c_hawkbob wrote:If, as it sounds may be the case, Trump jumps the gun and tries to put the economy back in service too soon we're looking at a second peak down the road. We absolutely need more and better testing before trying to get most businesses going again and a working vaccine before getting things all the way back to normal.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I would allow restaurants to open dining rooms on a limited basis as long as they can show tables are far enough apart with limits on who can be in the dining room. Wait staff and kitchen staff should work with masks and gloves.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Maybe require masks for travel on mass transit. That bus driver who got coughed on and died was unnecessary. No mask, no travel on mass transit.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Getting the economy operational with methods to slow or prevent infection in place is not only necessary for our quality of life, but also to test measures on how to maintain your economy during a pandemic. it's very important that we not pass on the future this idea of social distancing and hiding as the only means of combating this, but also how to maintain a modern economy during a global pandemic. This is a giant real world experiment we hopefully won't have for another 100 years. We need to make sure we take advantage of it to test and pass on information to our descendants, so they can do better next time. We can't think of just telling the future to hide in their homes, but give them quality information to ensure they handle this far better than we did. Then again in a 100 years, they'll probably be able to produce a usable vaccine in days if not just modify the DNA/RNA to make viruses and bacteria harmless with CRISPR tech.
RiverDog wrote:The problem with restaurants and bars is the amount of time individuals remain within contact of each other. It's unlikely a casual passing within 6' of an infected person is going to result in acquiring the virus, but if you're with an individual for hours, like the Mt.Vernon choir, then the odds go way up. IMO restaurants, bars, movie theatres, playhouses, sporting events, any place with over 50 people with average stays being over 30 minutes should be the last to open.
Hopefully we learn a lot of things as a result of this crisis, including having a reserve of PPE's, ventilators, and other cheap to make, long shelf life items. State and federal governments need to come up with a better thought out contingency plan, which businesses should close, which ones remain open, shutting down mass transit, etc. I also want to see a shake-up at the CDC. Some of the mistakes they made were unforgivable. We also need to pressure closed societies like China, Russia, North Korea, Iran, et al to be more open and honest when it comes to communicable diseases.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I wouldn't do bars. Just restaurants with good-sized dining areas, smaller restaurants with cramped dining can stick to take out. If you can spread tables, then you should be ok. Bars full of drunk people, no go.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I think what I would rather see is a national plan to ramp production of these items quickly rather than a stockpile sitting around. We can make things fast if we need to. No use having tons of stuff sitting around in mothballs when technology and everything else can change. Better to analyze which companies can ramp up production of needed items quickly, maintain a constant list of the companies that can do it, and ramp them up quicker if something similar should happen. Then we're ready to ramp up with current tech items for battling future pandemics with states also having a plan in place backed up by The Fed since state and local leaders often better know how to coordinate their states and cities than The Fed who doesn't have much knowledge or coordination with state and local level government on a day to day basis.
RiverDog wrote:I suppose that if you could guarantee that a business that makes PPE's could immediately drop what they're doing, re-tool, then start producing quantities of PPE's at 10 times their normal usage, it could take the place of an inventory.
Also, maintaining an inventory of PPE doesn't mean letting it sit around. They can rotate the inventory, move older goods out and replace them with newer, improved models as they become available. Current models are cheap enough that even if it were to suddenly become obsolete, you're not losing all that much money.
One of the issues we haven't talked about is airlines. Should airlines have to provide masks to their passengers and insist that they wear them? Is that a practical solution or would such a requirement unreasonable and unenforceable, like the 55 mph speed limit?
Aseahawkfan wrote:They won't have to retool much if you know which companies can do it best. You don't need an insane amount of ventilators as we are finding out.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Airlines should be able to require masks for flight. They are public companies and can require things like masks just like you can't smoke on planes or bring certain items.
RiverDog wrote:I don't know enough about the business to be able to give an informed opinion, but I'd be surprised if they can ramp up production to such a volume to handle a crisis like this one. It might require extra machinery that they don't have, require them to hire and train workers, etc. Keep in mind that there were shortages being reported even in the first couple weeks of this crisis.
That's where the government can help. The FAA can issue rules for wearing masks just like they do not smoking in the aircraft. The airlines don't even have to enforce it. Make passengers aware that they are being videotaped and can be levied a fine by the FAA. No different than traffic cameras at intersections. All the airlines have to do is make them available and remind passengers of the rules if they aren't in compliance.
Of course, this would apply only during an extreme crisis such as we have now. I have no desire to live in a "Big Brother Is Watching" police state society.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The Defense Protection Act was specifically created to convert private industry into emergency manufacturing. You just use it and don't screw around waiting for companies to negotiate a reasonable contract.
RiverDog wrote:Except that this POTUS won't use the Defense Production Act for manufacture of PPE's. He invoked it on March 18th for ventilators, but despite calls to do so, has yet to do it for PPE's. The states need something they can draw on without the approval of a POTUS, particularly one like the current office holder, that is driven by political reasons not to invoke the DPA.
Trump has faced pressure from Democrats for weeks to use the DPA to help address the shortages, but has resisted using the legislation for the purpose of manufacturing PPE while bowing to pressure last week on its use to direct companies to manufacture ventilators.
The states need a national repository where they can draw needed PPE supplies without the consent of the federal government, perhaps in a per capita amount, and if they need more, request permission from one of the other 49 states to obtain what they need from their share. Remember, this is the same POTUS that emphatically told governors that "I'm not a supply clerk!" The feds clearly don't want to have anything to do with supplying states with needed materials.
One thing that did tick me off is that, at least in this state, about the shutdown is that the government conveniently exempted themselves from shutting down. They demanded that all non essential construction work stop UNLESS they were working on a state or federally funded project. Talk about hypocrisy! It was the same way when they first banned unsolicited phone calls. They excluded politicians and "non profits" from the law.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I'm not sure how real the shortage is. Hopefully we will have some guidance on that other than news stories of some single doctor or nurse screaming about supply shortages. I'd prefer to see actual numbers. If it's something like supplies are not being delivered on the weekend because hospital administrators did not order them until Monday, I don't want to see The Fed getting blamed for that. Or some journalist finding the one hospital short on supplies and making that seem like it's everyone. Cases and deaths are fairly tame in all but three cities. Washington State and California should not be short on supplies, but New York, New Jersey, and Michigan maybe. We will see.
RiverDog wrote:As I have told you, my daughter is a charge nurse at an urgent care in Spokane. Here's a copy of my chat with her from back on March 10th: I do the ordering for my urgent care and I cant even get 1 box of masks...Yeah I have a feeling I will get covid before too long. Our managers are saying that it is ok to screen people with just masks and gloves since we are getting low on gowns....I dont believe that is true at all
Governors from all across the nation, from both parties, have been lamenting a PPE shortage. Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds (R): Gov. Kim Reynolds asked Iowans to pitch in Monday as the nation's health care professionals deal with a shortage of protective equipment during the COVID-19 pandemic. Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R): DeWine updated Ohio on the personal protective equipment shortage for healthcare workers. He said that one lab has developed a new technology that would sterilize masks so that they can be reused. Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker (R): The governor's frustration on the state's inability to get medical equipment in the middle of the novel coronavirus pandemic spilled over at the end of a 40-minute long news conference on Thursday. The state has found itself bidding against other states as well as the federal government in trying to find materials, particularly personal protective equipment desperately needed by medical facilities and first-responders. "The biggest thing I would say is that we are doing everything we can, through an incredibly messy thicket that is enormously frustrating for all of us to try to get them the gear that they deserve and they need," Gov. Charlie Baker said at a press conference live-streamed from Boston. "There are a lot of very compassionate and very brave people here in the commonwealth, who are doing what they can to serve people recognizing and understanding that in this particular area, the entire country is struggling to deliver."
I can find a lot more quotes like those if you like. It's not just a few bitchy doctors or nurses complaining about it. There's reports of PPE shortages all across the nation, including states like ours and California that are in relatively good shape. The shortage is real. Period.
PPE's may become cheaper and easier to make, but except perhaps with masks, which could change or improve their filters, they don't often become functionally obsolete. A gown is a gown and a face shield is a face shield. They haven't changed in decades. The PPE shortage is one of the easiest things to rectify when it comes time to fix everything that went wrong in our response. We need to keep an inventory of them.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Once again, no numbers, just quotes from various times form people like stressed out by the situation. I want numbers.
RiverDog wrote:I don't need a number from the thermometer to tell me it's cold outside. One step outside the door is all I need to make that determination. I only need the number off the thermometer to tell me how cold it is.
There is a shortage of PPE's at the end user, ie doctors and nurses like my daughter. It's so obvious that a blind man could see it. I haven't a clue why you are doubting it.
Aseahawkfan wrote:So that i why I have to first stop and look to see if the poster is engaging in a political attack or discussing an actual problem.
RiverDog wrote:So my quote from my daughter constitutes a political attack? Quoting Republican governors noting PPE shortages is a political attack against a Republican POTUS?
Lord, you can take me now, I've seen everything!
It's virtually impossible to have an intelligent discussion about any related topic without such criticism
RiverDog wrote:It's virtually impossible to have an intelligent discussion about any related topic without such criticism
c_hawkbob wrote:I find it totally impossible, which is what has led me to keep Asea on mute ... for a guy that claims to be anti-Trump he sure does carry his water, with extreme prejudice. He gets angry and mean if you say anything remotely disparaging of him ... And he calls me a hypocrite.
RiverDog wrote:Unfortunately that's mostly true. He's certainly not pro-Trump in the same manner that Idahawkman is, but there have been a number of occasions where he's proven himself to be an apologist that seeks excuses for DJT's actions/behavior, especially on this topic. Doubting that there is a PPE shortage is about the same as calling the coronavirus a hoax.
RiverDog wrote:Unfortunately that's mostly true. He's (ASF) certainly not pro-Trump in the same manner that Idahawkman is, but there have been a number of occasions where he's proven himself to be an apologist that seeks excuses for DJT's actions/behavior, especially on this topic. Doubting that there is a PPE shortage is about the same as calling the coronavirus a hoax.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Oh really? That's why I've called out IDhawkman on his BS Trump claims, likely more vociferously than anyone else on the forum. I'm fairly certain if you asked IDhawkman he'd be of the opposite opinion.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I looked up the PPE shortage and saw that it was real. I also found the real reason rather than it's Trump's fault. Which it wasn't, just a supply shock.
Aseahawkfan wrote:But me being a Trump supporter or apologist is BS.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:Yeah, Trump needs to back off this one and quick. States will do and need to do what is best for them right now. Trump is all too concerned about the economy; in an election year, any president would be, but his personality won't let him sit back and let this run its course properly. The economy was going to take a hit regardless so why not comport yourself in a way that is supportive and understanding and non-self aggrandizing? I think most voters would be understanding of a slack in the economy over this, but they'll have a hard time forgetting acting like a jackass.
Also, speaking of governors, I am really impressed with Jon Bel Edwards here in Louisiana. He's made it about leading, and, while he undoubtedly isn't happy with the federal response and Trump, he's refrained from making it political, and I think people will notice.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national ... story.html
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:The mayor and the governor stated there was no warning about shutting it down from federal agencies. Also, at the time, it was business as usual in most parts of the country. Edwards didn’t issue his emergency proclamation until March 11. Hind sight definitely says they should not have allowed it, but, barring police/NG intervention, those revelers probably would have done it anyway. I hate to say, it but there was probably some reluctance solely based on losing all that income from the event; I wonder about that double edged sword aspect. Shut it all down and you have a significant amount of service workers losing major income from that event but way fewer sick people. Keep it open so they at least get that shot of income before going dormant but exposure increases significantly. Hard to say if firm guidance prior to the event would have moved them to cancel. Such a big economic event for the state and city.
The mayor of NOLA did officially cancel St. Patrick’s day parades much to the dismay of the populace who proceeded to do it anyway but in reduced numbers. None of the bars and restaurants down there wanted to close.
It actually hasn’t been that hot. A lot of rain during that time and cool temperatures. It will be more telling come May if hot humid temperatures mean anything to this virus.
A link regarding the CDC on Mardi Gras:
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/ ... mm6915e4_w
In the second and third paragraphs in the Discussion section may explain some of it.
"Mardi Gras, which concluded on February 25, occurred at a time when cancelling mass gatherings (e.g., festivals, conferences, and sporting events) was not yet common in the United States."
So who dropped the ball? Trump, NOLA Mayor, Edwards, or CDC?
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