Florida, Texas Close Bars As Daily COVID-19 Cases See Record Jump: Live Updates
Tyler Durden
Fri, 06/26/2020 – 11:28
Summary:
- Trump cancels weekend trip to New Jersey
- EU moving toward blocking US travelers
- UAL to restart routes between SF & Shanghai
- Florida follows Texas, closes bars
- Arizona sees daily, weekly rise in new cases
- Houston declares “top-level” emergency
- Fla reports another record jump
- Dr. Fauci says WH considering “pool testing ” approach to uncover new outbreaks more quickly
- Abbott orders taverns to close
- Texas Gov expected to roll back reopening measures after announcing ‘pause’
- US sees second straight record jump in daily new cases
- India cases top 500k after another record jump
- Almost all US states seeing biggest jump in cases are located in south, west
- Japan reports 100 new cases, biggest spike in weeks
- Beijing unwinds more restrictions after latest cluster scare
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Update (1150ET): As Andrew Cuomo gloats by saying NY is in a position to provide assistance to other states, his latest in a series of victory laps, President Trump has reportedly cancelled a weekend trip to his golf club in New Jersey.
Additionaly, Cuomo slammed the states that reopened too early, and are now seeing cases climb, saying that there was incontrovertible evidence against moving forward, and that the state’s “anti-science” governors opted for the politically expedient route.
Meanwhile, Dr. Gottlieb just highlighted the trend of hospitalizations in Houston.
Covid admissions in Texas hospitals are rising quickly, precipitating some of the moves today. pic.twitter.com/8poUjGyWFu
— Scott Gottlieb, MD (@ScottGottliebMD) June 26, 2020
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Update (1135ET): As Ron DeSantis backtracks on reopening amid growing political pressure to do something about the burgeoning numbers of new cases in his state besides brazenly manipulating the data, the left-leaning press is reviving claims made by Rebekah Jones, a former state data scientist who has accused the state of a conspiracy to cook the numbers this week to make it look like the state made it “over the hump” in the runup to July 4.
Here’s more from the Guardian:
Rebekah Jones, who says she was fired from her job in charge of the state’s official Covid-19 database in May for refusing to manipulate its figures, claimed on social media to have evidence that employees at Florida’s department of health “have been instructed this week to change the numbers and begin slowly deleting deaths and cases so it looks like Florida is improving next week in the lead-up to July 4, like they’ve ‘made it over the hump’.”
“They’re only reporting all these cases now so they can restrict reporting next week to make everyone think it’s over,” she said.
DeSantis, a Donald Trump loyalist who has refused to slow Florida’s reopening or implement a statewide mask mandate, angrily dismissed the claim, calling a reporter from the Miami Herald who asked him about it “embarrassing.”
“You guys have been on the conspiracy bandwagon for months,” he snapped at a press conference on Thursday, without addressing the specifics of Jones’s assertion. “You need to move on.”
Whether one believes Jones or not, the timing of DeSantis’s about face, coming hours after Texas led the way, shows that the state knows the strategy of ignoring the second wave simply isn’t tenable.
Gov Cuomo, meanwhile, just said Friday that he has evidence that malls and movie theaters “created issues” with COVID-19. Meanwhile, another round of reports claiming the EU is moving toward extending the travel ban on the US has just hit the tape.
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Update (1134ET): New York just reported ~800 new cases, another 0.2% day on day jump, in line with the 7-day average. Meanwhile $UAL just announced plans to restart routes from San Francisco to Shanghai.
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Update (1123ET): The Arizona whisper number (the leaked press accounts that hit before the official data are released) is putting cases today at 3,428, above yesterday’s 3,056. That compares with 3,246 last Friday.
These numbers have just been confirmed by state health officials. Arizona’s COVID-19 cases climbed to 66,458, up from 63,030. That’s a 5.4% jump, compared with the 7-day average of 2.9%.
Meanwhile, Florida has just followed Texas’s lead and closed its bars, effective immediately.
Effective immediately, the Department of Business and Professional Regulation is suspending on premises consumption of alcohol at bars statewide.
— HalseyBeshears (@HalseyBeshears) June 26, 2020
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Update (1100ET): We have some more news out of Texas as we await the latest daily figures. After Houston’s hospital leaders assured the public that the situation wasn’t so dire after all, Harris County officials have just declared a new “top level emergency” regarding COVID-19.
Harris County is the largest county in Texas, and the third-largest in the US, by population, and is also home to Houston, the country’s 4th-largest city. Yesterday, at least some officials declared that the emergency infrastructure in the city has been “overwhelmed” by the surge in cases, as hospitalization numbers have more than doubled since early June. In other Texas news, the metro health director in San Antonio just resigned as the outbreak in that city intensifies.
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Update (1035ET): The Florida numbers just hit, and it looks like Florida just smashed its last record with nearly 9,000 new cases in a day.
- FLORIDA COVID-19 CASES RISE 7.8% VS. PREVIOUS 7-DAY AVG. 4.1%
Florida just reported 8,942 cases today, compared with 3,822 last Friday. That’s a 134% increase in the span of a week.
For context:
How you know it’s serious…
Will Gov DeSantis now need to follow Abbott by reversing course and walking back the reopening?
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Update (1015ET): Dr. Scott Gottlieb warned today that Florida, which has consistently tried to juice its testing figures, according to one self-styled whistleblower, is seeing testing fall while Texas has seen testing climb, a key difference that makes Florida’s outbreak more alarming than the numbers coming out of Texas (which, if you’ll remember, even the heads of the top hospitals in Houston have clarified that they’re not worried about capacity).
“Are they experiencing exponential growth? Texas is testing a lot so they are turning over their cases. Florida is not … Florida may be in worse shape than Texas,” says @ScottGottliebMD. “I would also be very worried about smaller states like South Carolina and Alabama.” pic.twitter.com/BYjUEDR6GF
— Squawk Box (@SquawkCNBC) June 26, 2020
Gottlieb also discussed the importance of the positivity ratios that states have started to tout as more useful metrics of progress.
“We’re diagnosing 1 in 5 to 1 in 10 infections now. At the height of the epidemic we were probably diagnosing about 1 in 20,” says @ScottGottliebMD on #coronavirus data. “I would guess around 7%” of the US population has had the virus. pic.twitter.com/skhzoVNF4U
— Squawk Box (@SquawkCNBC) June 26, 2020
We’re waiting for the latest figures out of both states.
In other news, Dr. Fauci just confirmed to the Washington Post ahead of today’s coronavirus task force briefing – the first public briefing in two months – that the White House is seriously considering pushing a new strategy called “pool testing” which Dr. Fauci himself believes could help states uncover outbreaks much more quickly.
The Trump administration, confronting a worrisome spike in coronavirus infections around the country, is discussing a major change in testing strategy — a shift to “pool testing,” in which samples from many people are tested all at once in an effort to quickly find the infected and isolate them.
Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, confirmed that officials are having “intense discussions” about the new strategy. Dr. Fauci’s comments were first reported by The Washington Post.
The pooled approach combines samples from multiple people at once, and would offer a way to minimize the number of tests needed. If the pooled sample tests negative for the coronavirus, all the individuals who provided samples are considered to be virus-free.
If a certain pool comes back with a positive result, each patient who provided a sample can be tested individually. The strategy can be particularly effective when the prevalence of infection in a population is less than 30 percent, according to some reports.
We’ll hear more about that, we imagine, during today’s briefing, which is set to begin at 1230ET.
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Update (1000ET): Texas Gov Abbott has officially ordered taverns in the state to close in response to the virus.
- TEXAS GOVERNOR ORDERS TAVERNS TO CLOSE IN RESPONSE TO VIRUS
Here are some more details from CNBC’s Meg Tirrell.
.@GovAbbott rolling back Texas reopening as positivity rate rises above 10%:
-bars required to close at noon today, may remain open for delivery & takeout
-restaurant capacity may not exceed 50%
-rafting & tubing businesses must close
-outdoor gatherings 100+ need govt approval— Meg Tirrell (@megtirrell) June 26, 2020
Numbers from California and Florida are expected out shortly.
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Update (0955ET): After declaring yesterday that he would “pause” the state’s reopening plan in counties hard hit by the state’s sudden surge in coronavirus infections and hospitalizations (though deaths have remained remarkable low), Texas Gov Greg Abbott is reportedly about to announce what would be the nation’s first rollback of coronavirus restrictions.
#Breaking Sources confirm a coming announcement from @GregAbbott_TX shortly, regarding a roll back on certain reopening phase items. I’m told bars and restaurants will be the subject. #COVID19 #TexasCovid19
— Doug Dunbar (@cbs11doug) June 26, 2020
😂 u know they’re digging deep into the @espn @XGames archives, when they pull out the first ever Extreme games to fill a time a time slot in 2020. Great memories from Roger Williams state park in Rhode Island, and many years after on the X train. #sports #XGames pic.twitter.com/XqNFZOdPKp
— Doug Dunbar (@cbs11doug) June 26, 2020
It’s believed the measures will impact bars and restaurants. The news sent equities sliding into the red, erasing this morning’s panic bid.
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As we reported last night, the US saw another record (or near record, depending on who you ask) jump in newly confirmed COVID-19 cases yesterday thanks to new records in Florida and Texas, and record (or near-record) numbers across much of the south and west.
According to the Washington Post, the final count for Thursday’s increase was 39,327 new infections reported by state health departments across the country. That number surpasses WaPo’s total set a day earlier (though some sources put the number of cases reported Wednesday as high as 45k). Texas alone reported a record 5,996 new cases (along with another record high for coronavirus hospitalizations) last night and, as WaPo points out, the Lone Star State’s rolling average has increased by 340% since Memorial Day.
With the US facing an unexpectedly large pickup in new cases, the median age of those infected has fallen sharply, down from 65 to around 35 today. This has been widely cited as one reason why deaths have continued to plateau, or even trend lower, amid all the insanity.
For the first time in nearly two months, the White House coronavirus task force will hold a news briefing on Friday to address the situation. But unlike previous briefings, VP Mike Pence will lead, and President Trump isn’t expected to make an appearance.
Last night, Joe Biden just took the “politicization” of mask-wearing up a notch by declaring that, if he were president, he would mandate mask-wearing in public, even though masks are only recommended to be worn in indoor locations (especially those with poor ventilation), or in outdoor areas where social distancing simply isn’t possible.
Coronavirus hospitalizations in New York dipped below 1,000 for the first time since March 18, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said Thursday. The WHO also said the virus could once again “push health systems to the brink” in Europe after 30 countries across the continent have seen cases rebound over the past 2 weeks.
As Australia learns the hard way that there’s nothing worse than declaring “victory” over the virus, only for it to come surging back a few weeks later, supermarkets around the country are being forced to impose limits on toilet paper purchases as Australians engage in another wave of “panic buying” amid fears that lockdowns might return (even though the number of cases reported over the last week is relatively minuscule). Victoria alone saw 30 new cases reported Friday, while a few other regions have reported one, or a handful, of new cases.
Seriously Melbourne? Is toilet paper stockpiling back? This is a Woolworths at Craigieburn Plaza right now (Wednesday morning). pic.twitter.com/Ogbifw89Nk
— Paul Dowsley (@pauldowsley7) June 24, 2020
However, deaths in the US have continued to fall, with the 7-day average for the entire US hitting its lowest level since March.
The 7-day average of COVID-19 deaths is now 560.
But with this many cases piling up, it seems unlikely to keep falling for much longer. pic.twitter.com/9rhtuXcwPj
— The COVID Tracking Project (@COVID19Tracking) June 25, 2020
Of course, every pundit inevitably points out that this trend likely won’t last for too much longer even as there’s plenty of reason to believe that deaths this time around won’t be as severe since we’ve learned more about how best to protect the most vulnerable to serious illness – ie those in long-term care homes, who in several instances died by the dozens as the virus tore through institution after institution.
Taking a step back, all but one of the 15 states seeing the biggest accelerations in new cases and hospitalizations are situated in the south or the west. That state is Missouri, which, as the Atlantic correctly points out, is sometimes lumped in with the south.
Zooming back out, 15 states have now set their record for reported cases since June 19. All but one (Missouri) is in the South and West.
(And we know some people do classify MO in the South.) pic.twitter.com/CD4ArI27nJ
— The COVID Tracking Project (@COVID19Tracking) June 25, 2020
The cumulative 7-day totals from the past week are already on track to make this past week the worst in terms of newly confirmed infections.
If you want more in-depth analysis of the last week, our team members put together this update. https://t.co/9D4MVeC8ya pic.twitter.com/8Zd1Gx7sxr
— The COVID Tracking Project (@COVID19Tracking) June 25, 2020
Yesterday marked another reported high in the outbreak according to the Atlantic’s stats from last night. Of course, the final numbers reported a day earlier ended up being over 45k for the day, according to some estimates. But according to the data, both Tuesday and Wednesday of this week saw record or near-record numbers of newly confirmed cases. Furthermore, while testing is rising across the country,
Even subtracting Wisconsin’s probables, today marked a new record high for reported cases in the outbreak at just over 39k. pic.twitter.com/oSl6FF9hKa
— The COVID Tracking Project (@COVID19Tracking) June 25, 2020
As Beijing unwinds more restrictions following its latest flare-up, Japan has just confirmed more than 100 new daily COVID-19 cases, the largest daily total since May 9, while in India, the biggest 24-hour spike in cases (17,296 new infections reported) pushed the country’s total case number close to half a million (490,401 in total) while deaths climbed by 407 bringing the death toll to 15,301. On the bright side, the country is seeing an improvement in the recovery rate for the most severe cases, with it climbing to 57.43%. Also, deaths per 100,000 stood at just 1.86, well below the global average of 6.24 per 100,000, per Al Jazeera.