Pa. receives less than half of emergency supplies requested from federal government
Pennsylvania has received less than half of the coronavirus supplies it requested from the federal government, according to Federal Emergency Management documents released by House Democrats.
The list of requested supplies includes personal protective equipment such as gloves, surgical masks, surgical gowns and face shields. It also includes testing supplies.
Pennsylvania requested at least 494,392 N95 respirators. As of Monday, the same day President Donald Trump declared a major disaster in the state, it had only received 112,250, less than a quarter of those requested.
The state requested 3,990 pairs of coveralls, but received only 480, or about 12%.
As of Thursday, Pennsylvania has 7,264 confirmed coronavirus cases. And 90 residents have died from COVID-19.
The House Oversight Committee also documents about requests in Delaware, the District of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia, which are all part of FEMA Region III.
President Trump’s disaster order, requested by Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf, allows for additional federal funding to flow to local recovery efforts.
Philadelphia experiences rapid growth in coronavirus cases
Philadelphia is still experiencing “rapid growth” in the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases, according to city officials.
As of Thursday afternoon, Philadelphia had 425 new cases, bringing the total to 2,100. There were 360 new cases on Wednesday.
Roughly half of all infections are people under 50.
Seventeen people in Philadelphia have now died from the coronavirus. Nine of them were nursing home residents.
Health Commissioner Thomas Farley said Thursday the city is seeing more “clusters” of COVID-19 cases inside group residential facilities, including nursing homes, behavioral health centers and county jails, where 20 incarcerated people have tested positive for coronavirus.
As a result, Philadelphia has expanded its definition of what it considers a health care worker to include staffers at those sites, said Farley.
Health care workers are among the groups the city is prioritizing for coronavirus testing.
Despite increases in the number of coronavirus cases, 44% of the region’s hospital beds are still available.
There are roughly 12,000 hospital beds in Philadelphia, Bucks, Montgomery, Chester and Delaware counties. There are 560 patients with COVID-19 at hospitals in those counties.
“Their emergency departments are not busy the moment. They’re seeing about half of the number of patients that they see under ordinary times,” said Farley during a virtual news conference.
“We want to keep it that way. We want to make it so our health care system does not become overloaded,” he added
During the news conference, Mayor Jim Kenney also signed into law a bill providing nearly $85 million in emergency funding to bolster the city’s coronavirus efforts, elbow-bumping City Council President Darrell Clarke just before picking up his pen.
The funding will help pay for personal protective gear and ventilators, as well as supplies and salaries at the Liacouras Center, which has been retrofitted to hold 250 additional hospital beds to handle a potential surge in COVID-19 patients.
Staff shortages have put city trash collection a day behind schedule, but residents should continue to put out their garbage on their designated day.
“I’m confident that we’re going to catch up,” said Managing Director Brian Abernathy.
Philly City Council approves $85.4 million in emergency funding
In one of the quickest meetings in Philadelphia City Council history, members approved $85.4 million in emergency funding to help fight the coronavirus pandemic.
“This is for us to deal with immediate need,” said Council President Darrell Clarke said. “$85 million will not be all we need for the city of Philadelphia to get us through this, but it is the most immediate need.”
The bill moves money from the city’s current Fiscal Year 2020 budget, and is expected to help fund a range of efforts to help deal with the COVID-19 outbreak.
It was City Council’s first-ever virtual meeting and ran about 12 minutes from start to finish. Clarke was the only member in the chambers at City Hall. The rest participated via phone and online.
Clarke says the virtual session could be a template for upcoming budget hearings, which are necessary to produce a city budget by July first.
Pa. lawmakers introduce bills to address rise in hate crimes
Pennsylvania lawmakers are introducing a slew of bills that would strengthen the state’s hate crime laws after reports of increased harassment against Asian Americans during the pandemic.
“We know that hate certainly does not take a pause during COVID-19 and neither [do] our attempts to eradicate it in Pennsylvania,” State Sen. Larry Farnese, who represents parts of Philadelphia, including Chinatown.
Farnese is backing a bill that would let the state’s attorney general track hate groups through a database, which would also be available to law enforcement agencies.
Another bill in the package would require anyone convicted of ethnic intimidation to take educational classes “relating to the motivating factor of the underlying crime.” An additional bill that would require postsecondary institutions to create anonymous hate crime reporting for students and staff.
Farnese said when social distancing measures were first put into place in the region, the first calls “were not about essential businesses being open, or courts, or even employment.”
“They were about the Asian American community who were literally frightened by the words that were coming out of national leadership,” he said referring to President Donald Trump’s press conferences where he called COVID-19 the “Chinese virus.”
Asian American activists have argued that type of language stigmatizes their communities.
Though data lags, anecdotally it appears Asian Americans have experienced an increase in verbal and physical abuse.
Marian Lien, president of OCA-Asian Pacific American Advocates’ Pittsburgh chapter, said she’s heard of college students being shunned and she described an instance of verbal harassment she experienced.
“During a visit to the market last week, I was told to go and shop with my own kind that I should take the disease, the virus, and be shipped back to China,” Lien said, adding she didn’t report the incident because of the initial shock.
Though bias incidents are primarily handled by local law enforcement, State Police Sgt. William Slaton, Commander of the Heritage Affairs section within the Equality and Inclusion Office, promised to offer assistance should any local departments need it.