The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

House puts Kemp on hot seat over COVID-19

- By Helena Oliviero | Helena.Oliviero@ajc.com Staff writers James Salzer, J. Scott Trubey, Greg Bluestein and Kelly Yamanouchi contribute­d to this article. The New York Times also contribute­d to this article.

The chairman of a U.S. House coronaviru­s subcommitt­ee sent Gov. Brian Kemp a letter saying Georgia is not in compliance with White House COVID-19 task force recommenda­tions and requesting the state’s detailed plans for dealing with the pandemic.

U.S. Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., said Georgia is not following at least six recommenda­tions from the task force, including mask mandates, strict limits on indoor dining and tighter restrictio­ns on social gatherings.

“I am writing to request informatio­n about the private guidance the administra­tion has provided to Georgia and whether you plan to implement those recommenda­tions and take other critical action to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s across the state,” Clyburn wrote. “Although the task force has apparently provided Georgia with private suggestion­s

concerning publicheal­th measures designed to stop the spread of the virus, the state has not implemente­d many of these recommenda­tions — and instead appears to be following the contradict­ory messaging coming from the administra­tion.”

The state’s COVID-19 case count has soared for weeks, and serious cases and deaths have spiked, too, reaching levels not seen even this spring.

Here’s a look at other major developmen­ts related to the coronaviru­s:

Some areas running out ICU beds

All ICU beds in the Athens region’s 12 counties have been full since Friday, according to state figures. In south central Georgia, the state shows

Tift Regional Medical Center’s nine-county region also extremely low on beds.

The surge in coronaviru­s cases has some hospitals treating emergency patients in hallways, waiting rooms and idle ambulances.

During the coming days, the state expects to launch a coordinati­ng center based at Grady Memorial Hospital, which will monitor patient capacity and patient overflows and act as a sort of air traffic control in shifting or diverting patients,

said Cody Hall, a spokesman for Gov. Brian Kemp. The state has budgeted $1.2 million for the new coordinati­ng center. The state also is close to reopening a temporary hospital with perhaps 120 beds for noncritica­l coronaviru­s patients, set up inside the Georgia World Congress Center. An overflow facility is also in the works in Milledgevi­lle. The state has also contracted with Piedmont Healthcare for as many as 90 overflow beds at

the Buckhead campus.

Delta adds flights but fewer than planned

Delta Air Lines plans to resume flights from Atlanta to Tokyo, Sao Paulo, Munich and Dublin in August, amid a gradual recovery tempered by the resurgence of the coronaviru­s.

The Atlanta-based airline says it now plans to add 700 flights to its worldwide schedule in August, growing to a total of 3,000 daily departures.

That includes both domestic and internatio­nal flights.

But the carrier’s recovery has been choppy, and in recent months it has added some flights to the schedule only to remove them later amid varying travel restrictio­ns and travelers opting to stay home.

Previously, Delta planned to add 1,000 flights to its schedule in August, but as the virus spread, the company said it may instead add half that many.

Herman Cain dies of COVID-19

Herman Cain — millionair­e business executive, political lobbyist, broadcaste­r, motivation­al speaker and presidenti­al candidate — died of COVID-19. He was 74. Cain, a Henry County resident, had been hospitaliz­ed since July 1 after traveling to multiple places in June, including a rally for his close ally President Donald Trump in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on June 20.

Major vaccine study gets underway

The first large U.S. study of safety and effectiven­ess of a coronaviru­s vaccine began Monday morning, according to the National Institutes of Health and biotech company Moderna, which collaborat­ed on the developmen­t of the vaccine.

A volunteer in Savannah received the first shot at 6:45 a.m., according to Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

The study, a Phase 3 clinical trial, will enroll 30,000 healthy people at about 90 sites around the country this summer.

 ?? MATT KEMPNER / MATTHEW.KEMPNER@AJC.COM ?? Publix stores are among major retailers in metro Atlanta that have recently set requiremen­ts for customers to wear masks in stores.
MATT KEMPNER / MATTHEW.KEMPNER@AJC.COM Publix stores are among major retailers in metro Atlanta that have recently set requiremen­ts for customers to wear masks in stores.
 ??  ?? Herman Cain
Herman Cain

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