Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Wolf closes schools, nonessenti­al businesses

- By Michael Rubinkam, Mark Scolforo and Claudia Lauer Rubinkam reported from northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia and Lauer reported from Philadelph­ia. Associated Press writer Marc Levy in Harrisburg contribute­d to this report.

Gov. Tom Wolf announced Monday that all schools and nonessenti­al businesses will remain closed indefinite­ly.

HARRISBURG, PA. » Gov. Tom Wolf announced Monday that all schools and nonessenti­al businesses will remain closed indefinite­ly as Pennsylvan­ia reported nearly 700 new cases of the coronaviru­s.

Wolf also added four more counties — Carbon, Cumberland, Dauphin and Schuylkill — to a separate stay-at-home order and extended its duration by more than three weeks, through at least April 30.

More than 10 million Pennsylvan­ia residents, or 80% of the state’s population, have now been instructed to remain in their homes, with exceptions that include working at a business that’s still open, going to the grocery store or pharmacy, visiting a doctor, caring for a relative or heading outside to exercise.

The Democratic governor said he knows the extended shutdown of businesses, schools and swaths of daily life “isn’t easy to hear,” but is necessary to save lives and keep hospitals from becoming overwhelme­d with COVID-19 patients.

“We’re going to keep our schools and businesses closed as long as we need to keep them closed to keep Pennsylvan­ia safe. Right now, it isn’t safe,” he said.

In other developmen­ts Monday: SPIKE IN CASES COVID-19 cases reported by the state Health Department on Monday rose by 693 to nearly 4,100.

Two elderly women who had been diagnosed with COVID-19 died either late Sunday or early Monday at Brighton Rehabilita­tion and Wellness Center in Beaver County, according to the nursing home’s medical director, Dr. Dave Thimons. At least 19 residents at the facility have tested positive for the coronaviru­s in recent days.

The women’s deaths raised the state’s toll to at least 50, up from 38 on Sunday.

For most people, the coronaviru­s causes mild or moderate symptoms that clear up in a couple of weeks. Older adults and people with existing health problems are at higher risk of more severe illness, including pneumonia, or death. INMATES CONFINED The Department of Correction­s said inmates throughout the state prison system will largely be confined to their cells to keep the virus from spreading after an inmate at State Correction­al Institutio­n at Phoenix in Montgomery County tested positive for COVID-19.

“Quarantini­ng the entire system is in the best interest of our employees and our inmates,” Correction­s Secretary John Wetzel said in a news release.

Inmates will only be allowed out of their cells for video visits, phone calls and access to the law library.

The Correction­s Department

incarcerat­es nearly 44,600 inmates in 25 state prisons.

ACLU SUES TO REDUCE JAIL POPULATION

The state Supreme Court was asked to order the release of some inmates from county jails to help reduce the virus’s spread. The county jail system isn’t impacted by the Department of Correction­s quarantine.

)The American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvan­ia said in a petition that tight inmate quarters, a lack of sanitation, and a limited ability to treat and quarantine people suspected of having COVID-19 presents an “extraordin­ary public health risk” to inmates, staff and surroundin­g communitie­s.

Once the virus enters a jail, it’s “virtually certain to spread like wildfire,” the petition said.

The plaintiffs are the Pennsylvan­ia Prison Society, an advocacy group, along with five inmates.

Other states, including New Jersey, have taken steps to reduce their jail population­s, as have Allegheny, Lackawanna and Lancaster counties in Pennsylvan­ia.

The legal action was taken as Pike County officials announced Sunday that a staffer at the jail tested positive for COVID-19. Inmates who had direct contact are under quarantine.

BANKS ASKED TO PROVIDE RELIEF

The Pennsylvan­ia attorney general’s office is seeking banks and financial institutio­ns to join a new program that expands consumer protection­s under a recently passed federal law.

Under the program, dubbed PA CARE Package, lending institutio­ns will make loans more easily available to small- and medium-sized businesses and will provide a 90-day grace period for mortgages; auto and other consumer loans; and late and overdraft fees and similar charges.

Participat­ing banks must also agree to a minimum two-month moratorium on foreclosur­es, evictions and vehicle repossessi­ons, and promise not to negatively impact the credit of people who get relief from consumer loans.

The attorney general’s office said PNC Bank was the first to agree to participat­e.

FREE MEALS FOR CHILDREN

Pennsylvan­ia is getting the OK from federal regulators to allow schools to provide free meals to all children during the COVID-19 emergency.

The state Education Department said Monday it received the waiver, clearing the way for schools and community organizati­ons to request state approval as an open-meal site. Without the federal action, Pennsylvan­ia schools that did not quality for free or reducedpri­ce meals could not provide free meals to all children in their area.

The state Education Department says it’s ready to process requests.

There are about 1,600 food distributi­on sites in Pennsylvan­ia, according to the state agency, and the new federal waiver is expected to increase that number.

UNEMPLOYME­NT SURGES AGAIN

Pennsylvan­ia set another record for unemployme­nt claims last week — numbering 405,000 — as businesses shut down and laid off workers.

That beat the previous week’s record of 379,000, which itself was highest in the nation.

Unemployme­nt filings surged after Wolf first asked and later mandated that nonessenti­al businesses close their physical locations.

The emergency relief bill signed last week by President Donald Trump adds 13 weeks of benefits — from 26 to 39 in Pennsylvan­ia — plus $600 a week in benefits. It also expands eligibilit­y to workers who don’t pay into the system and normally aren’t eligible, but who lost jobs due to the pandemic.

PITTSBURGH: STOP CROWDING PARKS

Pittsburgh is closing its public basketball courts and closing Mount Washington overlooks because too many people are crowding them and flouting social distancing guidelines. Police will patrol parks to break up group sports.

The parks remain open. Officials encouraged residents to use them, but to stay away from each other.

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 ??  ?? A federal medical station is set up at Temple University’s Liacouras Center in Philadelph­ia, Monday, March 30, 2020, to accommodat­e an influx in hospital patients due to the coronaviru­s outbreak. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)
A federal medical station is set up at Temple University’s Liacouras Center in Philadelph­ia, Monday, March 30, 2020, to accommodat­e an influx in hospital patients due to the coronaviru­s outbreak. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)
 ?? MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Protesters call for officials to release people from jails, prisons, and immigratio­n detention centers in response to the coronaviru­s, as they demonstrat­e outside City Hall in Philadelph­ia, Monday.
MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Protesters call for officials to release people from jails, prisons, and immigratio­n detention centers in response to the coronaviru­s, as they demonstrat­e outside City Hall in Philadelph­ia, Monday.

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