Sentinel & Enterprise

Baker delivers for people of color

Announces Commonweal­th Places grants

- Ly Jon winkler jwinkler@nashobaval­leyvoice.com

LOwRLL » With the coronaviru­s pandemic in its sixth month and the nationwide death toll now over 200,000, Gov. Charlie Baker is not backing down on providing testing and advisories.

Baker held a press conference at Mill City BBQ & Brew in Kearney Square to offer informatio­n on two different grant programs and new informatio­n related to the state’s handling of the virus.

One of those two programs is a $650,000 effort meant to help organizati­ons that are assisting people of color in multiple towns. Baker said that the funds

will support public awareness and targeted community interventi­on efforts in coordinati­on with state community interventi­on teams.

“These funds will be used to remind people about mask-wearing, social distancing and other steps that they can take in their community to help stop the spread,” Baker added.

It will also support training and messaging on COVID-19 prevention for people who provide inhome services like meals assistance and wellness checks,” he said.

Those interested in applying for the program can go to www.hria.org/macovidcom­munitygran­ts for more informatio­n.

Baker’s announceme­nt came after he detailed new COVID-related data.

He said the state is still a national leader in testing for the virus thanks to its Stop the Spread testing program, which is being implemente­d in 18 communitie­s, including Lowell.

He said the Massachuse­tts Department of Public Health reported 10,000 people were tested on Tuesday, with 143 of those

people testing positive for the virus.

As of Tuesday, the department has reported a total of 125,866 confirmed cases of the virus. Baker announced that Stop the Spread will be extended through the end of October in towns including Chelsea, Fall River, Methuen and Worcester.

“These statewide numbers indicate that Massachuse­tts continues to make progress in containing COVID,” Baker added.

Baker also talked about instances of upticks in cases in communitie­s and how they’re usually tied to a particular event, like an outbreak in a nursing home or a private gathering. He noted how in those

instances, contact tracing usually identifies the inciting event and how people quarantine to bring COVID numbers back down. With that in mind, Baker concluded that local government­s need to look at three weeks of data and determine if there is a trend before making decisions about reopening locations.

“We don’t parse the data,” Baker said. “We just put the numbers out as they are and then we work with our colleagues in local government to make decisions and determinat­ions with respect to what it is that creates the bump up or the bump down. If you look at the data week over week over week, there are a lot of communitie­s that

bounce around.”

Baker believes this method also applies to communitie­s bringing kids back to school for in-person learning sessions, a timely talking point after state Education Commission­er Jeffrey Riley wrote a letter last week to officials in 16 school districts.

The letter was issued to districts that have so far offered remote-only learning options for the school year, asking for informatio­n on when those districts plan to start in-person classes again.

Those districts are Amesbury, Bourne, Boxford, East Longmeadow, Gardner, Pittsfield, Provinceto­wn, West Springfiel­d, Berkshire Arts and Technology Charter Public, Hoosac Valley Regional, Gill-Montague, Mohawk Trail, Mohawk Trail/Hawlemont, Manchester Essex Regional, Belmont and Watertown.

Baker noted those 16 districts and how public health data supported a return to in-person learning in those schools. He also mentioned the letter sent out to those district and its requiremen­t of a response within 10 days. Depending on the response provided by the districts, Baker added that the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education can pursue an audit.

 ?? CRAIG F. WALKER/GLOBE STAFF, POOL ?? Gov. Charlie Baker listens to African Community Center of Lowell Founder & Executive Director Gordon Halm speak about Commonweal­th Places Grants at Mill City BBQ and Brew in Lowell on Wednesday.
CRAIG F. WALKER/GLOBE STAFF, POOL Gov. Charlie Baker listens to African Community Center of Lowell Founder & Executive Director Gordon Halm speak about Commonweal­th Places Grants at Mill City BBQ and Brew in Lowell on Wednesday.

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