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Your daily coronavirus update: Counties seek all-mail election in Pennsylvania

  • Marc Levy/The Associated Press
  • Staff
People wait outside Penn State Health's Milton S. Hershey Medical Center on April 10, 2020.

 Kate Landis / PA Post

People wait outside Penn State Health's Milton S. Hershey Medical Center on April 10, 2020.

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.

What you should know
» Coronavirus facts & FAQ
» Day-by-day look at coronavirus disease cases in Pa.
» What the governor’s stay-at-home order means

(Harrisburg) — Some of Pennsylvania’s most populous counties are starting to press Gov. Tom Wolf to allow them to conduct the June 2 primary election entirely by mail amid fears that the coronavirus would pose a threat to poll workers and voters.

The top government official in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania’s second-most populous, said Monday that holding an in-person election in the midst of the crisis would be a “disaster.”

Allegheny County Executive Rich Fitzgerald said he wants Wolf to expand an emergency declaration to allow the county to mail ballots to every registered voter and avoid the legal requirement that it open hundreds of polling places staffed by thousands of poll workers.

“I’m very concerned that we can actually operate this and actually function, getting this many people to work the election and in voting places,” Fitzgerald said in an interview.

Officials in a pair of heavily populated suburban Philadelphia counties, Montgomery and Chester, are also backing the idea of an all-mail election, while Philadelphia is making preparations for it in case an all-mail election is ordered.

A voter drops his ballot into a collection box outside the Douglas County Election Commission office in Omaha, Neb., Friday, April 10, 2020. Officials across the country are trying to figure out how to proceed with elections amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Nati Harnik / AP Photo

A voter drops his ballot into a collection box outside the Douglas County Election Commission office in Omaha, Neb., Friday, April 10, 2020. Officials across the country are trying to figure out how to proceed with elections amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Asking people to work at polling places and vote there goes against the social-distancing requirements for residents to slow the spread of the virus in Pennsylvania, Fitzgerald said.

Democrats pressed for a provision in legislation last month to require counties to send mail-in ballot applications to every voter, but it lacked support in the Republican-controlled Legislature and didn’t pass.

Lawmakers did, however, delay the primary election from April 28 to June 2.

In other coronavirus-related developments in Pennsylvania:

Cases

The state Department of Health said confirmed cases of coronavirus had risen to above 24,000, while coronavirus-related deaths have reached 524.

It reported 1,366 additional cases in the 24 hours through midnight Sunday and 17 new deaths.

Since the first cases were reported in central Pennsylvania on March 13, a total of 3,539 people in the region have tested positive for the virus.

The first coronavirus-related deaths in this region were reported about two weeks later, on March 28. In the 16 days since, a total 65 central Pennsylvania residents have died from COVID-19 or related complications.

Today’s update includes one new death in both Berks and Lebanon counties.

  • Adams: 56 cases, including 1 death
  • Berks: 1150 cases, including 21 deaths
  • Columbia: 113 cases, including 3 deaths
  • Cumberland: 122 cases, including 3 deaths
  • Dauphin: 240 cases, including 4 deaths
  • Franklin: 66 cases
  • Juniata: 39 cases
  • Lancaster: 828 cases, including 24 deaths
  • Lebanon: 284 cases, including 2 deaths
  • Mifflin: 17 cases
  • Northumberland: 40 cases
  • Perry: 17 cases, including 1 death
  • Schuylkill: 192 cases, including 2 deaths
  • Snyder: 23 cases, including 1 death
  • Union: 21 cases
  • York: 331 cases, including 3 deaths

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.

Defense Distribution Center declares emergency

At midweek, there were four reported COVID-19 cases at the Defense Logistics Agency's New Cumberland distribution facility.

Courtesy of Defense Logistics Agency

At midweek, there were four reported COVID-19 cases at the Defense Logistics Agency’s New Cumberland distribution facility.

About a week after a civilian employee died from COVID-19 and other workers tested positive for the coronavirus, the Defense Distribution Center Susquehanna in northern York County has declared a public health emergency.

The declaration permits the installation commander to implement protective measures, such as restricting post access and limiting services.

The emergency order is in effect for 30 days, but it can be terminated early or extended.

Reopening the economy

Wolf joined the governors of New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Rhode Island and Delaware to announce that they will share information and form a task force to help guide the reopening of the states’ economies once the crisis recedes.

President Donald Trump asserted Monday that he is the ultimate decision-maker for determining how and when to reopen the country.

Wolf, however, said that considering governors had the responsibility for closing states down, “I think we probably have the primary responsibility for opening it up.”

Wolf also asserted that it is a “false choice” to choose between public health or the economy.

“I think this regional compact is premised on the idea that you’re not going have a healthy economy if you have an unhealthy population,” Wolf said on a conference call with the other governors. “So we’ve got to do both. We’ve got to get people healthy. The sequence is you’ve got to get people healthy first and then you can reopen the economy, not until, or the economy’s not going to work.”

A double line of cars, stretching over a mile at times, are queued waiting as volunteers load food into vehicles outside the Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank in Duquesne, Pa., Monday, April 6, 2020. The COVID-19 pandemic has triggered a 543% increase in people coming to the food bank directly for food, according to the food bank's website.

Gene Puskar / AP Photo

A double line of cars, stretching over a mile at times, are queued waiting as volunteers load food into vehicles outside the Greater Pittsburgh Community.

Unemployment filings

More than 1.3 million Pennsylvanians have filed for unemployment compensation benefits in the four weeks after businesses began shutting down in earnest as Wolf called for measures to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

In the seven days through Saturday, another 238,000 residents filed for benefits, the lowest weekly figure in the four full weeks since March 15.

Prison death

The Department of Corrections reported the first death of an inmate due to the virus.

The department identified the inmate as a 67-year-old serving a life sentence in Phoenix state prison in Montgomery County for a first-degree murder conviction in Philadelphia.

The inmate died Wednesday at the Einstein Medical Center, the department said.

On Saturday, the Montgomery County coroner notified prison officials that the cause of death was acute respiratory distress from pneumonia due to COVID-19 with contributing factors of hypertensive cardiovascular disease and liver cirrhosis, it said.

Police academy shuts down

FILE PHOTO: State Police salute in Johnstown.

Gene J. Puskar / AP Photo

FILE PHOTO: State Police salute in Johnstown.

The Pennsylvania State Police said Monday that its training academy in Hershey will be closed for at least two weeks after an enlisted staff member assigned to the facility tested positive for the virus.

The 100 cadets in the training class will continue instruction remotely from home, the state police said.

The cadet class has been at the academy since Jan. 12, and the state police’s Bureau of Training and Education will work to ensure it can graduate by July 24 as scheduled.

The decision to resume onsite instruction will be based on guidance from the state Department of Health and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control.

All other activities at the academy have been suspended since March.

Car sales legislation

Car dealers would be allowed to resume sales under a bill that advanced Monday on party lines from the House State Government Committee.

The Republican majority pushed through the proposal, which would direct Wolf and his administration to allow all vehicle dealer activity that can be done with adequate social distancing and other safety measures.

Democrats said that the proposal was too expansive and that another pending bill, permitting notaries to operate remotely, would essentially allow more online sales of vehicles.

The House is expected to return to a floor voting session on Tuesday and could take up the bill, as well as other proposals that would permit more construction and retail businesses to operate during the pandemic.

Wolf has said he would oppose the measures if it could threaten public health.

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