JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – New signs are posted at the makeshift antibody clinic at Jacksonville’s downtown library, days after a photo showing sick people lying on the floor there went viral.

“Please do not sit or lay on the floor,” say the signs that greet people showing up for a monoclonal antibody treatment designed to fight early stage COVID-19 infections. “If you require immediate medical attention, please alert a staff member.”

The city has also provided more wheelchairs, seating and additional ways to notify someone if visitors need help while waiting in line to receive antibody treatments from the temporary clinic.

The changes come after a photo showing Toma Dean and another person curled up on the floor of the library was shared widely across social media, resulting in local and national headlines.

Dean told News4Jax her 16-year-old son took her to the library after she left Baptist hospital, where she said an emergency room physician recommended that she go get the antibody treatment.

At first, she said, she was so dizzy she could barely stay on her feet. So she sat down, then laid down.

“I don’t know how I made it that far in the day,” said Dean, adding that she’s feeling better now.

A photo posted to Reddit shows a woman lying on the ground at the new monoclonal treatment site in downtown Jacksonville. (Screenshot via Reddit)

The Fleming Island resident said she had been in an out of emergency rooms for the past two weeks while she dealt with symptoms of both COVID-19 and pneumonia.

Doctors say the Regeneron antibody cocktail is meant for patients who are recently infected. That’s why they try to avoid administering it to patients who have been sick for more than 10 days.

“The reality is, by that point the virus has replicated so much that your body’s natural immune system is kicking in and working to fight it,” said Dr. Chirag Patel with UF Health Jacksonville. “We don’t really see that there’s going to be a lot of added benefit of getting a monoclonal antibody fusion or injections.”

While Florida has received shipments with hundreds of thousands of doses of the drug, Dr. Chirag noted there isn’t an endless supply. He said not everyone needs the monoclonal antibody treatment.

“It is best to get this as early as possible to stop it when there’s minimal virus burden,” he said.

Still, even with guidance from medical experts, it appears there’s confusion at the clinic about who can or should go and get the antibody therapy.

A woman who asked to remain anonymous told News4Jax she questions protocol at the site. She said when she went in for the treatment, she wasn’t asked for any proof of a positive test result.

“It just seemed very haphazard,” the woman said. ” … And there was a waiting room full of people. I saw one woman without a mask and room full of COVID-positive people. This site also caters to people who are getting a COVID test, so some of those people…might be exposed while they’re there.”

News4Jax asked staff inside the clinic about checking patients’ COVID-19 status.

Staffers said most of the people who show up have visible symptoms, so they don’t often check, but they have a system in place where they can see if someone has already tested positive.

During a news conference Friday announcing the opening of another clinic elsewhere in the state, one of 10 located throughout Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis discussed the treatment’s efficacy.

The governor noted that data has shown there’s a 70-percent reduction in hospital admissions for people who receive the treatment early after testing positive for COVID-19.

Still, Dr. Patel said the best ways to avoiding getting sick are getting vaccinated and wearing a mask.

Source Article from https://www.news4jax.com/news/local/2021/08/20/do-not-sit-or-lay-on-the-floor-say-signs-at-jacksonville-antibody-clinic/

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WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden will address the nation on the U.S. military’s evacuation efforts in Kabul of American citizens, U.S. Embassy staff, citizens of NATO countries, at-risk Afghan nationals as well as Afghan nationals who have qualified for special immigrant visas.

The remarks, which were scheduled for 1:00 pm ET, are now delayed but he is expected to speak soon.

Thousands of Afghans have fled to the gates of Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul seeking a flight out of the country after the Taliban swiftly claimed control of the country.

The Pentagon has moved about 5,200 U.S. troops to Kabul in order to provide security and help with evacuation efforts of as many people as possible in the wake of a stunning Taliban takeover of the country.

The White House said Friday that the U.S. has airlifted about 9,000 people out of Kabul by cargo aircraft in the past six days. No flights have left Kabul airport in the past 8 hours because Qatar has reached capacity, two U.S. officials told NBC News.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/08/20/watch-live-biden-addresses-evacuation-of-americans-and-afghan-allies-from-kabul.html

Tropical Storm Henri is predicted to become a hurricane before reaching the coast of southern New England. In this graphic, the bright colors depict the likely path of tropical-storm-force winds, which have a minimum threshold of 39 mph.

NOAA/Esri/HERE/Garmin/Earthstar Geographics


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NOAA/Esri/HERE/Garmin/Earthstar Geographics

Tropical Storm Henri is predicted to become a hurricane before reaching the coast of southern New England. In this graphic, the bright colors depict the likely path of tropical-storm-force winds, which have a minimum threshold of 39 mph.

NOAA/Esri/HERE/Garmin/Earthstar Geographics

The National Hurricane Center has issued a rare hurricane watch for parts of New England, warning that Tropical Storm Henri will likely develop into a hurricane before making landfall on the northeastern U.S. coast this weekend.

“If Henri strikes southeast New England as a hurricane this weekend, it will be the first direct hurricane landfall since Bob in 1991,” National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration spokesman Chris Vaccaro told NPR.

Henri’s maximum sustained winds grew to 70 mph on Friday, making it “almost a hurricane,” the NHC said in its 2 p.m. ET update. Hurricanes have sustained winds of at least 74 mph.

The hurricane watch was issued early Friday, covering a large portion of Long Island and areas from New Haven, Conn., to Sagamore Beach, Mass., the National Hurricane Center said. Resort islands such as Block Island, Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket are also in the watch zone.

In addition to strong winds and heavy rain, forecasters are warning of a storm surge that could inundate land with 3 to 5 feet of water.

“Confidence is high that the event will occur Sunday into Monday,” the National Weather Service office in Boston said in a briefing early Friday. It added that damaging winds were especially possible east of Henri’s track, while rains could cause flooding to the west of the storm’s path.

A hurricane watch means that hurricane conditions are possible within the watch area; forecasters normally issue the alerts roughly 48 hours before they expect the first tropical storm-force winds to arrive. The first tropical storm winds from Henri could reach the shore late Saturday.

New England is under its first hurricane watch in years

When the NHC issued its advisory early Friday, “it had been nearly TEN YEARS since a Hurricane Watch has been issued for Southern New England,” meteorologist Aaron Perry of NBC Boston said on Twitter.

Henri is expected to bring 2 to 5 inches of rain to eastern Long Island and southern New England, with some areas seeing nearly 8 inches.

“The soil is going to get saturated, in some places it’s already saturated,” NHC Director Ken Graham said in a midday update on the storm. He added, “Put some winds on top of that, you’re going to knock down a lot of trees. You’re going to have power outages.”

Graham urged residents and travelers to be vigilant, warning of “significant impacts” from Henri.

The hurricane watch for Henri comes just one day after the 30th anniversary of Hurricane Bob’s landfall on New England.

Bob wrecked swaths of the coast and knocked out electricity in Cape Cod and other areas — in some cases, for as long as two weeks.

“At least 17 people were killed in the storm, the costliest in New England with more than $1.5 billion in property damage,” The Associated Press reports.

Henri’s impact will depend on its path and timing

At midday on Friday, Henri was roughly parallel with the Georgia-Florida line, hundreds of miles from the coast. The storm was moving northwest, but it is expected to make a sharp right turn toward the north.

It’s expected to strengthen over the next two days as it traverses very warm waters, likely becoming a hurricane by Saturday. It will then cross the north wall of the Gulf Stream.

“Henri’s expected slower motion over the colder water south of New England should induce quick weakening,” the hurricane center said in its 8 a.m. ET forecast, “but it may not be quick enough to keep Henri from reaching the coast as a hurricane.”

The effect of the storm’s slow pace is unclear. As member station WBUR reports:

“The slow movement may mean that it turns up the waters of the coastline. This mixing would cool the waters, causing the storm to lose its strength rather fast. But on the other side of the coin, slow movement can allow a lot of rain to fall, and could cause storm surge to last longer.”

Hurricane Grace is bearing down on Mexico

People along Mexico’s central eastern coast are bracing for the arrival of Hurricane Grace, which is currently packing sustained winds up to 85 mph, the National Hurricane Center said on Friday.

A hurricane warning is in effect along the coast, from Puerto Veracruz to Cabo Rojo.

“A Hurricane Warning means that hurricane conditions are expected somewhere within the warning area, in this case within 24 hours,” the NHC said.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/08/20/1029626711/new-england-is-under-a-hurricane-watch-for-the-first-time-in-years

Obama appeals court appointee Cornelia Pillard, Trump appointee Neomi Rao and newly confirmed Biden appointee Ketanji Brown Jackson all voted to reject the Realtors’ request.

The Realtors argue that the Biden administration ignored a late-June Supreme Court decision signaling that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention did not have the authority to impose a moratorium when the agency ordered the latest ban on Aug. 3.

The eviction ban that preceded the latest moratorium cost landlords billions of dollars a month before it expired July 31. The restrictions were intended to keep tenants housed after they lost income because of the pandemic.

In response to litigation brought by the Realtors against the earlier ban, the Supreme Court signaled that the policy was likely on shaky legal footing. The high court, in a 5-4 decision on June 29, allowed the moratorium to continue until its expiration July 31, but Justice Brett Kavanaugh — the deciding vote on sparing the ban — warned in his concurring opinion that the CDC had gone beyond its legal power and that the ban’s imminent expiration was what motivated him to let it stand temporarily.

President Joe Biden himself acknowledged doubts about the new ban’s fate in court on the day the same day the CDC rolled it out, saying “any call for a moratorium based on the Supreme Court’s recent decision is likely to face obstacles.” Still, he said, “by the time it gets litigated, it will probably give some additional time” to state and local officials working to disburse $46.5 billion in rental assistance.

In their request for immediate relief from the appeals court, the Realtors cited Biden’s remarks.

“Given the president’s statement that this extension of the moratorium and any litigation in its defense are meant to buy time to keep an unlawful policy in place for as long as possible, this Court should issue an immediate administrative order vacating the stay while it considers this motion,” lawyers for the landlords and real estate brokers’ group wrote in their motion filed Saturday.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/08/20/appeals-court-leaves-biden-eviction-ban-in-effect-506464

HOUSTON – Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick is under scrutiny Thursday after he blamed the rise of COVID-19 in Texas on Black people who are not vaccinated in the state and Democrats.

In an interview with host Laura Ingraham of Fox News show “The Ingraham Angle,” Patrick said this: “The COVID is spreading, particularly — most of the numbers are with the unvaccinated, and the Democrats like to blame Republicans on that.”

“Well, the biggest group in most states are African Americans who have not been vaccinated,” he continued. “The last time I checked over 90 percent of them vote for Democrats in their major cities and major counties, so it’s up to the Democrats to get, just as that it’s up to Republicans, to try to get as many people vaccinated.”

“But we respect the fact that if people don’t want to the vaccination, we’re not going to force it on them, that’s their individual right. But in terms of criticizing the Republicans for this, we’re encouraging those who want to take it to take it, but they’re doing nothing for the African American community that has a significant, high number of unvaccinated people, so they need to address that.”

RELATED: Big concern of vaccine rollout after numbers show disparities when it comes to race, data shows

RELATED: COVID-19 is spreading fast among Texas’ unvaccinated. Here’s who they are and where they live.

RELATED: Stronger Houston: Churches playing key role in bringing vaccines to minority communities

Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner personally signed a tweet in response to Patrick’s statement saying: “The Lt. Governor’s statements are offensive and should not be ignored. st”

The Texas Tribune reports there are an estimated 5.6 million white people who are eligible and unvaccinated, while the same figure is 1.9 million for Black people, who make up a far smaller part of the overall population. The figure is 4.9 million for Hispanic people, whose population is now nearly as large as the non-Hispanic white population in Texas.

The full vaccination rate among Black people in Texas is 29%, lower than the rates for Asian, Hispanic and white Texans.

Texas has reported race and ethnicity data for about 82% of people who are fully vaccinated.

The Tribune reported further: “Also despite Patrick’s claims, vaccine hesitancy is higher among Republicans than it is among Black people in Texas, according to a June poll from the Texas Tribune and the University of Texas at Austin. Thirty-eight percent of Republicans said they would not get a vaccine as soon as it is available to them, while 18% of Black people said the same.”

Dr. Jorge A. Caballero, a Stanford clinical clinical instructor in anesthesiology, perioperative and pain medicine, railed against Patrick on Twitter, using U.S. Census data, Kaiser Family Foundation statistics and Texas Department of State Health Services data.

Source Article from https://www.click2houston.com/news/local/2021/08/20/lt-gov-dan-patrick-blames-spread-of-covid-19-in-texas-on-black-people-democrats/

“The killing of a close relative of one of our editors by the Taliban yesterday is inconceivably tragic, and testifies to the acute danger in which all our employees and their families in Afghanistan find themselves,” DW’s director general, Peter Limbourg, said. “It is evident that the Taliban are already carrying out organized searches for journalists, both in Kabul and in the provinces. We are running out of time!”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2021/08/20/taliban-hunt-collaborators-united-nations/

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/08/20/henri-could-hit-cape-cod-hurricane-fred-flooding-missing/8208068002/

A man who claimed to have a bomb in a pickup truck near the Capitol surrendered to law enforcement after an hours-long standoff Thursday. The incident prompted a massive police response and the evacuations of government buildings and businesses in the area.

Alex Brandon/AP


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Alex Brandon/AP

A man who claimed to have a bomb in a pickup truck near the Capitol surrendered to law enforcement after an hours-long standoff Thursday. The incident prompted a massive police response and the evacuations of government buildings and businesses in the area.

Alex Brandon/AP

The confrontation between authorities and a man who pulled up next to the Library of Congress claiming to have a bomb in his truck ended with his surrender on Thursday afternoon.

It took hours of negotiations and at least three law enforcement agencies — the U.S. Capitol Police, the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives — to persuade Floyd Ray Roseberry to stop ranting about a “revolution” and to turn himself over to authorities.

But the ease with which Roseberry gained such close access to the sidewalk next to the Library of Congress’ Thomas Jefferson building, which is itself very near the U.S. Capitol and the Supreme Court, raises new questions about the security of nation’s most important symbols of democracy just seven months after the rioting and deadly violence of the Jan. 6 insurrection.

More attacks are probably inevitable

Malcolm Nance, a former Naval intelligence and counterterrorism officer, says Roseberry would never have gotten close to the Capitol complex had authorities moved to erect a permanent fence around the perimeter, as it has been debating for years.

“It should have happened long ago,” Nance tells NPR. He says it shouldn’t be a question of if a permanent barrier should be built, but when.

There was a protective fence built around the Capitol after the siege, but it was taken down last month. An outer perimeter fence was removed in March. Capitol Police explained that it would monitor intelligence for any threats to the complex and that the temporary fence could be reinstalled if needed.

Nance disagrees with that approach. Based on his ongoing monitoring of far-right radicalized groups throughout the country, he believes more bomb threats and other violence targeting symbolic institutions are inevitable.

There is a looming “insurgency where this is going to happen a lot only, there’s a lot of potential for it not to be threats,” he says.

He maintains that the only way to effectively protect lawmakers and civil servants in and around the Capitol complex is to use the same type of defensive military tactics the U.S. applies in fighting terrorism around the world.

“We don’t need a bomb blast to damage the Supreme Court, the Library of Congress and the U.S. Capitol building,” he says, adding that an appropriate “blast radius is about 680 yards.”

Congress approved a $2.1 billion package to boost security

Late last month, Congress approved a $2.1 billion package to improve member security and harden the Capitol’s security.

Roughly $950 million of that will be directed toward installing new security measures for members of Congress and fortifying the Capitol. That could include the construction of a retractable or mobile fencing system, hardening of doors and windows, the installation of new security screening vestibules and cameras.

It also allocates about $3.3 million for the Capitol Police intelligence division and $5 million for equipment, and another $18 million to provide body cameras to officers, specialized training, and new physical barriers.

Adding barriers would “rip the heart out of the city”

Daniel Schuman is policy director of Demand Progress, where he monitors the Capitol Police for the advocacy organization. He said further militarizing what should be public spaces and boosting staffing are the wrong solutions for addressing the growing domestic terrorism problem.

Schuman notes Capitol Police has a budget of a half-billion dollars, but it has no obligation to disclose how it spends that money or uses existing equipment.

“What Jan. 6 demonstrated was that a lot of these things aren’t being deployed very well,” he told NPR.

He opposes any plan that may include a 10-foot-high fence. “It would rip the heart out of the city.”

“It’s a terrible symbol,” he adds.

But a more substantive downside is the divide it creates between citizens and their representatives.

“Every time you add an additional layer between people and the people that represent them, you create further distance. It becomes harder for members of Congress and their staff to hear from folks that the laws affect.”

Schuman notes that Roseberry, a pro-Trump supporter who was livestreaming himself on Facebook while threatening to detonate a bomb outside of the Library of Congress, called himself a “patriot” and demanded that Democrats step down.

“In this crisis of democratic legitimacy,” Schuman said, “we don’t want to take the most democratic institution and make it even harder to interact with.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/08/20/1029590710/security-capitol-complex-bomb-threat-floyd-roseberry-capitol-police

Texas reported more than 13,700 new coronavirus cases Thursday, bringing its seven-day average for new infections to 16,482, according to data compiled by The Washington Post. Nearly 13,000 people are hospitalized in the state for covid-19, including more than 3,200 in intensive care units.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/08/20/texas-court-masks-schools-abbott/

Here’s what to know

  • A NATO official said that more than 18,000 people have been evacuated from Kabul airport over the past five days. But daily mayhem at the airport continued Thursday as thousands of people attempting to board flights faced beatings by Taliban guards, the crush of heaving crowds and endless dust and heat.
  • The Taliban is stepping up its hunt for Afghans who once worked for U.S. or NATO forces, warned a confidential threat assessment drafted for the United Nations. The report comes as German broadcaster Deutsche Welle says a relative of one of its journalists was shot dead.
  • Afghanistan’s economy faces calamity in the aftermath of the Taliban’s takeover, with the United States freezing the country’s financial reserves, residents unable to withdraw their money from bank accounts and billions of dollars of international aid put on hold.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2021/08/20/afghanistan-kabul-taliban-live-updates/

The day in late April 2015 was to be a double celebration: Larry Elder would get his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, then be married, on the spot, to his radio producer and love, Alexandra Datig.

But Datig today recalls that plan as a fleeting high point in an 18-month relationship that she said turned stormy. Datig alleges Elder controlled her finances and subjected her to verbal and emotional abuse.

The troubled partnership between the radio talk show host and his one-time girlfriend exploded into public view Thursday.

As Elder continued to lead a pack of contenders who hope to replace Gov. Gavin Newsom in the California recall election, Politico reported that the relationship devolved to the point that Elder allegedly checked to see whether his .45 revolver was loaded, during a heated argument with Datig.

Datig relayed a similar story, as well as other allegations against Elder, in an interview with The Times last week.

“I, for one brief moment, believed that he intended to shoot me. I was in fear for my life,” Datig said, calling it “my Phil Spector, Lana Clarkson moment,” referring to the Hollywood music producer who shot his companion to death. She added: “At the same time, I’m also very fearless and, having grown up around guns, I didn’t take it seriously.”

Elder issued a statement denying wrongdoing.

“I have never brandished a gun at anyone,” Elder said. “I grew up in South Central; I know exactly how destructive this type of behavior is. It’s not me, and everyone who knows me knows it’s not me. These are salacious allegations.”

Elder signaled that he would try to move past the issue quickly, saying it was “beneath” him and that he would stay focused on issues. The alleged incident did not come up in Thursday night’s debate, which featured other recall challengers but not Elder.

But Assemblyman Kevin Kiley (R-Rocklin) issued a statement saying: “Ms. Datig’s deeply troubling account should be treated with the utmost seriousness,” adding, “Mr. Elder should be given every opportunity to respond.”

Datig, who is supporting former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer for governor, appeared determined to put the episode and Elder’s private behavior before the public.

“There is Larry Elder the brand, the one on the radio, that everyone sees,” Datig said. “Then there is the Larry Elder after the show. The one with the insults, the Tasmanian devil rhetoric, the hoodwinking.”

Recall candidate Larry Elder slammed Gov. Gavin Newsom’s failures at wildfire prevention, while saying nothing about the role of climate change.

Datig previously gained some measure of attention because she worked for Hollywood madam Heidi Fleiss. She described approaching police and becoming an informant, helping send Fleiss to prison for a business that provided high-priced prostitutes to rich and powerful men.

She subsequently spoke in public out about surviving sex trafficking and drug abuse. She became an assistant to Los Angeles City Councilman Nate Holden, giving her entree to L.A.’s political elite.

Datig, 51, said she met Elder, 69, at political events and that he had asked her out several times over the course of about a decade before she agreed. She moved into his Hollywood Hills home and said she worked for him — helping him prepare for his shows and set up a website — after he was fired from KABC AM 790 in late 2014. (Elder briefly streamed his show after he left the station and before taking his current post at AM 870.)

Datig estimated that she devoted 3,000 hours to her work, helping with things like publicity and helping Elder transition to an online platform. She said she was not paid a salary, and was compensated instead with the use of credit cards and a Cadillac.

Prominent among her complaints was what she said was Elder’s “constant” smoking of marijuana. She said she asked him to stop, because she worried it would make it harder for her to maintain her sobriety. Elder kept on smoking, she said.

She provided a mobile phone video in which she asks Elder about his relationship with the rapper Snoop Dogg. “I introduced him to the evil weed,” Elder responds. “I taught him everything he knows … I’m the one who made him what he is.”

She said it was on the day after Valentine’s Day in 2015 that she told Elder she would not marry him. Without any of her own money, she continued to live in his house. The two argued about the terms of their breakup, with Datig insisting she be paid for her past work and to remove a tattoo, “Larry’s Girl,” that she said he demanded she get.

On the night of the alleged gun incident, Datig said something that sent Elder “fuming … full of anger and silent scorn,” she recalled. Elder walked to a nightstand and pulled out his .45-caliber revolver, opened the cylinder to see if it was loaded, and put the gun back into the drawer, Datig said. She said that Elder did not point the gun at her or make a verbal threat.

In her interview with The Times last week, Datig also said that Elder did not “wave” the gun, as later reported by Politico. After that account went online Thursday, Datig reiterated that point.

But she recalled feeling uneasy enough that tried to “defuse” the situation and then locked herself in a downstairs bedroom.

Datig did not file a police report or seek a restraining order. She said she did not want to draw attention to herself or cause a sensation that might distract from her budding work as a political commentator and, later, her pursuit of a career in law enforcement

Larry Elder leapfrogs the others vying to replace Newsom, with provocative stances from firing teachers to downplaying the dangers of secondhand smoke.

About a month after the alleged 2015 incident, Datig sent an email to her attorney, to Los Angeles City Councilman Bernard C. Parks and to 11 other people, asking for “help and advice” on how to resolve her differences with Elder.

“During an argument about a month ago, he felt it necessary to go to his cabinet where he kept his gun and check if it was loaded and made sure it was in my view,” Datig wrote in the email. The email produced a referral to a shelter for abused women, but no other official action, Datig said.

Elder’s denial did not address the rest of the specifics of Datig’s complaint, or whether he had ever examined his gun during an argument with her. The Times asked for clarification, but received none from the candidate’s campaign.

After her story went public, Datig said her day turned “crazy,” her phone filling with calls and texts from the media. And Elder insisted he would not engage.

“While my opponents and the Newsom campaign would love to keep voters distracted,” he said in his statement, “I am going to stay focused on the issues that inspired 1.7 million Californians to petition for this recall.”

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-08-19/larry-elder-recall-election-gun-pot-allegations-ex-fiancee

UPDATE 8/19/21 @ 11 p.m.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (WSAZ) — A large crowd packed an emergency meeting Thursday evening at the Cabell County Board of Education, where the issue of whether to adopt a mask mandate for students and staff was on the agenda.

Board members voted 3-2 to stick with their current plan and not require masks.

Mary Neely, Skip Parsons, and Alyssa Bond voted against the mandate. Bishop Charles Shaw and Rhonda Smalley voted in favor of it.

“The parents that don’t want to put the mask on their children, that is their prerogative,” Neely said. “That is their constitutional right.”

“I would never ever as a board member put a child at risk when all the medical opinions from the CDC to the local health department to every other entity that exists around in this county tells us masking our children is the best way to minimize them catching COVID,” Shaw said.

Parents on both sides of the issue addressed the board for about an hour and a half before the vote. The majority spoke against the mask mandate, saying parents should have the option to decide if their children should wear a mask to school.

Superintendent Ryan Saxe presented two options to the board after public comment: stick with the current plan of no mask requirement or require masks for kindergarteners through seniors starting Friday.

Those against the mandate cheered loudly following the vote.

“I knew we won, and I jumped up,” Misty Turman, who has two children who go to Cabell Midland, said. “I had to stand up and clap. I’m super excited this went our way. I’ve been stressed out all day, but I’m so happy our kids can go to school and show their faces.”

Saxe says the board’s decision goes against the recommendation of their chief health officer and the health department.

Under the mask mandate option that was voted down, if Cabell County had stayed green or yellow on the color map five days in a row, masks would’ve no longer been required, Saxe said.

The district is still encouraging all students to wear masks to school, but it is the parents’ choice.

During the public comment period, Dr. Tyler Clay, a professor of infectious diseases at Marshall University’s pharmacy school, asked the board to require masks.

“I want you to know that again our hospitals are filling up,” Clay said. “Again, our ICU beds are filling up. Again, our ERs are overrun. This is a simple decision. This decision is backed by the American Academy of Pediatrics. It’s backed by the CDC. It’s backed by every healthcare agency in the state.”

Tuesday night, the night before the first day of school in Cabell County, close to a dozen parents spoke out in favor of requiring masks at schools, urging the board to rethink their position.

Gov. Jim Justice and the West Virginia Department of Education have said they’re leaving decisions about masks to the local level.

ORIGINAL STORY

CABELL COUNTY, W.Va. (WSAZ) – Masks will not be required in Cabell County Schools.

The school board voted 3-2 Thursday evening not to require face coverings, deciding to stick with their original plan. Board members Mary Neely, Skip Parsons, and Alyssa Bond voted against the mask mandate. Rhonda Smalley and Bishop Charles Shaw voted for the mask mandate.

Dozens of concerned parents packed the emergency meeting, which was called earlier this week after parents voiced their concerns.

Cabell County BOE calls emergency meeting regarding masks

We have a crew at the meeting and will have more on this developing story.

Keep checking the WSAZ app for the latest information.

Copyright 2021 WSAZ. All rights reserved.

Source Article from https://www.wsaz.com/2021/08/19/school-board-votes-against-requiring-masks/

Americans have further soured on Vice President Kamala Harris as she continues her radio silence on the chaotic and tragic withdrawal of US forces from Afghanistan, a new poll indicates.

According to a Rasmussen Reports survey released Thursday, 55 percent of likely voters say the former senator from California is either “not qualified” or “not at all qualified” to assume the duties of the presidency. By contrast, 43 percent consider Harris “qualified” or “very qualified” to be commander in chief.

The same poll found in April that 49 percent of likely voters said Harris was qualified to become president, though 51 percent of voters had an “unfavorable impression” of her.

The poll was taken between Aug. 12 and Aug. 15, as the Taliban embarked on its sweeping offensive across Afghanistan that led to the collapse of that country’s Western-backed government weeks before the deadline to remove US combat forces.

Harris has not held a public event since last week, when she cut short a meeting with CEOs to discuss the Biden administration’s childcare proposals in order to receive an intelligence briefing about Afghanistan.

Since then, she has taken part in at least four briefings with President Biden and his national security team, but has confined her public statements about Afghanistan to Twitter and did not appear at Biden’s side when he attempted to defend the withdrawal in remarks from the White House East Room Monday.

AP

“For two decades, our courageous servicemembers put their lives on the line in Afghanistan. We will always be grateful—and proud,” she tweeted Monday. “Ending U.S. military involvement in Afghanistan is the right decision.”

On Tuesday, Harris tweeted: “We went to Afghanistan almost 20 years ago. Now, our mission is to get our people, our allies, and vulnerable Afghans to safety outside of the country.”

It is a stark contrast from April 25, when Harris told CNN’s “State of the Union” that she was the last person with Biden when he made the call to withdraw US forces from Afghanistan — and wholeheartedly endorsed the move.

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“This is a president who has an extraordinary amount of courage,” Harris told host Dana Bash at the time. “He is someone who I have seen over and over again make decisions based on what he truly believes — based on his years of doing this work and studying these issues — what he truly believes is the right thing to do.”

On Thursday, Harris gave her first on-camera remarks in seven days, delivering a taped three-minute address to the National Association of Black Journalists’ (NABJ) virtual convention. She praised their work covering the COVID-19 pandemic as well as what she called “anti-voter bills that have been introduced in state legislatures across our country,” but made no mention of Afghanistan.

On Friday, Harris is scheduled to depart on her second overseas trip, this time to Singapore and Vietnam. She is expected to face close questioning about what the calamity in Afghanistan means for US policy toward China.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/08/19/kamala-harris-tanking-in-poll-as-she-goes-to-ground-on-afghan-withdrawal/

Nurses feed newborn babies rescued and brought to Ataturk National Children’s Hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan, on May 15, 2020, after their mothers were killed in an attack on a maternity ward operated by Doctors Without Borders. The health-care nonprofit runs clinics and hospitals in various parts of the country.

Wakil Kohsar/AFP via Getty Images


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Wakil Kohsar/AFP via Getty Images

Nurses feed newborn babies rescued and brought to Ataturk National Children’s Hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan, on May 15, 2020, after their mothers were killed in an attack on a maternity ward operated by Doctors Without Borders. The health-care nonprofit runs clinics and hospitals in various parts of the country.

Wakil Kohsar/AFP via Getty Images

How is Afghanistan’s health system faring amid the Taliban takeover?

To get a perspective, NPR spoke on Thursday with Filipe Ribeiro, the country representative for Doctors Without Borders, to find out where things stand for patients and health workers in the organization’s hospitals and clinics across Afghanistan.

Ribeiro previously spoke to NPR two weeks ago when the Taliban and fighting was just moving into Afghan cities such as Lashkar Gah in southern Afghanistan. Hospitals where teams from Doctors Without Borders (also known as MSF) were working were then reporting a flood of civilian injuries.

Now the country is under a new regime — and hospitals are struggling with new challenges.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Let’s start with the situation in Lashkar Gah. You were describing just a horrific number of challenges there two weeks ago — all kinds of injuries due to bombing, fighting and people unable to reach the hospital. What is happening there now?

Lashkar Gah is much calmer. Peace is back, which is good for the population and good for our team, too. They can have some some rest or at least be less stressed than they were.

A lot of patients are coming back to the hospital. Those who couldn’t access us during the fighting are now showing up. Yesterday alone, we received something like 870 patients in the emergency room. We also have pregnant women coming in. The hospital has 300 beds and it is already full.

One of the big concerns will be the fate of the health system. The population will have more difficulties to access proper medical care.

Is there a functioning health ministry in Afghanistan at the moment that you can work with?

We are in a kind of a limbo, waiting to see who will be in charge. Our [health care] system in Afghanistan was fully dependent on foreign aid. Let’s see if donors will continue supporting the system.

Have you had any contact with the Taliban?

Yes, we do. We did in all of the provinces where we work, from Kunduz to Lashkar Gah to Kandahar to Herat. For the time being, we can work without a problem from the other side. As I said, the transition is ongoing. The [Taliban] administration is not yet fully at work. Let’s see how it goes.

Are the women on your teams able to continue working?

Some of them were obliged to flee because of the fighting. But most of them reported back. For the time being, yes, our female colleagues are able to work.

It sounds like the situation in Lashkar Gah still has many challenges, but it’s better than it was two weeks ago. What about in other places? You have teams in five places around the country, is that right?

We are running a trauma hospital in Kunduz. In Kandahar, it’s a little more challenging because tuberculosis patients couldn’t reach us for quite some time, but we [gave them enough TB drugs] for a couple of months so they can continue their treatment. In Herat, we are seeing an increase in patients coming back to our facilities.

And how about Kabul?

In Kabul, we do not run a project. The airport is still a big mess. But the situation in Kabul itself is calmer.

What’s the situation with COVID? I can’t imagine that vaccination rollouts are in full swing — and I’m not seeing many masks in these pictures coming out of Afghanistan.

People have one hundred problems and COVID is just one of them. We are at the end of the third wave of COVID. The number of cases is dropping. My main concern is the fourth wave. We expect it to happen. No one is prepared to face this wave.

Vaccination was already very limited in the country. COVAX only sent half a million doses. [Afghanistan] did receive some support from India and China with a few millions of doses, but we are far from having what is needed.

And how about the security situation for your teams? We’re obviously all watching heartbreaking images of many people trying to leave Afghanistan. For now, it sounds like you are staying put and are able to operate.

We are able to operate in the different project locations. Everything is so far, so good. One of the big concerns is that the teams are cut off. We cannot reach them by plane. We need to wait and see how the Civil Aviation Authority will function in the coming days or weeks. But security-wise, everything is OK.

The main challenges will very soon be supply. How are we going to get the medicines in? Or get people in and out, or travel around the country?

Just doing things as basic as [getting] a visa, it’s almost impossible for the time being because there is a dysfunctional or nonfunctional administration.

Miguel Macias and Patrick Jarenwattananon produced and edited the broadcast version of this interview. Malaka Gharib adapted it for the web.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2021/08/19/1029363837/afghanistans-health-care-is-in-limbo-following-taliban-takeover-says-msf-rep