The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Number of PA coronaviru­s cases tops 10,000; 136 deaths

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HARRISBURG, PA. » The Pennsylvan­ia Department of Health says the number of people who have tested positive for the coronaviru­s in the commonweal­th has topped 10,000 with another 34 deaths reported, bringing the statewide total to 136.

The department reported Saturday another 1,597 additional positive cases, bringing the statewide total to 10,017 across all but three of the commonweal­th’s 67 counties.

Officials say most patients hospitaliz­ed and most deaths have occurred in patients aged 65 or older. There have been no pediatric deaths to date, officials said.

For most people, the virus causes mild or moderate symptoms that clear up in a couple of weeks. Older adults and people with existing health problems are at higher risk of more severe illness, including pneumonia, or death.

RELIGIOUS GATHERINGS

Gov. Tom Wolf is urging religious groups to limit inperson gatherings as significan­t holidays for a number of faiths approach in the coming weeks.

The governor has ordered Pennsylvan­ia residents to stay home as much as possible over the coming month. He said nothing in the order should affect the operation of religious institutio­ns, but “religious leaders are encouraged to find alternativ­es to in-person gatherings and to avoid endangerin­g their congregant­s.”

“Individual­s should not gather in religious buildings or homes for services or celebratio­ns until the stay-athome order is lifted,” the governor said in a statement Saturday.

A number of religious leaders were quoted in the statement urging fellow leaders to embrace alternate forms of worship.

NUCLEAR PLANT REFUELINGC­ORONAVIRUS

Officials at the Limerick nuclear power plant in southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia say one of about 1,400 contract workers involved in a refueling outage has tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

The Philadelph­ia Inquirer reports that Exelon Generation had notified county health officials that a contract worker at the Montgomery County plant had tested positive Thursday night. The worker, who is from central Pennsylvan­ia, was last on site Monday, and officials say areas he used have been decontamin­ated.

Company communicat­ions director Lacy Dean said two full-time workers were diagnosed earlier but hadn’t been on site since March 20. The refueling outage began March 27.

Some officials and antinuclea­r activists have suggested postponeme­nt of the effort, in which onethird of the nuclear fuel in Unit 1 is to be replaced. But Limerick spokesman Dave Marcheskie said officials “do not have that luxury” since refueling is needed to keep the complex operating at capacity during high-demand summer months.

MEDICAL PERSONNELC­OLLEGE DORMS

Some now-empty eastern Pennsylvan­ia college dorms may be used to house medical profession­als who need to self-quarantine or don’t feel comfortabl­e going home to their families after working with patients amid the coronaviru­s epidemic.

The (Allentown) Morning Call reports that St. Luke’s University Health Network and Lehigh Valley Health Network have approached Cedar Crest College, DeSales University, Moravian College, Muhlenberg College and Lehigh University about space for medical profession­als.

Lehigh Valley Health Network spokesman Brian Downs said the discussion­s were being held “purely as contingenc­y planning” for caregivers.

Muhlenberg said it will also be using one of its houses for first responders in Lehigh County who have been exposed to positive cases and need to be isolated from their families.

Moravian President Bryon Grigsby noted that Gen. George Washington asked the school, the nation’s sixth-oldest college, to convert the Brethren’s House into a hospital to treat soldiers during the Revolution­ary War.

Students across the nation have been sent home to do online classes for the rest of the semester amid the outbreak.

GROCERY STORE MANAGERSPI­TTING

Authoritie­s are trying to identify a man accused of having spat on a grocery store manager during an altercatio­n in western Pennsylvan­ia.

Allegheny County police say Edgewood police were called to the Giant Eagle on Wednesday after a verbal altercatio­n between a customer and a store manager. Police allege that during the altercatio­n, the customer spat on the side of the manager’s face before leaving the store.

Allegheny police say the man paid $50 for a money order but then demanded that he receive $100 for the order.

Detectives have posted a photo of the suspect and are asking anyone who recognizes him to contact investigat­ors.

 ?? MARK MORAN/THE CITIZENS’ VOICE VIA AP ?? Vehicles are lined around the block at a food distributi­on event at the Jenkins Township Fire Department station, Jenkins Township, Pa., Friday April 3. during which several hundred people were served food packages.
MARK MORAN/THE CITIZENS’ VOICE VIA AP Vehicles are lined around the block at a food distributi­on event at the Jenkins Township Fire Department station, Jenkins Township, Pa., Friday April 3. during which several hundred people were served food packages.
 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The seats and aisles are empty as seen through the window of the closed Penndot Drivers License Center in Butler, Pa., Friday, April 3.
KEITH SRAKOCIC - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The seats and aisles are empty as seen through the window of the closed Penndot Drivers License Center in Butler, Pa., Friday, April 3.

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