Officials: Coronavirus variant likely more common in Kansas

TOPEKA, Kan. – A faster-spreading coronavirus variant first identified in the United Kingdom is probably more widespread in Kansas than a single confirmed case in the state’s northwest suggests, officials with a major health system said Thursday.

The first identified case of the variant came as the number of new COVID-19 cases dropped in the state and with officials focused on distributing vaccines. State health department data showed that Kansas averaged 914 new confirmed and probable cases a day for the seven days ending Wednesday, the lowest seven-day rolling average since late October and just a third of the record average of 2,767 cases for the seven days ending Nov. 18.

Public health officials also are concerned that people will attend gatherings and not maintain social distances at Super Bowl parties this weekend.

The state health department announced Wednesday that it had confirmed a case of the U.K. variant, in Ellis County, which is home to Hays and Fort Hays State University. Officials had worried that the variant was responsible for a fast-developing outbreak at a minimum-security state prison in Winfield in south-central Kansas, but genetic testing ruled that out.

“If it is in Hays, is there a chance it is in Kansas City? I think there is a chance it is in Kansas City and surrounding areas,” Dr. Dana Hawkinson, director of infection control for the University of Kansas Health System, said during an online briefing Thursday.

Dr. David Wild, a University of Kansas Health System vice president, said even before the first Kansas case was identified, he could “nearly guarantee” coronavirus variants were spreading already in Kansas and the Kansas City area.

“We know now of one in the state,” he said. “There will be more.”

Cases of the U.K. and other variants are identified through a full review of the virus’ genome.

Fort Hays State and the local health department said the person infected with variant was a student-athlete at the university, which tests its athletes weekly for COVID-19. Officials said the athlete’s contacts are being traced and that the state health department was sending a mobile testing van to Hays.

Hawkinson said it’s “well established” that the U.K. variant is “more transmissible,” and public health officials fear it could be deadlier. But he added, “We have to be concerned about other variants arising as well.”

“We are all tired, and it is one day at a time, but that is why we need to continue to need to be more vigilant, especially this weekend,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Republican-controlled Kansas Senate debated formally condemning a decision by Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly’s administration to make prison inmates eligible for COVID-19 vaccines during the second phase of vaccine distribution, which Kansas launched last month.

Prison inmates are in line with people 65 and older, workers critical to the economy and other people in group living situations. They’re ahead of most of the state’s 2.9 million residents, including people under 65 with medical conditions putting them at risk of severe complications if they are infected with COVID-19.

The Senate’s nonbinding resolution was drafted by health committee Chair Richard Hilderbrand, a Galena Republican. It called on Kelly to reverse her policy on inoculating inmates “without delay,” criticizing the idea that violent offenders could get shots before their victims.

Kelly has defended the policy, saying it will protect prison workers and helps keep COVID-19 in check in communities with prisons. Kansas also is following the recommendations of public health officials and experts, and state prisons have been especially hard-hit with virus outbreaks.

“I continue to believe that we are doing the right thing,” she said during a Wednesday news conference at the Statehouse.

But Kelly also said the state is for now vaccinating prison employees and, “Then, when we have finished with the staff, we will move on and begin with inmates who are 65 or older.”

Missouri governor to vaccinators: Don’t go rogue

O’FALLON, Mo. – Missouri’s governor and health director are warning local entities responsible for COVID-19 vaccinations to stick with the state’s priority list or risk losing future distributions. Gov. Mike Parson on Thursday raised concerns about vaccinators going rogue and allowing some people who are not yet eligible for the vaccine to jump ahead in line. Neither Parson nor Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services Director Dr. Randall Williams has named specific vaccinators or their locations. Missouri is currently vaccinating people 65 and older, those vulnerable due to health risks, and people whose jobs put them at high risk.

Virus outbreaks stoke tensions in some state capitols

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) – After only their first few weeks of work, tensions already are high among lawmakers meeting in-person at some state capitols – not because of testy debates over taxes, guns or abortion, but because of a disregard for coronavirus precautions.

In Georgia, a Republican lawmaker recently was booted from the House floor for refusing to get tested for the coronavirus. In Iowa, a Democratic House member boldly violated a no-jeans rule to protest the chamber’s lack of a mask rule.

And in Missouri, numerous lawmakers and staff – some fearing for their health after a COVID-19 outbreak in the Capitol – scrambled to get vaccinated at a pop-up clinic before legislative leaders warned that the shots weren’t actually meant for them. GOP Gov. Mike Parson denounced the lawmakers as line-jumpers.

House Democratic leader Crystal Quade, who got the shot, blamed the lax policies of the Republican-led Legislature for fostering angst.

Lawmakers are “coming every week to a building that doesn’t have precautions, where people aren’t wearing masks, where people are getting a positive test left and right,” Quade said.

“We are essentially a super-spreader just waiting to happen,” she said.

Since the start of this year, more than 50 state lawmakers in roughly one-third of the states already have fallen ill with the virus, according to an Associated Press tally. More than 350 state legislators have gotten COVID-19 since the pandemic began, including seven who died after contracting it. Republican lawmakers have had a disproportionate share of the cases, according to the AP’s data.

The U.S. Capitol also experienced a spike in COVID-19 cases – and tensions – after some Republican lawmakers refused to wear masks while sheltering with others during the Jan. 6 siege by supporters of former President Donald Trump.

The Missouri Capitol has had one of the largest outbreaks so far this year, with at least 10 cases among lawmakers. That number might be higher, but it’s hard to know because some lawmakers have refused to say whether they contracted the virus and aren’t required to tell legislative administrators.

Missouri’s legislature has no mask requirement, no formal contact tracing and no ability for lawmakers to vote remotely. Social distancing also is difficult, especially in the 163-member House chamber where desks are packed tightly together.

After being in session for barely a week, the Missouri House canceled all work for a full week “due to the rising number of COVID-19 cases in the building.” House Majority Leader Dean Plocher declined to estimate how many were sick, saying lawmakers had a right to privacy.

In Iowa, Democratic Rep. Amy Nielsen tested positive last weekend. She said she likely was infected at the Capitol, where Republican leaders have refused to require people to wear masks or disclose positive cases.

Iowa House rules require men to wear ties and jackets and prohibit jeans, but Republican House Speaker Pat Grassley said he cannot force members to wear masks and is unwilling to make them leave if they don’t. On Tuesday, Democratic Rep. Beth Wessel-Kroeschell wore jeans on the House floor to make a point and refused a request to change clothes. Grassley then prevented her from speaking during debate.

“Jeans aren’t hurting anybody, but all the people wandering around without masks on, they are,” Wessel-Kroeschell said Wednesday.

Ohio Sen. Cecil Thomas, a Democrat, walked out of a committee hearing Wednesday because many members of the public weren’t wearing masks. In Ohio’s Republican-controlled House on Wednesday, GOP lawmakers – many without masks -rejected Democratic motions to require statehouse staff to wear masks and to allow virtual testimony on bills, including by lawmakers.

In other states, Republican leaders have run into resistance from their own members while trying to enforce coronavirus precautions.

Georgia House Speaker David Ralston had police escort fellow GOP Rep. David Clark from the chamber last week after Clark refused to comply with the chamber’s twice-weekly coronavirus testing. At least nine Georgia lawmakers already have tested positive this year.

“I don’t know about you all, but I’ve been to too many funerals,” Ralston told colleagues after having Clark removed.

Clark eventually got tested and returned to the House a couple days later.

In Mississippi, where nearly 50 lawmakers tested positive for COVID-19 last summer, at least five more have come down with the virus since the session began in early January.

At least five Pennsylvania lawmakers also have become ill with the coronavirus this year, in addition to a dozen who had it last year. Conflicts about mask-wearing have been common, with a few dozen Republican lawmakers regularly going maskless on the House floor and during committee hearings.

Last week, House Minority Leader Joanna McClinton rose to make a point: “Masks are supposed to be worn on the floor of the House, and I’ve counted over 30 members that currently are unmasked,” she told the Republican House speaker.

Speaker Bryan Cutler summoned McClinton to the front of the chamber for a private talk after she disputed his response that some lawmakers of both parties were maskless. Cutler eventually encouraged everyone to abide by the chamber’s mask rules.

In New Mexico’s Democratic-led Legislature, House Speaker Brian Egolf excluded nearly all lawmakers from floor sessions and closed conference rooms after a Republican lawmaker and several staff tested positive for COVID-19. He cast partisan blame.

“What I have observed is that certain members of the Republican Party do not adhere to COVID practices in any meaningful way,” Egolf said.

House Republican leaders have asked the state Supreme Court to intervene, arguing the pandemic precautions go far beyond what’s necessary to protect public health.

“The new rules are unconstitutional in that they define ‘present’ as not present, the ‘seat of government’ as something other than where the legislature meets, and require members to participate via computers and headphones,” the Republican lawsuit states.

Coronavirus tensions were evident Monday during the opening of Oklahoma’s legislative session. About 20 lawmakers – mainly majority Republicans – didn’t wear masks as they gathered for the governor’s state of the state address. That frustrated House Democratic leader Emily Virgin, whose parents both were hospitalized last year after contracting COVID-19.

“It’s misguided. It’s dangerous. It sets a horrible example,” Virgin said during a news conference outside of an Oklahoma City hospital.

In the Wisconsin Assembly, majority Republicans aren’t allowing lawmakers to attend committee hearings or floor debate remotely. Democratic Rep. Lee Snodgrass tweeted that they were being forced to choose “between their health … or being in person for floor session.”

New Hampshire Rep. Al Baldasaro, a Republican, drew criticism for leading a lengthy committee hearing – much of it without his face covered – after returning from a trip to Florida. The state’s travel rules require anyone leaving New England to quarantine for 10 days upon returning, and Statehouse rules forbid entry to those who recently made such trips.

The House speaker’s office said Baldasaro was allowed to attend the hearing because the state health department considers lawmakers “critical infrastructure staff.” Baldasaro said he eventually put on a face shield to satisfy anyone “whining and complaining.”

“The people elected me to do a job and I will not be showing a sign of weakness by hiding in a basement or my computer because of COVID,” Baldasaro said in an email to the AP.

News to Know (2/5/2021)

WASHINGTON, D.C. – In the battle against the coronavirus, Johnson and Johnson has asked the FDA to approve emergency use of its single-dose vaccine. That raises the hope of the U.S. having a third vaccine within weeks, as the country tries to speed up the slow-going vaccination effort.

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – The Missouri House and Senate are working in tandem on legislation to counter future, federal gun laws. In the House the bill is known as the “Second Amendment Preservation Act”. It seeks to invalidate federal laws or other actions deemed to infringe on a person’s second amendment right to bear arms. The legislation would allow someone to sue police departments, starting at 50-thousand dollars. Opponents including some police agencies, say that would amount to defunding the police. The state Senate is working on identical legislation.

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – Missouri’s governor reports that covid-19 numbers are on a downward trend. In a news conference Thursday Governor Parson said the positivity rate for covid-19 tests has dropped dramatically. The governor also said 600-thousand Missourians will have received a vaccine by the end of this week. That number remains lower than expected. That’s due to a supply issue.

CARL JUNCTION, Mo. – The coronavirus has been rough on many businesses, but it’s also helped create some new ones. That includes Carl Junction Company, “Enviroteks, LLC,” that’s in the business of disinfecting everything in rooms, including the air, with an electrostatic sprayer. Enviroteks, LLC provides a fogging service, which is a method endorsed by the CDC to disinfect both surfaces and the air, and uses a product found on the EPA’s “N List” of covid-19 disinfectants.

New Carl Junction business fights COVID-19

 

CARL JUNCTION, Mo. – Carl Junction, Missouri’s Enviroteks, LLC is only a month and a half old but they’ve already landed some big clients including the Joplin Community Clinic, some local bars and grills, and the Carl Junction Area Chamber of Commerce.

They’re in demand because they’re in the business of killing the Coronavirus via electrostatic fogging.

“It’s a great way to take that next step. We clean, we wear masks, we social distance, and it’s just another added thing to protect ourselves, my employees, and just the people that come and go,” said the chamber Executive Director Kavanaugh Studyvin.

The EPA says that electrostatic sprayers apply a positive charge to a liquid disinfectant, and that positively charged disinfectant then attaches to negatively charged surfaces which allows for a more efficient coating.

Eniviroteks, LLC provides a fogging service which is a method endorsed by the CDC to disinfect both surfaces and the air, and uses a product found on the EPA’s List N of COVID-19 disinfectants. The specific disinfectant used is a company secret but KOAM was able to confirm that it’s on the EPA’s list.

“The solution that we use kills all airborne pathogens. It is not specific to COVID. People are all talking about COVID. That is the big push right now. But what it also does is, it also kills the flu, MRSA, mold, bacteria,” said Enviroteks, LLC co-owner Jan Grant.

Grant also answered the question she gets most often: How often should this service be used?

“There is not a concrete answer as to how long the fogging lasts. It has to do with the amount of traffic through your business, through your home, through your vehicle. Once a business or a structure has been treated, it is good until it is contaminated again,” said Grant.

Enviroteks, LLC recommends bimonthly foggings to most of its customers.

If you’d like to see what the EPA has to say about electrostatic spraying, click here.

If you’d like to see the EPA’s List N of COVID-19 disinfectants, click here.

News to Know (2/4/2021)

WASHINGTON, D.C. – In a secret ballot vote, House Republicans overwhelmingly rejected efforts to remove Liz Cheney of Wyoming from leadership. Hard right conservatives turned on her after she voted last month to impeach then-president Donald Trump. And House Republicans are standing by Marjorie Taylor Greene. Today, democrats are expected to vote on whether to kick Greene off her committees for past incendiary remarks and for endorsing conspiracy theories.

ELLIS COUNTY, Kan. – A variant of the coronavirus first discovered in the UK is now in Kansas. The Kansas Department of Health and Environment says the variant was found in a resident of Ellis county, Kansas. They’re investigating to find out how the resident became infected with the variant. The UK variant was first reported in the US at the end of December. It’s since been found in 33 states.

PITTSBURG, Kan. – According to the latest quarterly economic report produced by the Pittsburg Area Chamber of Commerce and PSU, Pittsburg businesses did an excellent job weathering the economic storm brought on by the coronavirus pandemic. The president of the Pittsburg Area Chamber of Commerce says last March, the city’s unemployment rate fell to a 20 year low of 3.3%, and while it did get up to 9% in April, as of December the unemployment rate was back down to 3.5%.

MUSKOGEE, Okla. – A vigil was held yesterday for the six people murdered in Muskogee, Oklahoma Tuesday. A man, five children under the age of 10 and their mother were found shot in a home. The mother survived, and is hospitalized with serious injuries. 25-year-old Jarron Pridgeon faces six counts of murder and other charges. There’s no word on a motive yet.

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