Anonymous wrote:I think pools should let in one family at a time for a 45 minute swim, by appointment. Why not?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The announcement that the stay at home order will be continuing "until further notice" is alarming.
Ugh.
There's plenty that's open in Montgomery County right now - and has been open all along. You might have to wait a bit longer to get your nails done or your hair cut.
The point is that the longer they don't go officially into phase 1 the longer it will be until childcare, camps and pools open. Which is what I am waiting for.
Camps are not going to open.
Why? They’re opening in CT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of personality disorder -- or mental illness -- is it that interprets these stay at home orders are doing on forever? So many posts about it not being sustainable "FOREVER" and we can't stay inside FOREVER.
Is this how you approach reaching a goal -- you can't sustain hard work FOREVER, or you can't diet FOREVER?
It's not forever. Obviously. It's until it's safe to reopen. MoCo is a way more densely populated county that the ones that are opening. That's why it's not safe here yet. But let's not pretend you don't know that, OP.
Have you actually looked at the metrics? They’re laughable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of personality disorder -- or mental illness -- is it that interprets these stay at home orders are doing on forever? So many posts about it not being sustainable "FOREVER" and we can't stay inside FOREVER.
Is this how you approach reaching a goal -- you can't sustain hard work FOREVER, or you can't diet FOREVER?
It's not forever. Obviously. It's until it's safe to reopen. MoCo is a way more densely populated county that the ones that are opening. That's why it's not safe here yet. But let's not pretend you don't know that, OP.
Have you actually looked at the metrics? They’re laughable.
How so? (And please don't be the poster who says we have as much chance of dying in a car crash. If I have to read that one more time I'll jump off the roof -- and we all know how much THAT would bother you.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They will reopen when the number of cases and hospitalizations go down.
These numbers will not go down. They will continue to go up. You can’t look at it that way. Look for the percentage of positives to drop.
If people in the DC metro are waiting for the number of cases to go down we will never start reopening.
Right, especially as we are testing more.
That’s why Hogan’s team of public health experts isn’t focusing on that metric. But I guess Gayles and Elrich know better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of personality disorder -- or mental illness -- is it that interprets these stay at home orders are doing on forever? So many posts about it not being sustainable "FOREVER" and we can't stay inside FOREVER.
Is this how you approach reaching a goal -- you can't sustain hard work FOREVER, or you can't diet FOREVER?
It's not forever. Obviously. It's until it's safe to reopen. MoCo is a way more densely populated county that the ones that are opening. That's why it's not safe here yet. But let's not pretend you don't know that, OP.
Have you actually looked at the metrics? They’re laughable.
Anonymous wrote:What kind of personality disorder -- or mental illness -- is it that interprets these stay at home orders are doing on forever? So many posts about it not being sustainable "FOREVER" and we can't stay inside FOREVER.
Is this how you approach reaching a goal -- you can't sustain hard work FOREVER, or you can't diet FOREVER?
It's not forever. Obviously. It's until it's safe to reopen. MoCo is a way more densely populated county that the ones that are opening. That's why it's not safe here yet. But let's not pretend you don't know that, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The announcement that the stay at home order will be continuing "until further notice" is alarming.
Ugh.
There's plenty that's open in Montgomery County right now - and has been open all along. You might have to wait a bit longer to get your nails done or your hair cut.
The point is that the longer they don't go officially into phase 1 the longer it will be until childcare, camps and pools open. Which is what I am waiting for.
Camps are not going to open.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The announcement that the stay at home order will be continuing "until further notice" is alarming.
Ugh.
There's plenty that's open in Montgomery County right now - and has been open all along. You might have to wait a bit longer to get your nails done or your hair cut.
The point is that the longer they don't go officially into phase 1 the longer it will be until childcare, camps and pools open. Which is what I am waiting for.
Camps are not going to open.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The metrics are both mathematically laughable and logistically impossible to attain:
— They want 5% testing capacity per month. That means doing an average of about 1,700 tests in MoCo per day. Statewide we are doing about 3,000 tests per day. No one knows how MoCo will get our testing capacity up to the point where we are doing 50% of what the entire state is doing.
— Amid all this increased testing, they want a 14-day decline in new cases.
— They want a 14-day decline—as calculated by rolling average—in deaths. We are now averaging 12.4 deaths per day. How can we attain a 14-day decline in a metric that is BELOW 14?
— They want a decline in hospitalizations, yet Gayles said last week that he doesn’t even know how many COVID patients we have in MoCo, and our hospitals haven’t been overwhelmed (with the exception of 2 Silver Spring ones).
That’s just 4 examples of the absurdity of these metrics.
Email your governor. I’m in Fairfax County and would love to see MoCo open since the region all seems to be following each other’s lead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The announcement that the stay at home order will be continuing "until further notice" is alarming.
Ugh.
There's plenty that's open in Montgomery County right now - and has been open all along. You might have to wait a bit longer to get your nails done or your hair cut.
The point is that the longer they don't go officially into phase 1 the longer it will be until childcare, camps and pools open. Which is what I am waiting for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The metrics are both mathematically laughable and logistically impossible to attain:
— They want 5% testing capacity per month. That means doing an average of about 1,700 tests in MoCo per day. Statewide we are doing about 3,000 tests per day. No one knows how MoCo will get our testing capacity up to the point where we are doing 50% of what the entire state is doing.
— Amid all this increased testing, they want a 14-day decline in new cases.
— They want a 14-day decline—as calculated by rolling average—in deaths. We are now averaging 12.4 deaths per day. How can we attain a 14-day decline in a metric that is BELOW 14?
— They want a decline in hospitalizations, yet Gayles said last week that he doesn’t even know how many COVID patients we have in MoCo, and our hospitals haven’t been overwhelmed (with the exception of 2 Silver Spring ones).
That’s just 4 examples of the absurdity of these metrics.
Email your governor. I’m in Fairfax County and would love to see MoCo open since the region all seems to be following each other’s lead.
Anonymous wrote:The metrics are both mathematically laughable and logistically impossible to attain:
— They want 5% testing capacity per month. That means doing an average of about 1,700 tests in MoCo per day. Statewide we are doing about 3,000 tests per day. No one knows how MoCo will get our testing capacity up to the point where we are doing 50% of what the entire state is doing.
— Amid all this increased testing, they want a 14-day decline in new cases.
— They want a 14-day decline—as calculated by rolling average—in deaths. We are now averaging 12.4 deaths per day. How can we attain a 14-day decline in a metric that is BELOW 14?
— They want a decline in hospitalizations, yet Gayles said last week that he doesn’t even know how many COVID patients we have in MoCo, and our hospitals haven’t been overwhelmed (with the exception of 2 Silver Spring ones).
That’s just 4 examples of the absurdity of these metrics.