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Lamont Says Fairfield County Has 'Hit The Apex,' Still Wants More Coronavirus Data

Senior Airman Michael Choothesa of the Connecticut National Guard leans in to listen to passengers in a car who came to get tested at a COVID-19 rapid testing center in New Haven.
Ryan Caron King
/
Connecticut Public
Senior Airman Michael Choothesa of the Connecticut National Guard leans in to listen to passengers in a car who came to get tested at a COVID-19 rapid testing center in New Haven.

Gov. Ned Lamont painted a picture Monday of a state with an eventually reopened economy undergirded by rapid testing and data collection. 

But how officials will use that data to inform public health actions in the coming months is an open question. 

This story was updated.

After two consecutive days of decline, hospitalization numbers in Connecticut rose slightly again Monday, but Lamont said overall trend lines are encouraging. He also said recent daily data indicate cases have peaked in Fairfield County. 

“There, we definitely have bent the curve … hit the apex, I think we feel fairly confident about that,” Lamont said. We depend on your support. Donate to Connecticut Public today.

Fairfield County reported 733 people hospitalized as of Monday. 

While Lamont said hospitalizations remain the state’s “lead metric” for tracking the impact of COVID-19, he also called it a “blunt instrument,” one which may not be adequate to inform decisions about reopening Connecticut at the state’s next major decision point: May 20, the date until which schools must remain closed.

Still, Lamont said any decision to reopen will require lots of data. So, to fill potential data gaps, the governor mentioned several possible technological solutions Monday, including “fever meters” at manufacturing facilities and, eventually, stores around the state. 

“Anybody with a temperature of more than 100.4, not allowed in,” Lamont said. “Over time, we may find that we can open up our stores and retail … a lot faster and sooner and more safely if we have that fever meter to test people on their way in.”

He also said the state was partnering with a nonprofit app project called How We Feel, which collects anonymous, self-reported health data that’s aggregated by ZIP code.

“That information may allow us to distribute more personal protective equipment,” said Feng Zhang, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who is involved with the app. “Or providing more information … for social distancing. Those are the things that may be possible if we have more nuanced information.”

Lamont said closing businesses in certain ZIP codes that have already reopened would be a “body blow,” but he said any such future measures based on data collection are “to be determined.”

“I want to make sure we open, we stay open and we go forward from there,” Lamont said.  

Meanwhile, the state’s positive COVID-19 case count jumped by nearly 2,000, and the death toll rose by 204 people. Lamont said both large numbers were consequences of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention changing rubrics for its data points. 

“We’re just truing this up so we keep with the CDC and federal definitions,” Lamont said. 

Foodshare Gives Away More Than 12 Tons Of Food In One Day

Foodshare, one of the state’s largest food banks, announced Monday it distributed around 25,000 pounds of food at its new mobile distribution site: the parking lot of Rentschler Field in East Hartford. 

“We had outgrown the Hartford Regional Market where we had been doing this for the last two weeks,” Foodshare President and CEO Jason Jakubowski said Monday. “The need is great.”

The majority of people who came to get food Monday morning did so because of COVID-19, Jakubowski said. “People who, just up until a few weeks ago … were gainfully employed. Had one, maybe two jobs. Now, all of a sudden, through no fault of their own, they’ve found themselves in need.” 

Jakubowski said Foodshare will give away food at Rentschler Field, 615 Silver Lane in East Hartford, from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. all week.

He said the organization has enough food to meet demand and would like to extend beyond this week.

“It will be completely dependent on how much food product we’re able to obtain, how many volunteers were able to get signed up,” Jakubowski said.

He said the organization is always looking for volunteers or donations, both of which can be done through its website

State’s Unemployment Fund ‘Is Not Solvent,’ Officials Say

State officials said Monday they anticipate Connecticut’s unemployment fund will run out of money in early May, but they stressed mechanisms are in place to allow for federal borrowing, which will ensure unemployment claims continue to get paid.

“Our trust fund that is supported by the employers in the state of Connecticut is not solvent,” said Daryle Dudzinski, deputy commissioner of the Connecticut Department of Labor, speaking on Connecticut Public Radio’s Where We Live.

In the last week, Dudzinski said his department paid out around 253,000 payments for a total of $83 million.

“We anticipate running out of monies, so to speak, but we have already prepared to borrow from the federal government … to make sure there is no delay in anyone’s [benefits],” Dudzinski said.

On Friday, Lamont said he was working with Congress to negotiate a federal relief package that could help shore up the state’s hemorrhaging unemployment funds. 

Lamont said federal relief could come in two ways: a low-interest loan, which would need to be paid back by the state, or a grant, which Lamont said he preferred.

“Obviously, small businesses and states would love them to do it that way,” Lamont said. “That would not impact anybody’s rating and keep us whole.”  

Lamont Calls For More Rapid Testing As Virus Accelerates In Hartford County

Lamont said Monday he wants more rapid COVID-19 tests in Connecticut, including a drive-up clinic in Hartford and a mobile testing center for nursing homes.

Connecticut launched a partnership with CVS Health last week to offer free coronavirus testing to anyone who preregisters online and then arrives by car at 60 Sargent Drive in New Haven, the former Gateway Community College parking lot. It is the state’s only drive-up rapid testing site at the moment.

The site uses a rapid-response COVID-19 test from Abbott, which can return results in as little as five minutes.

Speaking on Where We Live, Lamont said he is now in discussions with CVS to try to bring that testing model to Hartford. 

“The virus is accelerating still in the greater Hartford area,” Lamont said. “Let’s get a rapid test in Hartford -- maybe in the North End -- make sure that people have some security … I feel very confident that we will get one soon, but I can’t put a date on that.”

Lamont said he also wants to work with CVS to get a mobile testing facility that can travel around the state and rapidly test patients. 

The governor said that option would be particularly helpful for nursing homes, where a lag in COVID-19 test results over the past month left many in limbo about how to handle sick residents. 

Meanwhile, coronavirus tore through patient populations and, as of late last week, accounted for roughly 40% of the state’s COVID-19 deaths.

“We need rapid real-time mobile testing in our nursing homes now,” Lamont said. 

State Scrambles To Shore Up Assisted Living Complex Hit By COVID-19

State health and local health officials scrambled this weekend to shore up medical staff at an assisted living complex serving about 50 seniors in southwestern Connecticut.

A regional medical reserve corps and nurses from Yale New Haven Hospital sent staff to bolster Spring Village at Stratford, said Barbara Cass, head of facility licensing and investigations for the state Department of Public Health.

The department responded to an appeal from Stratford Mayor Laura Hoydick and from the community’s health department after receiving reports that the coronavirus had taken some of the nursing staff at Spring Village out of action.

“This was a team approach to help Spring Village get back on its feet,” Hoydick said. “This situation we’re finding ourselves in is new for everybody.”

The response began Saturday night with the state health department, which sent representatives to assess residents’ health and any staffing challenges.

A regional medical reserve corps involving volunteer providers from Stratford, Monroe and Trumbull sent a physician and a nurse to test more than 30 residents on Sunday.

Yale New Haven sent three nurses -- including an advanced practice registered nurse -- to both assist Spring Village staff and to provide patient assessments.

The administrator for Spring Village could not be reached for comment Monday.

But Cass said the facility has developed an interim plan to cover medical services while some staff recover from illness, and it will continue to receive additional nursing assistance from the hospital and the reserve corps.

Lamont Expresses More Support For Vote By Mail

Lamont again voiced his support for an alternative to in-person voting: vote by mail.

More than two dozen states have some form of vote by mail, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures

“I’m a strong supporter of vote by mail,” Lamont said Monday. “Even in August, my instinct is that, for a much older resident, I do not want them going out and voting.”

Connecticut has already delayed its 2020 presidential primary twice. First from April 28 to June 2, and as of last week, from June 2 until the latest new date: Tuesday, Aug. 11. 

Lamont said he is working with the legislature to figure out how voting by mail might work. But it’s unclear how, or if, the mechanisms for making that happen would be in place for the August primary or November’s presidential election.

Lamont acknowledged the idea has been met with some resistance by people who question the security of vote by mail.  

“They do it in … Republican states, Democratic states, it’s an idea whose time has come, especially now,” Lamont said. 

State Projects More Than Half A Billion-Dollar Budget Deficit

Lamont’s budget office projected a $530 million budget deficit Monday for the fiscal year that ends June 30, effectively matching a preliminary forecast issued two weeks ago.

The administration expects the General Fund, which covers the bulk of operating costs in the annual budget, to finish 2.7% in the red, due largely to eroding revenue collections, Office of Policy and Management Secretary Melissa McCaw, Lamont’s budget director, wrote in her mandated monthly forecast. 

McCaw had warned earlier this month that a shortfall of about $500 million was likely, given the multitude of business closures to combat the coronavirus pandemic, as well as numerous tax filing delays.

Lamont extended personal income as well as most business tax filing deadlines from April 15 until July 15 to ease financial pressure on residents and companies.

Despite Congress’ approval of emergency federal stimulus for states, Connecticut also has used its own resources to expand Medicaid eligibility, enhance funding for health care providers, and increase overtime allotments for government agencies facing extra demands during the crisis.

The $530 million shortfall likely will be closed this fall, when Connecticut audits the 2019-20 fiscal year, by drawing down a portion of the state’s record-setting $2.5 billion rainy day fund.

Connecticut Public Radio’s Lucy Nalpathanchil and John Henry Smith contributed to this report. The Connecticut Mirror’s Keith Phaneuf contributed to this report.

Copyright 2020 Connecticut Public Radio

Patrick Skahill is a reporter at WNPR. He covers science and the environment. Prior to becoming a reporter, he was the founding producer of WNPR's The Colin McEnroe Show, which began in 2009. Patrick's reporting has appeared on NPR's Morning Edition, Here & Now, and All Things Considered. He has also reported for the Marketplace Morning Report. He can be reached by phone at 860-275-7297 or by email: pskahill@ctpublic.org.
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