indicate past infection, will help us fine-tune our work to keep Hoosiers safe from this pandemic,†Dr. Box said. â€We are grateful that this partnership will help make that happen.â€
Participants will be notified of their eligibility for the study by mail, text message, email or phone and will be directed to the testing site closest to their residence. Registrants will receive a unique code that they will show at the testing site as proof of participation.
Testing for the study will be conducted at 8 fixed and 10 mobile sites around the state from Saturday through Wednesday. Additional sampling may be added later depending on initial participation levels.
Support for the testing operation is being provided by the Indiana National Guard, Indiana Department of Transportation, state Emergency Medical Services personnel and other state and private partners.
Financial Doomsday: State, Local Governments Face Layoffs, Service Cuts, Projects Derailed
Financial Doomsday: State, Local Governments Face Layoffs, Service Cuts, Projects Derailed
A Congressional Research Service report last week on initial coronavirus aid said that “early evidence suggests that the COVID-19 economic shock will have a notable impact on state and local budgets,” pointing to the “sizable share of economic output” that derives from state and local governments.
Linda Bilmes, a professor at the Harvard Kennedy School and a leading expert on public budgetary and financing issues, told NBC News that the nature of the crisis prevents states from raising new revenue in traditional ways.
“Can you increase property taxes, retail taxes, income taxes, special investments? Can you increase service fees? Well, no,” she added. “Nobody’s using services, toll roads. Can you expand the number of fees? Can you increase traffic violations? Well, nobody’s driving.”
These governments will need to instead lay off or furlough workers, reduce benefits, cancel projects, defer construction and maintenance, and more.
“But the problem is that by doing all of those kinds of things and canceling a lot of that kind of capital projects, those are the things that create employment and activity in the community and in the economy,” Bilmes said, adding, “It’s certainly capable of derailing a recovery or creating a second wave of recession.”
Already, governors, mayors, and county executives are planning for substantial budget cuts. Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, a Democrat, slashed roughly $235 million in planned spending. In Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, estimates suggest that billions in projected revenue over the next year will vanish. At the county-level, the National Association of Counties estimates close to $150 billion in lost revenue.
Matthew Chase, executive director of the National Association of Counties, said counties are watching as revenue from sales and gas taxes, court filing fees, and mortgage transactions evaporate. The losses mean “you’re going to see a cut in the staff at the exact wrong time, when their residents actually are going to need more services.”
State and local governments employ more than 10 percent of the overall U.S. workforce, including police officers, firefighters, and public-school teachers. State governments heavily subsidize public universities and finance significant construction projects, while local governments handle everything from trash collection to filling potholes.
Nan Whaley, the mayor of Dayton, Ohio, said her administration felt the impact of the outbreak on its budget “right away,” and quickly furloughed nearly a quarter of the city’s employees and has since instituted a hiring freeze. She’s asked her departments to provide guidance on what an 18 percent spending cut would look like, which she said would affect police, fire, and trash pickup, among other services.
“In 2009, in the Great Recession, most midsized cities in the middle of the country were decimated. We cut like 40 percent of our employees then,” said Whaley, a Democrat. “So we are on bare-bones as it is.”
This crisis, Whaley believes, “will be even worse than the Great Recession — by a factor of at least two.”
In Oklahoma City, Mayor David Holt, a Republican, said his city faces budget cuts of 3.3 percent for police and firefighters and 11.25 percent for all other departments for the upcoming fiscal year. But Holt says his city is buoyed by a more than $100 million reserve fund.
“We’re always prepared for bad stuff to happen,” he said. “Nevertheless … these are probably some of the biggest cuts here in Oklahoma City that we’ve taken in the last two decades.” Â The federal intervention will be needed within a couple of months, Holt said.
The National Governors Association has called for $500 billion in funding to state governments to account for budget shortfalls, while counties and mayors have called for an additional $250 billion in emergency relief. On Monday, Sens. Bill Cassidy, R-La., and Bob Menendez, D-N.J., unveiled a legislative proposal for $500 billion in state and local funding.
“In this crazy and political environment where you can’t get Democrats and Republicans to agree on anything,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, said, “all the governors agree and have said to Washington, ‘Make sure you fund the states in any next bill you pass.'”
In three Rust Belt states, Govs. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan, Tom Wolf of Pennsylvania and Tony Evers of Wisconsin, all Democrats, wrote to President Donald Trump last week asking him to work with Congress to get states and localities more funding.
“Without this leadership, the damage to our state economies will be exacerbated by the cuts we know we will be forced to make,” they said.
The boost won’t be coming in this current round of coronavirus aid, though Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., sounded optimistic it would be included in a future aid package.
In a letter to senators, Schumer said he was “disappointed” the funding was not part of the upcoming bill but added that “as a part of this agreement, we were able to secure a commitment from (Treasury) Secretary Mnuchin that he will support additional state and local relief in the next COVID-19 legislation, as well as a provision providing the flexibility to use all past and future relief dollars to offset lost revenues.”
However, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., seemed to throw cold water on the possibility of additional massive relief bills, telling reporters Tuesday he thinks “it’s also time to begin to think about the amount of debt we’re adding to our country and the future impact of that.”
“Until we can begin to open up the economy, we can’t spend enough money to solve the problem,” he said, adding, “Let’s weigh this very carefully because the future of our country in terms of the amount of debt that we’re adding up is a matter of genuine concern.”
Then on Wednesday, McConnell told conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt: “Fortunately, what they wanted to extract the most, I refused to go along with, and the White House backed me up, and that was we’re not ready to just send a blank check down to states and local governments to spend anyway they choose to.”
He added that “we need to have a full debate not only about if we do state and local, how will they spend it.”
Following the Great Recession, state and local governments took years longer to recover than their federal counterparts, contributing to a sustained drag on the economy.
The White House has acknowledged the bind these governments are in. Speaking to reporters Monday, White House senior adviser Kevin Hassett said the funding boost was on the president’s “radar” and “if you look at state budgets, they’re in about as bad a state as you’ve ever seen because the economy more or less ground to a halt.”
On Tuesday, Trump tweeted, “After I sign this Bill, we will begin discussions on the next Legislative Initiative with fiscal relief to State/Local Governments for lost revenues from COVID-19,” among other packages.
Asked what she’d say to those who think such a massive price-tag is too much, Whaley pointed to the total percentage of the workforce that state and local governments employ. “You want to talk about a drag on the economy, have state and locals be out of business,” she said.
Chase, of the National Association of Counties, said while there’s a narrative that state and local governments — because of certain prominent budget crises — are fiscally irresponsible, “that’s furthest from the truth.”
“We have counties that have been very fiscally responsible,” he said, “but when you lose this amount of revenue, you can never save enough money.”
Gov. Beshear: Phase 1 Health Care Services Will Begin Reopening Monday
Gov. Beshear: Phase 1 Health Care Services Will Begin Reopening Monday
FRANKFORT, Ky. (April 23, 2020) – On 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 vastly different than they did before the outbreak of the novel coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19).
“To do this safely, make sure you are going above and beyond. This is our proof of concept in the medical community. We have to prove that we can do this the right way,†Gov. Beshear said.
On March 23, Gov. Beshear signed an executive order ceasing all elective procedures to limit the spread of COVID-19 and increase hospital capacity to treat patients.
Thanks to Team Kentucky’s extraordinary efforts to flatten the curve up to this point, Gov. Beshear and the Department for Public Health feel safe easing some restrictions on health care procedures and facilities.
The Governor said the phased health care services reopening is the first step under the Healthy at Work initiative he introduced Tuesday to help businesses reopen safely when the time is right.
“Doing this right is about saving lives, making employees safe and making sure the people they serve are safe when we reopen,†Gov. Beshear said.
The initiative set out public health benchmarks for reopening Kentucky’s economy. These benchmarks closely follow the White House’s Guidelines for Reopening America.
Gov. Beshear said a foundational basis for safely reopening the economy requires a massive scaling up of testing capacity in the commonwealth.
Guidance for Health Care Practitioners and Facilities
On April 27, health care practitioners can resume non-urgent/emergent health care services, diagnostic radiology, and lab services in:
- Hospital outpatient setting
- health care clinics and medical offices
- physical therapy settings, chiropractic offices, and optometrists
- dental offices (but with enhanced aerosol protections)
This guidance does not apply to long-term care settings, prisons, other industries, or other settings for which separate guidance has already or will be provided in the future. This guidance does not apply to elective surgeries or procedures which will be addressed in a subsequent phase.
“This is intended to be a phased, gradual reopening so that we can do this thoughtfully, safely, and see the consequences of our actions to make the necessary adjustments,†said Dr. Steven Stack, commissioner for the Department for Public Health.
Dr. Stack emphasized that this is a phased, gradual reopening of services and that a COVID-19 surge may require adjustment.
Telehealth
In all phases, health care practitioners should still maximize telehealth rather than in-person services.
Visitation
Health care facilities should still not allow visitors except when necessary in end-of-life situations, or for vulnerable populations or minors, and even then, visitations should be kept to a minimum.
Waiting Rooms
Health care facilities should also eliminate traditional waiting room or common seating areas and use non-traditional alternatives, for example, a parking lot “lobby.â€
Social Distancing
Health care facilities should maintain social distancing, keeping people at least six feet apart in all possible settings, and employ other steps to minimize direct contact between individuals within the health care setting.
Screening and Sanitization
Health care facilities should screen all health care workers, patients and others for temperature and COVID-19 symptoms upon arrival for shift or visit. Staff should be required to stay home if sick. Staff should plan for and ensure enhanced workplace sanitizing enhanced hand hygiene compliance, and easily accessible hand sanitizer throughout the facility.
Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
Each health care setting must be able to procure necessary PPE via normal supply chains.
All health care providers and staff must wear surgical/procedural masks and gloves while in the health care office/facility.
All patients and other persons in the health care office/facility must:
- Wear a surgical/procedural mask while in a health care facility
- Wear either a surgical/procedural mask or cloth mask/face-covering in all other health care settings
Special Considerations
In high-touch clinical settings (e.g., physical therapy, chiropractic, etc.), health care workers should wear non-latex gloves in addition to enhanced hand hygiene practices described above. Any objects and contact surfaces used for clinical services should be sanitized between patients.
In high-aerosol risk outpatient settings (e.g., dentistry, oral surgery, pulmonary services, etc.), we seek additional input from these professionals regarding steps to assure the safety of both their patients and clinical staff.
Testing Sites and Eligibility
Gov. Beshear announced that just today, the state ran 6,769 tests. In addition to health care facilities, Kentuckians can be tested free of charge for COVID-19 at:
Kroger sites
- Throughput of 300-330 tests per site per day
- All Kentuckians are eligible to be tested at Kroger sites
Louisville (Jefferson County)
Shawnee Park, 4501 W Broadway, Louisville, KY 40211
- Testing conducted Monday, April 27- Friday, May 1 from 8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
- Hand sanitizer and face mask to be distributed at the site
Lexington (Fayette County)
Bluegrass Community & Technical College, 500 Newtown Pike, Lexington, KY 40508
- Testing conducted Monday, April 27- Friday, May 1 from 8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
- Hand sanitizer and face mask to be distributed at this site
Owensboro (Daviess County)
Owensboro Community College at 4800 New Hartford Road, Owensboro, KY 42303
- Testing conducted Tuesday, April 28- Thursday, April 30 from 8:30 a.m. – 5:30Â p.m.
Bowling Green (Warren County)
South Warren High School, 8140 Nashville Road, Bowling Green, KY 42101
- Testing conducted Tuesday, April 28 – Thursday, April 30 from 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Walgreens site
Through a separate partnership with Walgreens, Gov. Beshear said the company would offer a drive-through testing option in Lexington, starting Friday.
- The location is 2296 Executive Drive, Lexington, KY 40505
- The site is open seven days a week, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. ET.
- Visit walgreens.com/coronavirus for additional information on registering and eligibility
Update on long-term care facilities
Gov. Beshear announced that as of Thursday, 530 residents and 251 staff had been diagnosed with COVID-19. Of those, 85 residents and one staff member have died of COVID-19 or complications from COVID-19.
Gov. Beshear reminded Kentuckians of the precautions the state is taking in long-term care facilities, including encouraging all residents to wear masks, canceling communal dining and social activities, minimizing entry into resident rooms, restricting non-essential personnel from entering the building, daily temperature checks and adopting a low threshold to transfer ill residents to a higher level of care.
Acting Secretary Eric Friedlander for the Cabinet for Health and Family Services provided other updates on how the cabinet is working with so many organizations and local officials to respond to the needs of long-term care facilities.
Medical Laboratory Professionals Week
Today, Gov. Beshear recognized Medical Laboratory Professionals Week, April 19-25, an annual celebration of medical laboratory professionals and pathologists who play a critical role in health care and patient advocacy.
“We are thankful for the laboratory medicine profession,†Gov. Beshear said. “To every lab professional out there working during this very trying time, we appreciate you.â€
Condolences
The Governor sent condolences to the family of Patsy Carol Stith passed away on Monday at St. Elizabeth in Fort Thomas related to COVID-19. Stith was 76 years old. Patsy was an active senior who enjoyed yard work, gardening, and making crafts.
Patsy was a mother to three sons. She was “mamaw†to her grandchildren and great-grandchildren. She has a sister and brothers, along with many friends, who will miss her. We mourn her loss the Governor said.
Gov. Beshear also sent his condolences to family, friends, and colleagues of the Hopkins County Sheriff’s Deputy Terry Vick. Vick, 43, passed away April 22 after a traffic accident on Western Kentucky Parkway. He was a husband, father, and U.S. Marine Corps veteran who had been in law enforcement for 17 years.
Deputy Vick was the school resource officer at Hanson Elementary but had just completed an overnight security detail at Madisonville North Hopkins High School’s COVID-19 testing site, according to Hopkins County Sheriff Charles Young.
“He was helping people get testing during this crisis. Tonight, we remember him and all he contributed,†Gov. Beshear said.
The Governor said thank you to the Kentucky Organ Donor Affiliates and Kentucky’s Circuit Court Clerks for donating 1,500 COVID-19 swab tests, which were delivered to the DPH warehouse in Frankfort today.
Every year, April is National Donate Life Month. Although different this year, we are still honoring those donors who gave the gift of life, the recipients who are alive today because of them, and those 1,000 Kentuckians today on the waiting list. Everyone can do his or her part to be kind and register as an organ donor to give the gift of life. www.donatelifeky.org.
Case information
As of 5 p.m. April 23, Gov. Beshear said there were at least 3,481 coronavirus cases in Kentucky, 161 of which were newly confirmed.
Unfortunately, Gov. Beshear also reported six new deaths Thursday, raising the state’s toll to 191 deaths related to the virus.
The newly reported deaths include a 68-year-old male from Muhlenberg, a 62-year-old female from Jefferson, an 87-year-old female from Adair, a 73-year-old male from Henderson, a 77-year-old male from Jefferson and a 93-year-old female from Kenton.
At least 1,335Â people have recovered from COVID-19 in Kentucky.
To date, at least 42,844 people have been tested. At least 1,115 people have ever been hospitalized with 302Â currently hospitalized.
At least 570 have ever been in the ICU with at least 163 people currently in the ICU.
Gov. Beshear also offered an update on the racial breakdown of COVID-19 patients and victims, which unfortunately highlights existing disparities in health and health care access.
The Governor said with about 78.36% of the known cases accounted for, 76.36% of Kentuckians who tested positive were white, 13.48% were black or African-American, 5.13% were Asian, 4.96% were multiracial and 0.08% were Native American or Alaskan Native.
The Governor also said with about 73.36% of the known cases accounted for, 92.11% of people who tested positive were non-Hispanic and 7.89% were Hispanic.
On fatalities attributed to the coronavirus, with about 85.86% of the known cases accounted for, Kentucky deaths are about 79.27% white, 17.68% black or African-American, 1.83% Asian and 1.22% were multiracial.
On fatalities attributed to the coronavirus, with about 82.72% of the known cases accounted for, Kentucky deaths are about 98.73% non-Hispanic and 1.27% Hispanic.
More information
The Governor is asking all Kentuckians to continue to fight the spread of the virus by following his 10-step guidance, which includes practicing social distancing and staying healthy at home. Gov. Beshear says these efforts have the potential to save the lives of as many as 11,000 Kentuckians.
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 accounts Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.
Watch the Governor’s social media accounts at 5 p.m. ET each day for his regular briefing. Kentuckians can also access translated COVID-19 information and daily summaries of the Governor’s press conference at tinyurl.com/kygovespanol (Spanish) and tinyurl.com/kygovtranslations (more than 20 additional languages).
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) encourages people to follow these steps to prevent illness. Kentuckians who want advice can call the state hotline at 800-722-5725 or call their local health care provider.
State Looks To Expand COVID-19 Testing
State Looks To Expand COVID-19 Testing
By Victoria Ratliff
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS—With labs lined up and ready to process more COVID-19 tests, the lack of basic supplies is keeping the state from expanding testing further.
“We have the ability to run the tests, we need to now be sure we’ve got the ability to take the test,†Dr. Kristina Box, the state health commissioner, said at Gov. Eric Holcomb’s virtual press briefing Wednesday.

Box said getting the swabs used to get a sample from a person as well as the solution known as “viral transport medium†needed for the tests is difficult.
“We have tried to buy swabs,†Box said. “…The federal government has taken over the supply of a lot of this. It’s not a question of money. I have plenty of money. If I can find them, I’d buy them and will buy them.â€
Previously, Indiana was restricting coronavirus tests to individuals who had symptoms and were either in high-risk categories such as elderly or with underlying health problems or were essential workers including those in health care and first responders.
Box said that the state now wants physicians to test anyone whom they believe may have contracted COVID-19.
She said she has heard stories from Hoosiers who had symptoms, such as a sore throat and fever, but were unable to get tested. With the appropriate amount of supplies, she said increasing testing will be critical to identifying those who came in contact with the sick individual and to track the spread of the virus.
“Now the questions are, are all the places open and available to do tests for individuals? Are they accessible? Do we have them all over the state, and do they have the swabs and viral transport media that they need to do that testing,†she said.
The state reported 394 additional positive COVID-19 cases Wednesday, bringing the state’s total to 12,438. There were also an additional 31 deaths, making the toll now 661 fatalities. Box said those numbers may grow, both because there had been problems with the state’s online system for reporting positive cases and deaths that have now been resolved and because some earlier cases may only belatedly be found to have been from coronavirus.
At the press briefing, Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch announced that 13 rural Hoosier communities will receive nearly $2 million in grants from the state’s Office of Community and Rural Affairs to aid them during the pandemic. These funds may be used to expand medical facilities to help with the patient load, provide fixed or mobile testing, and provide grants or loans to small businesses.
As the state begins the process of reopening the economy, Holcomb said he will work closely with neighboring states in the Midwest. Governors of seven Midwest states announced recently they are coordinating their efforts to phase-in the reopening of businesses due to their shared borders and the numbers of people who live in one state but work in another.
Holcomb said he has called with the other governors nearly daily and keeps a real-time conversation about how to reopen the economy in the region.
“It’s very important that we know what each other is doing,†he said, not just in terms of the numbers of infections but also “what are we thinking in terms of long-term, short-term, opening up, and how we’re considering doing that.â€
FOOTNOTE: Victoria Ratliff is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.