Wednesday, September 2, 2020

State Sales Taxes need to pay $300 million for McCormick Place



Tourism decline could put state on hook for McCormick Place bonds

Tourism decline could put state on hook for McCormick Place bonds

McCormick Place convention center in Chicago. (Credit: McCormickPlace.com)

Tuesday, September 1, 2020

Chicago area sees 85% drop in tourism tax collections in August

By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com

SPRINGFIELD – A drastic drop in tourism and convention revenues in the Chicago area brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic could put the state on the hook for making bond payments on behalf of the operators of the McCormick Place convention center, according to the bond rating agency Moody’s Investor Services.

McCormick Place, which bills itself as the largest convention center in North America, is operated by a municipal corporation, the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority, commonly known as Met Pier.

According to Moody’s, Met Pier has about $2.9 billion worth of outstanding bonds backed by various tourism-related taxes in Chicago and, as a backstop, Illinois state sales tax revenues, which are used whenever the local revenues are insufficient to make the bond payments. State sales tax revenue covers up to $300 million in debt service in such a situation when Met Pier’s pledged tax revenue falls short, according to Moody’s.

Officials at Met Pier said they are working on a debt refinancing package that they hope will make it unnecessary to draw on state funds. According to the state comptroller’s office, as of June 30, Met Pier had a total outstanding bonded indebtedness of just under $4.2 billion.

In an email statement, Met Pier’s chief financial officer Jason Bormann said the corporation has taken a number of steps to cut its operational costs this year. He also said Met Pier plans to refinance $118.4 million in bonds that mature during the current fiscal year.

“These bonds financed McCormick Place’s South and West Buildings, among other things,” Bormann said. “These facilities help drive tourism, economic activity and tax revenues to the state of Illinois and city of Chicago.”

The possibility that Met Pier might have to draw on state revenues this year was reported as early as April by the Civic Federation, a nonpartisan policy think tank in Chicago. It noted that Met Pier had to draw on state revenues during the recession that followed the financial crisis in 2008, although it was later able to repay that money.

But local revenues that support McCormick Place have been plummeting again since Gov. JB Pritzker first issued a statewide stay-at-home order in March. Although that order is no longer in effect, the convention center and state tourism have continued to suffer as allowable crowd size remains limited to 50 people. In August, the city reported revenues from those local taxes were down 85 percent compared to the same month a year ago.

“Met Pier's weak August tax revenue marks another in a series of declines that began in April,” the Moody’s report stated. “Monthly collections for June through August were 78 percent below year-earlier levels on average. Met Pier's convention center, McCormick Place, has suffered from a wave of cancellations because of the pandemic.”

Gina Speckman, executive director of the Chicago North Shore Convention and Visitors Bureau, said in an interview Tuesday that the loss of convention business at McCormick Place is being felt throughout the Chicago metropolitan area.

“In the Chicagoland area, a lot of our visitor traffic is business-related,” she said. “McCormick Place has one of the largest convention centers in the country and it basically has been shut down since the end of March. I think there's been about 130 events that were taking place at McCormick Place that were canceled from March until next early next year. So that has had a tremendous impact on the city. And the suburban areas which are very heavily dependent on meetings and group business, you know, that is also not taking place.”

Speckman said that even if the pandemic were to disappear immediately, industry officials estimate that it could take at least until 2023 for travel and tourism business to return to pre-pandemic levels.

“And, you know, I don't think that we're going to get back to everything the way it was before,” she added. “Meetings are going to be more hybrid. People are going to want to have the Zoom options versus in-person options for meetings. And meetings are going to have to be able to accommodate that reality. The makeup of how meetings and conventions and conferences happen moving forward is going to look different.”

Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government and distributed to more than 400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.

Moratoriums give temporary relief on utilities, evictions

Moratoriums give temporary relief on utilities, evictions

Bill and Ted: Face the Music



By Doug Finke
The State Journal-Register

Posted at 4:57 PM

Ameren and Commonwealth Edison are among Illinois utilities that have agreed to extend a moratorium on residential disconnections.

However, the Illinois Commerce Commission said Wednesday the two utilities have only agreed to extend the moratorium through September 10. Other utilities have agreed to extend it until the end of the month.

The previous moratorium that the utilities agreed to expired at the end of August.

“Given the rise in positive COVID-19 cases in communities across Illinois and the prerequisite for residents to stay connected to school, work and family during a pandemic, I am pleased that several of the state’s larger regulated utilities have once again agreed to extend the moratorium on disconnections for residential customers,” said Carrie Zalewski, chair of the ICC.

She also said that customers having difficulty paying bills during the pandemic should set up deferred payment plans with the utilities that serve their homes.

Utilities that agreed to a moratorium until September 30 include Nicor Gas, Northshore/Peoples Gas, Illinois American Water, Aqua Illinois, and Utility Services of Illinois. Two other utilities, Consumer Gas and Liberty Utilities, previously agreed not to disconnect customers until six months after June 26, when a stipulated moratorium period expired.

The ICC is continuing to monitor the situation and look for ways to help people avoid losing utility service, the agency said.

On Tuesday, the Trump administration said it was implementing a four-month moratorium on residential evictions. The moratorium is nationwide.

The moratorium runs through December 31 and applies to individuals earning less than $99,000 a year who are unable to make rent or housing payments.


“President Trump is committed to helping hard-working Americans stay in their homes and combating the spread of the coronavirus,” White House spokesman Brian Morgenstern told reporters Tuesday.

The move drew a mixed reaction from housing experts: praise that it would potentially keep tens of millions of Americans in their homes but concern that it only moves back a deadline, potentially setting people up for evictions next year because they would continue to accrue back payments during the pause in evictions.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told lawmakers on Capitol Hill earlier Tuesday that the announcement on evictions would likely leave them “pleased,” but he acknowledged it was not a substitute for congressional action. The White House and congressional Democrats have stalled in talks to approve another stimulus, allowing many relief programs to expire.

“Our first choice is to have bipartisan legislation that allocates specific rental assistance to the people hardest hit,” he said.

Asked about an Aspen Institute estimate of that 30 to 40 million Americans were at risk of eviction, Mnuchin said the estimate was “absurdly high,” arguing the executive orders on enhanced unemployment benefits could help Americans pay rent.

“I think this is nothing close” to what was seen during the 2007 mortgage and housing crisis, he said.

USA Today contributed to this report.

Contact Doug Finke: doug.finke@sj-r.com, 788-1527, twitter.com/dougfinkesj

Above is from:  https://www.sj-r.com/news/20200902/moratoriums-give-temporary-relief-on-utilities-evictions?rssfeed=true

Champaign having COVID-19 Problems

UIUC blames “a few irresponsible students” for completely predictable behavior, orders undergrad restrictions

Wednesday, Sep 2, 2020

* UIUC

Increased undergraduate enforcement of COVID-19 safety guidelines
September 2, 2020 1:02 PM

Dear Colleagues,

Recent unacceptable behavior by a small number of students has resulted in some concerning increases in undergraduate COVID-19 positive cases. Real-time data from our Shield testing program allowed us to quickly detect this rapidly emerging trend and gives us the opportunity to act quickly to break that cycle.

For two weeks, starting now, we are intensifying our efforts to identify and swiftly remove those individuals who have created this unacceptable risk for our campus and community and who have undermined your hard work to stay together. Students who continue to violate our safety policies, who fail to comply with directions from our public health officials and who engage in unsafe activities that risk spreading the virus will be asked to leave this university.

Also, starting today at 5 p.m., for the next two weeks for their own protection, we expect all undergraduate students to limit their in-person interactions to only the most essential activities. These include things like taking twice weekly COVID-19 tests, attending class, purchasing groceries and food, going to work, engaging in individual outdoor activity, attending religious services and seeking medical attention.

We have seen the majority of our students respond voluntarily and positively this semester and we expect these temporary restrictions to be adopted. Fortunately, our Shield testing program identified this trend early, and there is no evidence of any spread from students to instructors or to the broader local community.

The full massmail we will send to undergraduate students in a few minutes is included below with details about what we expect them to do and more information about our increased focus on compliance and enforcement.

These actions will repair much of the damage a few irresponsible students have caused, and this should flatten the curve.

But, if this approach does not successfully reverse this upward trend, we will move quickly and decisively to transition the rest of the semester to fully remote instruction.

The choices of our students in the next two weeks will determine the rest of our semester.

Sincerely

Robert J. Jones
Chancellor

Andreas C. Cangellaris
Provost

Danita M. B. Young
Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs

* From the letter

Real-time data from our Shield testing program allowed us to quickly detect a rapidly emerging increase in positive cases that will force us to return to fully remote instruction for the rest of the semester if we do not take immediate action to break the cycle.

    • Some students have ignored the Champaign-Urbana Public Health District (CUPHD) directives to isolate or quarantine, choosing to go out even knowing they are positive for the virus.
    • Some students who have tested positive are actively avoiding our contact tracers and some have repeatedly returned to testing facilities attempting to “test out” of their positive status, which is not permissible under CUPHD protocols.
    • Some students have made active efforts to circumvent the Safer Illinois app.
    • Over the weekend, we received 11 complaints about large gatherings inside fraternities and private houses.
    • Over the weekend, we responded to more than 100 party-related calls.

* Some disciplinary measures taken so far

• A student was issued an interim suspension for hosting a large party at his apartment on Friday.
• Another student was issued an interim suspension for violation of a quarantine order on Saturday.
• A student who posted a video on social media attempting to show people how to circumvent the Safer Illinois app is facing discipline.
• The Pi Kappa Phi fraternity has been placed on interim suspension after another large party this weekend.
• Approximately 100 additional students and organizations are facing disciplinary action for their behavior over the weekend.

************************************************************************************************




Increased undergraduate enforcement of COVID-19 safety guidelines

September 2, 2020 1:02 PM

Dear Colleagues,

Recent unacceptable behavior by a small number of students has resulted in some concerning increases in undergraduate COVID-19 positive cases. Real-time data from our Shield testing program allowed us to quickly detect this rapidly emerging trend and gives us the opportunity to act quickly to break that cycle.

For two weeks, starting now, we are intensifying our efforts to identify and swiftly remove those individuals who have created this unacceptable risk for our campus and community and who have undermined your hard work to stay together. Students who continue to violate our safety policies, who fail to comply with directions from our public health officials and who engage in unsafe activities that risk spreading the virus will be asked to leave this university.

Also, starting today at 5 p.m., for the next two weeks for their own protection, we expect all undergraduate students to limit their in-person interactions to only the most essential activities. These include things like taking twice weekly COVID-19 tests, attending class, purchasing groceries and food, going to work, engaging in individual outdoor activity, attending religious services and seeking medical attention.

We have seen the majority of our students respond voluntarily and positively this semester and we expect these temporary restrictions to be adopted. Fortunately, our Shield testing program identified this trend early, and there is no evidence of any spread from students to instructors or to the broader local community.

The full massmail we will send to undergraduate students in a few minutes is included below with details about what we expect them to do and more information about our increased focus on compliance and enforcement.

These actions will repair much of the damage a few irresponsible students have caused, and this should flatten the curve.

But, if this approach does not successfully reverse this upward trend, we will move quickly and decisively to transition the rest of the semester to fully remote instruction.

The choices of our students in the next two weeks will determine the rest of our semester.

Sincerely

Robert J. Jones
Chancellor
Andreas C. Cangellaris
Provost
Danita M. B. Young
Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs

Full Text of MASSMAIL Message to Undergraduate Students Today

Dear Students,

Over these past few days, the irresponsible actions of a small number of students have created the very real possibility of ending an in-person semester for all of us. Their poor choices have led to a concerning and rapid increase in the number of new undergraduate COVID-19 positive cases. We know the majority of you reading this message are following the university’s COVID-19 guidance, and we are grateful to all of you who have worked so hard to help by doing your part.

For two weeks, starting now, we are intensifying our efforts to identify and swiftly remove those individuals who have created this unacceptable risk for our campus and community and who have undermined your hard work to stay together. Students who continue to violate our safety policies, who fail to comply with directions from our public health officials and who engage in unsafe activities that risk spreading the virus will be asked to leave this university.

We believe the damage done by these individuals can be reversed. But it must be done quickly. And it will require those of you who have been working so hard this semester to shoulder even more responsibility in these next two weeks.

For two weeks, starting today at 5 p.m., for your own protection, we expect all undergraduate students to limit their in-person interactions to only the most essential activities. These include things like taking twice weekly COVID-19 tests, attending class, purchasing groceries and food, going to work, engaging in individual outdoor activity, attending religious services and seeking medical attention.

And here is the hardest part. We need you to strictly avoid social gatherings under any circumstances for these two weeks. We know what we are asking with this. Being together with friends is a big part of why you chose to come back. And for our freshmen, opening your college experience with the same isolation that ended your high school career is intensely disappointing.

It is not fair that you will be the ones to fix a situation you did not cause. But this is where we are now, and this is what it will take to repair the damage in time to break the cycle of increasing new cases. Two weeks now gives you the chance for the rest of the semester together.

Why Are We Doing This Now?

Real-time data from our Shield testing program allowed us to quickly detect a rapidly emerging increase in positive cases that will force us to return to fully remote instruction for the rest of the semester if we do not take immediate action to break the cycle.

  • Some students have ignored the Champaign-Urbana Public Health District (CUPHD) directives to isolate or quarantine, choosing to go out even knowing they are positive for the virus.
  • Some students who have tested positive are actively avoiding our contact tracers and some have repeatedly returned to testing facilities attempting to “test out” of their positive status, which is not permissible under CUPHD protocols.
  • Some students have made active efforts to circumvent the Safer Illinois app.
  • Over the weekend, we received 11 complaints about large gatherings inside fraternities and private houses.
  • Over the weekend, we responded to more than 100 party-related calls.

The university has identified more than 400 new positive cases since the first day of instruction, Aug. 24, and about twice as many individuals are currently in quarantine. The number of new cases we have seen in the past several days has been progressing at a rate that will double every seven days without the actions we are asking of you.

Discipline for Non-Compliance & Dangerous Behavior

For the first week of classes, we focused on education, but now we are focusing on the individuals who are endangering everyone in our community. Here are some of the actions already taken to address these issues:

  • A student was issued an interim suspension for hosting a large party at his apartment on Friday.
  • Another student was issued an interim suspension for violation of a quarantine order on Saturday.
  • A student who posted a video on social media attempting to show people how to circumvent the Safer Illinois app is facing discipline.
  • The Pi Kappa Phi fraternity has been placed on interim suspension after another large party this weekend.
  • Approximately 100 additional students and organizations are facing disciplinary action for their behavior over the weekend.

These violations are unacceptable, and as we identify more individuals who are being irresponsible, they should be prepared to interrupt their studies and leave campus. Students who do not comply with campus COVID-19 rules or who fail to follow any instructions from Champaign-Urbana Public Health District will face immediate suspension.

The Office of the Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs has substantially increased staffing to monitor large gatherings, parties and other unacceptable activities in University Housing and throughout the Campustown area. In addition to possible city fines, party hosts will also be subject to immediate suspension. That office is also working in collaboration with CUPHD to more quickly identify and contact undergraduate students who have tested positive or been in close contact with those who have. Students who refuse to comply with quarantine or isolation directions will face immediate suspension. Student Affairs has established this confidential web form to allow you to report unsafe activities or behavior. 

What we need you to do to help

  • If you receive a call from Champaign-Urbana Public Health District (beginning with a 217 or 312 area code), respond immediately and follow their guidance about quarantine and isolation. If you don’t, you will be in violation of state law, and you will be suspended from the university.
  • Limit your in-person activities only to essentials like twice weekly COVID-19 tests, attending class, purchasing groceries and food, going to work, engaging in individual outdoor activity, attending religious services and seeking medical attention.
  • Avoid traveling or attending large gatherings over the Labor Day weekend. Many of our positive cases these first two weeks were brought from communities without the level of testing we have.
  • Remember that in addition to university disciplinary action for violation of rules, you could also be subject to fines of up to $750 per day per violation of the COVID-19 related emergency orders from the cities of Urbana or Champaign.
  • If you see any non-compliance, please document the evidence and submit it through this web form. You can do so confidentially. If you see something, please let us know about it.

Please Follow the Rules

We are continually monitoring our total number of COVID-19 cases and positivity rates, and each act of non-compliance affects the trajectory of the Fall 2020 semester.

We have created the most extensive testing process of any university in the country. We have extensively modeled to make the best science-driven decisions. We have invented a new COVID-19 test. We’ve created a new app to ensure building access and academic standing are linked to testing compliance. Seven teams have worked since the spring to do everything we could possibly think of to make your Illinois experience as normal as possible.

We’ve given ourselves a real chance to come together and to stay together.

But the decision to do so is in your hands.

We stay together. Or we go home.

It comes down to these next two weeks.

It is up to you.

Sincerely,

Robert J. Jones
Chancellor
Andreas C. Cangellaris
Provost
Danita M. B. Young
Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs
Ali Mirza
Student Member, University of Illinois Board of Trustees
Alexis Perezchica
Student Body President

September 2: 2128 New COVID 19 Cases in Illinois


27 additional fatalities in Illinois.  Boone County has 7 new COVID-19 cases.

September 2: Johns Hopkins COVID 19 Report



COVID-19


Updates on the emerging novel coronavirus pandemic from the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security.

The Center for Health Security is analyzing and providing updates on the COVID-19 pandemic. If you would like to receive these updates, please subscribe below and select COVID-19. Additional resources are also available on our website.


The Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security also produces US Travel Industry and Retail Supply Chain Updates that provide a summary of major issues and events impacting the US travel industry and retail supply chain. You can access them here.

EPI UPDATE The WHO COVID-19 Dashboard reports 25.60 million cases (245,984 new) and 852,758 deaths (4,355 new) as of 10:00am EDT on September 2.

UNITED STATES

The US CDC reported 6.00 million total cases (32,087 new) and 183,050 deaths (428 new). From the first case reported in the US on January 22, it took 98 days to reach 1 million cases. From there:

1 million to 2 million: 44 days

2 million to 3 million: 27 days

3 million to 4 million: 14 days

4 million to 5 million: 18 days

5 million to 6 million: 21 days

In total, 19 states (no change) are reporting more than 100,000 cases, including California with more than 700,000 cases; Florida and Texas with more than 600,000; New York with more than 400,000; and Arizona, Georgia, and Illinois with more than 200,000.

COVID-19 case fatality in the US has been declining since its peak (approximately 6%) in mid-May, but it is beginning to level off. Case fatality at the national level appears to be settling in at approximately 3%, but the ratio varies considerably from state to state. According to data compiled on the COVID Exit Strategy website, the states affected early in the US epidemic are reporting* elevated case fatality ratios, including Connecticut (8.4%), New Jersey (8.3%), Massachusetts (7.0%), Michigan (6.0%), New Hampshire (5.9%), New York (5.8%), and Pennsylvania (5.7%). This is largely driven by the early patient surge and associated impact on local health systems, under-reporting of cases due to an absence or dearth of testing early in the epidemic, and improved clinical care for COVID-19 patients over the past several months. While these states have largely brought their epidemics under control (at least relative to the early peak), their respective case fatality ratios are weighted heavily by those initial patients.

States that were severely affected during the summer resurgence—including Arizona (2.5%), California (1.8%), Florida (1.8%), and Texas (2.1%)—have fared much better in terms of case fatality; however, they had the advantage of advanced warning that provided additional time to improve preparedness and acquire necessary resources (eg, PPE, ventilators) as well as increased testing capacity, which identified many more cases than early in the pandemic. Additionally, the summer resurgence was spread across a larger geographic area, which mitigated to some extent the patient surge on individual health systems. A number of states remain at or below 1% case fatality, including Alaska, Hawai’i, North Dakota, and Utah.

*Unlike many of the trends we monitor, case fatality is typically analyzed cumulatively (ie, based on all the cases and deaths to date) rather than on a daily basis or moving average, so it represents the overall trajectory of the epidemic more so than current conditions.

Several US territories continue to report high per capita daily incidence. Guam is reporting 392 daily cases per million population, which would be #1 globally. Guam’s per capita daily incidence decreased from its high of 446 (August 31), but it remains elevated. The US Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico are both reporting decreasing daily incidence over the past week or so. Both would have fallen out of the global top 10, but they remain elevated compared to the US national average.

The Johns Hopkins CSSE dashboard reported 6.09 million US cases and 184,974 deaths as of 12:30pm EDT on September 2.

VACCINE DISTRIBUTION PLANS The US government is partnering with 4 states—California, Florida, Minnesota, and North Dakota—and Philadelphia to draft plans to distribute and administer COVID-19 vaccines. State and local governments already have plans to distribute and dispense or administer MCMs, including vaccines, for other scenarios like pandemic influenza and deliberate biological attacks; however, a mass vaccination effort on a nationwide scale would likely exceed the volume possible under existing plans. The new plans include provisions to establish mass vaccination sites (eg, points of dispensing [PODs]) due to the potential that an approved vaccine may need to remain frozen, which would require large vaccine freezers that could preclude some local healthcare providers from storing and administering the vaccine. In addition to distribution and dispensing plans, the 4 states and Philadelphia must also determine their approach to identifying and vaccinating high-risk and other priority populations (eg, healthcare workers, other essential workers) early in the campaign, when supply will be limited.

DRAFT COVID-19 VACCINE ALLOCATION FRAMEWORK Researchers at the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM) published a draft framework to support efforts to equitably allocate limited supply of COVID-19 vaccine once it becomes available. It is expected that the initial production capacity of any COVID-19 vaccine will be insufficient to provide it broadly to the public all at once. Production will scale up over time, but the initial doses will need to be prioritized to specific populations until enough is available to expand access to everyone. The committee considered a variety of challenges and factors in its analysis, including health disparities, characteristics of prospective vaccines, and geographic distribution of the US epidemic. The framework outlines considerations for identifying the initial, first tier priority populations as well as the process for expanding access to subsequent tiers as production capacity increases. The committee also included analysis of historical mass vaccination campaigns, various ethical principles and frameworks—including those proposed by other organizations, such as the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security—and practical and political limitations in their effort to develop the framework.

The framework includes 4 phases, with priority access for “high risk workers in health care facilities” and first responders in Phase 1a and individuals at the highest risk for infection and severe disease or death—eg, older individuals living in congregate settings and those with serious underlying health conditions—in Phase 1b. Phase 2 would expand access to other higher-risk essential workers, all older adults, those with less severe comorbidities, and individuals living in other congregate settings (eg, incarcerated populations, homeless shelters). Phase 3 would open access to the remaining essential workers, young adults, and children. Finally, Phase 4 would provide access broadly to remaining portions of the public.

NASEM held a “public listening session” earlier today, which provided the opportunity for the public to comment on the proposed draft, and it is also offering an open comment period—September 1-4—for written feedback.

TESTING As the US approaches influenza season, rapid and reliable SARS-CoV-2 testing remains vital for the next phase of the pandemic response. Despite the existence of several authorized PCR-based diagnostic tests, there are still significant delays in testing in some parts of the country, and increased routine testing capacity is needed to ensure adequate coverage of the US population. The Rockefeller Foundation COVID-19 Testing Solutions Group recommended that the US be capable of conducting 30 million diagnostic tests per week by October—a combination of 5 million PCR-based tests and 25 million rapid antigen tests. Last week, the US conducted approximately 4.7 million tests, falling well short of this recommendation.

While continued investment in rapid tests aims to supplement existing diagnostic testing capacity, private testing companies are still struggling to keep pace with demand. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis ordered state agencies to “sever their...testing relationships with Quest [Diagnostics] effective immediately," following the release of delayed results from nearly 75,000 SARS-CoV-2 tests, some of which dated back to April. Among these results were more than 7,500 positive tests. Quest apologized for the delay, citing a technical error, and stated that it provided timely results to patients and healthcare providers, just not to the Florida Department of Health. Florida will now have to identify alternative testing solutions, as Quest was responsible for approximately 30% of the state’s total SARS-CoV-2 testing volume.

INDIGENOUS POPULATIONS A study published in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) found that American Indians and Alaskan Natives (AI/AN) are disproportionately affected by COVID-19 compared to White Americans. Previously published data indicate that racial and ethnic minorities are at elevated risk for both infection and severe COVID-19 disease and death. Based on race/ethnicity data and laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 incidence from 23 states, the study found that COVID-19 incidence was 3.5 times higher in AI/AN populations than in non-Hispanic White populations. On a per capita basis, the COVID-19 incidence in AI/AN populations was 594 per 100,000 population, compared to only 169 in White populations. Additionally, AI/AN COVID-19 cases tended to be younger than White COVID-19 cases.

Long-standing racial and ethnic disparities, elevated prevalence of underlying health conditions, and inadequate access to infrastructure (eg, electricity, running water) and health services contribute to the disproportionate effect of COVID-19 on AI/AN populations. The researchers argue that public health agencies and programs must adapt data collection on race and ethnicity, including the use of culturally appropriate interview questions and data collection methods, in order to better account for AI/AN populations in COVID-19 data. Misclassification of individuals into other racial/ethnic groups is common among AI/AN populations, which complicates efforts to implement targeted interventions. The researchers also state that the US government should do more to provide culturally appropriate access to healthcare and public health services for high-risk and vulnerable racial and ethnic communities.

US SCHOOLS

K-12

Schools are continuing to adapt to changing plans to start their school year. New York City schools delayed the start of in-person classes from September 10 to September 21, citing the need to increase time for teachers to prepare. Teachers will return on August 8, as previously planned, but the delayed start will provide additional time to prepare for blended/hybrid classes—involving both remote and in-person learning. In New Jersey, some local school districts are rapidly developing and implementing plans to conduct classes remotely, following an announcement in mid-August that schools statewide would be permitted to conduct online-only instruction, a major shift in the statewide plan that previously required all schools to offer in-person instruction. Once some school districts made the decision to start the school year with online instruction, many others followed, creating a “cascade” of pressure on schools to institute remote learning options on short notice.

One of the principal concerns about resuming in-person school is the increased risk to adults—including teachers, parents, and the broader community—not necessarily the students themselves. An article published in the Annals of Internal Medicine discusses the COVID-19 risk among teachers and adults living with school-aged children stemming from students returning to school. Based on data collected through the National Health Interview Survey, the researchers estimate that 40 million US adults who live or work with children have “definite or possible risk factors” for COVID-19. The researchers also estimate that an additional 4.4 million non-teachers who work at schools and 1.6 million daycare employees would also be at elevated risk for severe COVID-19 disease or death.

COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES

As US colleges and universities resume classes, many students are returning to campus, whether they are participating in in-person classes or not. Schools are implementing a variety of protective measures, including testing programs, in order to identify and respond to cases of COVID-19 among students and staff. Several large schools have reported high COVID-19 incidence in the early weeks of class, and there have been a number of high-profile examples of students gathering on or near campus. School officials continue to point the finger at students for not adhering to recommended or required social distancing measures, but some students are pushing back, arguing that schools are not doing enough to protect them. As more COVID-19 cases are reported on campus, many schools have updated or adapted their plans to increase the use of remote learning or restrict in-person activities, including classes and other campus events. Following previous decisions to suspend in-person classes, some schools have announced that they intend to resume in-person learning, following efforts to contain transmission identified early in the school year.

The University of Alabama’s main campus in Tuscaloosa has reported more than 1,000 cases among students (and an additional 82 among staff) since August 18—which does not include 310 cases identified during the “student entry testing.” The University of Iowa has reported 922 cases among students and 13 among staff since the start of the semester. The New York Times college and university dashboard shows more than 26,000 COVID-19 cases associated with schools nationwide. This total includes all cases since the onset of the pandemic; however, colleges and universities have reported more than 20,000 cases since the end of July. The New York Times also publishes a list of the cities currently reporting the highest per capita incidence (over the past 2 weeks), and notably, many of the top 20 cities are home to major colleges and universities, including Ames and Iowa City, Iowa (Iowa State and University of Iowa, respectively); Auburn-Opelika and Tuscaloosa, Alabama (Auburn University and University of Alabama, respectively); Pullman, Washington (Washington State University); Oxford, Mississippi (University of Mississippi [Ole Miss]); and Columbia, Missouri (University of Missouri). Many of these schools only resumed classes in the past several weeks, so many of the detected cases were likely infected prior to arriving on campus. It will be critical to monitor incidence over the coming weeks in order to better characterize the scale of transmission on campus.

The University of Arizona reportedly identified an emerging COVID-19 outbreak in one of its dormitories by monitoring the sewage system. The university implemented the wastewater monitoring program in an effort to provide early warning of COVID-19 cases on campus. Last week, the system yielded positive tests from one of the campus dormitories, and the university followed up with diagnostic testing for students living there, which identified 2 COVID-19 cases. Both students were placed in isolation, and health officials are conducting contact tracing efforts. Students in the dormitory are also undergoing “periodic” testing. The sewage monitoring system supplements the university’s “Test, Trace, Treat” plan, and it aims to enable university officials to implement containment measures, such as isolation and quarantine, before the first cases even become symptomatic. The University of Arizona has implemented a myriad of other protective measures, including mandatory mask use on campus, and it is implementing a phased system for relaxing COVID-19 restrictions. The university also offers a smartphone application (voluntary participation) that can provide notifications for students and staff who may have been exposed to an infectious individual. Other colleges and universities across the country are implementing similar efforts to test wastewater and offer smartphone applications to support campus outbreak response.

NURSE SURVEY The American Nurses Association (ANA) published the results from a recent nationwide survey of nurses. The study surveyed more than 21,000 nurses—between July 24 and August 14—about PPE use, supply shortages, and decontamination practices in the context of the ongoing COVID-19 response. The survey was distributed to nurses working in various healthcare settings across the US, including hospitals and long-term care facilities. Approximately one-third of nurses reported that they are “out” or “short” of N95 respirators, and 58% stated that they are required to reuse their N95 respirators for more than 5 days. Additionally, 62% of respondents reported feeling unsafe reusing the respirators, and 55% felt unsafe using decontaminated respirators. ANA President Dr. Ernest Grant emphasized that the “re-use and decontamination of single-use PPE as the ‘new normal’ is unacceptable.” The ANA renewed its calls for immediate federal action, including increased use of the Defense Production Act and passing new legislation, to better protect nurses against workplace transmission of SARS-CoV-2.

COVID-19 MORTALITY A number of social media posts, including on Facebook and Twitter, are claiming that the CDC “quietly” corrected its COVID-19 mortality data to remove 94% of the reported deaths. This is factually inaccurate, and we want to provide some quick clarification to correct this misinformation.

The posts refer to provisional COVID-19 mortality data published by the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics, which states in its August 26 update that 6% of the “deaths involving...COVID-19” have COVID-19 listed as the only cause of death. These data come from death certificates, which may list multiple conditions as causing or contributing to death. These conditions could include those resulting directly from COVID-19 (eg, respiratory failure) or underlying health conditions that compound the effects of COVID-19 (eg, heart disease).

Assigning a cause of death is complicated, because death is often not attributable to a single, definitive cause. Doctors and medical examiners must judge, based on their expertise, the degree to which various conditions contributed to a patient’s death. It is well understood that numerous underlying health conditions—including heart disease, diabetes, and respiratory conditions—increase the risk of severe COVID-19 disease and death, so it is likely that these conditions would be included on death certificates along with COVID-19. A patient who tests positive for SARS-CoV-2 but dies of a completely unrelated cause (eg, trauma) should not be listed as a COVID-19 death, but a patient that dies due to complications of COVID-19, whether pre-existing comorbidities or conditions caused by COVID-19 itself, will likely have other conditions listed on the death certificate in addition to COVID-19. COVID-19 deaths are not limited to only those caused (or reported as being caused) solely by COVID-19.

RACE & CLINICAL TRIALS A commentary published in The New England Journal of Medicine highlights the importance of increasing the inclusion of racial and ethnic minority participants in clinical trials for COVID-19 drugs. The authors note that data from completed or ongoing trials indicate that racial and ethnic minorities are underrepresented in the study population, particularly considering the disproportionate incidence and disease severity among these populations. Notably, the studies they cite either have not yet published “outcome data according to sex or gender, race, and ethnicity” or did not include sufficient racial and ethnic minority participants to yield statistically significant results among these groups. As more candidate drugs, both treatments and vaccines, enter advanced phase clinical trials, it is critical to ensure appropriate diversity among trial participants, both to promote equitable access and to obtain the data necessary to fully characterize the drugs’ effects across all races and ethnicities, particularly those at the highest risk for infection and severe disease or death.