Tag Archives: face mask

Schools don’t need to require masks for vaccinated if coronavirus transmission is low enough :: WRAL.com

— Schools no longer need to require masks for vaccinated individuals if coronavirus spread in their communities is low enough, North Carolina health officials wrote in a guidance document published this week.

Only two counties currently meet the threshold of “moderate” or “low” spread – Hyde County on the coast and Cherokee County in the mountains – as the rest of the state’s counties continue to have “high” or “substantial” transmission rates.

The document updated by DHHS is dated Oct. 25, but the agency hasn’t updated its StrongSchoolsNC Toolkit, which is dated Oct. 5 and still recommends for universal masking in all schools.

Before the update, schools could make masks optional, but the large majority of schools chose not to while cases rose because of virus’ delta variant. Board members have also noted potentially high numbers of quarantines if people did not wear masks. Unvaccinated people are exempt from quarantines if they were exposed while wearing a mask by a person who was also wearing a mask.

“Given that our student population is largely not yet vaccinated, face coverings remain a critical tool for protecting children and keeping them safely in the classroom,” the DHHS document reads. “NCDHHS recommends that schools base their mask requirements on levels of community transmission, as defined by the CDC.”

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Gas station clerk murdered for asking a customer to wear a mask

Berlin — Senior politicians in Germany expressed shock over the weekend killing of a young gas station clerk who asked a customer to wear a face mask, and they warned Tuesday against the radicalization of people who oppose the country’s coronavirus pandemic restrictions. A 49-year-old German man was arrested in the fatal Saturday shooting of the clerk in the western town of Idar-Oberstein. The suspect is being held on suspicion of murder.
 
Authorities said the man told officers he acted “out of anger” after being refused service for not wearing a mask while trying to buy beer.

A police car is seen at a gas station in the city of Idar-Oberstein, in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, September 21, 2021, after an employee was fatally shot by a man who objected to the national face mask mandate.

Thomas Frey/picture alliance/Getty


“He further stated during interrogation that he rejected the measures against the coronavirus,” the Trier police department said in a statement.
 
A requirement to wear masks in stores is among the measures in place in Germany to stop the spread of the virus.

According to police, the suspect left the gas station after the dispute but then returned half an hour later wearing a mask and fatally shot the 20-year-old clerk in the head. 

The suspect, a German citizen who wasn’t identified by name in line with privacy laws, fled the scene and turned himself in to police on Sunday morning.


Mark Zuckerberg on Facebook vaccine misinform…

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The center-left Green party’s candidate to succeed German Chancellor Angela Merkel voiced dismay at the killing. Germany’s federal election is scheduled for Sunday.
 
“I’m shaken by this terrible murder of a young man who merely asked that existing rules be followed,” Annalena Baerbock said in a tweet.
 
Baerbock also expressed concern about the radicalization of Germany’s Querdenken movement, which includes people who oppose masks and vaccines, conspiracy theorists and some far-right and neo-Nazi extremists.
 
Authorities didn’t immediately say whether the suspect in the gas station killing was associated with the movement, which has come under increasing scrutiny from Germany’s security services following a series of large antigovernment protests, some of which turned violent.


White House responds to Minaj tweet on vaccin…

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Prosecutors told Germany’s dpa news agency that the man wasn’t previously known to police and that he wasn’t legally entitled to possess the firearm found at his house.
 
Paul Ziemiak, the general secretary of Merkel’s center-right Christian Democratic Union party, called the clerk’s slaying “incomprehensible.”
 
“A young man was virtually executed because he pointed out the mask requirement,” Ziemiak said on Twitter. “An inconceivable level of radicalization!”
 
Facebook last week removed almost 150 accounts and pages linked to the Querdenken movement under a new policy focused on groups that spread misinformation or incite violence but which didn’t fit into the platform’s existing categories of bad actors.

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NC Coronavirus update September 14: School districts diverge on COVID 19; some add more precautions, others relax guidelines

RALEIGH, N.C. (WTVD) — North Carolina, like many other states across the country, is seeing an uptick in COVID-19 cases.

TUESDAY MORNING HEADLINES
Some parents in Johnston County will meet ahead of Tuesday’s school board meeting to call for the elimination of the district’s COVID-19 mask mandate.

The Center for Disease Control and Prevention still recommends students older than 2 wear masks in school to help reduce the spread of COVID-19, which is now infecting children at higher rates than ever before seen.

Why children under 12 are not yet eligible for COVID vaccines

Yesterday, parents who oppose mask mandates met ahead of the Harnett County School Board’s meeting.

That board voted 3-2 to make masks optional starting October 5.

‘The hospital is full:’ COVID-19 cases still climbing in hospitals as emergency visits start to slow

The Orange County School Board also met Monday. However, it took more steps to limit the spread of COVID-19 among its students.

The district talked about shutting down some high school sports for a couple weeks, but ultimately did not move forward with that. Instead, it approved limitations on fans: each athlete can have 2 spectators and all fans must wear masks.

All athletes, regardless of vaccination status, must also wear masks on and off the field.

In addition, Orange County Schools is requiring all staff to be vaccinated by September 23.

MONDAY
11 p.m.
During a Monday meeting, the Orange County school board heard recommendations for its athletic programs amid the pandemic.

Recommendations included high risk programs being closed immediately following guidance from NCDHHS and the Orange County Health Department. The closure of these programs include those actively participating in-season and those offering off-season practices or workouts.

High risk programs include football, basketball, wrestling and competitive cheerleading. The closed period would last from Sept. 14 to 30.

All student-athletes in these programs who are eligible to be vaccinated must be fully vaccinated in order to participate when programs restart.

Cheerleading, softball, baseball, volleyball, soccer, tennis doubles and lacrosse are considered medium risk for transmission. Recommendations from the meeting included a face mask requirement for athletes on and off the field regardless of vaccination status.

Fans attending the programs must be masked indoors and outdoors. Attendance would be limited to parents or guardians (no more than two).

All athletes in the medium risk programs must be fully vaccinated or participate in a bi-weekly testing program.

Cross country, tennis singles and swimming programs are considered low risk. Masks will only be required when off the field of play. Athletes in these programs mus be vaccinated or participate in a required bi-weekly testing program.

The board did not vote on a pause for athletic programs Monday evening, but did vote on fan limitations and a mask requirement for athletes.

8:40 p.m.
The Harnett County School Board voted 3-2 Monday night to make face masks optional in schools starting Oct. 5.

6:20 p.m.
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Harris Teeter announced new store hours.

Effective Wednesday, Sept. 15, until further notice, Harris Teeter’s temporary Store Hours of Operations will be 6 a.m. – 9 p.m. Currently, many stores are open until 11 p.m.

Also effective Wednesday, Sept. 15, 2021, until further notice, the Fresh Foods Market Service Counter revised closing time will be 8 p.m. All amenities close at 7 p.m.

The Butchers & Fisherman’s Market Service Counters revised closing time will be 8 p.m.

5:30 p.m.
At Duke University, for the week of Sept. 6-12, there were 37 positive tests — 28 students and 9 faculty/staff — on the university side.

The university announced that, because of the declining trend, effective immediately, masking is no longer required outdoors in most circumstances on the Duke campus.

Masks are still strongly recommended in outdoor settings with a gathering of people.

Masks will continue to be required for large outdoor events on campus and must still be used indoors in classrooms and public spaces.

The number of students and employees who tested positive peaked at 364 during the second week of fall classes. Afterward, Duke instituted new safety measures including masking indoors and outdoors, suspending indoor group dining and discouraging larger gatherings.

The university said that the vast majority of those who tested positive had no or very mild symptoms, and none required hospitalization, though the spike did require a rapid expansion of isolation space.

For the week ending Sept. 5, the total dropped to 126 – a 65 percent reduction from the previous week.

5:10 p.m.
Some parents and community members are urging the Harnett County School Board to drop its mask mandate. Several community members told ABC11’s Elaina Athans they should have a choice in the matter.

“I don’t want to be told what or what not to do with my children. These are my babies and I would like that choice and my choice is that I would like for my children not to have to wear bacteria filled cloth diaper on their face all day long, when they’re telling me they cannot breathe. They’re hot and they’re miserable,” said one mother of five.

A public meeting will be underway at 6 p.m.

5 p.m.
UNC Rex Hospital in Raleigh set up tents outside its Emergency Department.

Officials said the hospital is very busy, and the clinical teams in the Emergency Department are working hard to care for COVID and non-COVID patients.

The surge tents will allow UNC Rex to expand its Emergency waiting areas and treatment areas.

“The hospital is full,” said Rex Director of Emergency Services Kim Boyder. “We are like 90% or greater capacity in the hospital. So that means we also get backed up in the ER. So that means we need additional space for not only the volume but some of the boarding.”

4:20 p.m.
Wake County health officials confirmed a COVID-19 outbreak at a Cary assisted living facility. According to a news release from the health department, it is the third outbreak at The Templeton of Cary.

The previous outbreaks were in September and December 2020, before COVID-19 vaccines were widely available.

It is unclear at this time how many staff or residents have been infected as part of this outbreak.

2 p.m.
In the last two weeks alone, nearly half a million children have tested positive for COVID-19.

Last week, the U.S. reported more than 243,000 child COVID-19 cases, marking the second largest number of pediatric cases in a week since the pandemic began, according to a newly released weekly report from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the Children’s Hospital Association (CHA). (That total could be partially skewed by reporting delays over the holiday.)

Since the onset of the pandemic, nearly 5.3 million children have tested positive for the virus. COVID-19 cases among children have risen “exponentially,” this summer, the organizations wrote, and in the last month alone, the U.S. has reported more than 1 million pediatric cases. Additionally, since the first children returned to school for the 2021-2022 school year, in late July, more than 1.2 million children have tested positive for the virus.

1 p.m.
Public health officials with the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services are urging North Carolinians to vaccinated against Influenza as the state enters flu season while experiencing a surge of COVID-19 caused by the Delta variant.

“COVID-19 is still here, still sending North Carolinians to the hospital with severe illness and still causing deaths. As flu season begins, we all need to do what we can to be as healthy as possible,” said Dr. Elizabeth Tilson, NCDHHS State Health Director and Chief Medical Officer. “It is critically important to get your flu vaccine and your COVID-19 vaccine. Flu can be a serious and sometimes deadly disease. Getting vaccinated can prevent you from getting ill and keep you from needing a hospital bed.”

In North Carolina, flu infections are most common from late fall to early spring, with activity usually peaking in January or February.

12:30 p.m.
North Carolina surpassed 11,000 new daily COVID-19 cases on Saturday, a number that hasn’t been seen since the peak of the pandemic in January and February.

A total of 23,890 cases were reported Saturday through Monday.

The percent of positive tests in the state is at 11.8%.

172 more deaths were reported on Monday.

3,514 people are hospitalized with COVID-19 in North Carolina.

There are currently 894 adult ICU COVID-19 patients.

338 confirmed COVID-19 patients were admitted in the last 24 hours.

12 p.m.
UNC Rex Hospital in Raleigh is setting up tents outside its Emergency Department.

Officials said the hospital is very busy, and the clinical teams in the Emergency Department are working hard to care for COVID and non-COVID patients.

The surge tents will allow UNC Rex to expand its Emergency waiting areas and treatment areas.

The tents are scheduled to arrive around 1:30 p.m.

11:30 a.m.
The Chatham County Public Health Department has been working with multiple testing providers to offer new options across the county throughout the week. The department has partnered with Optum Health for two sites, one each in Pittsboro and Siler City, and StarMed Healthcare for three sites, one each in Pittsboro, Siler City and Goldston. Additionally, local urgent cares and pharmacies are also offering testing. Check the full list here.

The new Optum testing sites are:

Pittsboro:
Old Chatham County Agriculture Building (in front of Justice Center),
65 E. Chatham Street, Monday-Friday, 10 AM-6 PM
Siler City:
Chatham Hospital Medical Office Building (located behind Chatham Hospital),
163 Medical Park Drive, Monday-Friday, 5 PM-8 PM
Tests are free
Walk-ins welcome, or you can pre-register.

10:10 a.m.
One school board in North Carolina voted Monday morning to stop COVID-19 quarantines and contact tracing.

This is the school board in charge of Union County Public Schools, which is one of five public school districts in the state to not require masks for staff and students, according to local ABC affiliate WSOC.

As of Friday, 479 students and employees had tested positive for COVID-19. The district had 7,285 people in quarantine due to close contact with someone who had tested positive.

With the school board vote Monday morning, students and staff will now only be required to stay home if they test positive for the virus or have symptoms.

Union County Public Health Director Dennis Joyner recently sent a letter to the school district saying that since the school did not require masks, quarantining students and staff exposed to the virus was the “best option to provide for the protection of student, teachers, staff and members of the community.”

Many parents in the district said they don’t want the school to mandate masks or quarantines because they don’t believe COVID-19 harms children.

UNC Children’s Hospital Department of Pediatrics Vice Chair Dr. Benny Joyner said they are wrong.

“I would say they need to come into my ICU. I’ve got six, now five, critically ill pediatric COVID patients. Two of them have breathing tubes inserted to basically breathe for them. Two of them are infants,” he told WSOC.

MONDAY MORNING HEADLINES
Parents in one North Carolina school district are planning to protest Monday against their children wearing masks in class.

Harnett County Schools Board of Education meets Monday afternoon, but it will not be alone. According to a flyer circulating online, a group of parents plans to be at the meeting.

Those parents will attempt to speak during the 6 p.m. meeting, voicing their disagreement with students having to wear masks–which health experts agree reduce the spread of COVID-19 when properly worn.

This comes as a record number of children are contracting the virus across the country.

“I haven’t seen anything like this in the 22 years I’ve been a pediatrician,” Dr. Bryan Kornreich said. “It’s never been this crazy, never been this busy. It’s exhausting all of us. And our biggest concern, of course, is that we’re worried that kids aren’t getting the care, sick kids aren’t getting the care they need.”

Children have largely been spared the worst of COVID-19 — hospitalizations and deaths are more rare for children than for adults — although children’s hospitals are filling up in COVID-19 hotspots around the country.

Timeline for younger children’s COVID-19 vaccines

Until the vaccine is approved for children, the vaccine chief for the Food and Drug Administration urged parents not to seek an adult vaccine for their children.

“My strongest advice is please don’t do that. Please let us do the evaluation that we need to do to ensure that when you do vaccinate your child, you vaccinate the child with the right dose and in a manner that’s safe,” Dr. Peter Marks said. “If you want to do something now for your child, make sure that you’re vaccinated, that your household is vaccinated, that all the people that come in contact with your children are vaccinated and that your child knows how to wear a mask.”

FRIDAY
5:40 p.m.
Cumberland County Schools Superintendent Dr. Marvin Connelly, Jr. announced a teacher in the district died from COVID-19.

“We are deeply saddened by the recent passing of one of our teachers, due to complications from COVID-19,” the statement said. “Our thoughts and prayers are with the employee’s family and loved ones. Schools are learning communities made up of employees, students and their families. Although the employee did not have the opportunity to teach this academic year, the school community is still feeling this loss. Please keep them in your thoughts as well.”

4:15 p.m.

Wake County Public Health has confirmed an outbreak of COVID-19 at UNC REX Rehabilitation and Nursing Care Center at 4210 Lake Boone Trail in Raleigh.

This is the facility’s fourth outbreak. The N.C. Department of Health and Human Services defines an outbreak as two or more people – residents or employees – testing positive for the virus.

3:30 p.m.
The CDC is out with three new studies showing that overall, vaccines are still dramatically reducing the risk of being hospitalized or dying of COVID-19 during the current Delta surge, as they did during the pre-Delta era.

Across the studies, vaccines remained 86-87% effective against preventing hospitalizations.

However, across any metric, vaccine effectiveness has dropped more for people ages 65 and older in recent months compared to the pre-Delta era, likely because of a combination of vaccine effectiveness fading over time, and the slight impact of the Delta variant on vaccine efficacy.

And vaccines are losing some of their effectiveness when it comes to preventing mild infections among the vaccinated (breakthroughs).

This new data will factor into the FDA and CDC discussions around booster shots, and whether they are necessary for everyone now or should perhaps be administered to specific groups first, such as older adults.

ABC’s Sasha Pezenik pressed the CDC director about this latest data at the White House COVID briefing and whether it accounts for the damage done by Delta.

Dr. Walensky said even accounting for Delta and other factors “it’s still well over 90% of people who are in the hospital are unvaccinated.”

She added there are “more than 10 times the number of people in the hospital who are unvaccinated compared to vaccinated.”

And earlier in the briefing, she gave this statistic:

“Those who were unvaccinated were about four-and-a-half times more likely to get COVID-19, are 10 times more likely to be hospitalized, and 11 times more likely to die.”

2:45 p.m.
A vaccine and COVID testing event will be held at Wheels Fun Park Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

The vaccination/testing event is being organized by several community organizations, with Duke Health being one of them.

1:30 p.m.
Next Sunday, September 19, the El Pueblo organization will hold an event at its offices located in Raleigh (2321 Crabtree Blvd.) that will include food distribution, COVID-19 testing and vaccines, and Zumba among other activities.

The outdoor event will be from 1 to 5 pm.

“We wanted to hold this fair because we know the more we take care of each other, the sooner we will get out of the pandemic together, without having to lose one more member of our community,” said Iliana Santillán, executive director of El Pueblo. “Our commitment as an organization is to help our Latinx community to always be protected and empowered.”

12 p.m.
5,877 new daily COVID-19 cases were reported in North Carolina on Friday.

The percent of positive tests in the state is at 12.1%.

3,756 people are currently hospitalized with COVID-19.

There are 909 adult ICU COVID-19 patients.

There were 445 confirmed COVID-19 patients admitted into North Carolina hospitals in the last 24 hours.

11:45 a.m.
State data shows unvaccinated individuals are nearly 4 times more likely to get COVID-19 as vaccinated individuals.

Unvaccinated individuals are 13.6 times more likely to die from COVID-19 than vaccinated individuals, when adjusted for age.

6% of all cases between January and the end of August were in vaccinated people.

Of the more than 4.8 million North Carolinians who were vaccinated as of the end of August, 0.82% had gotten COVID and 0.005% had died from COVID.

WEDNESDAY MORNING HEADLINES
Duke University will require face coverings at all Duke sporting events.

Indoor, outdoor, vaccinated, unvaccinated — it doesn’t matter. Facemask will be required at all home sporting events involving Duke University.

The policy change comes ahead of Duke’s home football opener against North Carolina A&T, which is set to kick off at 8 p.m. Friday in Wallace Wade Stadium.

Meanwhile, UNC is set to host its first football game of the season Saturday. That’s when the Tar Heels will take on Georgia State looking to rebound from their season opening loss against Virginia Tech.

Masks will be encouraged inside Kenan Stadium, but only required when fans are at indoor locations–such as the Blue Zone, bathrooms, etc.

Before the game, UNC will host a free COVID-19 vaccine clinic. Tents will be set up from 4 – 7 p.m. outside Kenan Stadium near Gates 5 and 6.

Anyone who receives a COVID-19 inoculation will also receive two free tickets to an upcoming home UNC football game.

Those plans come on the heels of President Joe Biden issuing his sternest COVID-19 warning to date. The president laid into the 80 million eligible Americans who are not yet vaccinated, saying their refusal to get the shot has cost the country dearly.

“We’ve been patient, but our patience is wearing thin. And your refusal has cost all of us,” he said. The unvaccinated minority “can cause a lot of damage, and they are.”

Biden went on to expand vaccine rules effectively mandating the vaccine for as many as 100 million Americans or requiring them to be tested for the virus weekly.

THURSDAY
9:17 p.m.

The Waren County school board voted unanimously to require all employees and student-athletes to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 and for student-athletes to be tested for COVID-19 at least once a week.

Employees and student-athletes have 30 days (until Oct. 9) to get their first shot of the COVID-19 vaccine and 60 days (until Nov. 8) to get their second dose, if it’s needed to be fully vaccinated.

If there is a medical or sincerely held religious reason why they cannot receive the COVID-19 vaccine, they may request an exemption to the vaccination requirement.

Exempted employees will be required to be tested once a week. Exemptions for student-athletes will require them to be tested twice a week, whereas vaccinated student-athletes are only required to be tested once a week.

As a further incentive to get vaccinated, student-athletes who are fully vaccinated and not showing any symptoms of illness will not be required to quarantine if they are exposed to someone with COVID-19. This provides the best chance for a team to complete its season without having to forfeit games because players are quarantined.

3 p.m.
Gov. Roy Cooper begged for North Carolinians to step up and get vaccinated to end the COVID-19 pandemic during a news conference Thursday.

“How many people need to get sick and die because people don’t get this miraculous vaccine?” Cooper said. “How many people need to witness the cruel death of a loved one?”

He added that the vast majority of hospitalizations are happening in people who are not vaccinated. “If you’re hesitant, get off social media and get on the phone with your doctor,” he added.

State Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mandy Cohen echoed Cooper’s sentiments, laying out the latest COVID-19 data for the state.

She pointed to the rapid rise in cases over the summer due to the Delta variant–the sharpest increase in cases the state has seen thus far during the pandemic. She added that the number of people hospitalized with COVID-19 was extremely worrisome and that more than a third of people hospitalized were younger than 49.

While more than 59% of North Carolinians older than 12 have been vaccinated, just 35% of teenagers and 40% of young adults between 18 and 24 have gotten the vaccine. Cohen recommended that people add layers of protection, given the high rate of community spread, such as wearing a mask.

“We are 18 months into this pandemic and almost 9 months into the time that vaccines have come onto the scene,” Cooper said. “The key to ending this pandemic of course is the vaccine. There’s still time to protect yourself.”

Cooper added that more than 96% of students in North Carolina schools are in districts where masks are required. Just three school districts are not requiring masks at this time.

“We know that keeping kids learning in the classroom is the most important thing for our students right now. Getting vaccinated, wearing a mask in public indoor settings and following the science is what we need to do,” Cooper said. “The faster we put this pandemic behind us, the sooner we can all rest easy and stay healthy.”

Thursday’s briefing, meanwhile, comes ahead of another weekend of big outdoor events, including college football and kickoff to the NFL season. Asked if he would attend events like that, including the North Carolina State Fair, the governor said he would – because he’s vaccinated.

“If I go, I am going to be careful and if I am around a lot of people outside, I am going to have a mask on,” Cooper said. “I am not immunocompromised. Everyone should look at their own situation and make decisions for themselves, particularly for people who have not gotten a vaccination.”

12:50 p.m.
6,290 new COVID-19 cases were reported in North Carolina on Thursday.

The percent of positive tests in the state is 11.3%.

3,815 people are currently hospitalized with COVID-19 in North Carolina.

That’s 25 more people than Wednesday.

North Carolina surpassed 15,000 COVID-19 deaths on Thursday.

110 more people were reported from Wednesday.

There are currently 919 adult ICU COVID-19 patients.

456 COVID-19 patients were admitted in North Carolina hospitals in the last 24 hours.

11:35 a.m.
A popular music festival in downtown Raleigh will be a completely outdoor event because of current COVID-19 metrics.

The Hopscotch Music Festival will have two main stages, more than 30 bands and more than 90 vendors.

The shows begin at 3:45 p.m. on Thursday and Friday and then at 1 p.m. on Saturday.

Festival officials said they expect the rain to slack off before the shows begin. Any possible delays or changes due to weather will be announced on the festival website and social media pages.

Click here for current weather updates

People who attend the festival will have to provide proof of vaccination or provide a negative COVID-19 test from the past 72 hours. Masks will be required in any indoor setting and are strongly encouraged regardless of vaccination status and seating location during the outdoor shows.

Last year, organizers canceled the event because of the pandemic.
If you already bought tickets but you do not want to attend because of the updated protocols, you can receive a refund or roll your tickets over to next year. For more information click here.

9:50 a.m.
Some South Carolina cities are bringing back indoor mask requirements as the state’s coronavirus outbreak rivals the height of the pandemic last winter before vaccines were widely available.

The cities of Columbia, West Columbia and Cayce in central South Carolina have all adopted requirements that people wear masks in indoor public places except while eating and a few other exceptions.

South Carolina has never had a statewide mask mandate but it allowed local governments to do so in 2020. Most of the mandates faded away after Gov. Henry McMaster ended a 14-month COVID-19 state of emergency in June when the state was seeing about 150 new cases a day.

Now, South Carolina is seeing about 5,400 new coronavirus cases a day, similar to the pandemic’s peak in January.

9:40 a.m.
President Joe Biden is toughening COVID-19 vaccine requirements for federal workers and contractors as he aims to boost vaccinations and curb the surging delta variant that is killing thousands each week and jeopardizing the nation’s economy.

That’s according to a person familiar with the plans, who spoke on condition of anonymity. Biden has signed a new executive order to require vaccination for employees of the executive branch and contractors that do business with the federal government. The step comes in advance of a speech Thursday afternoon outlining a six-pronged plan to address the latest rise in coronavirus cases and the stagnating pace of COVID-19 shots.

Biden has encouraged COVID-19 vaccine requirements in schools, workplaces and university campuses. The White House hopes the strengthened federal mandate will inspire more businesses to follow suit.

9:30 a.m.
President Joe Biden will unveil a new strategy for battling the spread of COVID-19 today.

The plan will be centered around six points, including vaccinating the unvaccinated.

There will be a focus on furthering protection for those who are vaccinated, keeping schools open safely and stepping up requirements for COVID testing and the wearing of face masks.

Finally, the president will focus on protecting the country’s economic recovery and improving care for those who have been infected with the virus.

8 a.m.
United Airlines says more than half its workers who weren’t vaccinated last month have gotten the shots since the airline announced it will require proof of vaccination.

The airline is detailing rules around its requirement that employees get vaccinated against COVID-19 by late September. United officials say employees with an exemption from vaccination because of medical conditions or religious beliefs will be placed on unpaid leave in early October. Those whose exemption requests are denied, and who still refuse to get the shots, will be fired.
United is citing “dire” statistics around the COVID-19 outbreak in the United States in explaining its new policy.

THURSDAY MORNING HEADLINES
One in four new COVID-19 cases are among children, according to new data from the American Academy of Pediatrics.

That new stat has Durham Public Schools considering taking classes outside.

The company Hobbs Architects proposed new outdoor learning spaces that could be built in a way to take more classes outside during the pandemic and long after.

The company said the proposed outside learning centers could be engineered in a way that protects the children from natural elements.

Durham students recently filed a petition for more virtual classes, due to the uptick in COVID-19 cases.

In Wake County, it will likely be another two weeks before the school board makes a decision about mandatory COVID-19 testing and vaccines.

Tuesday night’s board meeting was emotionally charged and members said they have a lot to consider before casting their vote.

Meanwhile, at Appalachian State University in Boone, all unvaccinated students are now required to get weekly COVID-19 tests.

The university said 52 percent of students and 89 percent of employees are fully vaccinated. That means more than 9,000 students are unvaccinated.

Copyright © 2021 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.



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How new CDC mask guidelines for vaccinated affects Michigan

DETROIT – The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reversed course Tuesday on some masking guidelines, recommending that even vaccinated people return to wearing masks indoors in parts of the U.S. where the coronavirus is surging.


Get Caught Up” is ClickOnDetroit’s Saturday news review to help readers catch up on the biggest stories of the week.


The CDC is recommending people who live in areas experiencing “high” (red on the map) or “substantial” (orange) COVID-19 spread wear masks in indoor places, regardless of vaccination status. About 63% of U.S. counties fall into this category as of July 27, according to the CDC’s data tracker, mostly in southern states. The entire state of Florida is in the “high” risk category.

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The CDC is recommending people who live in areas experiencing “high” or “substantial” COVID-19 spread wear masks in indoor places, regardless of vaccination status. — July 27, 2021 (CDC)

In Michigan, only a handful of counties fall into the higher risk categories, but none of them are in Southeast Michigan. The counties in “substantial” include Cass, Van Buren, Hillsdale, Mason, Kalkaska, Alpena, Iron and Gogebic counties. Branch and Dickinson counties are in the “high” risk category.

Most of the state falls into the “moderate” spread category, with about 27% of the U.S. as a whole. COVID-19 cases have been on the rise in Michigan for the last two weeks, with the 7-day case average tripling since July 1.

Related: Florida virus cases soar, hospitals near last summer’s peak

Michigan COVID: Here’s what to know July 31, 2021

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The CDC also recommended indoor masks for all teachers, staff, students and visitors to schools, regardless of vaccination status.

Most new infections in the U.S. continue to be among unvaccinated people. But “breakthrough” infections, which generally cause milder illness, can occur in vaccinated people. When earlier strains of the virus predominated, infected vaccinated people were found to have low levels of virus and were deemed unlikely to spread the virus much, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said.

But with the delta variant, the level of virus in infected vaccinated people is “indistinguishable” from the level of virus in the noses and throats of unvaccinated people, Walensky said.

The data emerged over the last couple of days from 100 samples. It is unpublished, and the CDC has not released it. But “it is concerning enough that we feel like we have to act,” Walensky said. Vaccinated people “have the potential to spread that virus to others,” she said.

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As of July 27, Michigan has not revised any state level masking guidelines. The overall mask mandate was lifted in June. There are currently no restrictions on capacity in the state.

Read more: CDC reverses course on indoor masks in some parts of US

Copyright 2021 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit/The Associated Press – All rights reserved.

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Cooper calls on NC businesses to press workers to get vaccinated or mask up :: WRAL.com

— Gov. Roy Cooper on Thursday pressed businesses statewide to verify whether employees are vaccinated against coronavirus and, if not, require them to wear masks and take weekly virus tests.

The push won’t be a requirement for businesses, but “a strong recommendation,” Cooper said. The governor will enforce the rules for some 50,000 state employees in his administration, however, and he issued an executive order that set a Sept. 1 deadline for workers to get their shots.

“We are at a crossroads. We need the private sector to help us increase vaccine rates,” Cooper said during an afternoon news conference. “Until more people get the vaccine, we will continue living with the very real threat of serious disease.”

Also during the governor’s news conference:

  • The state mask mandate will expire Friday, as scheduled.
  • New recommendations call for all K-12 students, faculty, staff and visitors wear masks, regardless of vaccination status.​

Fueled by the highly contagious Delta variant, coronavirus cases have exploded in North Carolina in recent weeks. The state reported 3,268 new infections on Thursday, the highest one-day total in more than five months. The daily case count is up 82 percent from a week ago and is more than triple the number reported July 15.

Also, 1,141 people are hospitalized with COVID-19 statewide, the most in three months and 51 percent more than a week ago.

Dr. Mandy Cohen, secretary of the state Department of Health and Human Services, said the rate of increase of hospitalizations is now the fastest during the pandemic. She noted that every person infected with the Delta variant spreads it to an average of six people, compared with only two to three people for the original virus.

The new requirements will affect most state agencies, but not university or community college campuses or state offices headed by other members of the Council of State, such as the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services or the Department of Public Instruction.

Those entities have separately appointed or elected leaders who don’t answer directly to the governor, although the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, at least, has already announced it will require students to be vaccinated or submit to weekly testing.

Cooper’s announcement is similar to what President Joe Biden mandated for federal employees on Thursday.

A number of North Carolina hospital systems have already said they’ll require employees to be vaccinated, and DHHS said this week it will do the same for employees working in state-run health care facilities.

Only 57 percent of North Carolinians age 18 or older are fully vaccinated, with another 4 percent having had one vaccine dose, according to the DHHS data.

Cooper said he expects many businesses to follow the vaccination or testing requirement for workers, saying owners want to protect their staffs and their customers.

“It’s responsible. It’s patriotic. It’s the right thing to do,” he said of vaccinations.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued guidance this week that people in areas where the virus is surging – that includes 85 North Carolina’s 100 counties – should wear masks indoors, including everyone in K-12 schools, regardless of whether they’ve been vaccinated. Despite that, Cooper said he wouldn’t reinstate a statewide mask mandate. He lifted much of that mandate in May, and the mask requirements for schools expire on Friday.

“Schools know what to do. Business knows what to do. People know what to do,” he said of wearing masks. “We know the real way out of this [pandemic] is vaccines.”

DHHS did adjust its guidance for school districts, however, recommending that everyone wear masks indoors. Earlier, that recommendation was only for elementary and middle schools, as well as unvaccinated high school students and staff.

Noting that some school boards across North Carolina have voted to make masks optional for all students and staff, both Cooper and Cohen urged them to reconsider and follow state and CDC guidance.

“Look at where the [virus] numbers are in your county and think about the danger that students could face,” the governor said.

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New Zealand opens 1st big vaccination clinic :: WRAL.com

WELLINGTON, New Zealand — New Zealand has opened its first large vaccination clinic as it scales up efforts to protect people from the coronavirus.

The clinic in south Auckland will initially target household members of border workers. New Zealand has stamped out community spread of the virus and considers border workers and their families the most vulnerable to catching the disease from infectious travelers.

Director-General of Health Ashley Bloomfield said that initially about 150 people a day will get vaccinated at the clinic, although the numbers will be rapidly increased. Health officials plan to open two more clinics in Auckland over the next few weeks.

“I know a lot of our old people are probably scared of getting the vaccine but getting it today, it doesn’t hurt, and it is important for everybody to get it,” said Denise Fogasavaii, the sister of an Air New Zealand employee who has already been vaccinated.

New Zealand this week announced it plans to use the Pfizer vaccine for all inoculations, and it hopes to complete its vaccination program by the end of the year.

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THE VIRUS OUTBREAK:

CDC: Fully-vaccinated people can gather without masks. The federal COVID bill will deliver big health insurance savings for many. Dutch prime minister extends country’s pandemic lockdown. — Vaccine rollout offers hope but also prompts envy, judgement and distrust. The long game: Coronavirus changed the way we play, watch, cheer.

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— Follow AP’s pandemic coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-pandemic, https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-vaccine and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak

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HERE’S WHAT ELSE IS HAPPENING:

Coronavirus vaccinations in NC

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — New Mexico is clearing the way for schools to reopen next month as vaccine eligibility is expanding to include shots for all teachers and other educators.

State education officials announced Monday that five-day a week in-class programs would be open to those who want them. Districts also will be required to provide virtual learning options for students who opt out.

As part of the vaccination effort, the state plans to get teachers their first shots by the end of March.

The state is making the move as part of a directive by the Biden administration. State officials have acknowledged that meeting the goal depends on the federal government increasing vaccine shipments.

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OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma health officials plan to start offering coronavirus vaccines Tuesday to workers in a wide range of essential industries, immediately making a vast majority of Oklahomans eligible to receive a vaccine.

Those eligible include child-care workers and students and employees at colleges, universities and vocational schools.

“This is a big step,” said Oklahoma’s Deputy Health Commissioner Keith Reed. “By the time we roll this group in, we’ve practically covered everyone in the state.” He said the expansion should include all but about 500,000 Oklahomans.

Oklahoma’s list of essential industries includes manufacturing, construction, communications, energy, finance, state and federal government, transportation and retail.

Oklahoma currently ranks 10th in the nation with 20.9% of its population having received at least one dose of a vaccine, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The national average is 18.1%.

Meanwhile, state health officials on Tuesday reported 165 confirmed new cases of coronavirus and no new deaths. That brings the total number of confirmed infections to nearly 430,000, while the state’s death count remains at 7,219.

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CHEYANNE, Wyo. — Wyoming Gov. Mark Gordon says the state will join a handful of others that have lifted mask-wearing mandates to limit the spread of the coronavirus. The changes take effect March 16.

Also being lifted are requirements for bars, restaurants, theaters and gyms, where employees must wear masks and customers not seated in small groups have to keep 6 feet apart.

Gordon cites Wyoming’s declining number of COVID-19 cases and its success in distributing vaccines as reasons to lift the restrictions.

The statewide order in place since December was set to expire next week. States including Iowa, Mississippi, Montana, North Dakota and Texas also have lifted mask mandates.

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HELSINKI — Estonia’s government has decided on further coronavirus restrictions due to a rapid rise in cases, especially the variant first detected in Britain, and the Baltic country will effectively enter lockdown as of Thursday.

Prime Minister Kaja Kallas unveiled the new measures in an interview with the Estonian public broadcaster ERR late Monday saying “the situation with COVID-19 in Estonia is extremely critical.”

Kallas said Estonia’s pandemic situation needs to be addressed quickly to avoid further escalation and hence “we have decided to lock the country in as much as possible.”

With exception of grocery and other essential stores such as pharmacies, all stores and restaurants throughout Estonia are required to remain closed and all indoor sport activities cease as of Thursday. Restaurants will, however, be able to serve food for take-away and drive-in customers.

Kallas said the new restrictions would be in place for a minimum of one month.

The nation of 1.3 million has seen a rapidly increasing number of COVID-19 cases n the past few weeks. The country on Monday reported 1,181 new confirmed cases putting total tally to over 76,183 cases with 667 deaths.

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HONOLULU — Hawaii has detected a new COVID-19 variant in the islands, one that first emerged in South Africa.

The state Department of Health said Monday the virus, which has technical name B.1.351 was found in an Oahu resident with no travel history.

Some tests suggest the variant may be less susceptible to antibody drugs or antibody-rich blood from COVID-19 survivors.

Acting State Epidemiologist Sarah Kemble said in a statement that a study conducted in South Africa, where the variant was predominant, showed that the Johnson & Johnson vaccine was effective in preventing serious disease requiring hospitalization and in preventing death.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that as of Sunday, 81 cases of the South African variant have been detected in 19 states and Washington, D.C.

Hawaii has already detected eight cases of the U.K. or B.1.1.7 variant, including two more announced Monday in an Oahu resident who traveled to the U.S. mainland and a household contact of that person.

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HARTFORD, Conn. — The first Connecticut resident to be diagnosed with COVID-19 says he is still coping with health problems one year later, but the experience has brought a new optimism to his life.

Chris Tillett, a former Wilton, Connecticut, resident, tested positive for COVID-19 on March 8, 2020, and spent three weeks at Danbury Hospital, including 10 days in a coma and on a ventilator. Doctors used experimental treatments, including anti-malaria and anti-HIV drugs, in efforts to save his life.

Tillett, who was 45 at the time, a husband and father of 4-month-old twin boys, got sick after returning from a professional conference in California.

“This has been a tough year,” Tillett, who now lives in Virginia, told WVIT-TV. “I’m enjoying little aspects of life. Even when things go bad, I just choose to laugh at it now instead of letting it get me angry and upset, and like what is that gonna do for me, right? So I’ve just found, yes, definitely a new lease on life.”

Tillett told Connecticut Public Radio he continues to experience muscle pain, stiffness and swelling in his legs. He also had to begin taking blood pressure medication, and may have to for the rest of his life. He said red spots still cover his feet, a common lingering symptom of the virus.

Exactly one year after Tillett tested positive, more than 285,000 Connecticut residents have contracted the virus and more than 7,700 have died.

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ATHENS, Greece – Greek authorities have registered the country’s youngest COVID-19 victim so far, a 37-day-old baby that had been in the hospital with the virus for the past three weeks.

Athens hospital officials said the baby boy died just before midnight Sunday. He had been brought to the hospital on Feb. 13 with a nose infection and a high temperature and tested positive for the coronavirus. He was taken to an intensive care unit for COVID-19 on Feb. 18 and intubated a day later.

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis tweeted his condolences to the baby’s family Monday.

“Today, unfortunately, we had the youngest victim to the pandemic in our country,” he wrote. “The virus makes no distinctions, but today the sorrow is very hard to bear.”

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GENEVA — A senior World Health Organization official said that so-called “vaccine passports” for COVID-19 should not be used for international travel because of numerous concerns, including ethical considerations that coronavirus vaccines are not easily available globally.

At a press briefing on Monday, WHO emergencies chief Dr. Michael Ryan said there are “real practical and ethical considerations” for countries considering using vaccine certification as a condition for travel, adding the U.N. health agency advises against it for now.

“Vaccination is just not available enough around the world and is not available certainly on an equitable basis,” Ryan said. WHO has previously noted that it’s still unknown how long immunity lasts from the numerous licensed COVID-19 vaccines and that data are still being collected.

Ryan also noted the strategy might be unfair to people who cannot be vaccinated for certain reasons and that requiring vaccine passports might allow “inequity and unfairness (to) be further branded into the system.”

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CARSON CITY, Nev. — One year into the pandemic, Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak is still attempting to strike the right balance between keeping the state’s tourism industry afloat while also containing the coronavirus.

Sisolak said in an interview with the Associated Press he plans to use Nevada’s safety protocols as a selling point to bring tourists, conventions and trade shows back to Las Vegas.

About one in 10 Nevada residents, including the governor, have tested positive for COVID-19 over the past year. More than 5,000 people have died, 63% of whom have been 70 or older.

Sisolak hopes vaccines will prevent future deaths, contain the virus and buoy the economy to pre-pandemic levels.

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GENEVA — One of the Oxford University scientists who helped develop AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine disputed that simply making intellectual property rights freely available would significantly widen access to vaccines.

Agencies, including the World Health Organization, have called for pharmaceuticals to waive patent rights.

At a press briefing on Monday, Sarah Gilbert of Oxford University said freely available IP rights would not get the world “anywhere close to solving this problem” of limited vaccines, saying that “it’s not just the rights to the technology that’s needed.” Gilbert said other essential technical goods were needed, including cell banks and testing reagents.

Last year, WHO began a patent pool that asked companies to share their COVID-19 technology and know how for vaccines, treatments and diagnostics. Not a single company has yet joined and Gilbert said she had never heard of the initiative, despite Oxford University’s pledge to make its vaccine available to countries globally.

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MILAN — Italy surpassed 100,000 dead in the pandemic, a year after it became the first country in Europe to go on lockdown in a bid to stop the spread of COVID-19.

The Italian Health Ministry on Monday said 318 people had died in the last 24 hours, bringing the total to 100,103, the second highest in Europe after Britain.

Italy recorded its first virus death on Feb. 21, 2020, when 78-year-old retired roofer Antonio Trevisan from a winemaking town west of Venice who had been hospitalized with heart issues died.

Italy’s total virus cases surpassed 3 million last week, with a new surge powered by the highly contagious variant that was first identified in Britain.

Nearly 14,000 new positives were recorded Monday as the number of people in ICUs rose to 2,700 — 95 more than a day earlier. Italy imposed a draconian nationwide lockdown last March 9, which continued for seven weeks and included a shutdown of all non-essential manufacturing.

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WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden will deliver his first primetime address to speak to the nation on Thursday to mark the one-year anniversary of COVID-19 pandemic shutdowns.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Monday that Biden would note the sacrifices and losses suffered by Americans during the last 12 months. More than 525,000 Americans have died from the coronavirus.

It was March 11, 2020 when the pandemic hit home for many Americans and lockdowns began. That was the night the NBA suspended play, actor Tom Hanks and his wife Rita Wilson announced they had tested positive and then-President Donald Trump addressed the nation.

The anniversary comes as the administration has bolstered vaccine supply, and some states have begun reopening even as worries remain about virus variants.

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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — New Mexico on Monday expanded eligibility for vaccinations to all school teachers, early childhood educators and other staff with the goal of getting the group its first shots by the end of March.

The state is making the move as part of a directive by the Biden administration to get more schools reopened as the coronavirus pandemic continues. Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and state Health Secretary Dr. Tracie Collins said last week that the ability of New Mexico to meet the timeline will depend on the federal government increasing vaccine supplies.

Collins said the state was in discussions with the White House last week about how the directive would affect vaccinations for other groups in the state. Under the plan, the state will start with educators outside of the Albuquerque area this week. The second week will involve those in the metro area, likely at a mass vaccination site.

The state already has vaccinated more than 15,000 educators as some were eligible as part of New Mexico’s first phases of the vaccine rollout.

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PHOENIX — Arizona is reporting a daily number of new COVID-19 cases below 1,000 for the first time in months along with no new deaths.

State health officials on Monday said there are 783 new confirmed cases of the virus. With that latest figure, the state’s pandemic total number of cases is now at 827,237. The death toll remains 16,328.

The number of vaccine doses administered around Arizona was up to 2.1 million with more than 1.3 million people having received at least one shot. That’s more than 19% of the state’s population.

The number of confirmed or suspected COVID-19 patients hospitalized statewide dipped to 919, the fewest since Nov. 1. The number of ICU beds used by COVID-19 patients fell to 256, the fewest since Nov. 6.

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Retailers put brakes on Texas and Mississippi move to scrap mask mandates

As Texas and Mississippi move to join a dozen other U.S. states without statewide mask requirements, many major retailers and employers aren’t ready to nix face covering requirements amid a pandemic that killed more than 1,800 Americans on Tuesday alone.

The governors of both states said they are dispensing with mask mandates and allowing businesses to operate at full capacity

“We must now do more to restore livelihoods and normalcy for Texans by opening Texas 100 percent,” Texas Governor Greg Abbott said in a statement. “We are ensuring that all businesses and families in Texas have the freedom to determine their own destiny.”

In Mississippi, Governor Tate Reeves is also lifting mask mandates for all counties, saying his office is “getting out of the business of telling people what they can and can’t do.” 

Despite the push to reopen, Texas and Mississippi residents will still need to wear face masks if they want to step inside many supermarkets and other large retail chains. The retailers, which include Kroger, Target and Walgreens, cited guidelines from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in continuing to require masks and take other measures to protect workers and consumers from the virus. 

“There is no change at this time to the company mask mandate policy or any current safety protocols that are in place in our stores or any work locations to protect our customers and team members. We are following current CDC and OSHA guidelines regarding safety protocols,” a spokesperson for Walgreens said in an email. 

The drugstore chain’s policy all along has been to “gently remind customers who are shopping without masks about the requirement, but out of concern for our employees’ safety, we do not stop these customers from shopping,” a spokesperson added.

Another major pharmacy, CVS Health, will also keep its face covering policy in place at stores nationwide, with a CVS Health spokesperson citing the “strong scientific evidence that masks help prevent the spread of COVID-19.”

“If a customer is not wearing a mask or face covering, we will refer them to our signage and ask that they help protect themselves and those around them by listening to the experts and heeding the call to wear a face covering,” the spokesperson added. “For safety reasons, our employees are directed to avoid escalated confrontations with noncompliant customers and to instead help them complete their purchases as quickly as possible.”

Kroger, the nation’s largest supermarket chain, “will continue to require everyone in our stores across the country to wear masks until all our frontline grocery associates can receive the COVID-19 vaccine,” a spokesperson told CBS MoneyWatch in an email. The company last month said it would give each of its 500,000 workers in 35 states $100 to get immunized against COVID.

Target is also sticking with its requirement that customers and workers wear masks, including those who have been vaccinated for the coronavirus, “in line with current CDC guidance,” a spokesperson for the retailer said in an email. The retailer makes an exception for those with underlying medical conditions and young children. 

Patrons that prefer not to wear masks can shop through Target’s no-contact options, such as shopping online, the retailer added.


Grocery union demands vaccines and hazard pay…

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Aldi said it would stick with its nationwide policy requiring its workers and customers to wear masks in its more than 2,000 grocery stores in 36 states. 

“We are aware of the mask mandate lifts in both Texas and Mississippi where we have store locations. Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic we have been following CDC guidelines, and we do not plan to make any adjustments to our safety measures at this time,” a spokesperson for Aldi said in an email. 

A spokesperson for Home Depot said the retailer “requires associates and customers to wear masks while in our stores or any Home Depot facility nationwide. We’ll continue to follow CDC guidelines, as we’ve done all along.”

Costco, Trader Joe’s, Walmart and Whole Foods did not respond to requests for comment.

The National Retail Federation issued a statement reiterating that retail stores are private entities that can refuse entry or service to those that refuse to adhere to their policies. Further, “It is within their right to implement and enforce policies that protect the health and the safety of their employees and their customers,” a spokesperson for the trade group said in a statement.

San Antonio, Texas-based H-E-B did not immediately respond to a request for comment. But the grocery chain, which employs more than 135,000 people at more than 400 stores in Texas and Mexico, seemed to take a softer stance in talking to a local media outlet.

“Although there is no longer a statewide mask order, H-E-B believes it is important that masks be worn in public spaces until more Texans and our partners have access to the Covid-19 vaccine,” an H-E-B spokesperson told a Fox News affiliate. “H-E-B will still require all our partners and vendors to wear masks while at work, and we urge all customers to please wear a mask when in our stores.”



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After 11 days in hospital with COVID-19, self-described ‘tough guy’ warns others not to take virus lightly :: WRAL.com

— Stanley McHenry, who describes himself as a “tough guy,” was a Durham police officer for 31 years before a dangerous brush with COVID-19.

“It (the job) prepares you for just about everything that might come along, although I don’t know if I was completely prepared for this,” said McHenry.

The 66-year-old said he routinely takes three-to-four mile walks with his wife. They wear masks in public, maintain social distancing as much as possible and practice regular hand hygiene. He is not certain where he was exposed to the virus.

It was the week before Christmas when early symptoms of a runny nose and slight fatigue appeared, so McHenry got tested for COVID-19.

A day or two later he learned he tested positive.

Brain fog and confusion set in. Soon after, he collapsed at home.

“The 24th, 25th, 26th and 27th of December, I have absolutely no recollection of,” said McHenry.

At Duke Raleigh Hospital, McHenry developed COPD and needed help breathing.

His physician, Dr. Amal Youseff, said many people wait for symptoms to get worse before they seek help. “The problem is, we don’t know who is going to get it mild and who is going to get it worse,” she said.

After four days in the hospital, McHenry remembers waking up. He panicked, pulling out his IV line and monitoring devices.

“I literally had no idea why I was there,” he said.

Once McHenry understood his condition, he had difficulty adjusting. He described it was “almost like a sense of depression because nobody can visit you there.”

After showing progress, McHenry was released from the hospital on Jan. 5 only to return six days later after a another lung infection. Altogether, he said, he spent 11 days at Duke Raleigh Hospital.

While there, he took part in a trial for Remdesivir.

According to Youseff, as is the case with blind-trials, McHenry may or may not have received the drug that can help fight infection and provide temporary immunity.

Requirements of the trial meant McHenry had to wait 90 days before getting longer term protection with a vaccine.

“So on March 31, I will be somewhere having some medical professional sticking a needle in my arm. That’s my plan,” he said.

“Nobody should think they should fight it (COVID-19) on their own,” said Youseff. “It’s a disease that is severe. Everyone should seek help when they experience symptoms or at least get diagnosed.”

According to Youseff, people who have no drop in their oxygen levels will be offered guidance by medical professionals and can quarantine at home.

If more serious symptoms appear, like diarrhea, loss of appetite, fatigue, and especially if a fever is detected, she advises people not to wait for the condition to grow worse. Seek medical care right away.

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