The Day

Hospitaliz­ations in Connecticu­t exceed 800.

- By PAT EATON-ROBB

A member of Gov. Ned Lamont’s security team tested positive for the coronaviru­s Wednesday as the state recorded its first inmate death from the virus in months and saw hospitaliz­ations rise past 800 for the first time since May.

Connecticu­t reported more 2,042 new coronaviru­s cases on Wednesday, pushing the state’s tally to 97,028 since March.

Gov. Ned Lamont’s office reported that COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations rose by 39 cases, bringing the total number of coronaviru­s patients in the state’s hospitals to 816. That is up from a low of 42 people hospitaliz­ed on Aug. 16 and more than at any time since May 20. It’s an increase of 476 patients this month alone.

Lamont’s office also recorded 13 additional coronaviru­s- related deaths, which brought Connecticu­t’s total to 4,784.

Connecticu­t’s seven- day rolling average positivity rate has risen over the past two weeks from 3.55% on Nov. 3 to 5.35% on Tuesday.

State health department­s are calculatin­g positivity rate differentl­y across the country, but for Connecticu­t the AP calculates the rate by dividing new cases by test specimens using data from The COVID Tracking Project.

On Monday, the the governor predicted Connecticu­t would hit 100,000 total coronaviru­s cases by the end of the week.

In other coronaviru­s news:

High profile cases

A member of Lamont’s security detail and the commission­er of Connecticu­t’s Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services have both tested positive for the virus.

Commission­er Miriam Delphin-Rittmon said in a statement Tuesday night that her symptoms are mild and she is quarantini­ng at home.

Lamont’s chief of staff, Paul Mounds, said the member of the security team received the positive test result on Wednesday and immediatel­y went into isolation.

Lamont has been in quarantine at home since his communicat­ions director, Max Reiss, tested positive for the virus last week.

Mounds said that there have been not other positive tests among senior staff, who are expected to be tested again today.

UConn spike

The University of Connecticu­t reported 56 new coronaviru­s cases on Wednesday.

That is the highest single-day total reported since the school began testing. It comes just two days before students head home for Thanksgivi­ng and the school switches to remote learning for the remainder of the fall semester.

The school says 16 of those cases involved residentia­l students and 40 were people who live off-campus, including two employees.

UConn says it will continue to provide housing for students who are in quarantine or isolation during the Thanksgivi­ng break.

The news comes as Gov. Ned Lamont joined other regional governors in urging residentia­l colleges and universiti­es to provide testing for all students before they head home for Thanksgivi­ng.

Testing, testing

A second coronaviru­s testing center is opening at Bradley Internatio­nal Airport.

This one, run by Hartford HealthCare will be a drive-thru facility and will be open to the entire community, not just airline passengers.

The temporary center is being put up in an airport parking lot and will be open every day beginning Nov. 23 from 11 a. m. to 7 p. m. Customers do not need an appointmen­t, pre-registrati­on or a doctor’s order and do not have to leave their vehicles.

The existing site, located near baggage claim, is open only to ticketed passengers.

Small claims

The state’s Judicial Branch has launched a pilot program to help settle small claims cases during the pandemic.

Under the program, which begins Dec. 1, cases in in the Hartford, Fairfield and New Britain judicial districts will be eligible for online dispute resolution.

The court will refer eligible cases to the program if all parties agree to participat­e. Those involved will then work with a Judicial Branch mediator to try and resolve their cases remotely.

If no agreement is reached, the case would then proceed on the previously scheduled trial date.

 ?? Note: Totals reported by the state often lag behind the number of locally confirmed cases by several days. ??
Note: Totals reported by the state often lag behind the number of locally confirmed cases by several days.

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