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Conn. Governor Calls For Phased-In Approach To Reopening Economy

Ryan Caron King
/
Connecticut Public
Chairs are stacked on tables at the sports bar Spills on State in New London. The bar had to shift its menu to takeout food after COVID-19 mandates forced restaurants to stop dine-in service in March.

The road to reopening Connecticut’s economy will likely require a phased-in approach that will consider hospitalization numbers, widespread COVID-19 testing and detailed tracking of infections in different regions, Gov. Ned Lamont said Thursday. 

This post has been updated.

On a day when Connecticut’s COVID-19 case count rose to nearly 16,000, state officials said those factors could be the keys to getting the state safely back to work. The state on Thursday also reported a total of 971 deaths since the outbreak began.

“This is a pandemic that’s going to be with us for a while,” Lamont said. “Even though we’ve got to think about what happens next.” 

What’s next, for now, is an advisory board that will include representatives from labor, small business and the scientific communities. The co-chairs are former PepsiCo CEO Indra Nooyi and Yale University epidemiologist Albert Ko, who said the challenge they face has “no magic bullet.”

“Vaccines are likely 18 months … if not two years away from us,” Ko said. “So we have to invest in the hard work now.” 

The advisers are expected to collaborate with state legislative leaders about when and how to reopen portions of the state’s economy. 

“It’s a business decision, but, more importantly, it’s a public health decision,” Lamont said. “Those two are going to be made together, with a focus on the public health.”

Right now, the governor said May 20 is the next big decision point for reopening schools and parts of the Connecticut economy.

Dedicated COVID-19 Recovery Centers Begin Accepting Patients

COVID-19 patients well enough to be discharged from a hospital but not well enough to go home now have several places in Connecticut to recover. 

Athena Health Care Systems announced Thursday it has accepted two patients at a dedicated floor of its Sharon Health Care Center. Northbridge Health Care Center, an Athena facility in Bridgeport, will also begin to receive recovering patients on Monday. 

Tim Brown, a spokesperson for Athena, said two more centers -- one in Torrington and one in Meriden -- are also expected to open in the coming days. 

“Torrington and Meriden were closed buildings that we are working to reopen,” Brown said in an email. “Torrington will be able to accept admissions next week.”

Other facilities have been set up by Hartford HealthCare and the Connecticut National Guard.

The recovery centers aim to free up hospital beds by admitting acute-care COVID-19 patients who no longer require the specialized medical care of a hospital. 

Department Of Labor Speeds Up Processing Of Unemployment Claims

The state Department of Labor’s nearly 40-year-old IT system has gotten a programming boost, allowing employees to process about 60,000 unemployment claims late Wednesday and early Thursday to ease a filing backlog.

The department now has processed about 247,000 -- or two-thirds -- of 365,000 applications since the pandemic began in early March, department spokeswoman Nancy Steffens said Thursday.

That’s a huge shift from midafternoon Wednesday when the department had processed just over half of 350,000 pending claims for unemployment benefits.

Lamont and labor officials announced new programming updates this week to lower the wait time for processing of claims and to expedite the release of enhanced federal relief for the unemployed.

Before the changes to the labor department’s IT system, it was taking an average of six weeks for staff to process benefit applications. And that’s despite the agency quadrupling the number of workers assigned to the task, from 20 to 80.

Deputy Labor Commissioner Dante Bartolomeo said Wednesday that the state’s goal is to reduce the average claim-processing time from six weeks to one week by April 25.

Hartford HealthCare Worker Dies After Getting COVID-19

An employee at Hartford HealthCare has died after testing positive for COVID-19, hospital officials said Thursday. 

“Our heart goes out to the family and friends and members of his team,” said Hartford HealthCare Chief Clinical Officer Ajay Kumar. “We’re all saddened by this.”

The hospital system did not release further details about the case. It’s unclear when the employee came down with symptoms, where he worked or when he died.

Hartford HealthCare employs around 30,000 people. Its network includes Hartford Hospital, The Hospital of Central Connecticut, and St. Vincent’s Medical Center in Fairfield County.

Meanwhile, Connecticut’s COVID-19 hospitalizations continue to rise. Hard-hit Fairfield and New Haven counties added about 100 hospitalizations on Wednesday

Senators Call For Extension To Work Authorizations

Dozens of Senate Democrats wrote to President Donald Trump Wednesday seeking an automatic extension of work authorizations for immigrant communities during the COVID-19 pandemic. 

In the April 15 letter, Connecticut’s U.S. senators, Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy, joined a group of more than 30 lawmakers asking Trump to renew the authorizations -- and avoid the prospect of deporting so-called Dreamers and Temporary Protected Status (TPS) recipients. 

The federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, provides temporary deportation relief to immigrants who arrived in the United States as children. The senators said more than 200,000 DACA recipients are working in “essential” jobs, as identified by the Department of Homeland Security, during the ongoing coronavirus outbreak -- including thousands of health care workers and teachers.

With stay-at-home orders in place and federal immigration offices closed to the public, the senators said immigrants facing renewals will be hard-pressed to gather the necessary documents and present them to officials already backlogged and delayed by COVID-19 disruptions.

“Your Administration can immediately ease burdens for thousands of American families, and prevent further, unnecessary economic disruptions during this public health emergency by automatically extending employment authorizations for DACA and TPS recipients and other impacted immigrants,” the senators wrote.

A Travelers Championship, But With No Fans

The PGA Tour announced Thursday that the Travelers Championship this year will be a TV-only event -- with no crowds allowed.

The golf tournament, set to begin June 25, will be broadcast on CBS and the Golf Channel. 

Despite the changes, organizers for the tournament said all of the event’s net proceeds will still go to charities, including COVID-19 relief organizations. 

“Conducting the tournament without crowds on-site is in the best interest of protecting everyone, including the broader community,” Andy Bessette, Travelers’ executive vice president and chief administrative officer, said in a statement.

National Guard Mobilizes To Care For COVID-19 Patients

Soldiers with the Connecticut National Guard and U.S. Army Reserve are now caring for COVID-19 patients at Stamford Hospital. 

Military officials said Thursday that it’s part of an effort to support medical staff across the country during the coronavirus outbreak. Military medical crews have also been deployed to New York and New Jersey. 

The Connecticut National Guard recently set up 200 beds at Stamford Hospital. The city has been the hardest-hit municipality in Connecticut, with more than 1,600 of the state’s 15,884 confirmed coronavirus cases. 

In other developments, the city of Stamford said it expected to begin testing all police officers and firefighters for the virus on Thursday.

Connecticut Mirror reporter Keith Phaneuf contributed to this story. This report contains information from the Associated Press.

Patrick Skahill is a reporter and digital editor at Connecticut Public. Prior to becoming a reporter, he was the founding producer of Connecticut Public Radio'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 at pskahill@ctpublic.org.

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