Rick's Blog

What’s happened while you’ve been working

Escambia County only added four more COVID-19 cases today. However, Santa Rosa had 11 more cases — the most in a single day since April 17.  Escambia has six more hospitalizations than it did a week ago.

DOH Escambia entered 549 new test results — less than 1% positive.  Since Sunday, the health department has entered 1,666 new results – a 38% increase over the last three days last week.

The additional results could possibly be from the National Guard site at UWF—but, of course, we’ve been given any data on that testing site and no explanation of the numbers from DOH Escambia or county officials.

The last press conference held by Escambia County on the COVID-19 pandemic was May 1.

 

5/19/20 5/20/20
11 a.m. 11 a.m. Increase
Total Cases 46944 47471 527 1.12%
Florida Residents 45684 46197 513 1.12%
Non-Fla. 1260 1274 14 1.11%
Deaths 2052 2096 44 2.14%
Escambia 719 723 4 0.56%
Okaloosa 180 184 4 2.22%
Santa Rosa 186 197 11 5.91%

Community Check-in Survey

The Pensacola Young Professionals (PYP) are conducting a Community Check-In survey of 18- to 40-year-olds in Escambia and Santa Rosa counties.

PYP wants to know about the experience of young professionals in coping with the coronavirus pandemic and building their new normal. The results of this survey will be used to educate our community on what young professionals are thinking, feeling, and doing in response to COVID-19. This survey will remain open until June 15, and is open to all young professionals between the ages of 18 and 40.

To complete the survey, visitpensacolayp.com/survey.


EXPECT TO WAIT ON CALLS ABOUT JOBLESS CLAIMS
By Jim Turner, The News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSEE — Floridians who call the state for help with unemployment claims should expect wait times to surpass an hour.

“The best time to call, and maybe after a lot of people hear it today it won’t be, is late afternoon,” Department of Management Services Secretary Jonathan Satter told reporters Tuesday. “But be prepared to sit on the phone for about an hour and a half.”

The average hold time for specific claim information reached 99 minutes on Monday.

“Yesterday we had a million phone calls. We’ve had 15 million phone calls since March 15,” said Satter, who was put in charge of the Department of Economic Opportunity’s troubled CONNECT online unemployment system in April. “We haven’t gotten to most of those. Most of those people are hanging up. It is as upsetting to me as it is upsetting to the callers.”

As part of changes to improve the system amid massive job losses because of the coronavirus, the state has scrambled to bring on more computer servers, set up a backup system for people to apply and allowed people to submit claims on paper applications.

Democrats, meanwhile, continue to question Gov. Ron DeSantis’ handling of jobless claims and the number of people being deemed ineligible for assistance.

“Why are so few people still being paid?” Sen. Lori Berman, D-Lantana, said Tuesday in an online call with other Democrats. “You know, the proof of it is what we heard from Secretary Satter. As he finished the press conference, he said they received 1 million phone calls to their office yesterday. One million times. … People are not getting answers.”

DeSantis held a news conference Tuesday to discuss the system, highlighting that the state has paid out $2.6 billion in benefits to nearly 1 million Floridians. He said the call-center labor force has grown from about 40 to 6,000.

The governor has been critical of the CONNECT system, which began operating in 2013 under former Gov. Rick Scott.  DeSantis said the system was set up to handle 1,000 individual users at a single time.

“When you’re in a situation like this, that’s the equivalent of throwing a jalopy in the Daytona 500,” DeSantis said. “It’s just not going to cut it and so you need to expand capacity. Big time. We did that.”

From March 15 through Monday, the Department of Economic Opportunity had received more than 2 million applications for unemployment, of which about 1.49 million were considered “unique.”

Among the unique claims, 901,962 people had been found eligible for state unemployment benefits, 97,681 were eligible for federal benefits, and 370,982 had been deemed ineligible. Of the money sent out to claimants, $1.79 million was from federal stimulus money.

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