Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Give us the real virus numbers, governor

- Editorials are the opinion of the Sun Sentinel Editorial Board and written by one of its members or a designee. The Editorial Board consists of Editorial Page Editor Rosemary O’Hara, Dan Sweeney, Steve Bousquet and Editor-in-Chief Julie Anderson.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis continues to set new lows for ir responsibi­lity regarding the C OVID19 pandemic.

Twoweeks ago, the mask-less governor high-five dot her bare faced Republican sat a rally for President Trump in Sanford. Nice role model. “We’re not going to let them shut down our country,” DeSantis said, apparently referring to Democrats, whohave made no such threat.

Then De Santis argued against quarantine­s for students exposed to the virus. His comment contradict­ed guidance fromthe Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organizati­on that anyone who comes within six feet of someone with the virus formore than 15 minutes should quarantine for twoweeks.

The governor wants the benefit of the doubt on virus-related issues, but he doesn’t deserve it. He hasn’t led the state effectivel­y.

In May, DeSantis reopened the state too soon. New cases spiked to the pointwhere Florida set a national one-day record. Amonth ago, De Santis moved the state into Phase 3 opening against the recommenda­tion of public health experts. He also prohibited cities and counties from enforcing mask mandates on individual­s.

Predictabl­y, cases are rising again. On Tuesday, Palm Beach County’ s emergency management director said the county is in a “resurgence” of the virus. Six of the county’s 13 metrics– among them the positive test rate, hospital admissions and deaths – have gone from green to red.

Andas the Sun Sentinel reported, the number of COVID19 deaths in Florida– roughly 16,505– could be undercount­ed by 25%, based on a new CDC study.

Faced with number she doesn’ t like but can’t control, DeSantis seems prepared to hide or rig the numbers. Thatwould be his most ir responsibl­e move yet.

Whenthe Orlando Sentinel this month wanted a report from the White House Corona virus Task Force that spoke of “early warning signs” for Florida, the DeSantis administra­tion refused. The paper had to hire lawyers to get the report.

With numbers rising, the governor also may shift from daily reports to weekly updates. Compiling those daily counts takes a lot of staff time, the governor’s apologist told an Orlando television station. “Informatio­n won’t change,” hesaid.

Such a move would be about optics and politics, not public health. Potential outbreaks require quick responses. But we’re in the last days of voting, and every bad number makes De San tis– and thus President Trump–look badas Trump tries to claim that Florida is “rounding the corner.”

Then there’s the informatio­n itself.

For months, Florida compiled COVID-19 deaths by using reports from county medical examiners. Nowthe informatio­n will come from doctors who treated patients.

Florida Surgeon General Scott

Rivkees said the change will relieve overburden­ed medical examiners. It also could affect the total. Rivkees said he became concerned when reports began arriving two months after a death.

Rivkees, though, hardly has been seen in public since April. His isolation began after he opined that Floridians might have to wear mask sand social distance for a year.

It would be helpful if Rivkees’ reappearan­ce aligned with anew attitude on the virus. Instead, he seems more like part of an attempt to question the numbers.

House Speaker Jose Oliva, R-Miami, offered his own criticism of the death totals. He referred to the “loosening of process and fidelity to establishe­d normsin classifica­tion.” Oliva added, “Our leaders cannot build upon the soft-footing of compromise­d data .”

We agree with that last part. But DeSantis has been the one comprising on the data. To review:

The governor long refused to release data on COVID-19 cases at individual nursing homes. He also fought the release of data that shows the number of people currently hospitaliz­ed with the virus. And the woman who created the state’s COVID-19 dashboard said De San tis administra­tion officials told her to manipulate the data to justify the first reopening in May.

DeSantis then forced out Rebekah Jones, whohas filed a whistle-blower lawsuit. She told London’s Guardian newspaper that when it comes to Florida and the virus, “They’re not listening to the scientists.”

After sevenmonth­s, you would think that the DeSantis administra­tion at leastwould be able to supply regular, credible informatio­n. But researcher­s at Johns Hopkins University contend that Florida is misleading on such metrics as the positive test rate.

As always, DeSantis talks past badnews. “Yes, weneed tomitigate the effects of this disease,” he told reporters. “But this virus is not theendof all health issues. Health is about peoples’ physical, mental, emotional, social well-being.

“Somitigati­ng one virus needs to be done, but it shouldn’t be done to the exclusion of anything else involving peoples’well-being. . .You’ve gotta look at the whole enchilada in terms of health.”

As always, DeSantis misses the point. Containing the virus will help all those ingredient­s in “the whole enchilada.” It also will bolster the economy.

But DeSantis’ priority has been to present an image of recovery that will help Trump. Whoever wins the election, though, Florida will be dealing with the virus. Irresponsi­bility only will bring more pain.

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