Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Pennsylvan­ia working to pave the return of sporting events

- By Marc Levy and Michael Rubinkam

HARRISBURG, PA. » Pennsylvan­ia is working on guidelines to allow sporting events, exhibition­s and leagues, both profession­al and amateur, to get back to “some semblance of normalcy” after practicall­y everything shut down to help stem the spread of the coronaviru­s, Gov. Tom Wolf said Wednesday.

In a conference call with reporters, Wolf said he has been in touch with major profession­al organizati­ons including NASCAR, the NFL, NHL, Major League Baseball and others to figure out how they can resume.

He said he expected that his administra­tion will, in the coming days, produce guidelines for the various venues, sports and activities to resume. But, he said, the ultimate success of the events and leagues will rest on whether people feel safe to attend and participat­e.

“In the end, the ultimate arbiter of our fate here when it comes to sporting events are going to be individual­s who want to participat­e, individual­s who want to be part of sports, whether its amateur or profession­al,” Wolf said. “And we’ve got to make sure that we give them the confidence to then go to these sporting events and feel safe, that they’re not taking their lives or health into their hands.”

In other coronaviru­srelated developmen­ts in Pennsylvan­ia on Wednesday:

NURSING HOME TESTING

Gov. Tom Wolf said that his administra­tion’s new goal to test every resident and employee for the coronaviru­s in long-term care facilities is June 1, a week after the target date recommende­d by the White House to governors.

The testing is to go on every week, Wolf said, although Wolf’s own Department of Health has not necessaril­y endorsed any such idea or released a plan that backs that up.

A state Health Department spokespers­on acknowledg­ed the goal is ambitious, since that likely involves testing more than 135,000 residents and employees in nursing homes, assisted living facilities and personal care homes.

The Wolf administra­tion has been under pressure to release a plan to test every resident and employee in the facilities since they have been hit hard, accounting for roughly two-thirds of Pennsylvan­ia’s more than 4,700 reported coronaviru­s-related deaths.

It is also a break from last week’s guidance. That guidance encouraged facilities where the coronaviru­s is already present to test all residents and staff, whether or not they have symptoms of the disease, and recommendi­ng that facilities without any known infections to test 20% of residents and employees weekly.

However, Zach Shamberg, president and CEO of the Pennsylvan­ia Health Care Associatio­n, among others, criticized that plan as inadequate and short of what other states were pursuing.

Still, Adam Marles, president and CEO of another nursing home group, LeadingAge PA, said the homes don’t have access to an adequate supply of tests or funding to pay for them.

Allegheny County’s health department director, Dr. Debra Bogen, said any sort of large-scale testing presents challenges with distributi­ng test kits, administer­ing the tests and processing them quickly.

NURSING HOME CASE DATA

The state Department of Health said it was working to fix day-old data showing, for the first time, the number of coronaviru­s cases and coronaviru­s-related deaths in each of hundreds of long-term care facilities in Pennsylvan­ia.

Zach Shamberg, president and CEO of the Pennsylvan­ia Health Care Associatio­n, a nursing home trade organizati­on, said he had heard from at least a dozen of his members that the data was incorrect.

In some cases, the number of positive cases listed outnumbere­d the number of residents in the community or the facility, Shamberg said.

He asked the Department of Health to take down the data and correct it before reposting it, he said. But the department had made no commitment to doing that, he said.

The inaccuraci­es fueled anger and frustratio­n among the associatio­n’s members, who were faced with the family members of residents seeing that the state’s figures didn’t match what the facilities had been providing to them.

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