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  • Updated: 10:07 a.m., Wednesday, April 1, 2020

    Ohio is taking an inventory of available ventilators in the state as the death toll from the coronavirus rose to 55, officials announced Tuesday afternoon.

    The Ohio Department of Health will require companies up and down the supply chain to report the number of ventilators in their possession each week, Gov. Mike DeWine said.

    The number of total confirmed COVID-19 cases in the state rose to 2,199, with 585 people hospitalized, including 198 admitted to intensive care units. One-fifth of the people who have tested positve so far in Ohio are healthcare workers.

    The Ohio National Guard is working with hospital systems in eight regions of the state to increase capacity and optimize personal protection equipment for medical staff. DeWine said Tuesday he expects to release more details on the capacity build-up plans soon.

     

    Health Director Dr. Amy Acton encouraged Ohioans to continue keeping their distance from others while in public and to be even more thoughtful about essential trips to places like the grocery store or pharmacy.

    "You can do it, we need you to be able to do that. But double up. Think about your being out there strategically. Because it's very, very important right now that we minimize our exposure to others," Acton said.

    Ohio’s stay-at-home order expires April 6. While DeWine did not announce the extension of that order Tuesday, he said a decision on the matter would be coming soon.

    “Everything you’ve heard me say, the lieutenant governor say, and everything you’ve heard Dr. Acton say, would indicate that we cannot let this monster up,” DeWine said. “We have to keep battling it. We can’t walk away or it’s going to rear up, and it’s going to kill more Ohioans.”

    So far, 29,191 Ohioans have been tested for COVID-19, according to the latest numbers reported to the state. The state’s lab can perform about 280 tests a day and turn them around in eight hours, Acton said. Other hospitals are supplementing that capacity, she said.

    “We are still dealing with a scarcity of testing, so saving that testing for the very sickest and most at risk,” she said. “That means a lot of us—most of us, actually—are working with our doctors, hearing that clinically we sound like we have a case and staying home. And we can’t report to you all on those numbers, but know it’s a significant amount from what we’re hearing on the front lines.”

    As new forms of testing become available, Acton said the state plans to expand its efforts to trace contacts of confirmed COVID-19 cases. 

    DeWine’s administration is also preventing local water systems from shutting off service for nonpayment during the pandemic. Customers who already have lost service must call to have their water restored, he said.

    “This will ensure that as many people as possible have safe water during this state of emergency,” DeWine said.

    Meanwhile, the state is working to expand capacity on the unemployment insurance website to handle the surge in new claims, Lt. Gov. Jon Husted said. The jobless claim call center is adding 180 employees, he said.

    “For all of you who have had challenges, I want you to know your voices are being heard, and they’re being acted upon,” Husted said.

    State job creation entity JobsOhio is making a $2 million low-interest loan to Appalachian Growth Capital, which helps finance small businesses in southeast Ohio, DeWine said.

    The state prison system placed Marion Correctional Institution under quarantine this week after a staff member tested positive for COVID-19. The state is considering on a case-by-case basis whether prisoners with health problems and nonviolent records are released, DeWine said.

    Statehouse News Bureau's Andy Chow contributed to this report.

  • Updated: 4:16 p.m., Wednesday, April 1, 2020

    Ohio is ordering medical providers to send coronavirus test samples to hospitals with spare testing capacity, rather than to slower-moving private labs, Gov. Mike DeWine said Wednesday.

    The Cleveland Clinic, MetroHealth Medical Center, University Hospitals and The Ohio State University can turn around COVID-19 test results more quickly, he said.

    DeWine said it was “unacceptable” for labs to take as long as six days to turn around test results.

    “It’s unacceptable to the patient, it’s unacceptable for the rest of us,” DeWine said. “Because knowing when someone tests positive or doesn’t test positive is information that we very, very desperately need.”

    The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Ohio rose to 2,547 as of Wednesday afternoon, with 65 deaths and 670 hospitalizations. A total of 222 patients have been admitted to intensive care units.

    The Ohio Department of Health will continue to analyze tests for critical patients and hospital workers showing COVID-19 symptoms, DeWine said. The state may have the capacity for rapid testing as soon as next week, he said.

     

    State and medical leaders are working to expand hospital capacity, anticipating a major wave of new COVID-19 cases in the coming weeks, DeWine said.

    “What we’re seeing in New York [City] is what we work every single every day to avoid here in the state of Ohio,” DeWine said, “when this wave finally does really hit us.”

    DeWine is also asking manufacturers to produce personal protective equipment (PPE) for medical workers and first responders. Companies able to make PPE or components for protective gear can sign up at repurposingproject.com, he said.

    To help small businesses, the governor signed an executive order Wednesday asking lenders and landlords to suspend rent and mortgage collections from commercial tenants for 90 days.

    The state is also working with certain grocers to allow those who receive food assistance to order online and pick up groceries outside the store, DeWine said.

    State officials expect the number of COVID-19 cases to hit a peak in May. The number of cases likely will decline gradually after that, Health Director Dr. Amy Acton said.

    Action and Lt. Gov. Jon Husted have convened a task force that includes data scientists, health economists and sociologists to plan for Ohio’s eventual pandemic recovery, she said.

    But with no treatment or vaccine for COVID-19, Acton said, it will take time to return to normalcy.

    “This will not be a switch that you flip and life goes back to normal,” she said.

    This is a developing story and will be updated as more information becomes available.

  • Governor Mike DeWine's latest update for April 14, 2020, on the impact of COVID-19 on the State of Ohio. The press conference is scheduled for 2 p.m., but the actual start has often been later due to fast-changing circumstances. Our priority is to provide trustworthy, up-to-date coverage that Northeast Ohioans can rely on. As the pandemic continues, ideastream will share live briefings from Governor DeWine online and on our broadcast channels, WVIZ/PBS, 90.3 WCPN and The Ohio Channel.

     


    During these trying times, ideastream is dedicated to keeping you, the Northeast Ohio community, informed by providing trusted, up-to-date information that you need to know, as it happens.

    From special coverage of briefings by the president and governor to information about health resources and opportunities to ask questions of local and national health experts, ideastream is committed to providing you with all the information you need to know about COVID-19, as it happens. Visit www.ideastream.org/coronavirus for the latest.

    This special coverage is made possible thanks to the support of our members. We're here for you, and we're here because of you​.

  • Gov. Mike DeWine and other state officials will provide their latest update on the COVID-19 pandemic for April 8, 2020. The press conference is scheduled for 2 p.m., but the actual start has often been later due to fast-changing circumstances.

    Our priority is to provide trustworthy, up-to-date coverage that Northeast Ohioans can rely on, including stories that follow up on the daily press conference. As the pandemic continues, ideastream will share live briefings from DeWine online and on our broadcast channels, WVIZ/PBS, 90.3 WCPN and The Ohio Channel.

     


    During these trying times, ideastream is dedicated to keeping you, the Northeast Ohio community, informed by providing trusted, up-to-date information that you need to know, as it happens.

    From special coverage of briefings by the president and governor to information about health resources and opportunities to ask questions of local and national health experts, ideastream is committed to providing you with all the information you need to know about COVID-19, as it happens. Visit www.ideastream.org/coronavirus for the latest.

    This special coverage is made possible thanks to the support of our members. We're here for you, and we're here because of you​.

  • Gov. Mike DeWine and other state officials will provide their latest update on the COVID-19 pandemic for April 8, 2020. The press conference is scheduled for 2 p.m., but the actual start has often been later due to fast-changing circumstances.

    Our priority is to provide trustworthy, up-to-date coverage that Northeast Ohioans can rely on, including stories that follow up on the daily press conference. As the pandemic continues, ideastream will share live briefings from DeWine online and on our broadcast channels, WVIZ/PBS, 90.3 WCPN and The Ohio Channel.

     


    During these trying times, ideastream is dedicated to keeping you, the Northeast Ohio community, informed by providing trusted, up-to-date information that you need to know, as it happens.

    From special coverage of briefings by the president and governor to information about health resources and opportunities to ask questions of local and national health experts, ideastream is committed to providing you with all the information you need to know about COVID-19, as it happens. Visit ideastream's Coronavirus coverage page for the latest.

    This special coverage is made possible thanks to the support of our members. We're here for you, and we're here because of you​.

  • Gov. Mike DeWine and other state officials will provide their latest update on the COVID-19 pandemic for April 8, 2020. The press conference is scheduled for 2 p.m., but the actual start has often been later due to fast-changing circumstances.

    Our priority is to provide trustworthy, up-to-date coverage that Northeast Ohioans can rely on, including stories that follow up on the daily press conference. As the pandemic continues, ideastream will share live briefings from DeWine online and on our broadcast channels, WVIZ/PBS, 90.3 WCPN and The Ohio Channel.

     


    During these trying times, ideastream is dedicated to keeping you, the Northeast Ohio community, informed by providing trusted, up-to-date information that you need to know, as it happens.

    From special coverage of briefings by the president and governor to information about health resources and opportunities to ask questions of local and national health experts, ideastream is committed to providing you with all the information you need to know about COVID-19, as it happens. Visit ideastream's Coronavirus coverage page for the latest.

    This special coverage is made possible thanks to the support of our members. We're here for you, and we're here because of you​.

  • Gov. Mike DeWine and other state officials will provide their latest update on the COVID-19 pandemic for April 8, 2020. The press conference is scheduled for 2 p.m., but the actual start has often been later due to fast-changing circumstances.

    Our priority is to provide trustworthy, up-to-date coverage that Northeast Ohioans can rely on, including stories that follow up on the daily press conference. As the pandemic continues, ideastream will share live briefings from DeWine online and on our broadcast channels, WVIZ/PBS, 90.3 WCPN and The Ohio Channel.


    During these trying times, ideastream is dedicated to keeping you, the Northeast Ohio community, informed by providing trusted, up-to-date information that you need to know, as it happens.

    From special coverage of briefings by the president and governor to information about health resources and opportunities to ask questions of local and national health experts, ideastream is committed to providing you with all the information you need to know about COVID-19, as it happens. Visit ideastream's Coronavirus coverage page for the latest.

    This special coverage is made possible thanks to the support of our members. We're here for you, and we're here because of you​.

  • President Trump's briefing is expected to begin at 3:00 p.m.

    By Danielle Kurtzleben, NPR

    Christian Piatt finally got a loan to help rescue his brand-new bar and restaurant in Granbury, Texas.

    But it wasn't easy.

    He applied through the federal Paycheck Protection Program, which is meant to help small businesses threatened by the pandemic. One bank told him it couldn't lend through the program. Another told him he might have better luck elsewhere. The third approved his loan and he got the money.

    Now he's wondering: How should he use his $34,000 loan?

    "I understand in principle it's encouraging us to get people back to work," said Piatt, the co-owner of Brew Drinkery, which was forced to shut down only 51 days after opening. "But in practice, when you have a retail storefront that is not being allowed by local authorities to operate in the way that we had before, there should be some consideration to make it to account for that."

    He's talking about rules laid out by the Treasury Department regarding how forgiveness of the loans will work. The small business relief program created by the CARES Act reopened Monday with new funding.

    The loans can be forgivable — meaning they won't necessarily have to be paid back. But there are conditions on forgiveness. One big one: 75% of the forgiven amount must be spent on payroll. And the rest can only be spent on a few categories: rent, mortgage interest or utilities.

    That wasn't what the CARES Act originally said. Rather, those are rules that the Treasury and the Small Business Administration created at the start of the program, saying they did it anticipating a high number of applications.

    Inventory is not one of those forgivable categories. That was a problem for Piatt. When his brewery and restaurant closed, he was sitting on a lot of beer, food and kombucha — things that will eventually go bad. Under the program's rules, he wouldn't be reimbursed for any of it.

    So Piatt asked his banker what to do.

    "The way I would think about it, he said, was you are becoming an extension of the unemployment office at this point," Piatt explained. In other words, this would mean Piatt could wind up spending most of his money on his workers, even if they weren't putting in that many hours.

    Some small business owners are finding new ways to give employees something to do at work. Mary Domito, owner of three furniture stores in New Mexico and Colorado, explained in a message to NPR how she plans to employ her workers before she can reopen her stores.

    "I will use the weeks that employees are back on payroll but before the stores open to do Zoom meetings and get them trained on working and updating our website," she said.

    Congress did pass the program with workers in mind — 26 million of them have filed for unemployment in just five weeks. It's right there in the title: the Paycheck Protection Program.

    Domito recognizes the need to help workers, and she also says it reduces how useful the loan is to her.

    "I guess it's to take the load off the unemployment system. It just isn't a big stimulus for me, but it does buy me some time," she also wrote.

    Confused experts

    It's not just small businesses that have had trouble with that 75% payroll rule. The Small Business Administration has yet to say exactly how that forgiveness calculation will work.

    "It's a mess. Just the calculation of who counts for payroll, what counts for payroll," said Adam Markowitz, who works at a Florida accounting firm. In fact, he can rattle off a list of how the meaning of "payroll" has changed since the program was created.

    "There was a point that independent contractors were going to count towards payroll costs. They no longer do. There was a point that FICA tax was going to count towards employee costs. It no longer does," he said, naming just two.

    While those things are being clarified, something else hasn't: exactly how forgiveness will work — how the forgiven amount will be calculated and how the total number of employees on payroll will be counted, for example. (For a very deep dive on what the SBA has yet to lay out, CPA Tony Nitti laid out the details at Forbes.)

    All of may sound arcane, but to small businesses struggling to hang on, it's a very big deal. It means that they can't know exactly how much will be forgiven.

    "In some ways, they really put these small businesses in a very compromising position because they could end up in a situation where they go out and spend dollars to bring people back on the payroll, which ultimately will not be forgiven at the end," said Don Stevens, managing partner of private client services at accounting firm CohnReznick.

    On top of all that, timing is extremely important. Businesses are required to spend their loan money within eight weeks of receiving it.

    Freezing the economy in place

    Michael Strain, an economist at the right-leaning American Enterprise Institute, agrees the payroll rule is needlessly complicated.

    But he says the 75% requirement does achieve something worthwhile: keeping workers on payrolls.

    "It's important because it creates a situation where those businesses don't have to search for new employees when the economy reopens," he said. "And where workers who otherwise would be unemployed don't have to don't have to search for a new job."

    Even if there's not much work to do, he says, the point is to make it as easy as possible to jump-start the economy again.

    "The idea is really to kind of freeze the economy where it was on February first and then unfreeze it as close as possible to that February first situation," he said.

    For Piatt of Brew Drinkery, there has been a little bit of a thaw — this week, he opened for delivery and curbside pickup. Now, he's looking forward to welcoming customers inside again.

     

     

  • Gov. Mike DeWine and other state officials will provide their latest update on the COVID-19 pandemic for May 4, 2020. The press conference is scheduled for 2 p.m., but the actual start has often been later due to fast-changing circumstances.

    Our priority is to provide trustworthy, up-to-date coverage that Northeast Ohioans can rely on, including stories that follow up on the daily press conference. As the pandemic continues, ideastream will share live briefings from DeWine online and on our broadcast channels, WVIZ/PBS, 90.3 WCPN and The Ohio Channel.


    During these trying times, ideastream is dedicated to keeping you, the Northeast Ohio community, informed by providing trusted, up-to-date information that you need to know, as it happens.

    From special coverage of briefings by the president and governor to information about health resources and opportunities to ask questions of local and national health experts, ideastream is committed to providing you with all the information you need to know about COVID-19, as it happens. Visit ideastream's Coronavirus coverage page for the latest.

    This special coverage is made possible thanks to the support of our members. We're here for you, and we're here because of you​.

  • Gov. Mike DeWine and other state officials will provide their latest update on the COVID-19 pandemic for May 5, 2020. The press conference is scheduled for 2 p.m., but the actual start has often been later due to fast-changing circumstances.

    Our priority is to provide trustworthy, up-to-date coverage that Northeast Ohioans can rely on, including stories that follow up on the daily press conference. As the pandemic continues, ideastream will share live briefings from DeWine online and on our broadcast channels, WVIZ/PBS, 90.3 WCPN and The Ohio Channel.

     


    During these trying times, ideastream is dedicated to keeping you, the Northeast Ohio community, informed by providing trusted, up-to-date information that you need to know, as it happens.

    From special coverage of briefings by the president and governor to information about health resources and opportunities to ask questions of local and national health experts, ideastream is committed to providing you with all the information you need to know about COVID-19, as it happens. Visit www.ideastream.org/coronavirus for the latest.

    This special coverage is made possible thanks to the support of our members. We're here for you, and we're here because of you​.

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