Chattanooga Times Free Press

Governor optimistic on Georgia’s fight against coronaviru­s

- BY JEFF AMY

ATLANTA — Gov. Brian Kemp says Georgia is headed in the right direction in its effort to contain the COVID-19 respirator­y illness, although others still point to areas of concern.

Kemp on Monday noted that the fewest ventilator­s were in use and the fewest patients confirmed to be positive for the coronaviru­s were in Georgia hospitals since the state began keeping those statistics on April 8. The number of hospitaliz­ed patients fell again Tuesday to 1,125 statewide, while the number of ventilator­s in use ticked up to 884.

On Tuesday, Georgia was reporting more than 34,000 confirmed cases overall and 1,461 confirmed deaths from the virus.

Positive cases reported today reflect infections that occurred two weeks earlier, so Georgia may just now start seeing the impact of its decision to allow businesses to reopen, said Robert Bednarczyk, an epidemiolo­gist at the Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University.

The drop in the number of people in hospitals was good in case of another surge, “but it doesn’t necessaril­y mean that we’re out of the woods right now,” he said.

Concerns also remain about geographic hot spots and disproport­ionate harm to African Americans and Hispanics. The Morehouse School of Medicine on Tuesday released a study that found that, even when accounting for

difference­s in poverty, health insurance and population density, Georgia counties with higher shares of African American residents have higher shares of confirmed COVID-19 rates.

The Northeast Georgia Health System, a four-hospital group based in Gainesvill­e, continues to warn that it could exceed the capacity of its staff to care for patients next week. The hospital system’s overall patient numbers have held steady in recent days, but the share of ventilator­s in use rose to 44% of capacity Tuesday. The region has large numbers of Spanish-speaking residents concentrat­ed in poultry plants.

Santiago Marquez, president of the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce and a member of Gov. Brian Kemp’s coronaviru­s task force, told The Valdosta Daily Times that undocument­ed immigrants fear testing sites

staffed in part by National Guard members.

“I don’t think we have a good handle on how many Hispanics actually are infected as we do with the general community,” Marquez said.

Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr on Tuesday issued a letter to Congress signed by 20 other Republican attorneys general calling for lawsuit protection­s to cover businesses, manufactur­ers of personal protective equipment, emergency workers, healthcare

workers, healthcare facilities, and members of law enforcemen­t.

Carr wrote that Congress and states should enact a “common-sense framework to provide liability protection­s for much-needed goods and services while still ensuring victims are able to seek legal redress and compensati­on where appropriat­e.”

Carr’s move came as businesses across the state continued to reopen. Tourist trolleys are running again in Savannah, but with 6 feet chained off between seats and reduced stops.

The YMCA of Metro Atlanta said it would reopen 19 of 24 facilities on a limited basis starting Friday.

Another business getting back to normal is the state lottery. Brad Bohannon, the Georgia Lottery Corp.’s vice president for government relations, told the state House Higher Education Committee Tuesday that lottery sales recovered in April after dropping in March.

“Most other forms of entertainm­ent were limited,” Bohannon said. “April sales rebounded really well.”

He said the lottery now estimates it will return more than $1.1 billion in profits to the state this year to finance college aid and preschool classes.

The state’s justice system remains frozen, though, after Chief Justice Harold Melton on Monday extended the statewide judicial emergency through June 12, barring jury trials and grand juries in most instances.

 ??  ?? Brian Kemp
Brian Kemp
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP ?? Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp wears a mask and urged fellow citizens to do the same on May 5 in Albany, Ga.
CURTIS COMPTON/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp wears a mask and urged fellow citizens to do the same on May 5 in Albany, Ga.

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