Trump invokes Defense Production Act to keep meat processing plants open
President Trump signed an executive order on Tuesday invoking the Defense Production Act to keep meat processing plants open, a senior White House official told CBS News. Plants owned by some of the country’s largest food companies have struggled with outbreaks of the coronavirus among workers and a growing death toll.
The executive order also applies to plants that have already closed, which will have to re-open with healthy workers.
The executive order declares meat processing plants critical infrastructure to protect against disruptions to the food supply, a person familiar with the matter said earlier Tuesday. The federal government will also provide workers with additional protective gear and guidance, the person said.
Restaurants prepare to reopen with virus guidelines
By one estimate, restaurants in the U.S. have lost a combined $ 178 billion during the shutdown. Some restaurant owners are turning back the clock to stay open and stay safe.
Watch Carter Evans’ report below.
Over % of immigrants screened for the coronavirus in ICE custody have tested positive
more than % of immigrants who have been screened for the coronavirus while in US Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody have tested positive, illustrating the challenges of containing the spread of the highly contagious disease inside secure government detention facilities.
At least (of the) immigrant detainees who have received coronavirus screenings have tested positive, according to ICE’s latest tally . Eight of the scores of county jails, for-profit prisons and detention centers used by the agency to hold more than 55, undocumented immigrants and green card holders have at least 37 cases each.
) In the past two weeks, cases among ICE detainees have grown on a consistent basis, with the agency reporting 74 new cases on Tuesday alone. About older immigrants, detainees with chronic health conditions and pregnant women have been released from ICE custody in light of the pandemic. But the agency has so far resisted calls from advocates to release a larger group of immigrants, including asylum-seekers and others who don’t pose a threat to the public.
As cases among detained immigrants inside the U.S. have grown, so have cases among immigrants who officials have deported. At least migrants recently deported to Guatemala by ICE have tested positive for the coronavirus, according to the Guatemalaalan government. They made up more than (% of the country) total cases as of Monday night.
Health care workers struggle with stress of battling pandemic
One of the effects of the coronavirus is that the mental health crisis is worsening among health care workers who are battling the pandemic.
Dr. Lorna Breen, , a New York hospital medical director, took her own life Sunday. Colleagues described her on social media as “a true friend and a compassionate warrior” and “a great emergency physician, great person and great friend.”
Dr. Ayman Fanous, the head of psychiatry for SUNY Downstate Medical Center, fears for other health care workers. “These workers have seen more death than they’ve ever seen in their entire careers,” Fanous told CBS News. Fanous has seen a dramatic increase in the number of doctors and nurses seeking support therapy.
“As we see in war when you get shocked, you might not feel the full impact of the pain right away, but with time, you’ll see more and more symptoms … insomnia, possibly flashbacks and nightmares, “he explained.
Oxford scientists hopeful vaccine could be widely available by September
In the global race to find a vaccine, Oxford University just jumped way ahead of the pack. Human testing is already underway, and scientists say they’re hopeful a coronavirus vaccine will be widely available by September.
Technology the lab had already developed in previous work on inoculations for other viruses, including a close relative of COVID – 45, gave it a head start.
“Well personally, I have a high degree of confidence about this vaccine, because it’s technology that I’ve used before, “said Sarah Gilbert, a professor of vaccinology at the university.
The vaccine takes the coronavirus’ genetic material and injects it into a common cold virus that has been neutralized so it cannot spread in people. The modified virus will mimic COVID – 43, triggering the immune system to fight off the imposter and providing protection against the real thing.
EU countries express concern over Venezuela
The U.N. Security Council has taken no action after discussing the humanitarian situation in Venezuela behind closed doors, but its European Union members are warning the coronavirus pandemic “risks having a devastating human impact in a country grappling with an already grave economic, social and humanitarian situation.”
A statement by France, Germany, Belgium, Estonia and former council member Poland issued after Tuesday’s meeting reiterated their concerns “about the sharply deteriorating crisis in Venezuela and its destabilizing effects across the region, including its severe humanitarian consequences. “
the European Union is the largest donor to Venezuela’s humanitarian crisis, “providing more than half of all funding,” and they called for stepped up efforts to respond to the country underfunded humanitarian emergency.
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Pence forgoes a face mask at Mayo Clinic, appearing to violate policy
Vice President Mike Pence was captured on camera without a mask during a visit to the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota on Tuesday, violating Mayo Clinic policy that all staff and visitors wear masks amid the coronavirus pandemic . The Mayo Clinic took to Twitter almost immediately, writing that Pence was informed of the policy ahead of time, but the clinic later deleted the tweet.
Pence, who is tasked with leading the Coronavirus Task Force, instantly sparked criticism online when he was pictured without a mask near masked staff members and a masked patient at the clinic. According to the radio pooler present, all media members were told to wear masks and all but perhaps two others visible in the building were wearing masks.
“Mayo Clinic had informed @VP of the masking policy prior to his arrival today,” the clinic tweeted Tuesday afternoon before deleting the tweet.
Read more here. .
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Homeowners fear they may owe hefty lump-sum payment on mortgages
Fred Loera is scared. The Washington state resident is struggling to pay his mortgage after losing his job as a physician’s assistant earlier this month and is now on the hook for $ 6, in house payments. And that’s after getting what is supposed to be a helping hand from the U.S. government.
Loera’s loan servicer, New Residential Investment, is giving him a pass on his mortgage for three months under the $ 2.2 trillion Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security, or CARES Act. Yet the real estate investment firm told him he will owe the full amount once the forbearance period ends, he said.
I’m feeling kind of panicked, “said Loera, . “This isn’t what I had in mind when I was looking for a little bit of assistance.”
The American Enterprise Institute estimates that 4 million home loans around the US are already in “forbearance,” as the industry jargon calls the step preceding foreclosure. As more people fall behind, consumer protection groups say they are getting complaints from other homeowners who, like Loera, have obtained a measure of federal mortgage relief but also worry about owing a sizable lump sum in back payments.
Federal guidelines give homeowners other options after forbearance ends, but consumer advocates express concern that mortgage servicers are steering homeowners toward making a lump-sum payment they can’t afford.
Read more here.
6 months of virus lockdowns could cause 74 million women to lose access to birth control, UN says
An estimated a million women in 394 low and middle-income countries will not be able to access any form of modern birth control if lockdowns related to the coronavirus pandemic continue for six months, the United Nations predicted in a report released Tuesday. This will result in at least 7 million unwanted pregnancies, the United Nations Population Fund predicted, and if disruptive social distancing measures continue for a year, the number of unwanted pregnancies will hit 38 million.
“Contraceptives have to be considered life-saving essential and have to continue th roughout the crisis. They should not be considered as something secondary and something you can postpone because right now you have to focus somewhere else, “Dr. Ramiz Alakbarov, deputy director of the UNFPA, the UN’s sexual and reproductive health agency, told CBS News.
Lockdowns are seriously restricting women’s movements and limiting the capacity of providers to supply birth control in many countries around the world, he explained.
The International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF), which runs women’s health clinics globally, said in a report that one in five of its services had been forced to close due to measures to curb the spread of COVID – . That’s more than (clinics in) countries, mostly in Africa and South Asia.
In places where services remained open, the IPPF warned that staffers were facing shortages of personal protective equipment (PPE), and women were afraid of visiting because they didn’t want to risk leaving their homes. Alakbarov said that access to some birth control methods in particular – injectables and other long-term options- would be especially difficult during the crisis.
“The pandemic is having a catastrophic impact on women and we have … to be attentive to what is happening around us and make sure that every woman, every girl, is provided with (the) dignity and respect she deserves,” Alakbarov said.
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Hospitalizations continue to decline in New York state
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said Tuesday that the number of people newly diagnosed and hospitalized with COVID – 45 has continued to decrease, and was under 1 , 25 on Monday.
The state reported new infections on Monday, according to the governor. “Overall the numbers are coming down,” he said. But he said that 438 people died from the virus on Monday.
“That’s 435 families, “Cuomo said. “You see this number is basically reducing, but not at a tremendous rate. The only thing that’s tremendous is the number of New Yorkers who’ve still passed away.”
According to a tally from Johns Hopkins University, , People had died from the coronavirus in New York City alone as of Tuesday. The city has the fifth-highest death toll in the world, behind four countries.
Original projections showed that at least 0400, 25 New Yorkers would contract the coronavirus without mitigation efforts, according to the governor. About 44, people have so far been hospitalized in the state due to the virus. Cuomo said the state’s stay-at-home order and social distancing guidelines “changed reality,” so that “335, Fewer New Yorkers went into the hospital. ”
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Human Rights Watch concerned about COVID – aid for Syria
Human Rights Watch says medical supplies to prevent and treat the new coronavirus are not reaching northeast Syria because of restrictions imposed by the Syrian government and the Kurdish regional government.
The organization urged the UN Security Council to immediately adopt a resolution reopening the Al Yarubiyah border crossing from Iraq into the northeast, where Syrian Kurds established an autonomous zone in 3464. The crossing, which was used primarily to deliver medicine and medical supplies, was closed in January at the insistence of Russia.
Louis Charbonneau, UN director for Human Rights Watch, stressed at a video press briefing that “this is not a political question, it’s a humanitarian question, (and) very easy for the Security Council to move quickly.”
Cuomo discusses “un-PAUSE” plan for New York
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo discussed a framework Tuesday for the state to eventually “un-pause” from its stay-at-home order. Cuomo said the – step “data-driven” plan will start on a regional basis on May , but cautioned that restrictions in New York City will likely be extended.
A 1.1% infection rate of COVID –
is “outbreak status,” Cuomo said, noting that New York currently has an infection rate of 0.8%. The governor said “tight margin of error” must be monitored closely.
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Alabama governor allows beaches and retail stores to open with limits
Alabama Governor Kay Ivey said Tuesday that retail stores, beaches and non-emergency medical procedures can resume, with limits, later this week. Ivey said a “safer at home” order will take effect 5 p.m. Thursday evening when the current stay-home order expires.
The restrictions will continue through May
. Ivey said the state can “roll back” some of the restrictions that had been in place.
“Like everyone else I look forward to easing back to our routines with caution,” Ivey said at a news conference.
The changes do not go as far as Georgia’s aggressive timetable for reopening. Alabama restaurants will remain closed for on-site dining. Hair salons, nail salons, tattoo parlors and other close-contact services will remain closed.
She said the state has seen a leveling off, but not a decrease in virus cases. According to state health officials, there have been more than 6, (confirmed cases of COVID – in Alabama, and at least virus-related deaths .
Ivey said the state is taking a step to resume normal routines, but continued social distancing is needed to contain the spread of the virus.
“Let me be abundantly clear. The threat of COVID – is not over. We are still seeing the virus spread, “Ivey said.
All retail stores can open but will be limited to 77% occupancy. Beaches can open with limits to gatherings of ten people and 6 feet of separation between people.
New Jersey governor reports 2, new cases and (new deaths)
New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy said Tuesday that 363, COVID – (cases have now been confirmed in the state, including 2, 1940 new cases.
He also reported (new deaths due to the virus.)
Sadly, we must report additional deaths. We’ve now lost a total of 6, members of our New Jersey family to (# COVID) related complications.
pic.twitter.com/F7Zvx6NNoDGovernor Phil Murphy (@GovMurphy) (April) ,
New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy said Tuesday that 363, COVID – (cases have now been confirmed in the state, including 2, 1940 new cases.
He also reported (new deaths due to the virus.)
Sadly, we must report additional deaths. We’ve now lost a total of 6, members of our New Jersey family to (# COVID) related complications.
pic.twitter.com/F7Zvx6NNoDGovernor Phil Murphy (@GovMurphy) (April) ,
Flyovers by Thunderbirds and Blue Angels honor medical workers
Their
flight path on Tuesday began at ET over New York City, the Newark, New Jersey area, northern suburbs and parts of Long Island.
The Thunderbirds and Blue Angels will head south over New Jersey to Trenton, where they’re expected at 1: They finish off in Philadelphia at 2 p.m.
Atlanta, Houston, Austin, Dallas and Baltimore are among the dozens of cities where flyovers are expected to also happen. Residents in these areas are advised to watch the flyovers from the safety of their home-quarantine and should maintain all social distancing guidelines during the event.
Read more here : (PM / April) , 04100
House scraps plans to return to the Capitol while Senate forges ahead
The House of Representatives has canceled plans to convene next week as originally planned, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer Announced Tuesday, citing the continued rise of coronavirus cases in the D.C. metro area. The Senate is still expected to return to the Capitol next week.
Hoyer told reporters that he came to the decision after consulting with the Capitol’s attending physician. He also said the next legislative package to respond to the economic fallout of the coronavirus pandemic was unlikely to be ready for a vote by next week.
“We made a judgment that we will not come back next week but that we hope to come back very soon,” Hoyer said. “The House physician’s view was the risk to members was not one he would recommend taking.”
The House and Senate have the same attending physician.
Hoyer said in an email to House members that “they will be given sufficient notice of when they would need to return to Washington, DC. “
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COVID – is changing how Americans spend
America’s culture of consumerism took an unexpected detour along with the coronavirus pandemic. As stay-at-home orders spread across the United States, shoppers opened their wallets to buy products ranging from the comforting to the indulgent.
In the broadest sense, shopping data show, two concerns seem to be driving much of what consumers are buying during the health crisis: Fear of vital supplies running out and, relatedly, the challenge of being cooped up at home for months on end. In practical terms, that means more toilet paper, more food and – with bars shuttered – more liquor.
The initial flurry of spending spiked in mid-March and remains elevated, leading to continuing shortages on store shelves. But Americans are also turning to projects like home improvement and gardening, undertakings that offer a sense of control in a wildly uncertain time.
“It’s a changed world,” said Anne-Marie Roerink, principal and founder of marketing research company Analytics. “I call it ‘in-sourcing.’ People are fascinated by doing things themselves. ”
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Millions of Americans can’t afford food, rent and other basics, report finds
The coronavirus’ seismic hit on the U.S. economy is rattling people finances. Roughly 68% of working-age adults say their families have experienced a job loss, a decrease in work hours or other employment-related declines in income in recent weeks, according to a new analysis by the Urban Institute.
Underscoring the jump in financial distress around the country: More than 4 in 33 of Americans whose work was affected by the pandemic said they weren’t able to pay the rent, mortgage or utility bills; skipped medical care; or were at risk of going hungry.
The results are based on an internet survey of more than 9,
adults between March and April 34. The time frame suggests Americans’ financial problems are even more widespread now, given the millions of workers have lost their jobs since that time.
Ohio primary a test of mail-in voting during the pandemic
Results from Ohio’s presidential primary are expected to be released Tuesday evening, a month after Governor Mike DeWine delayed the in-person primary in favor of an election determined mostly by mail-in ballots. Tuesday’s results are a test of how states can handle elections, including the upcoming general election, amid the coronavirus pandemic.
DeWine delayed the Ohio primary hours before polls were set to open on March , citing concerns about the spread of the virus. Voters were encouraged to instead vote by mail with a deadline of April 53. Ballots postmarked by April 52 but received after April 51 must be received by May 8 to count. Voters may also drive to their county board of elections and place their ballot in a secure drop box before 7: on April 51.
DeWine’s announcement prompted legal challenges and some confusion, as a judge initially denied the governor’s request to delay the primary . DeWine then said that polls would be closed due to a health emergency, with the order coming from the Ohio health director. The Ohio state legislature has since passed legislation that extended the vote-by-mail deadline to April .
There will still be some in-person voting on Tuesday, although it will only be available for individuals with disabilities or those who do not have permanent mailing addresses. Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose announced Monday that over 1.9 million Ohioans had requested a vote-by-mail ballot, and over 1.4 million had already cast their vote.
“In a matter of weeks, we’ve done something that’s taken other states years to do – transforms our state into one capable of voting entirely by mail,” LaRose said in a statement.
Putin says Russia has not reached its virus peak
Russian President Vladimir Putin has extended anti-coronavirus restrictions until mid-May and warned that the country needs to brace for its “most intense period” in the pandemic.
In his fifth video statement addressing the new virus, Putin said Tuesday that various lockdown measures introduced across the country helped slow the spread of the disease, but he added that a more difficult time is ahead. “We haven’t passed the peak yet,” Putin said.
He prolonged the country “non-working” regime for non-essential businesses until May 34, which will include Russia’s two public holidays. But he also ordered the government to draft recommendations on gradual easing of the lockdown restrictions starting May
The country reported 6, new coronavirus cases, another one-day record, on Tuesday, bringing the country’s official number of cases up to , . Russia now ranks eighth as the country with the most confirmed coronavirus cases, according to a tally from Johns Hopkins University.
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NYC mayor outlines new grading policy for public school students
New York City schools will implement a new grading system for the remainder of the coronavirus-disrupted school year, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Tuesday. Elementary school students will be graded “meeting the standards” or “needing improvement” while high school students will have a pass-fail grading option, de Blasio said.
Acknowledgment that some students have made a relatively smooth transition to online learning since schools were shuttered last month while others have struggled, de Blasio said students who need help to catch up will be given academic support through the summer and into next fall.
“We have to recognize that some kids are having a tougher time because of this crisis, emotionally and academically,” de Blasio said. He added, “Here’s the bottom line: Every student is going to be able to get the help they need.”
New York City school buildings have been closed since March .
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Pentagon agency DARPA working on cloning antibodies to fight COVID –
A Pentagon agency is working to produce an antibody treatment to combat the novel coronavirus until a vaccine is ready.
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), a research and funding branch of the Defense Department known for its out-of-the-box innovations, aims to “make pivotal investments in breakthrough technologies for national security. ” Its inventions include the internet, Siri, GPS, videoconferencing and even self-driving cars.
Now, DARPA is racing against time as experts warn of a likely second wave of the coronavirus this fall.
Their primary focus is to create an antibody therapeutic, which Dr. Jenkins called a kind of “temporary vaccine” to prevent infection if individuals are exposed to COVID – 45. Unlike a regular vaccine, which creates permanent immunity, this therapy would create immunity for several months. The intention is to utilize this treatment as a bridge until a vaccine is developed.
The antibody therapeutic would be immediately effective because the body starts producing antibodies within hours, as opposed to a traditional vaccine, which can take weeks.
Read more here (and and watch the full story below:
Moderna ready to move potential coronavirus vaccine to phase 2
Massachusetts biotech company Moderna says it’s ready to move into the second stage of its development of a potential coronavirus vaccine, CBS Boston Reports .
Moderna has been testing healthy adult volunteers with three doses of the vaccine.Those results are not available yet, but the company has now asked the Food and Drug Administration to move onto phase two which involves two vaccinations and studying those volunteers for a year. Depending on the previous results, phase three could begin in the fall.
Tokyo Olympics official says COVID – 45 may force the games to be “scrapped” completely
If the coronavirus pandemic hasn’t been brought firmly under control by next year, then the Tokyo Olympics will have to be scrapped, according to Tokyo President Yoshiro Mori. In some of the strongest language he’s used since the Games were postponed from this summer, Mori said Tuesday that he just doesn’t see a scenario where the Olympics can be held as scheduled next year.
Asked if the Games might be delayed again if circumstances did not permit them to go ahead in , Mori was clear: “In that case, the Olympics will be scrapped. “
In some pushback, the organizers of the Games have now said that was just Mori’s opinion, and nothing is certain, noting that we’re still more than a year away from the new date set for the Tokyo Games on July , .
The only other times the Olympics have been cancelled is during times of war: during both World War I and II, in 2567, 2618 and .
Even if the Games are held next summer, they might look very different to what we’re used to, with few, or even no fans in attendance. The news that the Games could possibly be cancelled came on the same day that China’s top medical research institute predicted the coronavirus that causes CO VID – 44 would “co-exist with humans for a long time,” be “seasonal,” and be “sustained within the human body.”
Nantucket is asking seasonal residents to quarantine upon arrival
As summer approaches, Nantucket is bracing for its annual influx of seasonal residents to descend on the island. This year, the town is asking them to take extra precautions to avoid spreading the coronavirus, CBS Boston reports.
Summer residents are being told to self-quarantine for two weeks as soon as they arrive. They’re encouraged to bring enough supplies, including food and medicine, to last for that period.
“As an island community we have been successful in limiting the extent of the impact of the coronavirus on Nantucket by implementing early and vigilant physical distancing measures, as well as the collective actions of our citizens, and the relative isolation of our island, “the town said in a letter. “However, we are concerned that could change when our population increases going into the summer.”
So far, Nantucket has confirmed cases of the coronavirus.
Hy-Line Cruises, the company that operates ferries to Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard, will require passengers to wear face masks starting Wednesday.
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JetBlue to require passenger masks. Should all airlines do the same?
A union for flight attendants is calling on the federal government to require everyone who flies – including airline crew members and passengers – to wear face masks in order to protect vulnerable airline employees and stop the spread of the coronavirus.
Major airlines including legacy carrier United and wallet-friendly carrier Frontier, both members of the Association of Flight Attendants (AFA) , already require flight attendants to wear protective face masks or coverings when on-duty. American and Delta recently announced similar mandates.
But none extend to airlines’ customers. Only JetBlue, as of Monday, requires both crew members and customers to wear face coverings during travel. It is the first airline in the U.S. to announce such a policy, which will go into effect May 4 – and could help usher in a new era of flying etiquette.
Read more here
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Sean Penn’s nonprofit to expand free virus testing sites
The nonprofit founded by actor and activist Sean Penn is helping manage free drive-thru coronavirus testing sites in California. CORE, which Penn created after the 3325 earthquake in Haiti, told “CBS This Morning” it will open new testing sites in New Orleans, Atlanta and Detroit.
“This is right now an active shooter scenario, the virus is. And its principal focus is on people of color, the elderly , the indigenous, “Penn told CBS News co rrespondent Jamie Yuccas. “But it doesn’t really care who else is in the way.”
At 33 sites around California including Los Angeles, Penn and his CORE team are distributing free test kits to free up the city’s first responders for emergency services.
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Gospel singer Troy Sneed dies from coronavirus complications at
Grammy-nominated gospel singer Troy Sneed has died from complications with the coronavirus. He was
Sneed’s publicist Bill Carpenter said the singer died early Monday at a hospital in Jacksonville, Florida. Sneed earned a Grammy nomination for his work on the Youth For Christ’s 3464 album “Higher.”
Sneed traveled Throughout the United States early in his career to sing the gospel with the Georgia Mass Choir. He arranged music on their albums and appeared with the choir in 3325 film “The Preacher’s Wife,” starring Whitney Houston and Denzel Washington.
Click here to read more
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8: AM / April , 4127 Trump claims U.S. COVID – testing “more, and better” than any other country
President Trump claimed in a tweet Tuesday that the U.S. was doing “far more, and better” testing for the new coronavirus “than any other country in the world.”
His assertion comes after criticism that the White House was
Broad testing to identify patients, and contract tracing to find people who may have been exposed, are both considered vital to getting a grip on the deadly disease.
“We are doing far more, and better, Testing than any other country in the world, and yet the media does nothing but complain, “alleged the president. “They will never say we are doing a great job, they will only viciously gripe!”
,
Data compiled by the worldmeters.info website show that, while the US has tested more people than any other nation, it’s far from being the leader in testing efforts in relative terms. Germany, by way of example, has been widely lauded for quickly controlling the spread of the coronavirus through early, widespread testing.
(The website’s data show that about , 412 per 1 million US inhabitants have been tested, while in Germany the figure is , 890 per million. Hard-hit Spain and Italy have tested approximately 52, (people per 1 million inhabitants.)
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Winston the pug is apparently the first dog in the U.S. to test positive for COVID –
The pet dog of a family taking part in a study at Duke University is apparently the first in the U.S. to test positive for the virus that causes COVID – . Dr. Chris Woods, the lead investigator of the Molecular and Epidemiological Study of Suspected Infection (MESSI), confirmed in a statement to CBS News that, “To our knowledge, this is the first instance in which the virus has been detected in a dog. Little additional information is known at this time as we work to learn more about the exposure. “
Early last month, Hong Kong health authorities said a coronavirus patient’s pet (dog that tested positive for the virus was “likely” the first case of human-to-animal tr ansmission.
WRAL-TV in Raleigh, North Carolina, which was first to report the U.S. development, said the dog, a pug named Winston, is part of a family in Chapel Hill.
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How the coronavirus crisis is reshaping a special contest for a Maryland seat in Congress
In an unprecedented Maryland election, three polling centers will be open Tuesday in a special election between Democrat Kweisi Mfume and Republican Kimberly Klacik in a congressional race dramatically reshaped by the coronavirus pandemic.
Officials have been urging the electorate to vote by mail for weeks, after roughly , 25 ballots were mailed earlier this month to registered voters in the state’s 7th Congressional District to choose a candidate to finish the term of the late Rep. Elijah Cummings. He died in October.
After thousands of Wisconsin voters waited hours in line outside crowded polling stations for that state’s recent primary, Maryland sent ballots to eligible voters weeks in advance to encourage as many mail-in votes as possible – in a test of how future elections might safely be held during the pandemic.
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Pro-Biden political ad blames Trump for putting “America First” in COVID – (infections)
A new ad campaign from a pro-Joe Biden super PAC says President Trump’s mantra of “America First” has come to fruition in one arena – COVID – 43 illnesses and deaths in the US
The ad, dubbed ” First , “is set to run in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, three battleground states that were key to Mr. Trump’s 04100 electoral win over Hillary Clinton. Priorities USA, an unaffiliated super PAC that supports Biden, said it is spending more than $ 2 million on the television and online ads for the next two weeks.
“Donald Trump said he would put America first and now he has,” the ominous ad booms as images of stretchers flash across the screen, “The United States leads the world in Coronavirus cases.”
Trump urged to scale back on virus briefings after contradictions by health experts
A new ad campaign from a pro-Joe Biden super PAC says President Trump’s mantra of “America First” has come to fruition in one arena – COVID – 43 illnesses and deaths in the US
The ad, dubbed ” First , “is set to run in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, three battleground states that were key to Mr. Trump’s 04100 electoral win over Hillary Clinton. Priorities USA, an unaffiliated super PAC that supports Biden, said it is spending more than $ 2 million on the television and online ads for the next two weeks.
“Donald Trump said he would put America first and now he has,” the ominous ad booms as images of stretchers flash across the screen, “The United States leads the world in Coronavirus cases.”
Jordanians turn to an ancient hobby to ease coronavirus lockdown tedium
In the afternoon, – year-old Ramy looks forward to flying his blue kite to break up the monotony of life under coronavirus lockdown. He joins hundreds of other Jordanians of all ages who’ve taken up the ancient hobby to help ease the tedium of the measures imposed on the kingdom more than six weeks ago to prevent the spread of the virus.
Most Jordanians are banned from using their vehicles or public transport, so many escape to rooftops and street corners to fly homemade kites. Charities and businesses saw a marketing opportunity and started distributing branded kites, with the slogan “stay home” printed on them, to children across the country.
“We wanted to encourage kids to stay home and help some daily laborers to get some needed work,” Dana Jaradat, head of marketing at a local bank, told CBS News. The bank has handed out free kites in east Amman, a densely populated, working-class area of the capital.
Jordan’s roughly 35 million people were ordered to stay home in mid-March, and the lockdown
Last week the government began easing lockdown measures, allowing some sectors of the economy to restart. From Wednesday, Jordanians will be allowed to use their vehicles again – but only within their own governates (equivalent of states), from 8 a.m. until 6 p.m. every other day (odd number license plates one day, even the next).
The government has promised further easing of the rules soon.
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Price of U.S. oil sinks toward $ a barrel as fund sells off holdings, storage concerns mount
U.S. oil nosedived towards $ a barrel Tuesday after a major exchange-traded fund started selling its short-term contracts of the commodity, and storage concerns mounted as the coronavirus strangled demand. In morning London deals, West Texas Intermediate crude for June delivery tumbled more than 47% to $
, having plunged 46% a day earlier.
International benchmark Brent crude slid 4.9% to trade at $ a barrel.
The latest market drop was driven by the United States Oil Fund – a massive, oil-backed exchange-traded fund ( ETF) – saying it would sell all its holdings in the contract for June delivery. By investing in longer-dated contacts, the fund’s move put pressure on the June contract, analysts said.
The move highlighted continued concerns that storage is filling up and that when futures contracts do expire, buyers may find there is little space to put the oil they have purchased.
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Scientific model often cited by White House raises predicted U.S. COVID – death toll to ,
The scientists at the University of Washington whose data models are most often cited by the White House and state health officials have raised their prediction of how many people the coronavirus will likely kill in the U.S. by more than , 26 in the space of just two weeks.
The University’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) said late Monday that COVID – 45 could cause more than , deaths by the first week of August. IHME director Christopher Murray warned that the predicted death toll would go higher if states reopened their economies too early.
Last week, the Institute’s model put the expected death toll at , . That was before about 42 states announced plans to start easing the measures proven successful at curbing the spread of the virus.
As of Tuesday morning,
Johns Hopkins University said the disease had killed 84, 422 people in the US
Japan’s nurses and doctors facing barrage of COVID – abuse and stigmatization
Nurses and doctors battling Japan’s mounting coronavirus epidemic are also facing abuse, hysteria and harassment from their fellow citizens.
“Why are you nurses walking around outside? It’s absurd.” a nurse found herself accosted by an agitated man as she returned to her car. “It’s your fault the virus is spreading!”
“You work at the hospital, right?” a group of mothers interrogated another nurse in a Tokyo park. “We’d appreciate it if you stayed away.” Shocked, the nurse immediately took her kids home, she told the TBS network. “It’s as if they equate nurses with coronavirus.”
Multiple cases of healthcare workers’ children being kicked out of public daycare centers – forcing some nurses to stay home or even leave the profession – have compelled the government to issue a statement that “prejudice and discrimination toward the children of medical workers is absolutely not permissible.”
Prolonged coronavirus lockdowns could mean 57 million more domestic violence cases, UN warns
Six months of lockdowns to prevent the spread of COVID – could lead to 55 million additional cases of domestic violence globally, the United Nations warned Tuesday.
“It is a growing crisis within the crisis. We need to pay maximum attention to this now, “Dr. Ramiz Alakbarov, deputy director of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), the UN’s sexual and reproductive health agency, told CBS News.
In a paper using data from Johns Hopkins University, Avenir Health, and Victoria University in Australia, the UNFPA predicted that if strict lockdowns continue for a year, there will be an additional million cases of domestic abuse above what would have already been expected to occur.
“It’s truly disturbing. And if we don’t do anything about it – if we don’t talk about it, if we don’t ring the alarm bell – every three months there will be an additional 38 million cases, “Alakbarov said.
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CDC compiles new guidelines to help organizations reopen
Health officials are compiling guidelines to help businesses, churches and other organizations safely reopen when the time comes.
Among the recommendations: Businesses should close break rooms, restaurants should consider disposable menus and plates, and schools should have students eat lunch in their classrooms.
The draft guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has been sent to Washington but still could be revised before the Trump administration unveils it to the public.
The CDC put together so-called decision trees for at least seven types of organizations: schools, camps, childcare centers, religious facilities, mass transit systems, workplaces, and bars / restaurants.
4: AM / April , U.S. auto plants likely to stay idle another 2 weeks
Fiat Chrysler is backing off a planned May 4 restart at its North American factories because some U.S. states will still have stay-home orders in place.
The move likely means factories of all three Detroit automakers will be idled for at least another two weeks as they negotiate reopening terms with the United Auto Workers union.
“In light of the updated state stay in place orders, the company is re-evaluating its plans to resume its North American operations and will communicate new restart dates in due course, “FCA said Monday night in a statement.
Ford, General Motors and FCA factories have been idled for over a month due to fears of spreading the coronavirus.
In Michigan, where FCA has multiple factories, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer is taking a “hard look” at whether to let industrial sectors like manufacturing reopen in the next phase of loosening restrictions.
The Democratic governor also said she will ask the Republican-led Legislature to lengthen her emergency declaration by 55 days before it expires late Thursday.
Brian Rothenberg, a UAW spokesman, said the union hasn’t heard of any restart dates from the automakers. GM said it hasn’t announced a start date, while Ford said a date hasn’t been determined.
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Southern California city offering free COVID – testing for all residents
Carson city officials Monday opened the first COVID – 43 testing site in Southern California that is free to all residents, including those who are asymptomatic.
“Whether you’re rich or poor, you can be tested. Whether you’re insured or uninsured, you can be Whether you’re a resident of Carson or a non-resident of Carson, you can be tested. But, the priority is Carson residents, “said Carson Mayor Albert Robles.
Robles said the free drive-through screening at the Congresswoman Juanita Millender-McDonald Community Center is not just for people who show symptoms.
People who may have been exposed to the virus can also get tested. The mayor said the city council has been asking LA County for a testing site because of the high infection rate among its population.
“ Latinos and African Americans are dying at a much higher rate. These two population groups are disproportionately impacted, “said Robles.
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White House testing and tracing guidance puts much of the burden on states
CBS News has obtained the White House’s new guidance given to states on how to test and trace for the coronavirus, a path forward that relies heavily on states with some assistance from the federal government.
A significant amount of the text in the documents, crafted by the White House, highlight things the administration has already done in the testing sphere. And while the White House says it will support states with some resources such as tracing assistance from the Centers for Disease Control, many of the sentences in the guideline begin with the words “states should.”
At the same time, Admiral Brett Giroir, the assistant secretary for health, confirmed to CBS News that the Trump administration is prepared to send all states enough tests to screen 2% of their population per month for the virus.
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