March 24, 2020 coronavirus news | CNN

March 24 coronavirus news

This transmission electron microscope image shows SARS-CoV-2—also known as 2019-nCoV, the virus that causes COVID-19. isolated from a patient in the U.S., emerging from the surface of cells cultured in the lab. Credit: NIAID-RML
Is delivery dangerous? Can I go outside? Your Qs answered
03:42 - Source: CNN

What you need to know

  • The 2020 Olympics in Tokyo was postponed for about a year.
  • The Dow soared 1,200 points at the open.
  • New York’s infection “attack rate” is five times higher than the rest of the US.
  • 43% of the US population is now being asked to stay home.
  • India ordered a 3-week nationwide lockdown.
  • China’s Hubei Province, ground zero for the pandemic, plans to lift nearly all lockdown restrictions tomorrow.
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New Zealand cases jump 30% as country heads into lockdown end of day

New Zealand has recorded a 30% jump in coronavirus cases as the country heads into lockdown by the end of day Wednesday, according to Ashley Bloomfield, the country’s Director of Health.

There are 47 new confirmed cases and three new probable cases, bringing the Pacific nation’s count up to 205, Bloomfield said at a news conference on Wednesday.

What is a probable case? New Zealand is including probable cases in its national count going forward, which includes people who present with coronavirus symptoms and have exposure history despite a negative test.

Bloomfield said the government will continue to see a rise for the next 10 days before a turnaround.

US sees deadliest day with 160 deaths

There are at least 52,976 cases of the novel coronavirus in the United States and 704 people have died, according to CNN Health’s tally of US cases that are detected and tested in the US through public health systems.

There have already been 163 deaths reported today, according to a tally by CNN, making this the deadliest day in the US since the coronavirus pandemic began.

The total includes cases from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and other U.S. territories, as well as all repatriated cases.

This post was updated to reflect the most recent figures.

Nevada governor prohibits public gatherings of 10 or more people

A new emergency order from Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak prohibits people from gathering in groups of 10 or more due to the coronavirus pandemic. 

The order does not apply to private homes or essential services. 

It comes as Sisolak says the state is still struggling to determine how many people have been affected by Covid-19. 

“Nevada has submitted four requests for Covid-19 testing components,” the governor said. “We have received zero shipments for Covid-19 testing components.”

FEMA obtains test kits from private market

Hours after Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Pete Gaynor told CNN the administration will start wielding the powers in the Defense Production Act for 60,000 tests kits and “use the allocation portion of the DPA,” FEMA press secretary Lizzie Litzow said the agency was able to procure the kits from the private market.

Earlier Tuesday, Trump and Gaynor contradicted each other on whether the Defense Production Act was being used in the fight against the coronavirus pandemic.

Around 8 a.m. Tuesday, Trump tweeted, “The Defense Production Act is in full force, but haven’t had to use it because no one has said NO! Millions of masks coming as back up to States.” 

Minutes later, Gaynor told CNN the administration was going to use the law.

“Just a little while ago my team came in and we’re actually going to use the DPA for first time today,” Gaynor said. In addition, FEMA will “insert some language into these mask contracts we have of 500 million masks,” Gaynor said. “DPA language will be in that today.”

Trump suggested at Tuesday’s afternoon briefing that his recent authorization of the DPA serves as enough “leverage” to compel companies to produce medical supplies without invoking the act to force them to start up production. 

Nevada's primary election will be conducted entirely by mail

The Nevada primary scheduled for June 9 will go ahead as scheduled, but will be conducted only with absentee ballots, Secretary of State Barbara Cegavske announced Tuesday evening. This decision does not affect the results of Nevada’s presidential caucus that took place in February. 

The state said all active registered voters will automatically receive a ballot in the mail. Voters can either mail in their ballot or drop it off at a designated location in each county. 

Every county will have at least one poll worker in at least one location to accommodate voters who registered too late to receive an absentee ballot. Mail-in ballots can be postmarked by Election Day, but must be received by election officials within the following seven days to be counted.

More than half of New Orleans' emergency medical workers are under quarantine, mayor says

More half of New Orleans’ medical emergency services personnel is under quarantine due to the coronavirus pandemic, the city’s mayor told CNN’s Erin Burnett on Tuesday. 

With New Orleans hospitalizations expected to exceed their capacity in 11 days, according to the Louisiana Gov. John Bell Edwards, New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell said she is looking for the federal government’s major disaster declaration to get a long-awaited relief.

There have been at least 375 cases of coronavirus and 26 deaths in New Orleans so far, the mayor said.

Universal Orlando and Universal Hollywood resorts extend closures until April 19

Universal Orlando Resort and Universal Hollywood Resort announced Tuesday that they will extend their closures until April 19, according to both resorts’ websites. 

A Disney Global Parks and Consumer Products spokesperson told CNN that Disney has not officially announced any extension of closures at this time.

Australia bans overseas travel and extends social restrictions

Australia banned overseas travel and extended social restrictions in order to tackle the spread of the novel coronavirus, Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced on Tuesday.

The decision to ban overseas travel is aligned with Australia’s upgraded “Level 4: do not travel” and comes under the Biosecurity Act of 2015, Morrison said.

To that effect, the Australian prime minister unveiled stricter social distancing measures that include weddings with a maximum attendance of no more than five people and funerals with no more than 10 people, with one person per 4 square metre (or at least 6 feet apart).

Australia reported a jump of 429 new confirmed cases of novel coronavirus on Wednesday, taking the national tally to 2,252 cases of which eight have died, according to the country’s Department of Health. 

Chicago Police Department has 6 cases of coronavirus

Chicago Police Department has six confirmed Covid-19 cases, Supt. Charlie Beck announced Tuesday.

“Two of these cases came from the same facility. And two of the officers are hospitalized,” he said.

As for law enforcement since Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker issued a stay-at-home order last week, Beck said, “We have issued zero citations and zero arrests for violations of the health order. We have also seen significant evidence that Chicago is staying home.”

Beck also said that 911 calls are down 30% this month. 

Alabama NICU nurse tests positive for coronavirus. Now a baby is in isolation.

Brandon Waltman went to visit his newborn baby girl in the neonatal intensive care unit of an Alabama hospital Monday night. His daughter Emmarie Grace Waltman has been in NICU at the University of South Alabama Women’s Hospital for the past month, but last night, he was told she had been moved to a different part of the hospital.

Waltman said he was told Emmarie was taken to a different room because a nurse tested positive for coronavirus and is being isolated as a precaution. After watching the news about the spread of the virus over the last few weeks, Waltman said he wasn’t surprised.

“I felt like it was inevitable,” he told CNN. Born February 20, Emmarie was in the NICU for issues associated with feeding, her father said.

Now he and his wife can only visit Emmarie one at a time in a low pressure room in order to prevent any potential spread of coronavirus.

Gary Mans, an associate vice president for Marketing and Communications at USA Health, said in a statement that a staff member within the health system had tested positive, but declined to say in which department. 

Waltman said he is anxious to get his daughter home to Mississippi to quarantine together as a family, but he isn’t sure when Emmarie will be released. The family’s home is about an hour away from the hospital.

He said his daughter isn’t showing any symptoms of Covid-19 and he hopes it’ll stay that way.

“I don’t think she’s going to test positive,” he said. “She’s one of the, probably the biggest and the healthiest babies in the NICU.”

London mayor says tube services running at a maximum despite government criticism

London’s Mayor Sadiq Khan has hit back at government criticism over the capital’s tube network running a reduced service amid the Covid-19 outbreak, telling local news outlets that Transport for London (TFL) is operating the maximum number of tube services it can, while maintaining safety. 

“We’re running the maximum tubes we can, as safely as we can. That roughly means that there are 55% of the tubes running,” Khan said Tuesday in an interview with Channel 4 News. 

The London’s mayor’s remarks come after images of London’s tube services circulated Tuesday morning depicting crowded trains, despite the virtual lockdown imposed by the government on Monday. 

Earlier on Tuesday, UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock criticized Transport for London’s decision to run a reduced service, suggesting that an increase in the number of tubes running would allow members of the public to adhere to the government’s social-distancing guidelines, while traveling on the underground network.

“TFL should have the tube running in full so that people travelling on the tube can be spaced out and further apart, obeying the two metre rule as best possible,” Hancock said during the government’s daily COVID-19 press briefing. 

“There is no good reason in the information that I’ve seen that the current levels of tube provision should be as low as they are. We should have more tube trains running,” the Health Secretary added. 

Speaking to BBC London, Khan denounced the “blame game being played” by Hancock, highlighting the “heroic” work being carried out by TFL staff, and the pressure placed on TFL by the number of staff members who are off work.

“About a third of TFL staff are off work, mainly because of themselves having COVID-19, or members of their family having the symptoms, which means they are self-isolating…TFL are running the maximum service they’re able to do safely, with the number of staff that they have got,” Khan asserted. 

US senators are having to step in to get their states the supplies they need

As states compete for valuable medical resources like testing kits, face masks and ventilators, some are turning to their senators to help with supply shortages.

Behind the scenes, lawmakers are overwhelmed by the stories they are hearing back home, and stepping in to troubleshoot. Senators are relying on their closer relationships with the White House and federal officials to get states what they need. 

Sen. Tina Smith, a Democrat from Minnesota, recounted that in her state, the public health department had been approved to receive more than 55,000 N95 masks, nearly 122,000 surgical masks, 23,145 face shields, more than 18,000 gowns and more than 67,000 gloves from the strategic stockpile. But when health officials opened up their shipment Friday, they saw just 657 pairs of gloves.

They called her office.

For the rest of the weekend, Smith and her staff were on the phone with Department of Health and Human Services, troubleshooting with the governor’s office and trying to understand what had gone wrong.

Just days later, after the weekend calls, Minnesota public health officials received another shipment that contained the items they had been approved for. But, Smith said public health officials in her state still warn it’s not likely to be enough for the long haul. She also said that her state still has not received a single ventilator from the stockpile. Other hotspots like New York, California and Washington continue to be top priorities as the government seeks to slow to spread of Covid-19 there.

Smith says she doesn’t blame career officials at HHS or the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

“I feel like the career staff are trying their hardest. I don’t blame them,” she said. “It feels as if the administration’s response is haphazard… I cannot help but think that if they had started to prepare for this in early February…we would have been in a better spot…”

It’s not just places like Minnesota that state officials are asking senators with closer ties to the federal government to help. 

In South Dakota, Sen. John Thune, the second-ranking Republican in the Senate, stepped in to try and help his state. According to an aide familiar, Thune helped South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem lean on both the White House and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last week when the state needed more reagents required to complete the Covid-19 tests.

White House press secretary tested negative for coronavirus

White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham listens during a meeting in the Oval Office on March 12.

White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham, who has been quarantined since coming in contact with Brazilian officials almost two weeks ago and has been working from home, has received negative Covid-19 test results and will be back to work Wednesday, deputy White House press secretary Judd Deere told reporters tonight. 

Fabio Wajngarten, the press secretary for Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro, tested positive for coronavirus earlier this month.

Wajngarten was with Bolsonaro on a US trip earlier this month, during which the Brazilian president dined with President Trump at Mar-a-Lago.

California mayor says he got coronavirus after attending a party at Trump's L.A. golf course

Rancho Palos Verdes, California, Mayor John Cruikshank said he contracted coronavirus after attending a birthday party at Trump National Golf Club Los Angeles.

The disco-themed birthday party, held on March 8, was for former Rancho Palos Verdes Mayor Susan Brooks, who is also positive for the virus, according to a statement from the city of Rancho Palos Verdes. Other guests at the party, which was attended by several current and former city officials, have also contracted the virus, according to the statement.

Cruikshank’s wife has not tested positive for the virus, according to city spokesperson Megan Barnes.

City employees, including the mayor pro tem, are self-quarantined out of an abundance of caution. City Hall has been closed since March 14 and is undergoing a deep cleaning, per a directive from City Manager Ara Mihranian.

The Trump National Golf Club Los Angeles is closed until further notice, a club representative told CNN on Friday.

A spokesperson for the Trump Organization did not immediately respond to a request for comment, nor did former mayor Susan Brooks.

CORRECTION: This post has been updated to reflect that Mayor John Cruikshank contracted coronavirus. His wife has not tested positive for the virus, according to a city spokesperson.

WeWork offers bonuses of $100 per day to employees coming into work during coronavirus outbreak

WeWork, the coworking space provider, said it has an obligation to stay open for its members who are working on essential businesses. And while it has implemented a work from home policy for all of its employees, building staffers or “community” team members, will be given bonuses of $100 per day should they choose to come to work. 

“This will go into effect immediately and we will reevaluate this policy again by March 31st,” the memo said.

TSA officer in Seattle tests positive for coronavirus

A Transportation Security Administration officer at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport has tested positive for coronavirus, according to a statement from the airport.

The officer was last on duty at the airport the morning of March 21, according to the airport. The checkpoint where the agent worked is now closed for cleaning.

At least two dozen TSA screeners around the country have tested positive for Covid-19, according to a count maintained by the agency.

Two infants in San Diego test positive for coronavirus

Two infants in San Diego have tested positive for coronavirus, Public Health Officer Dr. Wilma Wooten announced at a news conference Tuesday.

This is the first time San Diego County has reported cases of infants less than one year of age, Wooten confirmed.

Liberty University lets 1,900 students return to campus during the coronavirus outbreak

Students mingle on the campus lawn at Liberty University in 2018.

About 1,900 students returned to Liberty University, a private evangelical Christian university, in Lynchburg, Virginia, a spokesperson confirmed to CNN on Tuesday.

Liberty University President Jerry Falwell Jr. and other leaders discussed whether to extend spring break and “risk students having a longer time to become exposed to the virus,” the school said in a statement. It decided it was safer to bring the students back to campus.

Falwell’s decision to bring students back to campus flies against the guidance provided by state officials and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam issued a statewide order Monday to help slow down the spread of coronavirus. The order bans gatherings of more than 10 people and goes into effect just before midnight on Tuesday.

The order also closes nonessential businesses and shuts down all K-12 schools for the rest of the academic year.

Top US health expert says he emphasized being "very flexible" on a date to Trump

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told reporters that while he met with President Trump in the Oval Office Tuesday he emphasized the need to be “flexible” in determining a date for a bounce back, following Trump’s comments that he may relax guidelines by Easter Sunday.

He also said that parts of the country may be OK by Easter but added other places that are worsening.

“Obviously no one is going to want to tone down things when you see things going on like in NYC,” Fauci said.

He also spoke about the need to get more data through testing.

“We need to put a light on those dark spots,” Fauci said.

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