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Your coronavirus update in Pa.: More than 11,500 cases confirmed in 65 counties

The state Health Department's latest report included another 14 deaths, including three in Lancaster County and one in Berks County. 

The spread of COVID-19 has caused cancellations of many public events, including the Easter Egg Hunt at the Hanoverdale Church of the Brethren in Hummelstown.

 Tim Lambert / WITF

The spread of COVID-19 has caused cancellations of many public events, including the Easter Egg Hunt at the Hanoverdale Church of the Brethren in Hummelstown.

With our coronavirus coverage, our goal is to equip you with the information you need. Rather than chase every update, we’ll try to keep things in context and focus on helping you make decisions. See all of our stories here.

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(Harrisburg) — Pennsylvania’s health secretary issued new standards Sunday for cleaning large buildings that remain open during the COVID-19 shutdown.

Dr. Rachel Levine’s order, which applies to building that are at least 50,000 square feet, requires building owners to maintain usual cleaning and follow U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines to routinely clean and disinfect areas that are often touched.

The types of buildings covered by Levine’s order include warehouses, factories, offices, airports, grocery stores, government facilities, hotels, colleges and universities and residential buildings that have 50 units or more.

Building owners also must make sure there are enough workers to perform the cleaning properly and, if they have security, that they are sufficient to control access, keep order and enforce social distancing. The order takes effect early Monday.

Service 1st Restoration workers Shaun Deimler and Nick Hamilton prepare to spray disinfectant throughout the Centric Bank corporate headquarters to stop the spread of the coronavirus.

Sean Simmers / PennLive

Service 1st Restoration workers Shaun Deimler and Nick Hamilton prepare to spray disinfectant throughout the Centric Bank corporate headquarters to stop the spread of the coronavirus.

NEW CASES

There were more than 1,400 new cases overnight for a total of 11,500, the state Health Department said Sunday. Fourteen deaths were reported, making 150 people who have died in the state. Three deaths were in Lancaster County and one was in Berks County.

A total of 1,312 cases and 17 deaths have been reported in central Pennsylvania counties: Adams (21), Berks (276, including 3 deaths), Columbia (22), Cumberland (58, including 2 deaths), Dauphin (118, including 1 death), Franklin (30), Juniata (7), Lancaster (371, including 8 deaths), Lebanon (106), Mifflin (9), Northumberland (14), Perry (5, including 1 death), Schuylkill (90), Snyder (8, including 1 death), Union (6) and York (171, including 1 death).

“The continued rise in cases combined with our increasing deaths from COVID-19 reflects the seriousness of this situation,” Secretary of Health Dr. Rachel Levine said. “We need everyone to listen to the orders in place and to stay calm, stay home and stay safe. We know that these prolonged mitigation effects have been difficult for everyone, but it is essential that everyone follows these orders and does not go out unless they absolutely must.”

The agency said most deaths and most hospitalizations have been of patients 65 and older.

For most people, the virus causes mild or moderate symptoms that clear up in a couple of weeks. Older adults and people with existing health problems are at higher risk of more severe illness, including pneumonia, or death.

Pennsylvania officials have told residents to stay at home unless they are getting food, groceries or medicine, seeking medical attention or getting outdoor exercise without coming in close contact with others. There are also exceptions for those whose jobs require their attendance and other circumstances. Non-life-sustaining businesses have been ordered closed and schools have shut down statewide indefinitely.

Signs posted along Philadelphia’s Schuylkill River Trail caution users to keep six feet away from others to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

Emma Lee / WHYY

Signs posted along Philadelphia’s Schuylkill River Trail caution users to keep six feet away from others to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

LAWMAKERS RETURN

State lawmakers return to session this week under emergency rules that permit senators and representatives to vote remotely.

In the House, which will be voting on Monday and Tuesday, the business includes swearing in three new members who won office in special elections last month. The Senate will be in on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.

Although the agenda is a work in progress, among the coronavirus response ideas that could be considered are setting up a task force to examine the pandemic’s impact in the state.

There are also pending bills with House Republican proposals to override some of the directives put in place by Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf. One GOP proposal would allow more construction sector employees to work during the statewide stay-at-home order. Another would permit retail stores to reopen if they can be run by a single employee and are set up to handle one customer at a time.

COUGHING INVESTIGATED

Charges are planned against two people accused in separate incidents of purposely coughing on a fast-food restaurant worker and employees at a doctor’s office while saying they have the coronavirus, according to state police in western Pennsylvania.

Police said a 48-year-old woman in Westmoreland County became upset at a drive-thru window of a fast-food restaurant and purposely coughed at an employee, saying she hoped they became fatally infected with the virus.

In the other incident, at a doctor’s office in Latrobe, police say a 53-year-old man told an employee her mask wouldn’t help her before he coughed on her repeatedly and said, “I guess we’ll find out.”

 

 

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