Chain Reaction: Fractures in the global supply chain may spark new links, locally.

A screen grab of David Iwinski, who spoke at Tuesday’s webinar.

Fractures and breakdowns in the global supply chain—a pandemic-laced crisis—may actually present opportunities for south central Pennsylvania’s manufacturing sector.

That was the topic of a Zoom webinar attended by about 100 area manufacturing, economic development and state officials on Tuesday. It was presented by two Pittsburgh-based experts on international business, Dennis Unkovic and David Iwinski, Jr.

“We see a domino-effect of implications… with much greater issues to come,” said Iwinski, managing director of Blue Water Growth LLC.

Understanding the reasons behind the supply chain breakdown requires a little background in China’s factories.

Iwinski, who traveled to China 65 times since 1985, described Chinese factories as mini-cities where employees not only work, but also live in dormitory-style housing. These mini-cities were shut down for the Chinese New Year holiday—a time when the Chinese traditionally return to the hometowns in an “extraordinary migration.” There are no unemployment benefits in China. Many workers remained in their hometowns, picked up new jobs, wary of returning to dormitory-style housing conditions amid the COVID-19 climate.

Meantime, factories are now trying to exist on 30 to 40 percent of their returning workforce while replacing and retaining the remaining 60 percent. Volumes are down and quality is down.

“These problems started to flow overseas, into shortages, masked by panic buying,” said Iwinski.

Just as Chinese factories started to ramp back up, the United States shut down due to the pandemic—“the last straw in decades of changes” between the two countries, Iwinski said.

So what does this have to do with south central Pennsylvania companies?

“We think there’s going to be a large-scale, simultaneous supply chain realignment,” Iwinski. “If all your supplies are coming out of China, you’re at extreme risk.”

They offered three critical pieces of advice. First, they cautioned business leaders to be pessimistic regarding forecasts of recovery from China. Secondly, they advised businesses to conserve capital and resources. And lastly, they implored attendees to either realign or re-shore their supply chains now.

Unkovic held up his iPhone.

“It’s made of 32 component parts from 11 different countries. This is the concern we have—companies relying on component parts are going to see shortages in the future—it’s going to keep them from creating finished goods,” said Unkovic, an international law partner at Meyer, Unkovic & Scott LLP. “We think this is going to be an extremely tumultuous next three to five years.”

A screen grab of Dennis Unkovic

Both experts see a silver lining—an opportunity for Pennsylvania manufacturers.

“We want strong Pennsylvania companies and a strong Pennsylvania economy,” Iwinski said. “Timing is of the essence—we’re all coming to this realization, but capacity is not unlimited. So, there are lines to get into (other) factories—there are backups.”

Tina Weyant, founding executive director of the World Trade Center (WTC) Harrisburg, said it was critical to apprise regional companies of this situation because there’s never been a supply chain breakdown of this magnitude. But she hopes area companies are inspired by the opportunities presented.

“We have a generally strong manufacturing industry with a lot of knowledge, and we have the benefit of being very diversified, so I think we can ramp up, although it will be a challenge.”

There are currently 2,900 diverse manufacturers in south central Pennsylvania’s nine counties accounting for 16 percent of the workforce.

“In general, the region’s manufacturers got through the pandemic fairly well—a lot were able to stay open,” said Leigh Ann Wilson of MANTEC, a private, nonprofit organization based in York. “The concern is the next quarter, because sales drop off will happen.”

Leigh Ann Wilson of MANTEC

There are also pre-pandemic workforce issues.

“There are lots of jobs open,” Wilson said. “More people are able to stay at home right now due to unemployment funding—there’s not a huge incentive for them to return to work. But the jobs are there—highly skilled jobs.”

Two area manufacturers producing unique components for niche markets gathered valuable takeaways from today’s webinar.

“It was a great recap of the current global situation,” said Kerry Woods, sales manager at PR Hoffman, a Carlisle manufacturer of highly specialized components such as glass optics and silicon carbide semiconductors.

As many as 70 percent of PR Hoffman’s customers, accounting for $5 to $8 million in sales, are in exports to Europe, China, Japan and additional Asian markets. Their components are utilized in 5G networks, satellites, electronic vehicles and autonomous engineering.

Instead of having difficulties receiving component parts from Chinese manufacturers, they have the reverse problem—trying to retain their Chinese customer base.

“We’ve been operating in fire drill mode. We have many customers in China—we’re seeing the impact of their extended Chinese New Year holiday… we’ve had problems getting freight into China,” Woods said.

PR Hoffman’s 35 essential employees continued working throughout the pandemic. Woods said the company made many adjustments to align with health and safety guidelines.

Chris Tarsa, is president and CEO of C.L. Sturkey, a Lebanon-based manufacturer that is one of a handful of worldwide manufacturers for microtome knives used by hospitals and laboratories in biopsies and other medical procedures.

While his company is not reliant upon Chinese-produced components, it gave Tarsa pause in another area.

“It’s pretty clear that China is not the reliable business partner many think they are. We’re looking at putting our blades in China, but now I’m cautious as a result of today’s webinar,” Tarsa said.

Many area business leaders on the call asked about the strength of the American manufacturing sector.

“I believe based on a lifetime in international business that we’re sitting in the most innovative nation in the world—that’s based on us having the best universities in the world,” Iwinski said. “But the deeper reason—it’s culture. This country was formed by adventurers, malcontents, weirdos, risk-takers—it’s in our guts. In China, the nail that sticks up is hammered down. But innovation is our core and key. I know I’m on a soap box, but I love this soap box.”

For more information, see mantec.org and wtccentralpa.org.

Continue Reading

New COVID-19 cases rise a bit, but remain within longer-term decline

A chart of COVID-19 cases and tests in PA. Source: PA Department of Health

New COVID-19 diagnoses rose slightly on a day-over-day basis, but still continued a trend of long-term decline.

The PA Department of Health today reported 612 new positive cases for the period ending at midnight.

This marks 23 days straight with new case numbers below 1,000 in Pennsylvania. With the additional cases, 72,894 Pennsylvanians have now been diagnosed with the coronavirus.

Cases peaked in early April at nearly 2,000 daily new cases. Since then, cases have shown a gradual decline, despite increasingly greater testing levels for the virus (see chart).

Yesterday, the state reported jut 356 new cases, but data has tended to be lower following weekends due to less reporting to the state health department.

Of the new cases reported today, 115 are in residents of nursing and personal care homes.

Locally, total diagnosed cases are as follows:

  • Adams County: 255 cases (yesterday, 250)
  • Cumberland County: 644 cases (yesterday, 635)
  • Dauphin County: 1,359 cases (yesterday, 1,303)
  • Franklin County: 781 cases (yesterday, 777)
  • Lancaster County: 3,218 cases (yesterday, 3,189)
  • Lebanon County: 980 cases (yesterday, 972)
  • Perry County: 62 cases (yesterday, 61)
  • York County: 1,028 cases (yesterday, 1,013)

Overall, 15.4 percent of PA residents tested have shown to be positive for the virus.

The health department also reported another 100 fatalities, meaning that 5,667 Pennsylvanians have died from the disease since March. Not all of these deaths necessarily occurred in the past 24 hours, as the health department constantly updates its data.

Of the newly reported fatalities, 40 were residents of nursing or personal care homes.

Around central PA, the COVID-19 fatality data now stands as follows:

  • Adams County: 8 deaths (yesterday, 8)
  • Cumberland County: 52 deaths (yesterday, 52)
  • Dauphin County: 77 deaths (yesterday, 74)
  • Franklin County: 36 deaths (yesterday, 35)
  • Lancaster County: 306 deaths (yesterday, 297)
  • Lebanon County: 33 deaths (yesterday, 33)
  • Perry County: 3 deaths (yesterday, 3)
  • York County: 26 deaths (yesterday, 26)

Statewide, Philadelphia County continues to have the most confirmed cases with 18,703 cases, followed by Montgomery County with 7,172 cases. The two counties also have reported the most deaths statewide from the disease: 1,346 and 696, respectively.

“As Pennsylvania continues to move forward in the process to reopen, we need to remember that the threat from COVID-19 has not gone away,” health Secretary Rachel Levine said.

So far, the state has moved 57 of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties into the less restrictive yellow phase, including all of the Harrisburg area except Lancaster County. By June 5, the remainder of the state will exit from the red phase.

Nursing homes and personal care facilities have been particularly hard hit by the virus. Of total deaths, 3,597, or 63.4 percent, have occurred in residents from nursing or personal care facilities, according to the health department.

In nursing and personal care homes, there are 15,660 resident cases of COVID-19, and 2,696 cases among employees, for a total of 18,356 at 609 distinct facilities in 44 counties, according to the health department.

In addition, about 5,523 of total cases in PA are in health care workers.

Statewide, 472,255 coronavirus tests have been performed, with 399,361 people testing negative, according to the state health department. Yesterday, the state reported that 461,713 people had been tested for the virus.

Of the patients who have tested positive to date, the age breakdown is as follows, according to the health department:

  • Nearly 1 percent are aged 0-4
  • Nearly 1 percent are aged 5-12
  • Nearly 2 percent are aged 13-18
  • 6 percent are aged 19-24
  • Nearly 37 percent are aged 25-49
  • 25 percent are aged 50-64
  • 28 percent are aged 65 or older.

Most of the patients hospitalized are 65 or older, as are most of the reported deaths, according to the state.

Levine continued to emphasize that Pennsylvanians should do the following:

  • Wash your hands with soap and water for at least 20 seconds or use hand sanitizer if soap and water are not available.
  • Cover any coughs or sneezes with your elbow, not your hands.
  • Clean surfaces frequently.
  • Stay home to avoid spreading COVID-19, especially if you are unwell.

“As counties move into the yellow and green phases, we must take personal responsibility to protect others,” Levine said. “Wearing a mask, continuing to maintain social distancing, and washing your hands frequently are all steps we can take to help protect others, including our most vulnerable Pennsylvanians, our essential workers and our healthcare system.”

For more information, visit the PA Department of Health’s COVID-19 website.

Continue Reading

Let’s Eat: First “Saturday Nights in the City” to feature more than a dozen Harrisburg restaurants for outside dining

Mangia Qui and Rubicon will be among the restaurants participating in this weekend’s “Saturday Nights in the City.”

Do you long for a hearty Tuscan ribeye from Mangia Qui? Can you practically taste an artichoke pizza from Cork n Fork or the shepherd’s pie from McGrath’s?

Then I have the news you’ve been waiting to hear for nearly three months.

These three are among more than dozen restaurants that will participate this weekend in the first “Saturday Nights in the City,” an outdoors dining event sponsored by the city and the Harrisburg Downtown Improvement District.

Late today, the city released the first lineup of restaurants for the June 6 event. They are:

    • Stock’s on Second
    • Carley’s Ristorante and Piano Bar
    • Café Fresco
    • Second Street Shawarma
    • Sawyer’s
    • Bourbon Street Saloon
    • Zembie’s Sports Tavern
    • McGrath’s Irish Pub
    • Taste Buffalo
    • Arooga’s
    • JB Lovedraft’s MicroPub
    • Federal Taphouse
    • Mangia Qui
    • Rubicon
    • Cork & Fork
    • Burger Yum
    • Bollywood Bar & Grille
    • The Brick Haus
    • Los Tres Cubanos
    • Taco Solo

Each weekend in June, Harrisburg will close down several streets to permit restaurants to set up tables and serve outdoors. These streets are N. 2nd Street from Market Street to Pine Street and portions of North Street and State Street (see map).

“We know that businesses have faced challenges and struggles during this pandemic,” Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse said. “I encourage residents to come support their favorite restaurants safely as we work together to get through these difficult times.”

This initiative will run on Saturdays for the entire month of June from 6 to 9 p.m. On June 13, Ad Lib Craft Kitchen and Bar is expected to join the lineup.

“I applaud the efforts of the city of Harrisburg to allow for street closures on behalf of the struggling restaurant industry,” said Mangia Qui co-owner Staci Basore. “This will allow for much needed revenue as well as provide us an opportunity to integrate on-premise dining, in conjunction with our ongoing delivery and takeout platform. We will be measured in our approach with regards to the safety and health of our guests and staff.”

Since mid-March, restaurants have been prohibited from offering dine-in service due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Harrisburg is now in the “yellow” phase, which allows for outdoors dining following certain state regulations.

As a result of the event, the following streets will be closed from 3:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. on Saturday:

  • 2nd Street from Market to Pine streets
  • State Street from Church to N. 2nd Street westbound
  • North Street from Susquehanna to N. 3rd streets westbound

Papenfuse said that the city plans to enhance police and security presence for the event.

Continue Reading

First Dauphin County libraries to reopen on Friday

Madeline L. Olewine Memorial Library in Uptown Harrisburg

In a sign of society beginning to gear back up, the Dauphin County Library System today announced it would begin a phased reopening of its branches on Friday.

On June 5, the first four libraries will reopen:

  • East Shore Area Library, 4501 Ethel St., Lower Paxton Township
  • Madeline L. Olewine Memorial Library, 2410 N. 3rd St., Harrisburg
  • William H. & Marion C. Alexander Family Library, 200 W. Second St., Hummelstown
  • Elizabethville Area Library, 80 N. Market St., Washington Township

The libraries then will be open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday to Thursday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fridays and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdays. The East Shore Area Library will also be open from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sundays. A seniors-only hour is from 10 to 11 a.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays at all open locations.

The Elizabethville branch is the exception to this schedule, in that it’s closed on Monday.

According to a release from the library system, limited numbers of members at any given time can enter the buildings only to use the computers, which have all been repositioned to ensure social distancing. Members can also order books and other materials online and arrange for curbside pickup.

“As we reopen, the library is focusing on the safety of the public and our staff,’’ said Executive Director Karen Cullings. “We ask that all visitors wear masks, and all locations will have masks available for those who need them. We request everyone’s patience as the library works to maintain a safe environment while delivering vital services.”

Cullings said the reopening plan prioritized computer accessibility since the library often is a member’s only resource for internet service. Free Wi-Fi, which has been available outside at all locations since the lockdown began March 13, will remain accessible.

As conditions allow, additional library locations will partially reopen, Cullings said. All programs will continue to be offered only online through the library’s website and Facebook page, she added.

During this limited reopening, members wanting to check out items may request the materials online—either through BookAdvisor or the online catalog—choosing their preferred open location for curbside pickup. Members without computer access may request materials by calling 717-652-9380.  Once they have been notified their materials are ready, members will have one week to retrieve their selections.

To guard against the coronavirus, the library will quarantine all returned materials for 72 hours. In addition to the computer stations between use, staff will clean all publicly accessible areas every two hours. Sneeze guards have been installed at all service points.

Additionally, all staff members are receiving training covering cleaning and sanitizing procedures, and at the start of each shift will have their temperature taken and answer health screening questions, Cullings said. Staff will also use gloves when handling items used by the public and when delivering materials for curbside pickup.

“From providing computers and internet access to educational materials for children unable to go to school, we know the vital role the library plays in our community,” Cullings said. “We are committed to balancing the need to serve the public with our responsibility to keep our members and staff safe.’’

Continue Reading

State reports fewest new COVID-19 infections in more than two months

An image from the PA Department of Health lab in Exton

New COVID-19 diagnoses sank to their lowest level since late March today, with the state health department reporting fewer than 400 cases.

The PA Department of Health reported 356 new positive cases for the period ending at midnight.

This marks 22 days straight with new case numbers below 1,000 in Pennsylvania. With the additional cases, 72,282 Pennsylvanians have now been diagnosed with the coronavirus.

Cases peaked in early April at nearly 2,000 daily new cases. Since then, cases have shown a gradual, relatively steady decline, despite increasingly greater testing levels for the virus.

New case and fatality data has tended to be lower on weekends due to less reporting to the state health department.

Of the new cases reported today, 59 are in residents of nursing and personal care homes.

Locally, total diagnosed cases are as follows:

  • Adams County: 250 cases (yesterday, 251)
  • Cumberland County: 635 cases (yesterday, 629)
  • Dauphin County: 1,303 cases (yesterday, 1,277)
  • Franklin County: 777 cases (yesterday, 774)
  • Lancaster County: 3,189 cases (yesterday, 3,161)
  • Lebanon County: 972 cases (yesterday, 969)
  • Perry County: 61 cases (yesterday, 59)
  • York County: 1,013 cases (yesterday, 1,007)

Overall, 15.6 percent of PA residents tested have shown to be positive for the virus.

The health department also reported another 12 fatalities, meaning that 5,567 Pennsylvanians have died from the disease since March. Not all of these deaths necessarily occurred in the past 24 hours, as the health department constantly updates its data.

Of the newly reported fatalities, most were residents of nursing or personal care homes.

Around central PA, the COVID-19 fatality data now stands as follows:

  • Adams County: 8 deaths (yesterday, 8)
  • Cumberland County: 52 deaths (yesterday, 50)
  • Dauphin County: 74 deaths (yesterday, 73)
  • Franklin County: 35 deaths (yesterday, 35)
  • Lancaster County: 297 deaths (yesterday, 297)
  • Lebanon County: 33 deaths (yesterday, 33)
  • Perry County: 3 deaths (yesterday, 3)
  • York County: 26 deaths (yesterday, 26)

Statewide, Philadelphia County continues to have the most confirmed cases with 18,517 cases, followed by Montgomery County with 7,093 cases. The two counties also have reported the most deaths statewide from the disease: 1,320 and 686, respectively.

“As Pennsylvania continues to move forward in the process to reopen, we need to remember that the threat from COVID-19 has not gone away,” health Secretary Rachel Levine said.

So far, the state has moved 57 of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties into the less restrictive yellow phase, including all of the Harrisburg area except Lancaster County. By June 5, the remainder of the state will exit from the red phase.

Nursing homes and personal care facilities have been particularly hard hit by the virus. Of total deaths, 3,557, or 63.9 percent, have occurred in residents from nursing or personal care facilities, according to the health department.

In nursing and personal care homes, there are 15,545 resident cases of COVID-19, and 2,663 cases among employees, for a total of 18,208 at 608 distinct facilities in 44 counties, according to the health department.

In addition, about 5,463 of total cases in PA are in health care workers.

Statewide, 461,713 coronavirus tests have been performed, with 389,431 people testing negative, according to the state health department. Yesterday, the state reported that 455,037 people had been tested for the virus.

Of the patients who have tested positive to date, the age breakdown is as follows, according to the health department:

  • Nearly 1 percent are aged 0-4
  • Nearly 1 percent are aged 5-12
  • Nearly 2 percent are aged 13-18
  • 6 percent are aged 19-24
  • Nearly 37 percent are aged 25-49
  • 25 percent are aged 50-64
  • 28 percent are aged 65 or older.

Most of the patients hospitalized are 65 or older, as are most of the reported deaths, according to the state.

Levine continued to emphasize that Pennsylvanians should do the following:

  • Wash your hands with soap and water for at least 20 seconds or use hand sanitizer if soap and water are not available.
  • Cover any coughs or sneezes with your elbow, not your hands.
  • Clean surfaces frequently.
  • Stay home to avoid spreading COVID-19, especially if you are unwell.

 “As counties move into the yellow and green phases, we must take personal responsibility to protect others,” Levine said. “Wearing a mask, continuing to maintain social distancing, and washing your hands frequently are all steps we can take to help protect others, including our most vulnerable Pennsylvanians, our essential workers and our healthcare system.”

For more information, visit the PA Department of Health’s COVID-19 website.

Continue Reading

Harrisburg mayor, police commissioner blame “agitators” from outside city for protest violence

After marching through downtown Harrisburg, a second wave of protestors pushed police to the top of the PA Capitol steps late Saturday afternoon. Police in riot gear are at the top of the steps, preventing access to the building.

Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse today painted a picture of two protests—one organized and peaceful and a second chaotic and violent.

During a virtual press conference, Papenfuse, joined by police Commissioner Thomas Carter, said the planned rally on Saturday at the PA Capitol steps was a positive event with hundreds of people advocating for civil rights and protesting the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police.

Many of those people were local, he said, and they largely dispersed following the main rally.

However, Papenfuse and Carter both said that, later in the afternoon, a second wave of protesters, described as “agitators,” took to the streets of Harrisburg, intent on making trouble.

“You saw a change in the rally itself,” Papenfuse said. “The police were there to assist, and it would have gone smoothly except for those who were there to agitate.”

According to Papenfuse and Carter, in mid-afternoon, the second group of protesters began marching through downtown, and police set up near Front and North streets to direct traffic around the protesters, who were marching up Front Street.

At that point, an unidentified woman struck a Harrisburg police cruiser with a pole, smashing the windshield, Papenfuse said. This incited other marchers who surrounded several cars with officers inside, with a total of three vehicles damaged with bricks and other objects, he said.

Papenfuse estimated the cost of damage to the vehicles to be “tens of thousands of dollars.”

Feeling under threat, the six Harrisburg officers, who were not dressed in protective, or riot, gear, called for backup. State and Capitol police, in full protective gear, quickly responded and then used pepper spray to “extricate the Harrisburg police officers,” Papenfuse said.

He said that tear gas was not used, contradicting some previous accounts.

“Forces were brought in to control the crowd,” Carter said.

Two Capitol officers were taken to the hospital, one suffering a head injury from a brick and one who injured his hand. Both were later released from the hospital, Papenfuse said.

The crowd of about 100 people then walked up Forster Street and made it back around to the Capitol, where they pushed police up the front steps, with Harrisburg, Capitol and state officers conducting “an orderly retreat” to avoid a direct confrontation, he said. The standoff at the top of the steps lasted about an hour before the protesters suddenly left and headed back downtown.

At about 8 p.m., mounted state officers arrived and helped divide up the remaining protestors into smaller groups around N. 2nd and Walnut streets. Carter then spoke directly with some of the protestors, who finally agreed to disperse.

“We didn’t want nightfall to occur,” he said. “That’s when bad things start to happen.”

According to Carter, this group of people was not from Harrisburg. He said he knew this because he didn’t recognize any of the second wave of protestors, whom he interacted with for hours, and some told him that they were not from the area.

“Most of the things that happened in the demonstration yesterday, happened from outside people,” Carter said, adding that he wanted “to congratulate the Harrisburg people” for conducting a peaceful protest.

Carter and Papenfuse said that they did not know the identity of the woman who they said initiated the violence against the Harrisburg police, but will be reviewing police body cam video to try to determine who she is.

“Regrettably, it turned from a peaceful protest into something quite different,” Papenfuse said.

Continue Reading

New COVID-19 cases continue to moderate in Pennsylvania

An image from the PA Department of Health lab in Exton

New COVID-19 diagnoses dipped again in the commonwealth, as the PA Department of Health today reported 511 newly positive cases.

This marks 21 days straight with new case numbers below 1,000 in Pennsylvania. With the additional cases, 71,926 Pennsylvanians have now been diagnosed with the coronavirus.

Cases peaked in early April at nearly 2,000 daily new cases. Since then, cases have shown a gradual, relatively steady decline, despite increasingly greater testing levels for the virus.

New case and fatality data have tended to be lower on weekends due to less reporting to the state health department.

Source: PA Department of Health

Of the new cases reported today, 110 are in residents of nursing and personal care homes.

Locally, total diagnosed cases are as follows:

  • Adams County: 251 cases (yesterday, 245)
  • Cumberland County: 629 cases (yesterday, 626)
  • Dauphin County: 1,277 cases (yesterday, 1,258)
  • Franklin County: 774 cases (yesterday, 767)
  • Lancaster County: 3,161 cases (yesterday, 3,131)
  • Lebanon County: 969 cases (yesterday, 958)
  • Perry County: 59 cases (yesterday, 57)
  • York County: 1,007 cases (yesterday, 1,000)

Overall, 15.8 percent of PA residents tested have shown to be positive for the virus.

The health department also reported another 18 fatalities, meaning that 5,555 Pennsylvanians have died from the disease since March. Not all of these deaths necessarily occurred in the past 24 hours, as the health department constantly updates its data.

Of the newly reported fatalities, five were residents of nursing or personal care homes.

Around central PA, the COVID-19 fatality data now stands as follows:

  • Adams County: 8 deaths (yesterday, 8)
  • Cumberland County: 50 deaths (yesterday, 50)
  • Dauphin County: 73 deaths (yesterday, 73)
  • Franklin County: 35 deaths (yesterday, 35)
  • Lancaster County: 297 deaths (yesterday, 295)
  • Lebanon County: 33 deaths (yesterday, 33)
  • Perry County: 3 deaths (yesterday, 3)
  • York County: 26 deaths (yesterday, 26)

Statewide, Philadelphia County continues to have the most confirmed cases with 18,426 cases, followed by Montgomery County with 7,061 cases. The two counties also have reported the most deaths statewide from the disease: 1,316 and 684, respectively.

“As Pennsylvania continues to move forward in the process to reopen, we need to remember that the threat from COVID-19 has not gone away,” health Secretary Rachel Levine said.

So far, the state has moved 57 of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties into the less restrictive yellow phase, including all of the Harrisburg area except Lancaster County. By June 5, the remainder of the state will exit from the red phase.

Nursing homes and personal care facilities have been particularly hard hit by the virus. Of total deaths, 3,540, or 63.7 percent, have occurred in residents from nursing or personal care facilities, according to the health department.

In nursing and personal care homes, there are 15,486 resident cases of COVID-19, and 2,659 cases among employees, for a total of 18,145 at 609 distinct facilities in 44 counties, according to the health department.

In addition, about 5,280 of total cases in PA are in health care workers.

Statewide, 455,037 coronavirus tests have been performed, with 383,111 people testing negative, according to the state health department. Yesterday, the state reported that 447,146 people had been tested for the virus.

Of the patients who have tested positive to date, the age breakdown is as follows, according to the health department:

  • Nearly 1 percent are aged 0-4
  • Nearly 1 percent are aged 5-12
  • Nearly 2 percent are aged 13-18
  • 6 percent are aged 19-24
  • Nearly 37 percent are aged 25-49
  • 25 percent are aged 50-64
  • 28 percent are aged 65 or older.

Most of the patients hospitalized are 65 or older, as are most of the reported deaths, according to the state.

Levine continued to emphasize that Pennsylvanians should do the following:

  • Wash your hands with soap and water for at least 20 seconds or use hand sanitizer if soap and water are not available.
  • Cover any coughs or sneezes with your elbow, not your hands.
  • Clean surfaces frequently.
  • Stay home to avoid spreading COVID-19, especially if you are unwell.

 “As counties move into the yellow and green phases, we must take personal responsibility to protect others,” Levine said. “Wearing a mask, continuing to maintain social distancing, and washing your hands frequently are all steps we can take to help protect others, including our most vulnerable Pennsylvanians, our essential workers and our healthcare system.”

For more information, visit the PA Department of Health’s COVID-19 website.

Continue Reading

Burg Review: Open Stage brings “masterful” “Iliad” to modern times, to your living room

My only brush with Homer’s epic poem “An Iliad” was 10th grade English.

I remember muttering a few stanzas out loud in class, then the classmate behind me fumbled through reading the next few lines. If Thomas Weaver [The Poet] (pictured) and Joseph Osborne [The Muse] could have brought a modernized re-telling of the Trojan War alive for me as a sophomore, I wouldn’t have fallen asleep facedown in my “Cliff’s Notes.”

For those of us currently longing for story slams, low-lit coffeehouses or basement nightclubs, Weaver evokes a similar smoky mood when entering an empty theater to perform his monologue. Multiple cameras capture his wild gesticulations as he gets close enough to the camera lens to fog it lightly, bringing intense eye contact and intimacy to each audience member, courtesy of Zoom.

Every element of the play’s trappings is simple: the setting of a chair, the prop of a bottle, the costume of Everyman. Yet the story and its theme feel layered and complex.

The Poet could be the regular at a corner pub telling war stories play-by-play, clicking dog tags together. He could be your co-worker whose mind never left Kosovo. Then as soon as The Muse pipes in his rhythmic, mystical guitar to accompany the re-telling, the mood feels as transcendent as a Doors album, The Poet chanting and dancing like a shaman, taking us on an ancient spiritual journey as if he’s come straight from Troy to urgently tell us his account.

We don’t know who The Poet is or from where he hails. He probably isn’t Greek at all. In fact, he uses distinctive American southern and West Coast accents and talks about American places when referencing soldiers’ hometowns.

The tale and the telling are raw and guttural, scraping the bottom of humanity, connecting the primeval past and present through unforgettable images. I didn’t view anything through the camera except The Poet and the Muse, but I left the play imagining penetrating images of a son’s body being handed to his father, and a baby’s head splitting when dropping to the pavement. Where was that level of detail in “Cliff’s Notes?”

I can’t say I absorbed the entire two-hour battle plan for the Trojan War. Even with a laser pointer on one of those cork boards with strings, I probably would have lost the thread somewhere. Yet more props surely would have shifted the atmosphere into seminar mode, upending the mood Weaver and Osborne masterfully wove together.

For Weaver, it felt weird to perform to an empty audience, although it changed his storytelling in a physical way.

“The poem is such a theatrical story to tell,” he said. “It was never meant to be performed, and it wasn’t meant for one person to tell.”

In the background, Osborne played the music to “get to the emotion of what’s happening at any given time. If people are getting hurt [in the poem], then the music sounds like people are getting hurt.”

With oral tradition and storytelling, Producer Stuart Landon puts forth the notion that Homer is more than one author, more like a collective idea.

“With the unfortunately enduring theme of war, we are all some version of Homer, and we are all involved in telling and re-telling the continuing war story, passing it down like an oral tradition,” he said.

The interactive talk-back afterwards offers further dissection of the play, with discourse more insightful than the throwback questions I remember from my English class about theme, mood, voice and the dreaded question, “What did the author intend?” You’ll even have the chance to ask your own questions via Zoom’s Q&A features.

Landon revealed that one of the play’s adapters was anti-war, and one was not, yielding a push-pull struggle within the adaptation. This makes for fascinating speculation for the argument of Homer being pro-war or anti-war. Either way, this gripping legend will pull you in from beginning to end, laying the best and worst of humanity in the midst of desperate times in front of you to decide.

“An Iliad” runs twice more live through the Zoom app on June 5 and June 13, with a 48-hour viewing window. Tickets and all access information are available through Open Stage’s website https://www.openstagehbg.com/.

Continue Reading

Mayor issues 9 p.m. curfew in Harrisburg, urges people to stay home

Protesters mounted the stairs to the PA Capitol during today’s second protest there, stopped at the entrance by police in riot gear.

Harrisburg has issued a 9 p.m. curfew for tonight following a day of rallies and marches to protest the death of George Floyd.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse issued the curfew order and urged people to stay home tonight after protests earlier today that sometimes led to conflicts with police.

The rally began at around noon at the Capitol, where upwards of 1,000 people gathered to protest Floyd’s death at the hands of police in Minneapolis, Minn., and to call for racial justice. Similar rallies were held in cities throughout the country.

In Harrisburg, many protesters departed following the passionate, yet peaceful, rally. However, others began to march throughout downtown. At Front and Forster streets, several protesters clashed with police, who had set up a blockade at the intersection.

Water bottles, rocks and other projectiles were thrown at state and Capitol police dressed in riot gear, and some police responded with pepper spray and rubber bullets. Two injured Capitol police were taken to the hospital with unspecified injuries.

After this incident, police blocked access into Harrisburg from the Harvey Taylor and Market Street bridges.

About 100 remaining marchers then continued up Forster Street before rallying again at the Capitol in late afternoon. They then pushed their way up the steps of the Capitol, which was blocked by city and state police.

At about 5:30 p.m., the remaining protesters suddenly left the Capitol and resumed marching in the downtown area. The remnants of that group were met with increasing numbers of state police, who blocked off several downtown streets.

Continue Reading

New COVID-19 diagnoses continue to decline slowly in PA

Daily new positive COVID-19 cases and tests. Source: PA Department of Health

The PA Department of Health reported just under 700 new COVID-19 cases today, in line with case numbers over the past week.

The department said that there were 680 new positive cases for the period ending at midnight, a daily rate nearly unchanged over the past several days.

This marks 20 days straight with new case numbers below 1,000 in Pennsylvania. With the additional cases, 71,415 Pennsylvanians have now been diagnosed with the coronavirus.

Cases peaked in early April at nearly 2,000 daily new cases. Since then, cases have shown a gradual, relatively steady decline, despite increasingly greater testing levels for the virus (see chart).

Of the new cases reported today, 41 are in residents of nursing and personal care homes.

Locally, total diagnosed cases are as follows:

  • Adams County: 245 cases (yesterday, 241)
  • Cumberland County: 626 cases (yesterday, 621)
  • Dauphin County: 1,258 cases (yesterday, 1,231)
  • Franklin County: 767 cases (yesterday, 762)
  • Lancaster County: 3,131 cases (yesterday, 3,105)
  • Lebanon County: 958 cases (yesterday, 950)
  • Perry County: 57 cases (yesterday, 56)
  • York County: 1,000 cases (yesterday, 991)

Overall, 15.9 percent of PA residents tested have shown to be positive for the virus.


The health department also reported another 164 fatalities, meaning that 5,537 Pennsylvanians have died from the disease since March. Not all of these deaths necessarily occurred in the past 24 hours, as the health department constantly updates its data.

Of the newly reported fatalities, 18 were residents of nursing or personal care homes.

Around central PA, the COVID-19 fatality data now stands as follows:

  • Adams County: 8 deaths (yesterday, 7)
  • Cumberland County: 50 deaths (yesterday, 48)
  • Dauphin County: 73 deaths (yesterday, 72)
  • Franklin County: 35 deaths (yesterday, 34)
  • Lancaster County: 295 deaths (yesterday, 292)
  • Lebanon County: 33 deaths (yesterday, 33)
  • Perry County: 3 deaths (yesterday, 2)
  • York County: 26 deaths (yesterday, 26)

Statewide, Philadelphia County continues to have the most confirmed cases with 18,347 cases, followed by Montgomery County with 7,006 cases. The two counties also have reported the most deaths statewide from the disease: 1,308 and 682, respectively.

“As Pennsylvania continues to move forward in the process to reopen, we need to remember that the threat from COVID-19 has not gone away,” health Secretary Rachel Levine said.

So far, the state has moved 57 of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties into the less restrictive yellow phase, including all of the Harrisburg area except Lancaster County. By June 5, the remainder of the state will exit from the red phase.

Nursing homes and personal care facilities have been particularly hard hit by the virus. Of total deaths, 3,535, or 63.8 percent, have occurred in residents from nursing or personal care facilities, according to the health department.

In nursing and personal care homes, there are 15,376 resident cases of COVID-19, and 2,650 cases among employees, for a total of 18,026 at 607 distinct facilities in 44 counties, according to the health department.

In addition, about 5,280 of total cases in PA are in health care workers.

Statewide, 447,146 coronavirus tests have been performed, with 375,731 people testing negative, according to the state health department. Yesterday, the state reported that 437,705 people had been tested for the virus.

Of the patients who have tested positive to date, the age breakdown is as follows, according to the health department:

  • Nearly 1 percent are aged 0-4
  • Nearly 1 percent are aged 5-12
  • Nearly 2 percent are aged 13-18
  • 6 percent are aged 19-24
  • Nearly 37 percent are aged 25-49
  • 25 percent are aged 50-64
  • 28 percent are aged 65 or older.

Most of the patients hospitalized are 65 or older, as are most of the reported deaths, according to the state.

Levine continued to emphasize that Pennsylvanians should do the following:

  • Wash your hands with soap and water for at least 20 seconds or use hand sanitizer if soap and water are not available.
  • Cover any coughs or sneezes with your elbow, not your hands.
  • Clean surfaces frequently.
  • Stay home to avoid spreading COVID-19, especially if you are unwell.

“As counties move into the yellow and green phases, we must take personal responsibility to protect others,” Levine said. “Wearing a mask, continuing to maintain social distancing, and washing your hands frequently are all steps we can take to help protect others, including our most vulnerable Pennsylvanians, our essential workers and our healthcare system.” 

For more information, visit the PA Department of Health’s COVID-19 website.

Continue Reading