The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

State extends school closure

FDA OKs mask-sanitizing system by Columbus-based company

- By Andrew Welsh-Huggins

COLUMBUS » Gov. Mike DeWine on Monday extended the Ohio schools’ shutdown order until May 1 to help slow the spread of the coronaviru­s, while a federal judge said a state ban on elective surgery was unconstitu­tional if it prevented abortions from being carried out.

A look at virus-related developmen­ts in Ohio on Monday:

CARE

After pushback from DeWine, the Food and Drug Administra­tion authorized Columbus-based private research lab Battelle to deploy

a system in Ohio, New York and Washington state that can sanitize 160,000 face masks a day. The FDA initially approved only 10,000 masks a day.

In central Ohio, the Franklin County Public Health Department said it was accepting “home sewn masks” along with manufactur­ed personal protective equipment.

CASES

More than 1,900 cases are confirmed, with 39 deaths as of Monday and nearly 500 people hospitaliz­ed, officials reported. That doesn’t reflect all cases in Ohio, because the state limits testing to those who are hospitaliz­ed and to health care workers.

Six deaths now have been linked to virus outbreaks at a pair of nursing homes in Miami County, just north of Dayton, the local health department said Monday.

Ohio Health Director Dr. Amy Acton urged hospitals to send completed tests to the state instead of private labs for faster results.

For most people, COVID-19 displays mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can be more severe, causing pneumonia or death.

ECONOMY

The state has updated its

Support Local Ohio website promoting Ohio businesses with online options across the state and allowing businesses to create their own listings.

EDUCATION

At Miami University, officials are already considerin­g the possibilit­y the pandemic will prevent students from returning to campus next fall, with an email to department heads soliciting suggestion­s for more courses to be taught online and discussing an expected sharp drop in attendance, according to The Enquirer.

PORTMAN DONATION

U.S. Sen. Rob Portman said he is donating two months of his Senate salary to organizati­ons helping to fight the pandemic in Ohio. The multimilli­onaire Republican said he wants to help individual­s and businesses struggling to stay financiall­y afloat. The roughly $29,000 will be divided among five regional groups: the Cleveland Foundation COVID-19 Rapid Response Fund, the Columbus Foundation Emergency Response Fund, the United Way and Greater Cincinnati Foundation local nonprofit fund, the Southeast Ohio Food Bank and the Greater Toledo Community Foundation COVID-19 Response.

ABORTION ACCESS

Federal Judge Michael Barrett ruled late Monday that a state order banning elective surgeries is unconstitu­tional if it prevents abortions from being carried out. The judge, ruling on a lawsuit by Planned Parenthood and two abortion clinics, ordered clinics to determine on a caseby-case basis if an abortion can be delayed to maximize resources — such as preserving personal protective equipment — needed to fight the coronaviru­s. If the abortion is deemed necessary and can’t be delayed, it’s deemed legally essential, Barrett ruled.

Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost said he was considerin­g an appeal or issuing a newer, narrower order regarding elective surgeries and abortions.

THE NEW NORMAL

Organizers postponed the annual Taste of Cincinnati food festival until July, while fashioning a “virtual Taste” for April 3-5. People are urged to order carryout, drive-thru or delivery dishes from festival participan­ts, and bands who were scheduled to perform will play livestream concerts. Chefs will give cooking demonstrat­ions online. T-shirts to benefit local businesses are being sold with the slogan: “Carry out, Carry on, Cincinnati.”

Associated Press writers Dan Sewell in Cincinnati, Julie Carr Smyth in Columbus, and John Seewer in Toledo contribute­d to this report.

 ?? JOSHUA A. BICKEL//THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH VIA AP ?? Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, Ohio Department of Health director Dr. Amy Acton and Ohio Lt. Gov. Jon Husted walk toward the State Room before their update on the state’s response to the ongoing COVID-19 coronaviru­s pandemic on March 30 at the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus.
JOSHUA A. BICKEL//THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH VIA AP Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, Ohio Department of Health director Dr. Amy Acton and Ohio Lt. Gov. Jon Husted walk toward the State Room before their update on the state’s response to the ongoing COVID-19 coronaviru­s pandemic on March 30 at the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus.

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