The State of Ohio has begun to reopen businesses on May 1st. Religious organizations have never been subject to the Stay at Home orders. Almost all have complied. The few that did not were characterized as being very unwise by the Governor. I suspect their lawyers decided it was best to comply. Catholic Bishops of Ohio have announced that they are planning for a possible resumption at the end of May on Pentecost Sunday/
SUMMARY OF NEW RULES WHICH TOOK EFFECT ON MAY 1ST
These orders set forth the minimum acts that must be taken;
if people do more than the minimum it will benefit everybody. Nothing in this
order prohibits the gathering of members of a household, family or residence.
Does not apply to weddings and funerals but does apply to wedding receptions.
Does not apply to religious facilities, and religious gatherings. (The original
orders never did)
STAY AT HOME REMAINS IN EFFECT. All persons may leave their
homes only to participate in activities,
businesses or operations permitted by this order. Elderly people, and those with vulnerable
medical conditions are urged to remain at home unless necessary for medical
reasons.
All businesses and operations are permitted to reopen so
long as workplace safety standards are observed according to the following schedule.
MANUFACTURING DISTRIBUTION AND CONSTRUCTION: permitted to reopen on May 4
GENERAL OFFICE permitted to reopen May 4 but strongly
encouraged to work from home using teleconferencing, etc.
RETAIL permitted to reopen on May 12 however can begin curbside
pickup, delivery and appointment only (limit of 10 persons at a time) on May 1
PERSONAL CARE SERVICES: Personal care services such as hair
salons, barbershops, day spas, nail salons, and tanning facilities may reopen
on May 15 under guidelines developed jointly by their professionals and Ohio Health Department
RESTAURANTS AND BARS will be permitted to
reopen as follows: Outdoor dining: May 15
Dine-in service: May 21 Again all with guidelines developed jointly by their professional and Ohio Health Department
CLOSED BUSINESS:
Schools, Adult Day Care/Support,
Child Care/Support, Entertainment, Recreation, Gymnasiums,
COVID 19 TESTING:
The state is ramping up testing by developing a lot of the materials here in Ohio
PRIORITY 1
Hospitalized persons and medical personnel who present symptoms
PRIORITY 2 Residents of
long term facilities, first responders,
persons over age 65 and those with vulnerable medical conditions who present
symptoms Residents and staff of long
term care facilities even if they do not have symptoms.
PRIORITY 3. Those with or without symptoms who are receiving
out- patient surgery/ procedures
WHAT HAPPENS WHEN AN ELDERLY PERSON TESTS POSITIVE?
The state is also ramping up monitoring, hiring and training thousands more public health workers
1. Monitor and stay at home for 14 days.
2 Public health
workers obtain a list of contacts in previous days, and request those contacts
to stay at home and monitor themselves.
3. Public health looks to identify hot spots that are promoting virus spread
MY HYPOTHESIS OF WHAT WILL HAPPEN
1. In May as business reopen there will be more transmission
of the virus especially as younger people with the virus who are not
symptomatic or mildly symptomatic transmit it to more and more people.
If the
Elderly stay at home and are not visited at home they will be less likely to
get it. However some will not stay a home or will be visited and therefore will
begin to present with symptoms in late May and early June, and will then be
picked up by the Public Health workers monitoring system
2. If Catholic churches reopen in June, some of the elderly
will begin to attend Mass. As more and more elderly leave home during the
summer for various reasons, more and more will develop symptoms, and come into
the Public Health monitoring system.
Many of those developing symptoms will include
Mass going among their prior contacts. More and more suspicion will develop
that Mass going is a cause of virus transmission whereas it may just be a
correlate of virus transmission.
Catholic parishes may become stigmatized as “hot spots” like nursing
homes and congregate living facilities
MY STRONG RECOMMENDATIONS
1. Do not reopen the parishes for public Mass until August
at least. The State of Ohio knows that it is taking a very risky strategy at
reopening the economy while attempting to shield the elderly and the vulnerable
by encouraging them to stay at home.
By August we should know how risky that
strategy is. If we become a part of the
reopening in June we could become a great part of the problem if the reopening
makes our seniors vulnerable.
August is also a natural time to reopen since it is the low point of annual attendance. That attendance slowly climbs to an average in October (which is why Mass attendance counts are then) and then to a first annual peak at Christmas
2. Continue to develop LIVESTREAMED MASSES as a very
attractive alternative to coming to the parish for Mass. They should become the preferred option for the Elderly and Vulnerable
It is very possible
that we will have waves of the virus for
the next two years until an effective vaccine or herd immunity slows the virus
down so much that it is not a problem
3. Develop very strong parish networks that assist the
ELDERLY AND VULNERABLE in staying at home for at least two years. These networks should become a strong
permanent feature of parish life.
Good analysis, Jack. I also worry that churches generally will be seen as virus hotspots.
ReplyDeleteI do think that people in vulnerable groups need to understand that regular life isn't going to stop just for them until a vaccine is available.
It would be nice if some of the support now in place (designated shopping times, pick up and delivery) would stay in place. It would be nice if decent masks and gloves were available. It would be nice if churches planned more outreach.
But they won't. Getting rid of precautions is a way to restore normality.
For me, the way the pandemic has revealed callousness, scorn, and even resentment directed at vulnerable populations has been the most depressing part of the lockdown.
I read a comment someplace that the quarantine has made people "more so" (I apologize if I ripped off that from anyone here). Anyway, if they were kind and thoughtful people before, they became more that way. If they were self-centered and heedless of others before, they became more that way now.
DeleteThey are opening up a lot of things Monday, including barber shops (ohne mich) and restaurants with distancing and disinfecting. I don't know how one cuts hair from 6 feet away. The cases-per-day has not dropped. We are nearly 40 dead for the week, and should be near 50 by Monday. Hand sanitizer? Even Publix doesn't have it. This is not a decision formed from the best science but from the best politics, as our Republican government sees it.
DeleteSome Georgians suspected their state had reopened ahead of the best science to save money on unemployment compensation. That can't be the issue here, because we basically still aren't paying any. But we will get that computer fixed with the money from the next tax cut that will more than pay for itself. Jack, I agree with all your forecasts.
The barbers and beautician here are still working with the state on recs, but the thought is that they will wear plastic visors and stay behind the customer, not breathing in his/her face. Eyebrow waxing, facials, and manicures may not be allowed for awhile, but that's just preliminary info.
DeleteOf course, we have the Demon Barber of Main Street the next town over, who has been visited by the cops three times and now has been declared a public menace. I hope the local constabulary can shut him down before the armed "guards" arrive to "protect his freedom." There are several Go Fund Me pages set up for him. https://www.mlive.com/news/saginaw-bay-city/2020/05/state-orders-owosso-barber-to-shut-shop-or-face-court-if-he-continues-to-defy-governors-coronavirus-order.html
I see on our parish website that our catechumen was finally able to be baptized last Sunday. Looks like it was just him, Father, and his sponsor. The picture is of him getting the water poured on his head while wearing a mask. That had to be rather awkward.
DeleteAnd then there is this. As a 79 year old diabetic, I take this VERY SERIOUSLY!
ReplyDeleteInfectious disease specialist warns herd immunity is years away; pre-COVID-19 life should not resume yet
https://piedmontexedra.com/2020/05/infectious-disease-specialist-warns-herd-immunity-is-years-away-pre-covid-19-life-should-not-resume-yet?utm_source=LWVP+Newsletter&utm_campaign=c7aec65970-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2018_02_28_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_3f1c6f0143-c7aec65970-493679677
I may hold off until we peasants can get tested as much as the people around Trumpy. I'm not so much afraid of sickness and death as much as Trumpy outliving me. That would just be wrong.
ReplyDeleteDid you hear that Stephen Miller's wife has Covid? I don't wish that on anyone, including her, but maybe it will give Trump the clue that it's not just peons that get it.
DeleteYes. I heard. Trump is supposedly germophobic. Wealth and privilege provide some safety but that virus is out there trying to get him.
DeleteNah, if he didn't get shook when the GI who places his cheeseburgers in front of him tested positive, Mrs. Miller won't stop him. You governors just go ahead (Please!). It's all on you.
DeleteHe hasn't used his special powers to make more PPE equipment but when his cheeseburgers were threatened by meat packing closures, time to act.
DeleteRe: churches staying closed beyond the end of the restrictions: the bishops may decree it but not all pastors would follow it. Frankly they all have an urgent financial incentive to reopen.
ReplyDeleteEverybody has an urgent financial incentive to reopen (except us endangered retirees on fixed incomes). But if everybody gives in to the urge at 78,763 deaths, and we end up with a death count in the millions (as some of the scarier projections show), the recriminations will destroy viability of a lot of businesses and institutions.
DeleteChina, which fought the war ("worse than Pearl Harbor, worse than 9-11")a lot harder and (beltedly) smarter than we have, reports another outbreak near the Russian border. This is a virus. It does not yield to rhetoric or financial need. Declaring victory and getting out won't work with it.
Our Archdiocese had said a week or so ago that they hoped to have official guidance published by now for reopening, but nobody has received anything yet. Our governor published his five point plan this week and that probably made the Archdiocese's plans obsolete.
ReplyDeleteOur archdiocese has published this guidance on returning to Mass. I see that our parish has already taped off every other pew with yellow caution tape in anticipation of reopening May 30. It actually is six feet of separation that way. Everyone is to wear a mask except small children. As a parent and grandparent I say that small children shouldn't be there for now. I have more to say later on what I believe we should do during the transition period when we have a partial reopening of Mass.
DeleteThe Lansing Diocese has apparently ditched plans to re-open Sunday Mass until June 1 since the governor continued her emergency order through May 28.
ReplyDeleteBishop Boyea's announcement:
"From May 18, however, our pastors will be allowed, should they wish, to celebrate, by invitation only, weekday Masses for small groups of parishioners. Unfortunately, this will not happen on Sundays until after June 1. The Diocese of Lansing is also finalizing liturgical guidelines for the safe celebrations of the Mass during this pandemic. These are small but certain steps towards restoring public Masses."
This looks like an abrogation of responsibility to me, allowing weekday masses, however small, "by invitation" with no sanitation guidelines currently in place.