Commonwealth substantially increases COVID-19 fatalities following data revision

The state Department of Health lab in Exton, Pa.

Pennsylvania today significantly increased the number of deaths in the commonwealth attributed to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Secretary of Health Rachel Levine reported 276 more deaths due to the virus, most of which did not occur in the prior 24-hour period ending at midnight.

Instead, most of the newly reported fatalities occurred sometime over the past few weeks, their deaths re-categorized based upon being a “probable positive.” Much of the re-classification was based upon a “reconciliation” of data from several different systems, including state and county systems, Levine said.

“We have been working to reconcile our data with information from several different sources, including our NEDSS reporting system and our county and municipal health departments,” Levine said. “This is the cause of the increase in deaths we are reporting today. This work takes time and so the increase in deaths today reflects the culmination of that effort, which will continue moving forward. The majority of these deaths did not occur overnight.”

The revision brings the state’s fatality total to 1,112 deaths since the pandemic began in early March.

Many of the additional deaths were in counties that already had reported the most: the Philadelphia metro area and the northeast. Locally, only Lancaster County had a substantial revision upward, with 24 more fatalities reported.

Locally, the COVID-19 fatality data now is as follows:

  • Adams County: 1 death (unchanged)
  • Cumberland County: 4 deaths (unchanged)
  • Dauphin County: 9 deaths (unchanged)
  • Franklin County: 0 deaths
  • Lancaster County: 60 deaths (24 more than yesterday)
  • Lebanon County: 4 deaths (unchanged)
  • Perry County: 1 death (unchanged)
  • York County: 6 deaths (2 more than yesterday)

Otherwise, the state today reported 1,215 newly diagnosed cases of COVID-19, a significant drop from yesterday’s 1,628 new cases, bringing the state’s total to 32,284 positive cases.

Dauphin County now has 368 confirmed cases, 25 more than yesterday. Cumberland County has 182 cases, six more than yesterday. Lancaster County has 1,188 cases, York County has 481 cases, Lebanon County has 484 cases, Adams County has 80 cases, Franklin County has 111 cases and Perry County has 20 cases.

Philadelphia County continues to have the most confirmed cases with 8,764 cases, followed by Montgomery County with 2,913 cases. The two counties also have reported the most deaths from the disease: 240 and 164, respectively.

Statewide, 158,854 coronavirus tests have been performed, with 126,570 people testing negative, according to the state health department. Yesterday, the state reported that 153,965 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:

  • Less than 1 percent are aged 0-4
  • Nearly 1 percent are aged 5-12
  • Nearly 1 percent are aged 13-18
  • 6 percent are aged 19-24
  • 39 percent are aged 25-49
  • 28 percent are aged 50-64
  • Nearly 24 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. There have been no pediatric deaths to date.

Levine today also said that she is concerned about a planned anti-shutdown protest planned for Harrisburg tomorrow.

She said that people have a right to protest but hoped that protesters would stay in their cars. If they mingle in close groups, especially without protective equipment, they risk infecting others, she said.

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.

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

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COVID-19 cases exceed 31,000 in PA; state announces new northeast testing center

A screen shot of Dr. Rachel Levine (right) during her virtual press conference on Saturday

Positive COVID-19 cases now exceed 31,000 in Pennsylvania, as the state Department of Health today reported 1,628 newly diagnosed cases.

The new case total is a bit lower than yesterday, when 1,706 new positive cases were reported.

The department has now reported 31,069 positive COVID-19 cases since the pandemic began in early March.

The department also reported 80 new coronavirus-related deaths, bringing the statewide total to 836 fatalities. This is the highest number of daily deaths yet reported statewide due to COVID-19.

Locally, Dauphin and Lebanon counties both reported two more fatalities from the disease, bringing the countywide totals to nine and four deaths, respectively. Lancaster County has now reported 36 deaths from the disease, one more than yesterday.

Deaths in other midstate counties were unchanged: four in Cumberland and York counties, one each in Perry and Adams counties and zero in Franklin County.

“COVID-19 cases and deaths continue to rise in Pennsylvania, and even though the daily increases are not exponential, now is not the time to become complacent,” said Secretary of Health Dr. Rachel Levine.

Locally, Dauphin County now has 343 confirmed cases, 32 more than yesterday. Cumberland County has 176 cases, 22 more than yesterday. Lancaster County has 1,113 cases, York County has 463 cases, Lebanon County has 458 cases, Adams County has 74 cases, Franklin County has 106 cases and Perry County has 20 cases.

Philadelphia County continues to have the most confirmed cases with 8,502 cases, followed by Montgomery County with 2,781 cases. The two counties also have reported the most deaths from the disease: 136 and 106, respectively.

Statewide, 153,965 coronavirus tests have been performed, with 122,896 people testing negative, according to the state health department. Yesterday, the state reported that 147,373 people had been tested for the virus.

Levine today said that state would open its third public, drive-through testing site on Monday at the Mohegan Sun Arena parking lot in Wilkes-Barre.

“This is a very important step as we continue to see a rise in cases throughout northeast Pennsylvania,” she said.

Testing will begin with first responders and healthcare workers who are showing symptoms consistent with COVID-19 before expanding to other vulnerable populations, Levine said.

The state lab in Exton will process the tests, with results in two to three days. The site can test as many as 200 people a day and registration is required. Click here for more information.

The new testing site is the state’s third, joining sites in Philadelphia and Montgomery counties. Levine said that other locations in the state are under consideration for mass-testing sites.

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

  • Less than 1 percent are aged 0-4
  • Nearly 1 percent are aged 5-12
  • 1 percent are aged 13-18
  • 6 percent are aged 19-24
  • 39 percent are aged 25-49
  • 28 percent are aged 50-64
  • Nearly 24 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. There have been no pediatric deaths to date.

“We must continue to stay home to protect ourselves, our families, our community,” Levine said. “If you must go out, please make as few trips as possible and wear a mask to protect not only yourself, but other people as well. We need all Pennsylvanians to continue to heed these efforts to protect our vulnerable Pennsylvanians, our health care workers and frontline responders.”

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.

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

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The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Groceries await at the Salvation Army Harrisburg pickup area.

Our locked-down life hit a month this past week, with few signs that the quarantine would end anytime soon. The state reported fewer new COVID-19 cases for much of the week before another spike on Friday. Meanwhile, the Harrisburg area said good-bye to two prominent local figures felled by the disease. If you missed any of our coverage, we have it all listed and linked below.

COVID-19 pandemic took two prominent Harrisburg-area residents last week: Gerald Welch and Joe O’Connor. We featured an online news story about Welch, a city school board director, and a blog post about O’Connor, written by our arts writer, who was also his fan and friend.

Federal stimulus checks began arriving in bank accounts this week. Many Harrisburg-area residents need the funds to pay for basic necessities. But, in a blog post, our editor asked the lucky ones who don’t need the money to spread it around generously.

Food banks and providers are under stress as demand has skyrocketed over the past month. Our online feature story examines how several local organizations are handling the demand, especially during a time of social distancing.

Gov. Tom Wolf gave a speech offering general guidelines on reopening the economy in Pennsylvania. He didn’t provide a timeframe, but said that more information would be coming next week. We covered the speech in an online story.

Grub for Scrubs is a new initiative with a twofold benefit. By making a donation, you can support local restaurants and buy a meal for frontline healthcare workers. Our online feature gives all the details of this win-win.

Harrisburg City Council conducted its first virtual meeting last week, holding a short legislative session. Among other matters, it approved funding to complete a road design for a slimmed-down State Street on Allison Hill. We had the story.

Harrisburg’s “Community Conversations” continued, with the city’s mayor interviewing school and nonprofit leaders. In our online story, you can learn more about support for businesses and for school students.

Home sales and prices in the Harrisburg area were relatively stable in March. We wrote up our monthly online update as we anxiously await next month’s report, which may be much more challenging.

Open Stage is going virtual, live-streaming its production of “Angels in America.” Sign up and log on for the most unique theater experience of your life. Our reviewer offers her thoughts on this virtual play.

PA Department of Health continued issuing daily updates on the COVID-19 pandemic’s spread in the commonwealth. We wrote up the data each day, and you can see the latest facts and figures by clicking here.

PennDOT deserves praise for reversing its stance on State Street, allowing a pedestrian safety project to proceed, according to our editorial. Over the years, our editor has been serially critical of PennDOT, but he compliments this change of heart and hopes it’s the start of more changes to Harrisburg’s many state-owned streets.

Sara Bozich is, yes, still at home. But, just like she has for a month now, she has suggestions for some great virtual events that you can attend, as well as links to places where you can buy something fun or yummy to help keep local businesses operating.

Do you receive TheBurg Daily, our digest of news and events delivered right to your email inbox each weekday? If not, subscribe here!

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Menus & Medicine: “Grub for Scrubs” brings restaurant meals to healthcare workers

Support for healthcare professionals working on the frontline of the COVID-19 crisis has taken the form of social media hashtags and signs in windows, but now it’s coming hot from the takeout box.

Local Harrisburg design company andculture and its startup accelerator, Catamaran, began a new food delivery initiative on Wednesday putting meals in the hands of healthcare workers at UPMC Pinnacle.

“We have a lot of friends and colleagues working in health care,” David Hickethier CEO of andculture said. “It’s a really challenging service they’re providing.”

Appropriately named “Grub for Scrubs,” the project uses partnerships with local restaurants such as Café Fresco, Premier Caterers, Stock’s on 2nd and Sturges Speakeasy to provide for essential workers at both Harrisburg Hospital and UPMC Pinnacle Community Osteopathic.

Each time $1,000 is raised for a restaurant, meals will be provided. Donors can give specifically to the restaurant of their choice or to a general fund. They have already raised over $2,000.

The deliveries will be made through coordination with UPMC to ensure safety policies are met, Hickethier explained.

“Our team of caregivers is working around the clock to ensure the health and safety of our patients and each other,” said Andrea Potteiger, vice president of Nursing Operations at UPMC Pinnacle. “A hot meal gives us time to step away from the frontline, replenish and recharge. It really means a lot.”

In addition to essential healthcare professionals, andculture’s goal is to assist restaurants struggling during the crisis, Hickethier explained.

“One day, they’re up and operational, the next they are shut down,” he said. “We thought, maybe we could help both groups in our community.”

Adam Sturges, owner of Sturges Speakeasy, was happy to be part of the Grub for Scrubs project, knowing it would bring awareness that his restaurant is still open for takeout. But the main reason was that he knew firsthand how it would help others, as his wife is a registered nurse.

“We want to show our appreciation for staff down at the hospital,” Sturges said. “They’re the ones dealing with the worst of the situation right now.”

Hickethier hopes that more restaurants will get involved and is especially looking for a few bakeries and coffee shops to join the mission. In fact, Harrisburg’s Elementary Coffee Co. just signed onto the effort.

andculture plans to continue the program for one to two months, or as long as they see the need.

“The community has got to pull together and we’ve got to find ways to support each other,” Hickethier said.

andculture is located at 614 N. Front Street, Harrisburg. For more information or to donate, visit https://grubforscrubs.com/.

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Gov. Wolf outlines broad measures to guide economic reopening in PA

A screen capture of PA Gov. Tom Wolf (right) during his online speech today

Gov. Tom Wolf today set a general, six-point outline for reopening the state’s economy and allowing people to begin to return to work.

In an afternoon speech, he complimented state residents for staying resolute during the one-month general economic shutdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

He then said that his administration wanted to begin talking about when and how to reopen the state’s economy.

“We all want to get back to work. We all want businesses to reopen as quickly as possible,” he said. “The challenge is that we all want to keep people safe, and we are trying to steer the fine line between those two.”

According to Wolf’s outline, the decision over when and how to reopen businesses will rely on these six broad criteria:

  • Re-openings will be “data driven,” will be based upon “quantifiable criteria” and will be targeted and regional.
  • Before allowing businesses to reopen, the state will issue “guidance and recommendations” for employers and workers.
  • Reopening will necessitate the availability of “adequate personal protective equipment” and “diagnostic testing.”
  • Reopening will require a monitoring and surveillance program allowing the commonwealth to deploy “swift actions” for containment or mitigation.
  • Protections for vulnerable populations, especially at congregate care facilities and prisons, will remain in place throughout the reopening process.
  • Limitations on large gatherings unrelated to work will remain in place for the duration of the reopening process.

Wolf declined to give more specifics for these criteria, but said that he’d offer greater detail next week.

Wolf made the speech as the Republican-controlled state Senate this week passed a bill intended to allow more businesses to reopen. Moreover, an anti-shutdown rally is planned at the state Capitol on Monday.

In contrast, Wolf urged Pennsylvania residents to “stay the course,” saying that the state’s shutdown of “non life-sustaining” businesses and its stay-at-home requirements have successfully slowed transmission of COVID-19 and helped to “flatten the curve.”

Wolf also mentioned he wasn’t alarmed following a spike of newly diagnosed COVID-19 cases today. He attributed some of the new cases to greater testing and said that more results had come back from private labs following the Easter and Passover holidays.

The state Department of Health today reported 1,706 newly diagnosed positive cases in PA, the highest number in a week.

During her daily press conference, health Secretary Rachel Levine also attributed the higher case number to receiving more test results.

“We felt it was due to the holidays,” she said. “So, we’re starting to see more testing now.”

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New COVID-19 case numbers jump in PA following week of improvement

An image from the state Department of Health lab in Exton, Pa.

After a week of reporting mostly lower case numbers, the PA Department of Health today said that the number of new COVID-19 cases has spiked again.

The department today said that 1,706 new positive cases had been reported as of midnight, bringing the state’s total to 29,441 since the pandemic began in early March.

This reverses a trend of mostly lower case numbers that the state had been reporting for nearly a week, ranging from about 1,150 to 1,250.

The department also reported 49 new coronavirus-related deaths, bringing the statewide total to 756 cases.

Locally, Lancaster County now has reported 35 deaths from the disease, two more than yesterday. As of midnight, deaths in other midstate counties were unchanged: seven in Dauphin County, four in Cumberland and York counties, two in Lebanon County and one each in Perry and Adams counties.

The virus has spread to all of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties.

Locally, Dauphin County now has 311 confirmed cases, 24 more than yesterday. Cumberland County has 154 cases, 18 more than yesterday. Lancaster County has 1,030 cases, York County has 393 cases, Lebanon County has 424 cases, Adams County has 70 cases and Perry County has 18 cases.

Philadelphia County continues to have the most confirmed cases with 8,138 cases, followed by Montgomery County with 2,684 cases. The two counties also have reported the most deaths from the disease: 136 and 97, respectively.

Statewide, 147,373 coronavirus tests have been performed, with 117,932 people testing negative, according to the state health department. Yesterday, the state reported that 141,470 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
  • 1 percent are aged 13-18
  • 6 percent are aged 19-24
  • Nearly 40 percent are aged 25-49
  • Nearly 29 percent are aged 50-64
  • 23 percent are aged 65 or older.

Source: PA Department of Health

Most of the patients hospitalized are 65 or older, as are most of the reported deaths, according to the state. There have been no pediatric deaths to date.

“We must continue to stay home to protect ourselves, our families, our community,” said Secretary of Health Rachel Levine. “If you must go out, please make as few trips as possible and wear a mask to protect not only yourself, but other people as well. We need all Pennsylvanians to continue to heed these efforts to protect our vulnerable Pennsylvanians, our health care workers and frontline responders.”

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.

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

 

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Burg View: Credit Where It’s Due

State Street on Harrisburg’s Allison Hill

Over the years, I haven’t held back in criticizing the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation.

PennDOT has an enormous presence in the city of Harrisburg, and, with that should come an enormous responsibility.

But it’s a responsibility that I’ve felt the agency has profoundly neglected in its singular focus on getting state workers in—and then out—of Harrisburg as fast as humanly possible. In so doing, it’s been arrogantly cavalier about the lives of the people who live here, whose flesh-and-blood bodies are no match for speeding hunks of steel.

But might there finally be change afoot at PennDOT?

This past week, city Engineer Wayne Martin told City Council that PennDOT had approved the city’s “Rapid Response” plan for State Street, which includes new curbs, lighting, ADA ramps and, the biggest shock of all, a narrower road—all designed to improve pedestrian safety.

Was I floored? Yes, I was.

Now, this approval didn’t come easily.

Originally, PennDOT’s district officials rejected the city’s plan, concerned it might slow down its commuters, which, incidentally, is the point. So, the city went over their heads, directly to top agency honchos, including two department secretaries, where they found a more receptive and responsible audience.

“Narrowing that road and reducing the crossing distance for pedestrians is really what needs to be done, and that’s what finally everyone agrees to,” Martin told council members.

So, huge kudos to PennDOT—and to city officials for making it happen.

Let us now hope that this change has legs.

As regular Burg readers may know, I’ve long advocated for changes to the eight-plus-lane asphalt monstrosity known as Forster Street. Just as State Street is a menace to upper Harrisburg, Forster Street is a menace to lower Harrisburg.

Like State Street, state-owned Forster Street needs to be put on a serious road diet. Harrisburg may never reclaim the quaint neighborhood lane it lost in the 1950s, but it can get a vastly improved road with bike lanes, bump-outs and more green space.

This would make perilous Forster Street much safer for both vehicles and pedestrians, while helping to stitch the city back together by narrowing the paved canyon currently dividing downtown and Midtown.

I have two other bold asks of PennDOT. First, the agency should scale back its proposal to widen I-83 in south Harrisburg. Secondly, it should take measures to slow down traffic and improve pedestrian safety on Front Street.

PennDOT—you’ve shown you can act in good faith and in the best interests of the people of Harrisburg. Please don’t stop now. We need just a few other things from you, measures that could vastly improve the quality of life for those live, visit and, yes, even work in the capital city.

Lawrance Binda is co-publisher/editor-in-chief of TheBurg.

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Burg Review: Zoom into Open Stage’s virtual “Angels in America.”

Welcome back to 1985, when Ronald Reagan took office a second time, AIDS was a little understood pandemic, and people felt free to be politically incorrect.

“Angels in America” is a multi-award-winning drama by playwright Tony Kushner presented in two acts: “Millennium Approaches” and “Perestroika.” Each part spans several hours over several days. Absorbing the full weight of the marathon story is impossible if only watching a portion.

But, really, where else are you going? Launch your Zoom app, shake yourself a quarantini and settle in for an absorbing, interwoven saga from Harrisburg’s Open Stage—presented in the new, social distancing-appropriate format of online theater.

A sophisticated slant marks this script, introducing an ensemble cast of city slickers and transplanted Mormon archetypes from Salt Lake City. For example, men with AIDS talk through the gravity of their own mortality, characters un-closet themselves, and unlikely friends come together despite their opposing political leanings. Every character is tormented in some way—by their sexuality, by AIDS and by the politics surrounding these issues, all intertwined in the midst of Reagan-era America.

The play’s religious symbolism is weighty, from Jacob wrestling an angel, interacting with heavenly figures and voices, to Jewish elders speaking plainly. Any humor in this tragedy is caustic and likely unintentional.

I’m not convinced that the script truly captured the fear associated with AIDS back then, when people seemed unsure how it was transmitted. It was only later, after the U.S. government poured billions into research and treatments, that people began to relax somewhat, as AIDS no longer meant certain death.

In 1985, we certainly would not have had the luxury of viewing a live theater production over our Commodore 64Ks. Even if Zoom had existed, our AT&T modems never would have had enough bandwidth. The irony grips thicker with the fact that we’re watching a character drama about a pandemic during another cloistered world pandemic.

The old saying holds true: “The show must go on.” Open Stage Director Stuart Landon said that using this alternative medium is the “best chance to understand this epic story.”

Live theater is always better, but the actors resiliently found ways to tell the story, taking care to arrange backgrounds in their living rooms, implement fun costumes and props within their head frames, and adjust lighting to shift focus. I had to imagine special effects like snow or angel wings flapping.

A narrator explained the stage direction that became lost in translation, like dancing or fistfights. To have that same narrator glaze over uncomfortable sex scenes—thank you, Zoom!

Zoom theater provided an intimacy normally lost from the cheap seats. I could see facial expressions in the Brady Bunch-like squares that would have been exaggerated onstage. Sometimes Zoom even froze them for me.

You will need to give the actors a certain amount of grace, the same way you forgive your co-worker who forgets to hit their un-mute button before talking. And the shouting scenes made me wish I had not opted for headphones.

Yet, the format offered some advantages, too.

For example, Stacey Werner, who played multiple roles, did not miss the quick changes between scenes.

Another multiple role-player, Karen Ruch, said the home venue, “allowed me to be vulnerable in my safest place, which is where I live.”

Sean Adams, who played Louis, said the format, “helped shake me out of old habits and try new things.”

Landon filmed himself in the same spot where he goes night-night.

“I think focusing on the work has been a morale boost for all of us,” he said. “We all love the theater, and we love this show. Having this goal, even as the target keeps moving, has been life-giving.”

No matter the media, it’s exciting to connect to live theater. You can watch in your jammies, with no usher tapping you on the shoulder if you crinkle your candy wrapper.

You can also hang around for the interactive portion, eavesdropping on the rest of the “audience.”

 “Angels in America” runs through the Zoom app April 17 through May 10. Tickets and all access information are available through Open Stage’s website, https://www.openstagehbg.com/.

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Satisfying the Hunger: Area food banks and organizations respond to “staggering” spikes in need

Bags and boxes of food await at the Salvation Army Harrisburg drive-through pickup.

The face of a little boy is captured in Kathy Anderson-Martin’s memory. His eyes followed her, as she put milk on the table—the table holding grocery items his family was about to receive—and he started licking his lips.

“I heard the mom telling him they would have it when they got home,” said Anderson-Martin of the Salvation Army Harrisburg Capital City Region.

This is the faith-based charity’s fifth week of crisis operations, which began on March 16, and the needs continue to escalate.

“We are seeing a record number of new folks who have never used our services before—more and more folks who have lost employment, as well as small business owners, from all walks of life,” said Anderson-Martin.

The numbers demonstrate the need.

In the first four weeks of crisis operations, the Salvation Army distributed food equivalent to 130,835 meals. To put it in perspective, that’s the amount of food they distributed under typical circumstances over six months last year.

More than 1,000 households—1,087 to be exact—received boxes of food during the past four weeks, and 66 percent of those households had never received food from the Salvation Army before. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, the organization provided food equivalent to 5,400 meals per week. That’s increased six or sevenfold to 32,000 meals per week, or 80 households per day.

Normally, the Salvation Army provides a daily hot breakfast, access to their food pantry via a “choice shopping model,” youth programs with meals, and more. With COVID-19 safety regulations in place, plus a spike in needs, the organization is providing hot breakfasts only on Wednesday mornings from 9 to 10 a.m. from their 29th Street location, along with distribution of food via a drive-through six days of the week, by appointment. Boxes are designed to help families put food on the table for about a week.

“We need to strike a balance between serving people and protecting our staff, so everything is highly organized and designed to eliminate crowds,” said Anderson-Martin. “Families line up in their cars, and we bring their orders out to a table. Families retrieve the food once we go back in.”

She described it as a “triage process,” by which families make an initial call, go through a brief questionnaire with staff members working remotely from their homes, then receive an appointment time for food distribution.

Not all families have cars. Anderson-Martin noted some families arrive on foot or via bus, carrying the 25-pound boxes and additional grocery bags home.

“We’re making the food orders a little more generous than usual so that people don’t have to come back as frequently,” she said.

What does a typical family receive? A core box of kitchen staples is supplied by a partner, the Central Pennsylvania Food Bank. The Salvation Army adds fresh produce, bread, milk, eggs and meat. The charity is serving a larger footprint than normal, absorbing residents of additional zip codes beyond their standard coverage area, due to smaller food banks’ closure or reduced capacity.

“The volume going out is crazy, but the community has been incredibly supportive,” said Anderson-Martin. “We have a fairly robust food rescue program that’s continued and increased [during COVID-19]—retail outlets such as grocery stores and restaurants that are providing more.”

Fresh food donations arrive from 10 different retailers, five days a week, totaling more than 100,000 pounds of rescued food in a typical year.

The Salvation Army’s standard annual budget is $3.4 million, which fuels 11 programs that serve 23,000 individuals.

But it’s obvious 2020 will be anything but a typical year.

“Financial contributions are the best way people can help, from the individual who sends $25 to those who’ve sent much more. We’ve had a terrific response, but honestly, we need that,” Anderson-Martin said. “We can’t accept food donations or volunteers, unlike normal circumstances.”

 

All the Tools

On a larger scale, the Central Pennsylvania Food Bank’s mission is to reduce hunger across 27 counties by supplying more than 1,000 agencies and programs with food, including Harrisburg’s chapter of the Salvation Army.

“My age is 56, so I’ve been around a while,” said Joe Arthur, executive director of the Central Pennsylvania Food Bank. “The closest thing [to this pandemic] is when I landed here 12 years ago, working through the financial crisis and great recession…. That took a fair number of months to develop… but this time it’s so immediate and so pervasive—it’s touching so many households.”

That immediacy is clear in the comparisons—Arthur calls it “staggering.”

Overall, the food bank’s distributions have spiked by 25 percent. They supply a network of soup kitchens and food pantries that normally serve 135,000 central Pennsylvanians—but the need has ballooned to 175,000 residents. In the past four weeks, they distributed almost 6.5 million pounds of food—that’s 2 million pounds above normal. They are packing and shipping 5,000 boxes of food every day—enough to fill four tractor-trailers.

What’s inside each standard brown cardboard box that eventually finds its way into a family’s hands?

Arthur said the ingredients—pantry staples—are intended to sustain a small family of four or five members, “to help them get by.” Boxes contain pasta and sauce, cereal, a quart of shelf stable milk, granola or cereal bars, peanut butter and snack foods, along with canned vegetables, soup, chili and tomatoes. They also distribute fresh food—produce and dairy products—to partners that have the ability to distribute it, such as the Salvation Army or Mechanicsburg’s New Hope Ministries.

One of the biggest issues facing the Central Pennsylvania Food Bank is a breakdown in the supply chain, especially for shelf-stable, boxed food and canned goods.

“You can’t buy what’s not available,” Arthur said. “The continued over-buying in grocery stores is stretching the supply lines.”

He said the nonprofit has already placed food orders stretching through June 30 to meet needs.

“The good news is, in the world of fresh produce, dairy, milk and eggs, we’re able to source in abundance every day,” he said. “Unfortunately, dairy farmers are in worse crisis now than they’ve seen over past five years, so there’s a lot of milk available—and we’re moving that at record levels.”

The organization has been “blessed” by a flood of donations, Arthur said, including substantial corporate gifts:

  • In March, the Giant Co. donated $250,000 to four hunger relief organizations including the Central Pennsylvania Food Bank.
  • On April 15, Giant announced it was donating an additional $250,000 to 18 local hunger relief organizations including the Central Pennsylvania Food Bank, Harrisburg’s Downtown Daily Bread, Mechanicsburg’s New Hope Ministries, Carlisle’s Project Share, Perry County Food Bank, Lebanon County Christian Ministries, York County Food Bank and Lancaster’s Water Street Rescue Mission.
  • The food bank received a $100,000 grant from the PNC Foundation on April 14.
  • Sizable gifts to the Central Pennsylvania Food Bank by several health insurance companies have included those by Highmark Health and Capital BlueCross, Arthur said.

“General donors by the hundreds are coming to our website to make donations too—and we’ve been incredibly inspired by that,” Arthur noted.

The nonprofit is also accepting volunteers via their website.

An additional financial shot in the arm, available to the region’s food banks and shelters, was announced on April 15. Two of the region’s largest nonprofit funders—The Foundation for Enhancing Communities and United Way of the Capital Region—partnered to establish a COVID-19 Community Response Fund. They launched the initiative with an initial $118,000 in donations culled from the Hershey Co., Highmark Health, TFEC and private donors.

At the Central Pennsylvania Food Bank, the typical annual operating budget is $16 million, which allows for the distribution of 50 to 60 million pounds of food.

“We’re adding probably 10 million pounds of food on top of that, most of which has to be purchased—and that’s just to get through June,” said Arthur.

He noted that the financial effects will easily be felt through 2020—and possibly beyond.

“On the expense side of this crisis response, we think this will go on for months,” Arthur said. “We are about $2 million above normal expenditures due to the crisis response through the end of the fiscal year at the end of June. And we are using some of our own reserves saved over the years—this crisis is that big. We’re using all the tools in our toolbox.”

To contact the Salvation Army Harrisburg Capital City Region and see if you’re eligible for food distribution, call 717-233-6755. For more information, or to make a donation, see pa.salvationarmy.org/harrisburg-pa. 

Anyone within the Central Pennsylvania Food Bank’s 27-county coverage area can locate feeding programs by calling the nonprofit’s helpline at 877-999-5964. To donate or volunteer, see centralpafoodbank.org.

To learn more about the COVID-19 Community Response Fund or to make a donation, see tfec.org/covid19. Nonprofit organizations based in Cumberland, Dauphin, Franklin, Lebanon, Perry and Northern York Counties are invited to apply for assistance through the fund at tfec.org/covid19resources

 

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PA reports 1,245 new COVID-19 cases, as days-long case trend continues

The number of new COVID-19 diagnoses continued to be relatively stable in Pennsylvania, with cases increasing somewhat from yesterday.

The state Department of Health today reported 1,245 new COVID-19 cases, 100 more than yesterday. The department also reported 60 additional deaths from the disease, compared to 63 yesterday.

Since Saturday, the state has reported a similar range of new cases–around 1,150 to 1,250–after a spike to nearly 2,000 late last week.

Since the pandemic began in early March, 27,735 Pennsylvanians have been diagnosed with COVID-19 and 707 state residents have died from the disease.

Secretary of Health Rachel Levine has said in recent days that she believed the “curve was flattening” in Pennsylvania, though has warned repeatedly against “complacency.”

In fact, just yesterday, Gov. Tom Wolf announced further mandates on “life-sustaining” businesses that remain open, including ensuring enough space for six-foot social distancing and requiring greater use of masks.

Locally, Lancaster County now has reported 33 deaths from the disease, four more than yesterday, and Dauphin County now has seven fatalities, two more than yesterday. As of midnight, deaths in other midstate counties were unchanged: four in Cumberland and York counties, two in Lebanon County and one each in Perry and Adams counties.

The virus has spread to all of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties.

Locally, Dauphin County now has 287 confirmed cases, 16 more than yesterday. Cumberland County has 136 cases, six more than yesterday. Lancaster County has 970 cases, York County has 393 cases, Lebanon County has 380 cases, Adams County has 67 cases and Perry County has 17 cases.

Philadelphia County continues to have the most confirmed cases with 7,684 cases, followed by Montgomery County with 2,544 cases. The two counties also have reported the most deaths from the disease: 134 and 89, respectively.

Statewide, 141,470 coronavirus tests have been performed, with 113,735 people testing negative, according to the state health department. Yesterday, the state reported that 137,584 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:

  • Less than 1 percent are aged 0-4
  • Nearly 1 percent are aged 5-12
  • 1 percent are aged 13-18
  • 6 percent are aged 19-24
  • Nearly 40 percent are aged 25-49
  • Nearly 29 percent are aged 50-64
  • Nearly 23 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. There have been no pediatric deaths to date.

“We must continue to stay home to protect ourselves, our families, our community,” Levine said. “If you must go out, please make as few trips as possible and wear a mask to protect not only yourself, but other people as well. We need all Pennsylvanians to continue to heed these efforts to protect our vulnerable Pennsylvanians, our health care workers and frontline responders.”

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.

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

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