Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump dismisses Texas’ virus case spike as El Paso surges

- By Acacia Coronado

President Donald Trump downplayed the toll of the coronaviru­s during Thursday’s final debate with Joe Biden, and specifical­ly mentioned tamping down the surge in Texas.

“There was a very big spike in Texas, it’s now gone,” Trump said.

But in El Paso, COVID-19 is the worst it’s been since the pandemic began.

Health officials in the El Paso area reported 969 new coronaviru­s cases Friday, leading to more than 10,000 active cases in the region as figures soared over the past week to record highs. Hospitaliz­ations increased by 107 over Thursday, bringing the total to 678 total, with 195 of those people in intensive care.

At least 571 people there have died since the pandemic began.

Local officials have tightened virus restrictio­ns, cutting back capacity at nonessenti­al businesses to 50 percent, stopping visitation­s at facilities that care for the elderly, and banning home gatherings — the first major county in Texas to scale back since Gov. Greg Abbott loosened rules in September.

The virus is taking a toll on the mostly Hispanic area in more ways than one, according to Salvador Perches, CEO of Perches Funeral Homes, which does business in El Paso and neighborin­g Juárez, Mexico.

Families are asking for bodies to be transferre­d across the border as the death tolls rise in the U.S. and Mexico, Perches added, noting that he has added a refrigerat­ion unit inside one of his chapels to accommodat­e the growing number of bodies.

Over the last two to three weeks, Perches said he has seen an increase in requests for funeral services, not only due to COVID-19 deaths, but also untreated health conditions and suicides because of depression from isolation and job loss.

“People can’t celebrate their loves ones, we can’t mourn,” Perches said.

Dr. Hector Ocaranza, the city and county health authority, called the situation critical.

An additional 500 medical personnel plus medical equipment sent by Abbott helps, but he said it is necessary for El Paso residents to “realize we are in a dire situation” and take personal responsibi­lity to stop the spread.

“The spike in El Paso has continued,” Ocaranza said, noting that other Texas metropolit­an areas aren’t seeing the same surge. “El Paso, we are in a different situation and we continue to see the rise.”

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