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Your daily coronavirus update: Pennsylvania tops 3,000 virus deaths as data are reconciled

  • Michael Rubinkam/Associated Press
  • Marc Levy/The Associated Press
  • Mark Scolforo/The Associated Press
A worker folds up a tarp after attaching a poster to a shuttered business in Philadelphia, Monday, May 4, 2020. The Center City District and Mural Arts Philadelphia posted the original works on multiple locations in an effort to enhance the neighborhood awash with business shuttered to help curb the spread of coronavirus.

 Matt Rourke / AP Photo

A worker folds up a tarp after attaching a poster to a shuttered business in Philadelphia, Monday, May 4, 2020. The Center City District and Mural Arts Philadelphia posted the original works on multiple locations in an effort to enhance the neighborhood awash with business shuttered to help curb the spread of 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.
» Red, yellow, green: What to expect in each of Pa.’s tiers for reopening

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Pennsylvania reported another 554 deaths from the coronavirus to pass 3,000 total, while Gov. Tom Wolf said Tuesday that he is not committing to a particular schedule to lift stay-at-home pandemic restrictions in the state’s counties or regions.

The large number of new deaths reported Tuesday by the state Department of Health were spread out over the previous two weeks, the agency said, as it reconciles its figures with deaths being reported by local agencies or hospitals.

Still, it was as stark a figure as the state has reported since the first case of the new coronavirus was detected in Pennsylvania in early March. It comes as the growth in cases appeared to slow down in many parts of Pennsylvania and Wolf’s administration moves to lighten its restrictions on movement and business activity.

With the economic fallout of the pandemic shutdown growing, Wolf maintained Tuesday that he would stick to a reopening process that relies on what he sees as indicators tied to safety.

Wolf also acknowledged that the state, as it begins lifting stay-at-home orders and allowing many businesses to reopen in 24 counties this Friday, will be unable to investigate or enforce every complaint about an employer not following his administration’s safety guidance to protect workers and customers.

On a conference call with reporters, Wolf acknowledged fielding complaints from lawmakers from various regions about lifting restrictions there sooner, or removing hard-hit nursing homes from regional case counts that factor in to whether he will lift restrictions.

However, Wolf otherwise said it is not realistic to ignore case counts in prisons and nursing homes, and he said that setting a schedule to reopen counties would be arbitrary.

“What we’re trying to do is keep people safe … and we’re going to be guided by that as we were guided in opening 24 counties last week,” Wolf said. “The next round, when it comes, is going to come when we feel it’s OK to open another series of counties.”

Wolf promised an announcement on Allegheny County and southwestern Pennsylvania “soon.” The county, with 1.2 million people, and its immediate area remain under the governor’s strictest orders, the so-called “red” designation.

In other developments:

Cases

About 865 additional people tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19, according to the state Health Department. That lifted the statewide total to nearly 51,000.

A total of 9,168 people in central Pennsylvania have tested positive or are presumed to have had the virus since the first cases were reported in the region on March 13. Of those who tested positive, 411 died from COVID-19.

Today’s update includes 31 newly reported deaths in Lancaster County, 29 in Berks, seven in Cumberland, five in Lebanon, three in Columbia, one in Adams, one in Dauphin, one in Franklin and one in Union.

  • Adams: 148 cases, including 5 deaths
  • Berks: 3004 cases, including 147 deaths
  • Columbia: 298 cases, including 16 deaths
  • Cumberland: 382 cases, including 25 deaths
  • Dauphin: 695 cases, including 29 deaths
  • Franklin: 396 cases, including 9 deaths
  • Juniata: 86 cases
  • Lancaster: 2018 cases, including 144 deaths
  • Lebanon: 766 cases, including 15 deaths
  • Mifflin: 42 cases
  • Northumberland: 107 cases
  • Perry: 34 cases, including 1 death
  • Schuylkill: 405 cases, including 7 deaths
  • Snyder: 33 cases, including 1 death
  • Union: 38 cases, including 1 death
  • York: 716 cases, including 11 deaths

The number of infections is thought to be far higher than the state’s confirmed case count because many people have not been tested, and studies suggest people can be infected with the virus without feeling sick. There is no data on how many people have fully recovered.

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.

Mass transit funding

With its revenues plummeting, the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission is going to miss its July payment to the state Department of Transportation for mass transit.

Under state law, the turnpike is supposed to send PennDOT $450 million per year to subsidize mass transit. The turnpike made its quarterly payment last month, but PennDOT granted an extension of the July payment in light of the pandemic’s impact on turnpike revenues, Acting Transportation Secretary Yassmin Gramian said Tuesday.

At least in the short term, federal coronavirus relief money will make up the difference for the state’s mass transit agencies, which include the Port Authority of Allegheny County and the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority, she said.

Meanwhile, PennDOT is getting ready to reopen driver license centers in the 24 counties where Wolf is lifting some pandemic restrictions. Customers and staff alike will have to wear masks and observe social distancing, Kurt J. Myers, deputy secretary for Driver & Vehicle Services, told reporters.

Real estate transactions

Starting Friday, real estate activity can resume in areas designated as yellow under the governor’s reopening plan, albeit with limitations. That includes no more than two people in a property at one time for in-person inspections, showings or walk-throughs, and social distancing precautions must be taken as well, including masks.

Hank Lerner, director of law and policy for the Pennsylvania Association of Realtors, said social distancing guidelines mean that open houses are pretty much off the table. But, he said, the Wolf administration should have allowed three people to go into houses together to accommodate both spouses and their agent. Otherwise, two such tours might be necessary, thus potentially increasing exposure to the virus, Lerner said.

In areas still designated as red, the only allowed transactions are where a buyer’s property was already under contract prior to Wolf’s March 19 order to close non-life-sustaining businesses. Someone who sells their house under one of those contracts is allowed to buy another house to live in, although the problem with that, Lerner said, is that the person they are buying from may not have a place to live since they, in turn, cannot buy a house in a county designated as red.

The association, in the meantime, is backing legislation that would allow agents to resume operations as long as they adhere to social distancing practices and other federal guidelines.

Mail-in ballot boom

A million or more Pennsylvanians may end up employing the state’s new vote-by-mail system in the presidential primary that is four weeks away.

The Department of State said nearly a million people have applied for a mail-in ballot, which is permitted for the first time under a law passed last year.

Along with the presidential race, this year’s contests include row offices, Congress and the Legislature.

Until this year, Pennsylvanians who did not want to vote in person needed to have an approved excuse in order to obtain an absentee ballot. But the 2019 voting reform law authorized no-excuse mail-in ballots for the first time.

As of Monday, 949,000 applications had been made for mail-in or absentee ballots, according to the Department of State. During the 2016 primary, 84,000 votes were cast in Pennsylvania using the absentee ballot process.

The deadline for registered voters to ask for an absentee or mail-in ballot is May 26. They must be returned by 8 p.m. on Tuesday, June 2, the primary day.

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