Tag: COVID-19

  • COVID-19

    As of January 12, 2021 at 9:30 AM
    (according to Alabama Political Reporter)
    Alabama had 407,848 confirmed cases of coronavirus, (23,664) more than last week with 5,573 deaths (579 more than last week)
    Greene County had 738 confirmed cases, (29 more cases than last week),
    with 20 deaths
    Sumter Co. had 890 cases with 26 deaths
    Hale Co. had 1,695 cases with 42 deaths

  • COVID-19

    As of November 24, 2020 at 1:24 PM
    (according to Alabama Political Reporter)
    Alabama had 236,865 confirmed cases of coronavirus,
    (13,379 more than last week) with 3,427 deaths (125 more than last week)
    Greene County had 413 confirmed cases, (31 more cases than last week),
    with 17 deaths
    Sumter Co. had 562 cases with 22 deaths
    Hale Co. had 932 cases with 31 deaths

  • COVID-19

    As of November 4, 2020 at 11:20 AM
    (according to Alabama Political Reporter)
    Alabama had 197,777 confirmed cases of coronavirus,
    (10,599 more than last week) with 3,006 deaths (95 more than last week)
    Greene County had 354 confirmed cases, (18 more cases than last week),
    with 17 deaths
    Sumter Co. had 490 cases with 21 deaths
    Hale Co. had 816 cases with 30 deaths

  • COVID-19

    As of October 28, 2020 at 11:10 AM
    (according to Alabama Political Reporter)
    Alabama had 187,706 confirmed cases of coronavirus,
    (13,178 more than last week) with 2,911 deaths (106 more than last week)
    Greene County had 436 confirmed cases,
    (7 more cases than last week),
    with 16 deaths
    Sumter Co. had 477 cases with 21 deaths
    Hale Co. had 780 cases with 30 deaths

  • Newswire: Trump orders aides to halt talks on COVID-19 relief

     BY:MORGAN CHALFANT,MIKE LILLIS;SCOTT WONG,the Hill

    President Trump said Tuesday (October 6) that he has instructed his top aides to stop negotiating with Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) on future coronavirus stimulus legislation until after the November election, a risky move just weeks before voters head to the polls.
    Trump, who is himself currently being treated for COVID-19, accused Pelosi in a series of tweets Tuesday afternoon of “not negotiating in good faith” and seeking “bailouts” for states he says are poorly run by Democratic officials.
    “I have instructed my representatives to stop negotiating until after the election when, immediately after I win, we will pass a major Stimulus Bill that focuses on hardworking Americans and Small Business,” Trump tweeted.
    The message marked a sharp reversal for the president, who just three days earlier had urged leaders of both parties to come together to finalize an agreement that can hit his desk before the Nov. 3 elections.
    “OUR GREAT USA WANTS & NEEDS STIMULUS. WORK TOGETHER AND GET IT DONE,” Trump tweeted on Saturday afternoon, a day after he checked into the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center to be treated for COVID-19.
    Pelosi quickly condemned Trump’s move Tuesday, accusing the president of neglecting his office by refusing to provide help to those struggling under the health and economic weight of the pandemic.
    “Today, once again, President Trump showed his true colors: putting himself first at the expense of the country, with the full complicity of the GOP Members of Congress,” she said in a statement.
    The Democratic leader added that the White House “is in complete disarray.”
    In derailing the talks, Trump seems to be betting that his best shot at reelection is not in getting new emergency funding out the door before Nov. 3, but instead dangling the promise of more aid for after voters go to the polls – particularly if he wins.
    The president singled out one area of the talks where both sides have remained far apart for weeks: help for state and local governments. Pelosi is seeking more than $430 billion for those localities, while Republicans have rejected that figure as far too high, wary that Democrats simply want to rescue blue states facing budget crunches as the result of policy decisions made before the pandemic started.
    “Nancy Pelosi is asking for $2.4 Trillion Dollars to bailout poorly run, high crime, Democrat States, money that is in no way related to COVID-19,” Trump tweeted. “We made a very generous offer of $1.6 Trillion Dollars and, as usual, she is not negotiating in good faith.”
    The strategy is a risky one. Millions of Americans remain out of work; thousands of businesses are on the brink of collapse; the major airlines have furloughed tens of thousands of employees in recent days; and American consumers have been wary of returning to restaurants, theaters and public transit, even in regions where they’ve reopened.
    Earlier Tuesday, Jerome Powell, head of the Federal Reserve, warned that the long-term effects on the economy could be devastating if Congress fails to act quickly with more emergency relief – comments not overlooked by Pelosi, who has leaned heavily on Powell’s grim forecasts as leverage throughout the talks. And stocks immediately plunged after Trump announced he would call off the negotiations until after the election, which is now four weeks away.
    Trump’s tweets came shortly after the president hosted a call with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and top congressional Republicans – Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (Calif.) – about the status of the talks.
    McConnell and McCarthy have both been cold to the idea of adopting another massive round of stimulus. And the fact that it was their message, not Mnuchin’s, that resonated with the president is some indication of the level of Republican distrust in the Treasury secretary, who has come under fire from the GOP in earlier negotiations for giving away too much to Pelosi.
    Trump’s actions appeared to come as a surprise to Pelosi and the Democrats. Mnuchin has been speaking daily with Pelosi, and just minutes before Trump’s tweets, Pelosi told rank-and-file Democrats on a private conference call that she and Mnuchin continued to make progress and that she was waiting to hear back from the White House on state and local funding and other Democratic priorities.
    Trump is currently trailing Democratic nominee Joe Biden in national and swing-state polling. The president’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic has been a central issue in the election.
    Mnuchin and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows have been negotiating with Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) since late July on a fifth bipartisan coronavirus relief package but have been unsuccessful in reaching an agreement.
    The president has remained largely on the sidelines in the negotiations, allowing Meadows and Mnuchin to take the lead on the discussions.
    Trump and Pelosi have a particularly chilly relationship and have not had a meaningful conversation for an entire year. In lieu of a deal in August, Trump signed a handful of executive orders aimed at halting federal evictions, extending expanded unemployment benefits and deferring the payroll tax.
    The president returned to the White House on Monday evening after 72 hours of treatment for the coronavirus at Walter Reed. Trump, who was diagnosed with the virus on Thursday, has sought to project an image of strength by showing that he has returned to work amid his illness. Some pundits speculated that the President’s decision may have affected by the medications he is taking for the virus.
    Trump has also urged Americans not to fear the virus or allow it to “dominate” their lives, remarks that have been met with scrutiny from health experts who argue that he has dangerously minimized the threat from COVID-19.

    • Jordain Carney contributed.
  • COVID-19

    As of September 23, 2020 at 10:20 AM
    (according to Alabama Political Reporter)
    Alabama had 147,153 confirmed cases of coronavirus,
    (6,066 more than last week) with 2,488 deaths (96 more
    than last week)
    Greene County had 287 confirmed cases, (3 more cases
    than last week), with 16 deaths
    Sumter Co. had 411 cases with 19 deaths
    Hale Co. had 571 cases with 27 deaths

  • COVID-19

    As of September 9, 2020 at 11:45 AM
    Alabama had 134,417 confirmed cases of coronavirus,
    (12,000 more than last week) with 2,285 deaths (320 more than last week)
    Greene County had 282 confirmed cases,
    (9 more cases than last week), with 14 deaths
    Sumter Co. had 404 cases with 19 deaths
    Hale Co. had 574 cases with 27 deaths

  • COVID-19

    As of September 2, 2020 at 10:30 AM
    Alabama had 118,220 confirmed cases of coronavirus,
    (6,000 more than last week) with 2,114 deaths (49 more
    than last week)
    Greene County had 279 confirmed cases, (6 more cases
    than last week), with 15 deaths
    Sumter Co. had 399 cases with 19 deaths
    Hale Co. had 535 cases with 27 deaths

  • Per capita Coronavirus cases in the Alabama Black Belt are at high levels

    By: John Zippert, Co-Publisher

    As of August 5, 2020 at 11:25 AM
    Alabama had 91,776 confirmed cases of coronavirus,
    (11,000 more than last week) with 1,639 deaths (41 more than last week)
    -Greene County had 247 confirmed cases,
    (10 more cases than last week), with 11 deaths
    -Sumter Co. had 360 cases with 18 deaths
    Hale Co. had 459 cases with 26 deaths

    Looking at maps and statistics on the prevalence of coronavirus in Alabama, the map to the right caught my eye. It shows that the Alabama Black Belt counties across the State of Alabama have among the highest per capita rates of coronavirus cases.
    The map shows the number of cases in the county, per 100,000 people.
    The darker the color of the county, the higher the per capita rate of the disease.
    This means while the number of cases in each county is small, in comparison to the total population of the county, the incidence, rate of disease, is higher in many of these rural counties, with significant African-American populations.
    The county in the state with the highest number of cases, Jefferson with 12,186 cases, has a per capita rate per 100,000 people of 1,850. In Mobile Co with 9,269 cases, the per capita rate per 100,000 is 2, 243. In Greene County with 247 cases, the per capita rate per 100,000 people is 3,045.

    For Sumter County with 360 cases, the per capita infection rate is 2,897. In Hale County with 459 cases, the per capita infection rate is 3,313. For Perry County, the infection rate per 100,000 is 4,841; in Marengo County the rate is 2,804; Dallas County has a per capita rate of 3,490; the rate for Wilcox County is 3,962; and for Lowndes County the rate is 5,768. Going toward the eastern side of the state, Montgomery County has a rate of 2,804; Bullock County has a rate of 4.396 and Macon County has a rate of 1,749.
    Mostly every county in the Alabama Black Belt has a higher per capita, per 100,000 population rate than either Jefferson or Mobile counties, which have the highest numerical coronavirus head counts in the state.
    This means, the coronavirus infection rate in relation to the population is proportionately much higher in the smaller, poorer, rural counties of the Alabama Black Belt. The Alabama Black Belt counties deserve more attention and funding than they have received for testing, contact tracing, isolation and treatment than they have received so far since the start of this pandemic.
    As the dark color on the per capita case map suggests, the Black Belt counties, especially those in the western Black Belt have a high prevalence of the coronavirus disease and should receive more attention before the situation gets worse.
    This map should not be a great surprise, since we have known that health care disparities existed in the Black Belt counties before the onset of the coronavirus. This is because these rural counties have high African-American populations, low incomes and significant poverty. Many of the people living in the Alabama Black Belt have co-morbities for the coronavirus, i. e. , diabetes, asthma, COPD, hypertension, obesity, which make people more vulnerable to the virus.
    Despite the Alabama Black Belt being rural and people are more spread out than in urban areas, they do live in multi-family and in some cases crowded households, which facilitates the spread of the virus.
    The map and other data are available at http://www.alreporter.com/mapping-coronavirus-in-alabama for examination and analysis.

  • Newswire: African trade pact expected to boost the income of participating countries

    Map of Africa

    by BlackmansStreet.Today

    UN News—The African Continental Free Trade Area represents a major opportunity for countries to boost growth, reduce poverty, broaden economic inclusion and help “expand opportunities for all Africans,” said a World Bank official on Monday, which if fully implemented, could boost regional income by around $450 billion.
    By making African countries more competitive and lifting some 68 million people out of moderate poverty, the Free Trade Area, or AfCFTA for short, has the potential to increase employment opportunities and incomes”, said the bank’s Chief Economist for Africa, Albert Zeufack.
    The pact was brokered by the African Union and entered into force at the end of May last year for the 24 countries that had deposited their instruments of ratification. However, according to news reports, it is unlikely to be implemented for several months, due to the disruptions caused by the coronavirus. The initial deadline to begin trading had been 1 July this year.
    According to a new World Bank report, the trade pact could improve regional income by $450 billion – or around seven percent of current regional income – speed up wage growth for women, and lift 30 million people out of extreme poverty by 2035.
    With the aim of creating a single, Africa-wide economic market, AfCFTA offers its members unhindered access to commodities, goods, and services across the continent.
    In light of the havoc that COVID-19 has wreaked on the African economy, the report suggests that gains achieved will be particularly important.
    The pandemic has already caused major trade disruptions across the continent, including in critical medical supplies and food, and is expected to cause up to $79 billion in output losses in 2020. However, by supporting regional trade and reducing trade costs, the successful implementation of AfCFTA would cushion negative COVID-19 effects on economic growth.
    Most of AfCFTA’s income gains are likely to come by cutting red tape and simplifying customs procedures. The report explains that tariff liberalization accompanied by reducing non-tariff barriers would boost income by about $153 billion.
    The remaining $292 billion would be resulting in measures such as lowering trade costs for businesses and facilitating African businesses to integrate into global supply chains.
    In the longer term, the pact would provide a path for integration and enhanced growth for African countries, the report maintains. Moreover, by replacing a patchwork of regional agreements, streamlining border procedures, and prioritizing trade reforms, AfCFTA could also help increase resiliency to future economic shocks.
    The African Continental Free Trade Area has the potential to increase employment opportunities and incomes — World Bank economist
    While overall economic gains would vary – with the largest benefits going to countries with highest trade costs – the report pointed out that the agreement would spur larger wage gains for women, while boosting wages for skilled and unskilled workers alike.