August 6, 2021 coronavirus news | CNN

The latest on the Covid-19 pandemic in the US

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What we covered here

  • Half of the US population is fully vaccinated against Covid-19, according to a White House official.
  • The Delta variant accounts for an estimated 93.4% of Covid-19 cases in the US, according to CDC numbers.
  • US Covid-19 hospitalizations and deaths are likely to increase over the next four weeks, according to a CDC ensemble forecast.
  • Meanwhile, coronavirus cases continue to rise across much of the world with Covid-19 deaths hitting a record peak in Africa, according to the WHO.

Our live coverage has ended for the day. Follow the latest on the pandemic here.

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Florida's Orange County Public Schools issues mask mandate and allows parents to opt out

Florida’s Orange County Public Schools issued a mask mandate for the upcoming school year, according to a news release issued by the district late Friday. 

This comes after the district was notified about a new rule by the Florida Department of Health which, according to the release, said parents must be given the option to opt out of the mask requirement for their children.

Opting out means sending a student to class with a signed note saying they would like to opt out of wearing a face mask, according to the district. 

According to the district, the mask mandate for students goes into effect on Aug. 10, the first day of school, and is effective for 30 days. 

Orange County Public Schools will also require employees, visitors, volunteers and parents to wear masks starting the first day of school.

Arkansas judge blocks state law banning mask mandates in schools

An Arkansas judge temporarily blocked the enforcement of the state’s law banning mask mandates in schools in response Friday to two lawsuits — one from a school district, and one from parents — who want schools to be able to require masks if they so choose.

The preliminary injunction was issued by Pulaski County Circuit Judge Tim Fox, after the state’s general assembly held a special session on the matter on Thursday without amending the state’s law.

With the injunction in place, school districts can now enforce mask requirements, while the suits continue.

The law “cannot be enforced in any shape, fashion or form,” Fox said during the hearing on Friday.

Gov. Asa Hutchinson called on the state’s legislature earlier this week to amend the law that he himself signed in April, indicating that in hindsight, he wished he had not signed it.

“The local school districts should make the call,” Hutchinson said Wednesday. “And they should have more options to make sure that their school is a safe environment during a very challenging time for education.”

In a statement to CNN Friday, the governor said the judge’s decision ended with the result he intended.

Officials from Marion School District filed the suit. The district has more than 900 students and a dozen staff members in quarantine due to positive Covid-19 cases during just the first two weeks of school.

Marion School District Superintendent Glen Fenter said in a statement to CNN the district is “pleased” with the judge’s ruling today.

Fenter said the district is now considering how best to move forward.

“We will be spending the coming days visiting with our lawyers and exploring what the best option will be for students in the Marion School District. We will work with our school board to enact a suitable policy.”

Florida reports record high number new Covid-19 cases this week

A healthcare worker administers a Covid-19 swab test at a testing site at Tropical Park in Miami, Florida, on Friday, August 6.

Florida reported more Covid-19 cases over the past week than any other seven-day period during the pandemic. 

Data published Friday by the state health department reported 134,506 new Covid-19 cases over the past week, for an average of 19,215 cases each day.

The previous record high was on Jan. 8, with 125,937 total cases reported over seven days, for an average of 17,991 cases each day, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

This week’s total is about 22% higher than last week, when the state reported 110,477 total cases, for an average of about 15,782 new cases each day.

Over the past couple of weeks, about one in five new Covid-19 cases have been reported in Florida. But the state accounts for less than 7% of the US population overall, according data from the US Census Bureau.

With this latest update, Florida has the second highest rate of new cases per capita, with about 90 new cases per 100,000 people each day over the past week. The US overall is averaging about 30 new cases per 100,00 people each day.

Other states with the highest per capita case rates are Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi and Alabama.

Over the past week, Florida reported 175 deaths and a new case positivity rate of 18.9%, according the state health department’s Covid-19 Weekly Situation Report.

Share your story: Are you returning to an office, classroom or college campus for the first time?

People across the country will be returning this fall to a physical office, workplace, college or school for the first time since the coronavirus pandemic started.

What will be different? What are you excited about? What are you concerned about? 

We want to hear about your plans for a potential story.

Amazon will require all warehouse workers to wear masks beginning Monday

An Amazon fulfillment center in seen in Bessemer, Alabama, on March 27.

All of Amazon’s US warehouse employees will again be required to wear masks indoors beginning on Monday, whether they are vaccinated or not, the company confirmed to CNN Friday. 

The decision marks yet another corporate titan that is tightening Covid-19 policies in response to the rise in infections linked to variants of the coronavirus.

Amazon had relaxed its mask requirement on May 24 for fully vaccinated US warehouse workers, at least in areas where local regulations did not continue to require them.

The company had been criticized early on in the pandemic after some workers said the company had not provided sufficient protective gear or adequately sanitized its warehouses, leading to protests and lawsuits. 

Friday’s announcement was first reported by The Wall Street Journal. 

Biden administration will extend pandemic student debt relief through January 2022

The Biden administration will extend the pandemic pause on student debt until January 2022, Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said in a statement.

“The payment pause has been a lifeline that allowed millions of Americans to focus on their families, health, and finances instead of student loans during the national emergency,” Cardona said.

The statement said that as the economy starts to bounce back, the extension will give students and borrowers “the time they need to plan for restart and ensure a smooth pathway back to repayment.”

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, and Rep. Ayanna Pressley released a statement in support of the extension shortly after the announcement from the White House.

Some context: Federal student loan borrowers would have had to resume payments on Oct. 1 after an unprecedented 19-month suspension. The freeze was initially put in place by Congress and then extended by both the Trump and Biden administrations.

Borrowers’ balances have effectively been frozen since March 2020. Interest stopped adding up, saving the average borrower about $2,000 over the first 12 months – and collections on defaulted debt have been on hold.

Biden earlier suspended collections on defaulted student loans made by private lenders, which had previously been excluded from the protection.

The interest pause alone has provided $72 billion in relief.

Mississippi Supreme Court issues emergency order implementing Covid-19 safeguards in all courts

The Mississippi Supreme Court has issued an emergency order implementing Covid-19 safeguards in all courts in the state, giving individual judges discretion to adopt safety measures, according to a release from the court on Friday.

Judges have the discretion to postpone jury trials scheduled through Sept. 10, according to the release.

The order also strongly encourages judges to refer to guidance issued by the Mississippi State Department of Health for preventing the spread of Covid-19, including recommendations for social distancing, capacity limitations on gatherings and masks.

“Unfortunately, circumstances have precipitously deteriorated, especially with respect to the Delta variant of Covid-19,” Randolph said, adding that the worsening pandemic requires changes to safeguard the public.

Peloton delays office reopening until October

A Peloton office sign is seen ion New York in July 2020.

Peloton is the latest company to postpone its office reopening amid concerns about the Delta variant.

The New York-based fitness company told CNN on Friday that it is pushing its staggered return to office from September to October.

Peloton added that once its office does reopen, the company plans to offer flexible work options to all corporate employees. The fitness company employed about 6,600 people as of the end of March.

Some context: Over the past 48 hours, major companies including Wells Fargo, BlackRock and ViacomCBS have pushed back their plans to reopen offices in September by at least a month. Amazon is delaying its return to office until January 2022.

CDC vaccine advisers scheduled to meet next Friday

A meeting of vaccine advisers to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has been announced for Aug. 13, according to an update to the agency’s website Friday.

An agenda has not been posted, but the event is described as “a virtual COVID-19 meeting” that begins at 11 a.m. ET. The Washington Post is reporting the focus will be on giving additional doses to immunocompromised people, which may then inform whether and how the US Food and Drug Administration modifies its policies regarding the vaccines’ authorization.

CNN has reached out to the CDC for more information.

At a previous meeting of the group – known as the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP – experts discussed the types of people who might fall under this category, such as organ transplant recipients and people undergoing certain cancer treatments. It’s estimated that around 3% of the adults in the US are immunosuppressed.

According to current CDC guidance, “data suggest immune response to COVID-19 vaccination might be reduced in some immunocompromised people.” The agency recommends that they continue taking steps as though they were not vaccinated – such as wearing masks, physical distancing and avoiding crowds.

Covid-19 vaccine booster might just be a one-time shot, not a yearly one, leading FDA researcher says

Syringes with doses of the Johnson and Johnson Covid-19 vaccine are readied at a vaccination clinic in Culver City, California, on August 5.

A booster dose of Covid-19 vaccine might just be part of the completion of immunization, not an annual requirement to revaccinate, Dr. Peter Marks, director of the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research at the US Food and Drug Administration, said Tuesday.

“I don’t think that we want to think that these vaccines have somehow failed us,” Marks said at a discussion hosted by the Covid-19 Vaccine Education and Equity Project. 

Marks also distinguished between two ways of considering third doses — one to aid people without an effective immune response, and one to address continuing circulation of the virus.

“There is the third dose of vaccine as part of the upfront series for people who don’t make a good immune response – that’s one type of third dosing. And then there may be a third dose, or a booster, depending on how you look at it, that will be given to make sure we have good immunity against the circulating strains of Covid-19,” Marks said. “I think we need to make sure we present this correctly.”

More than 900 students in quarantine after second week of school in one Arkansas district

More than 900 students and 12 teachers are in quarantine as the second week of school comes to an end in Marion, Arkansas, as the district grapples with an outbreak of Covid-19 cases.

Forty-seven students and eight staff members tested positive for Covid-19 this week alone, causing the jump in students needing to be quarantined. An additional 54 students and five staff members were able to avoid quarantine because they are vaccinated.

The latest Covid numbers are being tracked on the district’s online dashboard, which says the district is “committed to being transparent about the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on our school community.”

CNN previously reported that the district has not been able to put a mask requirement in place due to the law signed by Gov. Asa Hutchinson in April. Hutchinson said earlier this week that he wished that had not become a law.

The district, which is just west of Memphis, Tennessee, said that if a mask mandate was in place, the number of students in quarantine would be drastically lower.

“Again, if all students and teachers had been wearing a mask appropriately — then [Thursday’s] 9 positive cases would be isolated — but there would be no resulting quarantines for anyone else,” the district’s website said.

Georgia's largest school system confirms 253 cases of Covid-19

Gwinnett County Public Schools confirmed at leas 253 cases of Covid-19 for the first three days of classes on Friday.  

Watson said that out of the system’s 141 schools, 59 of them have no cases.  

“In order to really handle this and deal with this we need the cooperation of and partnership with our parents and students,” said Watson. “Fortunately, we haven’t had to quarantine as of yet.”

Gwinnett County Schools mandated masks on all campuses and encouraged anyone eligible for a vaccine to get one.

“If you’re sick or you feel sick don’t come to school, don’t come to work,” Watson said. 

The first day of school for Gwinnett County was Wednesday.

Gwinnett County, in the metro Atlanta area, is the largest school system in Georgia. It has about 180,000 students and close to 12,000 teachers.  

The schools where Covid-19 is spreading are not following mitigation measures, CDC director says

Schools and summer camps where Covid-19 has spread are the ones that have not been closely following mitigation measures, such as wearing masks, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said on Friday during a town hall event in Boston.

Walensky added that, as an example, Florida does not require masks in schools.

“If you’re masked and you’re doing all of the prevention mitigation strategies, it won’t be transmitted in the school. It will be contained,” Walensky said.

“It is possible to do this safely,” she added. “We’ve seen it done safely even in areas of high transmission – and where you’re seeing all of the challenges are in places that are not implementing mitigation strategies.”

JPMorgan sticks by office reopening but reinstates employee mask mandate

An office worker enters the JPMorgan Chase & Co. headquarters in New York on July 22.

JPMorgan Chase told employees on Friday they will be required to wear masks in common areas, on elevators and in lobbies to help prevent the spread of Covid-19, but America’s largest bank will keep offices open for now.

The company is now requiring non-vaccinated employees to be tested twice a week. However, unlike Wells Fargo and other Wall Street firms, JPMorgan is sticking by its return-to-the-office schedule even as Covid-19 cases rise. 

JPMorgan announced in late April that it would open its US offices to all employees on May 17, subject to a 50% occupancy cap. All US-based employees were expected to return to the office by early July on a consistent rotational schedule, subject to that same 50% cap.

JPMorgan executives said the new mask rules are being implemented out of “an abundance of caution” and due to the recently-updated mask guidance from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“We are aware of current conditions and are disappointed to see the rise in Covid-19 cases in the US, and we know that it is a cause of increasing anxiety for many,” the bank said in the memo.

White House says US is not headed toward lockdown despite Delta variant surge

White House press secretary Jen Psaki answers questions during the daily briefing on August 6.

The White House said the US is not headed for another lockdown to stop the spread of Covid-19 despite the highly contagious Delta variant spreading throughout the country. 

Psaki added: “We are not going back. We are not turning back the clock.”  

Earlier Friday: President Biden said more work needs to be done to vaccinate the rest of the country amid the Delta variant surge.

But he said the national vaccination program, which has so far resulted in 50% of the country getting fully vaccinated, has protected the population from the worst of the Delta variant. 

White House says there's no plan to renew enhanced unemployment benefits in September

White House press secretary Jen Psaki answers questions during the daily briefing on August 6.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters Friday there’s been no decision made whether or not to extend enhanced unemployment benefits when the program lapses in September.

The $300 boost, as well as two other pandemic programs that provide benefits to independent contractors and others who don’t typically qualify and to those who’ve run out of their regular state benefits, is scheduled to last until early September in the states that are continuing the programs.

In a follow up, CNN’s Phil Mattingly pressed on if there’s still a chance the administration may still decide to extend the enhanced unemployment insurance benefits.

“Well, it’s planning to end – it’s supposed to end, at this point, at the beginning of September, so he hasn’t made a decision to extend it, he also hasn’t made a decision not to, so I suppose that’s, that’s correct,” Psaki said.

Florida's Board of Education just passed these rules about Covid-19 school protocol

School buses are seen parked at a school in Winter Springs, Florida, in August 2020.

The Florida Board of Education unanimously passed two rules — one regarding school attendance as it relates to Covid-19 and another about the use of scholarship funds to help kids being harassed for mask use.

The rules will go into effect immediately for the upcoming start of the school year.

Friday’s emergency meeting was called as parental concerns grow around Covid-19 protocols.

The first rule presented by the Florida School Board of Education states that in the event that school districts implement quarantine orders for students who could be exposed or could become infected, attendance rules should change as to not impact the education of children. Since “these directives will result in learning loss for students unless plans are enacted to continue learning during ‘stay-home’ days,” according to the document presenting the emergency rule. 

Board of Education General Counsel Michael Mears stipulated during Friday’s emergency meeting that “even though they won’t be physically present under this rule, they’ll be able to continue their education and get credit for those days of schools outside of the physical school building.”

Mears urged school districts to implement procedures so children could continue learning at home.

During the time set aside for public comment, several parents complained that virtual schooling was no longer an option in their school districts forcing them to send their healthy kids into schools.

The second rule set forth pertained to using Hope Scholarship funds for parents who felt their kids were being harassed because of their personal choice of mask use. The funds, in the form of a voucher, can be used to switch schools. As explained during the emergency session, the money comes from Floridians who chose to make donations to the program when they buy motor vehicles. According to the board, “it is not money that was appropriated to the districts.”

During the hour-long conference call, vice chair Ben Gibson explained further that “this rule allows a parent to access a scholarship that they could use to go to a different public school, they could use to cross to a different district if you happen to live near a line. You could go to another school district, or you could access a private school that accepts state scholarships and the funding would follow, but it’s not taking money from the district.” 

“Those funds are then available to help parents get their child out of a situation that’s 100% in keeping with the right of a parent to direct the education and health of their children,” Gibson added.  

An outraged parent chimed in during the public comment session, “I urge you to look beyond the false platitudes of parental rights and personal freedoms that this rule espouses. It is in fact, extremely one sided,” the Leon County parent said. “What about my constitutional parental rights to a safe public education for my child? This bill defunds school districts and you’re writing a blank check of taxpayer money to private school.” 

“We’re not going to hurt kids. We’re not going to pull funding that’s going to hurt kids in any way,” Gibson said.

New Jersey governor announces statewide mask mandate in schools

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy talks to reporters on June 8.

Students, educators, staff and visitors – regardless of Covid-19 vaccination status – will be required to wear face masks while inside school buildings across New Jersey during the 2021-2022 academic year, Gov. Phil Murphy announced in a news conference Friday afternoon.

The decision was made due to the recent and rapid spread of the Delta variant, because no child under the age of 12 is eligible for vaccination, and the reality that many older students and their parents remain unvaccinated, he said.

Covid-19 vaccination rates are lower among adults with disabilities, according to Census Bureau survey data

The Covid-19 vaccination rate among adults with disabilities is lower than among those without disabilities, according to data from the US Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey and published by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

According to the latest survey data, about 77% of adults with a disability had received at least one dose of Covid-19 vaccine, compared to 82% of adults without a disability.

This survey data differs from the official vaccination data published the CDC, which shows that about 70% of adults have received at least one dose of Covid-19 vaccine.

But the gap in reported vaccination rates from the survey – a difference of about five percentage points – highlights the relative disparity.

A gap exists across age groups, but is largest among adults ages 50-64, with about 78% of people with a disability who have had at least one dose compared to about 87% of those without a disability.

Vaccination rates among Black people with and without a disability are about even, but are largest among those individuals who identify as multiracial or a race or ethnicity other than White, Black, Hispanic or Asian.

Responses for the latest Household Pulse Survey were collected between June 23 and July 5. They are weighted to be representative of the total adult population in the United States.

Vaccination more than halves your chance of Covid-19 reinfection, study suggests

A nurse prepares a dose of the Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine on July 29 in Wilmington, California.

For adults previously infected with Covid-19, a new study shows that vaccines do a better job at protecting you from reinfection than natural immunity on its own.

The study, published Friday by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, suggests that people who got Covid-19 in 2020 and didn’t get a Covid-19 vaccine were more than twice as likely to be reinfected in May or June 2021, compared with people who also had Covid-19 but were later fully vaccinated.

The CDC has long recommended that people who have been previously infected also get vaccinated. The agency notes that reinfection risk “is low in the months after initial infection but may increase with time due to waning immunity.” There is no minimum time to wait between recovering from Covid-19 and getting vaccinated.

The authors note that scientists are still unraveling how long and how robust natural immunity to Covid-19 is. A number of earlier studies have shown evidence of lasting immunity in some people with previous Covid-19 – but scientific consensus has maintained that vaccines do an even better job.

With the Delta variant driving a surge in cases, the study also noted that “the emergence of new variants might affect the duration of infection-acquired immunity, and laboratory studies have shown that” those antibodies from natural infection might be weaker against certain variants of concern.

Meanwhile, studies of vaccinated people have continued to show high levels of protection, particularly when it comes to severe outcomes, including hospitalization and death.

The new study of hundreds of people in the state of Kentucky did not assess severity of reinfections, and it noted that vaccinated people may be less likely to get tested, thus potentially skewing the numbers.

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Here’s how to keep your kids safe from the coronavirus Delta variant
WHO calls for a moratorium on booster shots until at least the end of September
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If we do not all get vaccinated, the next Covid-19 variant is just around the corner, expert says
Travel to New York City during Covid-19: What you need to know before you go