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Your daily coronavirus update: Pennsylvanians get governor’s OK to resume golfing, boating

  • The Associated Press
  • Staff
Betty Seward carries lettuce plants at the Cleveland Ott & Sons farm which supplies garden centers and farm stands, in Graterford, Pa., Monday, April 27, 2020. With outdoor planting season in full swing for much of Pennsylvania, many garden centers and the farms that supply their vegetable seedlings and flowers are buckling under the pain of Gov. Tom Wolf's orders to tens of thousands of businesses to shut down to contain the spread of the coronavirus.

 Matt Rourke / AP Photo

Betty Seward carries lettuce plants at the Cleveland Ott & Sons farm which supplies garden centers and farm stands, in Graterford, Pa., Monday, April 27, 2020. With outdoor planting season in full swing for much of Pennsylvania, many garden centers and the farms that supply their vegetable seedlings and flowers are buckling under the pain of Gov. Tom Wolf's orders to tens of thousands of businesses to shut down to contain the spread of the coronavirus.

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

Golfers, boaters, anglers and campers got some good news Monday when Gov. Tom Wolf announced some restrictions on those outdoor activities will be loosened in the coming days.

Wolf said golf courses, marinas, guided fishing trips and privately owned campgrounds will be allowed to reopen on Friday, as long as they comport with state-issued guidelines to operate safely during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Campgrounds in state parks will remain closed until mid-May, at least.

Wolf said in a statement that the reopenings amount to “measured limited steps” that will help the economy and be good for mental health.

Tony Yoon fishes at Meadow Lake in FDR Park.

Emma Lee / WHYY

Tony Yoon fishes at Meadow Lake in FDR Park.

Robert Kleckner, president of the Pennsylvania Golf Course Owners Association, said his organization pushed hard over the past six weeks to have golf considered a permissible activity.

“It’s pretty emotional,” Kleckner said after learning of the decision. “You know, we lost hundreds of thousands of operational dollars — every course did. Not profit dollars. What a relief to myself and my family.”

Kleckner said about a quarter of states still have restrictions on golf to help mitigate the pandemic spread. Pennsylvania has more than 500 golf courses.

A construction crew works to build structures for a drive-in coronavirus testing facility at Spirit Urgent Care in Camp Hill on April 27, 2020.

Kate Landis / PA Post

A construction crew works to build structures for a drive-in coronavirus testing facility at Spirit Urgent Care in Camp Hill on April 27, 2020.

Cases

Nearly 900 additional cases of COVID-19 were reported in Pennsylvania on Monday by the state Health Department, raising the total to more than 42,000 since the pandemic began.

The agency said there have been nearly 1,600 deaths from the coronavirus outbreak so far. About 50 additional deaths were reported over the past day.

The number of infections is thought to be far higher because many people have not been tested, and studies suggest people can be infected with the virus without feeling sick.

A total of 7,436 people in central Pennsylvania have tested positive for the virus or are presumed to have the virus since the first cases were reported in the region on March 13. Of those, 227 died from COVID-19.

Today’s update includes three newly reported deaths in Dauphin County, one in Berks, one in Cumberland, one in Lancaster and one in York.

  • Adams: 122 cases, including 1 death
  • Berks: 2526 cases, including 89 deaths
  • Columbia: 277 cases, including 7 deaths
  • Cumberland: 282 cases, including 9 deaths
  • Dauphin: 529 cases, including 21 deaths
  • Franklin: 227 cases, including 2 deaths
  • Juniata: 79 cases
  • Lancaster: 1633 cases, including 75 deaths
  • Lebanon: 621 cases, including 7 deaths
  • Mifflin: 30 cases
  • Northumberland: 90 cases
  • Perry: 26 cases, including 1 death
  • Schuylkill: 324 cases, including 5 deaths
  • Snyder: 33 cases, including 1 death
  • Union: 31 cases
  • York: 606 cases, including 9 deaths

Most hospitalizations and deaths have occurred in patients 65 or older, officials said. The disease has spread to every county in the state.

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.

Cumberland County employee tests positive

Editor’s note: This section has been updated to clarify the reason behind temporary furloughs in Cumberland County.

Tim Lambert / WITF

A courtroom in the Cumberland County Courthouse in Carlisle.

The Cumberland County Board of Commissioners is warning the public about possible exposure to the coronavirus after a county government employee tested positive. The unidentified employee visited the Cumberland County Courthouse, Historical Courthouse and Business Central, a government facility on North Hanover Street in Carlisle, during the weeks beginning on April 13 and 20.

Commissioner Gary Eichelberger said the areas where the county employee worked have been disinfected according to CDC guidelines.

As part of the COVID-19 response, the Cumberland County Courthouse, county-owned buildings and facilities remain closed to all pubic. Offices are still operational with core personnel to continue daily operations. On April 24, the county furloughed 156 employees as a result of the economic fallout of the coronavirus pandemic.

Elective surgery

The Department of Health said Monday that hospitals and outpatient centers may resume elective surgeries if they can show they won’t jeopardize patient safety or their ability to respond to a sudden spike in COVID-19 patients.

The Wolf administration had ordered hospitals to postpone elective procedures last month in an effort to preserve hospital capacity and medical supplies. The health secretary, Dr. Rachel Levine, said Monday the department has issued guidance allowing the procedures to resume, as long as a hospital can show it has enough personal protective equipment and meet other conditions.

An analysis commissioned by The Hospital and Healthsystem Association of Pennsylvania said the cancellation of elective surgeries and deferral of medical treatments — from which hospitals derive a large portion of their income — resulted in a nearly $1 billion revenue hit in March alone.

High school graduation

Wolf dashed any remaining hope that a high school senior might be able to participate in a traditional graduation ceremony. It’s not happening, he said Monday.

The virus “has made it impossible for traditional graduation ceremonies to take place,” he said in a video message. “A lot of you are probably feeling angry about this, and you have a right to feel that way because you have been dealt a bad hand.”

Wolf’s reopening plan bans large gatherings even in regions of the state where pandemic restrictions are being eased starting May 8.

“We have all had to make sacrifices to keep ourselves and our loved ones safe during this pandemic and this has been a big one,” said Wolf, offering congratulations to the class of 2020.

Garden centers

A proposal to force the Wolf administration to open lawn and garden retail suppliers passed a House committee on Monday with unanimous Republican support and a few Democratic “yes” votes.

The Agriculture and Rural Affairs Committee approved that bill as well as a measure to let pet groomers open. Both categories of business would have to be able to operate in accordance with federal social distancing guidelines.

The bills still require action from both chambers and the governor’s signature.

Gardeners are now starting the spring planting season with severely limited access to seeds, seedlings, fertilizer and other material.

Wolf closed down garden centers as part of a March 19 order that closed businesses not deemed necessary to sustain life.

Contact tracing

Levine said Monday a plan will be made public later this week about how Pennsylvania will trace the contacts of people infected with the coronavirus to help control its spread.

A smartphone belonging to Drew Grande, 40, of Cranston, R.I., shows notes he made for contact tracing Wednesday, April 15, 2020. Grande began keeping a log on his phone at the beginning of April, after he heard Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo urge residents to start out of concern about the spread of the coronavirus.

Steven Senne / AP Photo

A smartphone belonging to Drew Grande, 40, of Cranston, R.I., shows notes he made for contact tracing Wednesday, April 15, 2020. Grande began keeping a log on his phone at the beginning of April, after he heard Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo urge residents to start out of concern about the spread of the coronavirus.

Levine said the tracing, a prerequisite under the administration’s reopening plan to loosen social distancing restrictions, will have multiple components, including work by public health nurses.

Levine said county and municipal health departments, hospitals and health systems will also contribute. She said volunteers and new hires, people she called “disease detectives,” will be involved. She did not say when this week the plan will be released but said it will be in place by May 8.

The tracing will also involve the use of technology to trace contacts, which Wolf said Monday needs to be sensitive to people’s privacy needs.

Mail-in voting lawsuit

A new lawsuit seeks to force Pennsylvania elections officials to accept absentee or mail-in ballots as long as they are received within a week after the primary or general elections during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The groups and voters who filed the lawsuit on Monday with the state Supreme Court argued current deadlines threaten to invalidate otherwise properly cast votes.

They are seeking to have the court order that ballots be accepted if they are mailed by election day and received within a week afterward.

They argue that postal delays from the COVID-19 pandemic could cause ballots to be received too late to count. The deadline for county elections offices to receive absentee and mail-in ballots is currently 8 p.m., when polls close, on election day.

Pennsylvania’s primary has been postponed until June 2.

The state legalized mail-in ballots last fall and they will be used for the first time this year.

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