July 15, 2020
Now that summer’s here, you may wonder what type of care is available for your school-age children. While priority is still given to essential workers, emergency child care providers can also accept families who are returning to work during reopening. Summer school and day camps are also permitted. Find child care options by calling 211 or visiting 211info.
The following safety tips will help keep kids and families safe as Oregon reopens:
- Encourage children to practice physical distancing, keeping clean hands and covering coughs.
- Encourage children to stay with their assigned group (or safety bubble). This is required to help camps monitor for potential virus spread.
- Stay home if you suspect anyone in your home is sick or has been in contact with someone infected with COVID-19.
- Keep pick-up and drop-off times short, and keep 6 feet away other families and staff. You may be asked to wait outside to sign your children in and out.
To learn more about reopening Oregon, visit coronavirus.oregon.gov. More information is available at Oregon Department of Education’s emergency child care page and this fact sheet.
The Oregon Legislature’s Joint Emergency Board yesterday allocated more than $200 million to support COVID-19 relief efforts, specifically targeting investments to struggling workers, small businesses and Oregonians facing the deepest and most disparate impacts of the pandemic.
Meeting recordings and materials from Emergency Board meetings can be found on the Oregon State Legislature website. You can also view a press release from House Speaker Tina Kotek and Senate President Peter Courtney with a list of the approved funding.
Today, OHA released its Weekly Report, which highlights the data trends for the week from July 6 through July 12. The report noted that the recent COVID-19 resurgence accelerated over the reporting week. OHA recorded 2,043 new cases of COVID-19 infection, a 7 percent increase from the previous week. In addition, 22 Oregonians were reported to have died, twice the number who died the preceding week. The percentage of tests positive increased to 6.2 percent from 5.0 percent, though the daily number of newly reported infections appears to have plateaued for the first time since late May.
Hospitalizations also plateaued after increasing for the five consecutive weeks and remain below earlier peaks in March and April despite reported daily case counts approximately three times as high. These circumstances are probably due principally to 1) detection and reporting of a higher proportion of all infections that occur (more widespread testing; testing of asymptomatic contacts of known cases); and 2) actual increases in underlying rates of infection among younger people who are at lower risk of hospitalization than are those in older age groups. ICU bed usage remains well under capacity statewide.
COVID-19 has claimed four more lives in Oregon, raising the state’s death toll to 247, the Oregon Health Authority reported at 12:01 a.m. today.
Oregon Health Authority reported 282 new confirmed and presumptive cases of COVID-19 as of 12:01 a.m. today, bringing the state total to 13,081.
The new confirmed and presumptive COVID-19 cases reported today are in the following counties: Baker (1), Benton (1), Clackamas (24), Columbia (2), Coos (2), Crook (1), Deschutes (12), Douglas (4), Jackson (9), Jefferson (2), Josephine (1), Klamath (1), Lane (9), Lincoln (2), Linn (2), Malheur (15), Marion (38), Morrow (3), Multnomah (59), Polk (4), Tillamook (1), Umatilla (27), Union (4), Wasco (2), Washington (50), and Yamhill (6).
Oregon’s 244th COVID-19 death is a 63-year-old man in Deschutes County who tested positive on June 13 and died on June 14 at St. Charles Medical Center. He had underlying conditions.
Oregon’s 245th COVID-19 death is a 61-year-old man in Multnomah County who tested positive on April 13 and died on May 6 in his residence. He had underlying conditions.
Oregon’s 246th death is an 85-year-old woman in Multnomah County who tested positive on April 11 and died on June 20 at Providence Portland Medical Center. She had underlying conditions.
Oregon’s 247th death is a 61-year-old woman in Douglas County who tested positive on June 28 and died on July 12 at Covenant Hospital in Lubbock, Texas. She had underlying conditions.
NOTE: The death of a 71-year-old woman from Multnomah County who died on May 5 was accidentally reported twice — once in the May 7 press release as Oregon’s 120th death, and again in the May 8 press release as Oregon’s 124th death. We regret the error. The total number of deaths today has been amended to reflect this change.
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