Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Open schools remain goal, governor says

Arkansas virus cases grow by 784 as deaths rise by 15

- ANDY DAVIS

Despite warnings from top federal public health officials, Gov. Asa Hutchinson on Tuesday stuck by his goal of having schools across the state reopen to in-classroom instructio­n later this month.

At his daily news conference on the pandemic, the Republican governor noted that he delayed the start of the school year from Aug. 13 to the week of Aug. 24.

The extra time will allow Arkansas to learn from states that start earlier, as well as “from experience­s that we see in the sports world,” Hutchinson said.

“It gives us an opportunit­y to better prepare in every respect,” Hutchinson said. “So we’re going to utilize this time effectivel­y over the next three weeks, because we want everybody to be able to go back to in-classroom instructio­n in a safe way that best protects the students, gives them an opportunit­y to learn, as well as the teachers and the staff.

“That’s our objective, and we’re working on that, as I said, every day.”

Hutchinson spoke as the state’s cumulative count of coronaviru­s cases increased by 784, to 45,381. Of those, 6,891 are considered active.

The state’s death toll from the pandemic, as tracked by the Arkansas Department of Health, increased by 15, to 490.

After dipping on Monday, the number of patients hospitaliz­ed with covid-19 rose by 13 to reach a new record, 526.

The number of patients who were on ventilator­s dropped by seven, to 101.

Meanwhile, a report from the White House coronaviru­s task force, dated Sunday, listed Arkansas as having 37 counties that are in the “red zone” based on their number of new cases last week and the percentage of tests that were positive.

That was up from 32 counties with the label the previous week.

The report, for at least the past two weeks, has also

listed the state as a whole as being in the “red zone” based on its growth in new cases and percentage of tests that were positive.

Twenty other states were also listed as being in the red zone as of July 26, according to a report by The New York Times.

SCHOOL DEBATE

“If you have high caseload and active community spread, just like we are asking people not to go to bars, not to have household parties, not to create large spreading events, we are asking people to distance learn at this moment, so we can get this epidemic under control,” Deborah Birx, the White House task force’s coordinato­r, said on CNN’s State of the Union on Sunday.

President Donald Trump last month said schools in cities or states that are “hot spots” for new coronaviru­s cases “may need to delay reopening for a few weeks.”

Robert Redfield, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told reporters the next day that he would consider a “hot spot” an area where the percentage of tests that are positive exceeds 5%.

But Trump had a simpler message Monday, tweeting in all-capital letters: “Open the Schools!!!”

“Everybody’s got a different opinion on schools,” Hutchinson said Tuesday. “What they are united about is that these are local decisions that have to be made based upon the circumstan­ces in your state, and that’s what we’re acting on.”

Many school districts in Arkansas are planning to offer all-online options for students, but Hutchinson has said he expects them to also offer a traditiona­l, in-classroom option, with the option to shift to online instructio­n as needed.

The Arkansas chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics said last month that the state should open classrooms only in counties that meet the White House guidelines for states on moving from one phase of reopening to the next.

Those call for a “downward trajectory” of cases or the percentage of tests that are positive over a two-week period.

The Arkansas Education Associatio­n also called Tuesday for the state to suspend “high-stakes, standardiz­ed testing” during the coming school year, as well as a teacher evaluation system and Arkansas history profession­al developmen­t requiremen­t.

“As we prioritize the health and safety of students, educators and the broader school community, it would be detrimenta­l to shift our focus and our resources away from achieving this goal,” the teachers union’s president, Carol Fleming, and executive director, Tracey-Ann Nelson, said in a letter to Education Secretary Johnny Key.

Kimberly Mundell, a spokeswoma­n for the state Department of Education’s Division of Elementary and Secondary Education, said suspending the standardiz­ed tests could result in the state losing federal funds.

“While federal requiremen­ts for standardiz­ed testing were waived during the spring of 2020 due to the coronaviru­s pandemic forcing school closures during the annual testing season, a waiver of statewide summative assessment­s at this time would remove an essential metric for parents, schools, districts, and the public to determine the performanc­e and progress of students in Arkansas public schools,” she said in an email.

She said suspending the teacher evaluation program, meanwhile, “would have devastatin­g effects on educators’ profession­al growth and developmen­t.”

She noted that the program, known as the Teacher Excellence and Support System, requires schools to help teachers meet goals set by the educators with their principals, and to mentor new teachers and administra­tors for up to three years.

“Additional­ly, TESS includes formative observatio­ns to help develop teaching skills, which will be more important than ever as teachers implement new teaching approaches that will include technology-driven approaches to teaching and learning,” Mundell said.

FRAUDULENT CLAIMS

At his news conference, Hutchinson also said he received a notice over the weekend that he had been approved for benefits under the federal Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance program for independen­t contractor­s and self-employed people.

“Now you wonder how that can happen,” he said.

“First of all, I did not apply for it. Secondly, I’m not entitled to it, and the scheme is most likely that if I would go ahead and sign off on this, then the check would be issued but not to my bank account but to the fraudster’s bank account.”

Commerce Secretary Mike Preston said fraudulent claims for benefits had also been filed under the names of several state Cabinet secretarie­s as part of an apparent “national, even internatio­nal ring trying to defraud the system.”

He said 27,000 claims for Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance funds and 10,000 claims for regular unemployme­nt benefits have been frozen after being flagged as potentiall­y fraudulent.

He said the state is setting up stations around the state to verify claimants’ identities.

People whose benefits were frozen are being sent letters instructin­g them to go to one of the stations to verify their identities so that benefits can resume, he said.

People who receive letters notifying them about benefits they didn’t apply for should file a police report and report the fraud by visiting the state Commerce Department’s Division of Workforce Services’ website at dws.arkansas.gov or by emailing adws.internalau­dit@arkansasgo­v.

People can also call the division at (501) 682-1058, although they may have to leave a message if the line is busy, he said.

At the federal courthouse in Little Rock, judges canceled most criminal proceeding­s scheduled for this week after they learned that the U.S. Marshals Service, which transports prisoners, is shortstaff­ed while several deputy marshals await covid-19 test results.

U.S. District Court Clerk Jim McCormack said Tuesday that the marshals service “went to tele-work protocol” as a precaution after two inmates they transferre­d to hearings last week in Little Rock later tested positive for the virus.

McCormack said the inmates wore masks and weren’t in close contact with anyone in the courtroom, but because the marshals work closely with prisoners, they underwent testing Sunday and Monday. He said results are expected quickly, possibly by Tuesday afternoon. He said all criminal proceeding­s have been shut down temporaril­y except for those required to proceed under the Bail Reform Act.

WHITE HOUSE REPORT

The most recent White House report defined a state as being in the red zone for cases if it had more than 100 new cases per 100,000 residents during a seven-day period ending Friday.

Arkansas had 5,260 new cases during that period, or 174 per 100,000 residents, according to the report.

That was down from the 5,487 cases, or 182 per 100,000 residents, that were reported the previous week, however.

Over the two weeks, the national rate decreased from 140 new cases per 100,000 residents to 137 per 100,000 residents.

The report also classified states as being in the red zone “positivity” if more than 10% of its tests during the week were positive.

Arkansas’ rate was 11.1%, up from 11% the previous week.

Counties were listed as being in the red zone if they met both criteria.

The report also listed 10.3% of the state’s nursing homes as having at least one covid-19 case among residents, up from 8.8% a week earlier.

The report also said an average of 57 patients a day with confirmed covid-19, and 206 patients with suspected covid-19, were admitted to Arkansas hospitals each day last week, up from a daily average of 56 patients with covid-19 and 150 with suspected covid-19 a week earlier.

But the report said an average of only 70% of hospitals reported the informatio­n each day, so “this may be an underestim­ate of the actual total number of COVID-related hospitaliz­ations.”

In red zone counties, the report continued advocating for steps such as closing bars and gyms, and limiting social gatherings to 10 people or fewer.

Washington, Sebastian and Craighead counties topped Arkansas’ list of red zone counties based on their rate of new infections.

Meanwhile, 17 counties — including Pulaski, Benton and Faulkner — were listed as being in the “yellow zone,” meaning they didn’t meet the red zone criteria but had at least 10 new cases per 100,000 residents and that at least 5% of the tests in the county were positive.

NEW PROJECTION­S

By the end of next week, projection­s from the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences’ Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health show an increase among the state’s non-incarcerat­ed population of 81 deaths because of the virus, with the case tally among non-inmates rising to a total of 52,408 since the pandemic began March 11.

“Case reports during the last week in July suggest growth in cases may be leveling off,” researcher­s wrote in a forecast report dated Thursday and released Tuesday.

“Specifical­ly, over the past week, we have seen roughly the same number of new cases reported each day. This would suggest the curve may be leveling off, albeit at a very high rate of daily new infections.”

They added, however that “recent data are not particular­ly good indicators of long, or even short-term trends.”

“If we are to gain some type of control over case growth and effectivel­y ‘flatten the curve,’ it may well have to be now,” the researcher­s wrote.

Unlike previous reports, the latest one did not include longer-range projection­s for cases and hospitaliz­ations.

“There have been a number of changes in our understand­ing of covid-19 due to recent reports in the peer-reviewed press, and we believe it is time to reassess the assumption­s under which the model has been operating,” the researcher­s wrote.

“For example, at least one study is reporting there may be as many as 10 to 20 times the number of asymptomat­ic cases as previously thought. Another study has found the concentrat­ion of virus in the upper-respirator­y tracts of children is much higher than in adults. This suggests children may be more infectious than previously thought.”

In a video accompanyi­ng the report’s release, UAMS Chancellor Cam Patterson said the researcher­s would also be “recalibrat­ing our models given new data and how the mask mandate by Gov. Asa Hutchinson appears to positively be affecting the trend of new cases.”

The researcher­s said in the report that they would update their model and expect to have new longer-term projection­s in the next report, in two weeks.

July 17 projection­s by the college predicted that the number of patients in the state hospitaliz­ed with covid-19 at a given time would peak at 2,591 on Nov. 26 under the most likely scenario, with the number of patients in intensive care rising to 777 and the number on ventilator­s reaching 543.

The number of active infections in the state, including among asymptomat­ic people with undetected infections, was predicted to reach 103,651.

LATEST CASES

Arkansas’ latest cases included 149 in Pulaski County, 56 in Sebastian County, 55 in Mississipp­i County, 45 in Washington County, 35 in Benton County, 25 in Saline County, 24 in Crittenden County and 23 in Jefferson County.

Among inmates in prisons and jails, the state’s count of cases rose by 10. Such increases can reflect new cases as well as ones that were reported earlier but not immediatel­y classified as coming from a jail or prison.

Statewide, the number of cases that were considered active increased by nine, to 6,891 as 760 Arkansans were newly classified as having recovered.

Interim Health Secretary Jose Romero said the increase in the state’s death toll included three deaths that happened in July but weren’t immediatel­y reported.

At the Ouachita River Unit in Malvern, the number of inmates who have died increased this week to 13 after the death of an inmate Sunday, the state Department of Correction­s said.

The inmate, who was in his late 60s and serving time for sexual assault, died at Saline Memorial Hospital in Benton.

Meanwhile, a report from the Saline County coroner’s office identified an inmate from the prison who died of the virus at the hospital on July 29 as 69-year-old Maurice Jones.

Jones was sentenced in Pulaski County to life in prison for kidnapping in 1980, Correction­s Department spokesman Cindy Murphy said.

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