Rick's Blog

Saturday Morning: the new normal?

As Inweekly predicted yesterday, Escambia County has 46 more COVID-19 cases as of April 30.  The increase came from Bayside Health on Langley Avenue – 44 residents, 13 staff.

The report produced by Agency for Health Care Administration’s Emergency Status System and is not cumulative, in other words if staff die, are fired  or quit they aren’t shown. Southern Oaks went from 15 infected employees to only six.

We have been told that over 500 specimen collections taken a local nursing homes were outstanding as April 30, which contradicts the county’s assertion that results are coming back in 24-48 hours. In

Residents Transfer Out Staff
Arcadia Health & Rehabilitation 0 0 3
Asbury Place 0 0 1
Bayside Health 44 0 13
Brookdale Pensacola 3 0 6
De Luna Health And Rehabilitation 0 0 0
Florida Mentor 0 0 1
Homestead Village Retirement 0 1 1
Olive Branch Health And Rehabilitation 0 1 0
Pensacola Developmental Center 0 0 1
Rehabiltation at Park Place 0 1 1
Rosewood Healthcare And Rehabilitation 9 1 1
Southern Oaks Care Center 94 4 6
Specialty Health And Rehabilitation 0 1 0
Total 150 9 34 193

FDOH has issued a report of deaths in nursing homes that will be updated weekly. Of course, the department made it as difficult as possible to use by not listing facilities by county. Southern Oaks had four residents and one employee die because of the virus. Brookdale had four residents die due to COVID-19.

FDOH finally update the county surveillance report – the last one was dated April 26.  The positive percentage for April 27 – the day before the county vote to reopen the beaches – was 14%, followed by to consecutive days of 10%.  The April 30 positive percentage was 7%.

Escambia’s death total has risen to 12 – up one from last Friday; Santa Rosa 8 deaths, up 2. Escambia County had 26 new cases yesterday, the most in a single day since April 22.

4/30/20 5/1/20
11 a.m. 11 a.m. Increase
Total Cases 33690 34728 1038 3.08%
Florida Residents 32804 33829 1025 3.12%
Non-Fla. 886 899 13 1.47%
Deaths 1268 1314 46 3.63%
Escambia 506 532 26 5.14%
Okaloosa 154 156 2 1.30%
Santa Rosa 154 158 4 2.60%

 


Nursing Home Investigation

I spent yesterday away from my computer interviewing staff and family members of residents in nursing homes. If you have any information on what’s happening in local nursing homes, please email – rick@inweekly.net.  What I have accumulated so far is shocking and sad.

Inweekly doesn’t want the fear and suffering that some county officials have called “anomalies” to go unnoticed.


State Parks to Open

Gov. Ron DeSantis on Friday said Floridians want to return to the workforce and added state parks to what will be allowed to reopen Monday in the first phase of trying to recover economically from the coronavirus pandemic.

“If it’s not risky to go to a park, you should be able to go to a park. If it’s not risky for you to walk 18 holes, then do it,” DeSantis said while at Little Talbot Island State Park in Duval County with Jacksonville Mayor Lenny Curry.

Julia Woodward, chief executive officer of the Florida State Parks Foundation, welcomed the announcement that parks will be allowed to reopen.

“Numerous studies have shown that nature is actually good for our health and well-being, and Florida’s state parks are the ideal place to commune with nature, reduce stress levels and unwind,” Woodward said in a prepared statement. “And by continuing to be ever-vigilant in practicing social distancing, our parks can also provide a safe outlet for so many.”


Gulf Islands Park to Open 2

Following guidance from the White House, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and state and local public health authorities, Gulf Islands National Seashore is increasing recreational access at three Florida areas. The National Park Service (NPS) is working servicewide with federal, state, and local public health authorities to closely monitor the COVID-19 pandemic and using a phased approach to increase access on a park-by-park basis.

Beginning on the dates listed below, Gulf Islands National Seashore will reopen access to:  

With public health in mind, the following facilities remain closed at this time:

“The Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, and Naval Live Oaks areas are almost exclusively used by the surrounding Florida counties which cleared the phase one gating criteria on May 1,” said Superintendent Dan Brown. “The other areas of the national seashore draw visitors from areas that have not yet met the required gating criteria based on the White House’s guidance. In evaluating some park areas, the National Park Service assessed communities within an eight-hour drive, as is consistent with visitation information.”


Catholic Masses Open Next Week

Sunday and weekday Masses in the diocese will begin on May 6, 2020. Bishop Wack with pastors, priests, laypeople and health care experts have set safety guidelines in place to reopen churches to celebrate Mass with a congregation present. Due to these guidelines, which allow a limited number of people in churches at one time, a general dispensation from the Sunday obligation will remain. Social distancing will be practiced in accordance with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines. Some parishes in the diocese may not be ready to open immediately. Live streamed Masses will continue to be offered for those who are unable to attend.

For more information on what parishioners can expect when Masses are celebrated with a congregation present, visit https://ptdiocese.org/resuming-the-celebration-of-mass. To view Bishop Wack’s video announcement, visit https://vimeo.com/413689604.


Unlimited outdoor seating for restaurants. Inweekly has heard the Greater Pensacola Chamber has approached Pensacola Mayor Grover Robinson to close Palafox and turn it into an outdoor food court.

REGULATOR DETAILS RESTAURANT RULES

By Jim Turner, News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSEE — Servers and other employees won’t be counted toward limits on occupancy when restaurants reopen Monday under coronavirus guidelines, the state’s top business regulator said.

Also, Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation Secretary Halsey Beshears on Friday advised restaurant owners to use as much outdoor space as possible under federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention physical-distancing recommendations.

“I want to be real clear about that, and this is how we’re going to regulate this: You know, if you have outdoor seating, there is no (maximum)  occupancy,” Beshears told members of the Orange County Economic Recovery Task Force’s Business Work Group during a teleconference.

“There is no (maximum) number of patrons you can have out there,” Beshears continued. “So, if that outside seating area can seat 100 people, then you can seat 100 people as long as you can practice those social distancing guidelines.”

On Wednesday, Gov. Ron DeSantis outlined what he described as a step-by-step plan that initially will allow restaurants outside of Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties to have outdoor seating and occupancy indoors of up to 25 percent.

Chuck Whittall, chairman of the Orange County working group, said businesses owners would have preferred DeSantis allow 50 percent occupancy, as was recommended by a task force created by the governor.

“Restaurants can’t afford to pay their manager, their assistant manager or bartender, their chef,” said Whittall, who is also president of the real estate company Unicorp National Development. “You just can’t do enough business with that.”

Whittall said they were also disappointed hair salons and barber shops were left off the initial list of reopening in a three-phase plan that doesn’t have specific timelines.

DeSantis’ first phase, which starts Monday, also includes steps such as allowing hospitals and other medical providers to conduct elective procedures. However, movie theaters will remain closed, as will bars, gyms and hair salons, and visitors will continue to be prevented from going to hospitals and nursing homes.

On Friday, DeSantis added state parks to the list of what will reopen on Monday, but he maintained that gatherings of 10 or more people will continue to be prohibited.

Beshears said he expects that bumping occupancy to 50 percent for restaurants “gets changed sooner rather than later.”

To help, Beshears said his agency will only count customers in indoor occupancy numbers.

“If it takes 12 people, right, to run the restaurant period and a 25 percent occupancy means you can only have 13 more patrons, you know, it just doesn’t even make sense to open the door,” Beshears said. “So, that’s the way we’re going to read it for now, and we’ll see how that works, and hopefully that can help out a little bit.”

Also, extending outside seating won’t, for now, jeopardize businesses’ liquor licenses so long as the expansion isn’t “jamming up the flow of” traffic, Beshears said.

“Just let your local jurisdiction know or the county, ‘Hey this is what we’re doing,’ to make sure you’re OK,” Beshears said. “Let’s not overthink it and realize it’s just a short-term solution. You will not be losing your liquor license from us for doing that right now in trying to get people seated outside.”


County Reopens – Phase 1

Escambia County’s Central Office Complex at 3363 West Park Place, the Ernie Lee Magaha building at 221 S. Palafox Street, the Parks and Recreation Department office at 1651 E. 9 Mile Road and West Florida Public Libraries will reopen to the public Monday, May 4, and will operate at 25% capacity, in accordance with Phase 1 of Gov. DeSantis Executive Order 20-111 and Executive Order 20-112.

In anticipation of welcoming the public back to government facilities in a safe yet comfortable manner, the county will implement the following safety measures:

Escambia County Buildings, Offices and Enclosed Facilities

West Florida Public Libraries
Libraries will open for limited general public access and online order pickups as follows:

Requests for library materials placed prior to arrival will be retrieved and ready for pickup at your vehicle. Designated online order pickup spaces will be marked. Drive-through services are closed. All returned library materials will be cleaned and isolated for a period of 72 hours.

Public computer and study room access:

Increased eBook, eAudiobook and eMagazine titles will increase in availability and variety available for electronic access.

Escambia County Supervisor of Elections Office

Escambia County Tax Collector’s Office

Escambia County Clerk of the Circuit Court & Comptroller First Judicial Circuit
The MC Blanchard and Theodore Bruno Juvenile Justice Building will remain open, at this time, but have limited public access. The Clerk’s office will continue to process the following emergency court services:

Clerk’s Official Records, Treasury, Finance, and Clerk to the Board Offices will reopen at 25% public capacity effective Monday, May 4. Passport services remain suspended until further notice.

The following Clerk’s offices will remain closed for in-person services until further notice.

To make payments and access other online services, please visit our e-services page here. For further information visit escambiaclerk.com.

Escambia County Property Appraiser’s Office

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