Anonymous wrote:The Bethesda Patch is reporting phase 2 next week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MoCo dashboard update!
We continued to be maxed out on 14/14 days of improvement on:
- Deaths; 3 day avg is 5
- Hospitalizations; 3 day avg is 267
- ER patients; 3 day avg is 8
- ICU admissions; 3 day avg is 98
- ICU bed utilization; 3 day avg is 70%, target is 80% or less
- Ventilator usage; 3 day avg is 56%, target is 70% or less
- Test positivity; 3 day avg is 12%
Test capacity is 3.5% of the population.
Cases improved to 8 days of decline out of the last 14; 3 day avg is 115
Acute care bed utilization improved to 4 days of decline out of the last 14; 3 day avg is 67%; target is 70% or less
That’s all great news! I wish I had confidence that Elrich cared.
PP here. Me too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MoCo dashboard update!
We continued to be maxed out on 14/14 days of improvement on:
- Deaths; 3 day avg is 5
- Hospitalizations; 3 day avg is 267
- ER patients; 3 day avg is 8
- ICU admissions; 3 day avg is 98
- ICU bed utilization; 3 day avg is 70%, target is 80% or less
- Ventilator usage; 3 day avg is 56%, target is 70% or less
- Test positivity; 3 day avg is 12%
Test capacity is 3.5% of the population.
Cases improved to 8 days of decline out of the last 14; 3 day avg is 115
Acute care bed utilization improved to 4 days of decline out of the last 14; 3 day avg is 67%; target is 70% or less
That’s all great news! I wish I had confidence that Elrich cared.
Anonymous wrote:MoCo dashboard update!
We continued to be maxed out on 14/14 days of improvement on:
- Deaths; 3 day avg is 5
- Hospitalizations; 3 day avg is 267
- ER patients; 3 day avg is 8
- ICU admissions; 3 day avg is 98
- ICU bed utilization; 3 day avg is 70%, target is 80% or less
- Ventilator usage; 3 day avg is 56%, target is 70% or less
- Test positivity; 3 day avg is 12%
Test capacity is 3.5% of the population.
Cases improved to 8 days of decline out of the last 14; 3 day avg is 115
Acute care bed utilization improved to 4 days of decline out of the last 14; 3 day avg is 67%; target is 70% or less
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Takoma Park and as liberal as they come and I will never vote for Elrich again over this. The lack of communication is appalling.
+1
As is his emphasis on eating out being the driver of reopening. I could not care less about eating at a restaurant--open the freaking playgrounds and stores and pools, FFS.
Yep. I dont need restaurants to open. I need him to open pools, playgrounds and curbside pickup at the library - the things young families need to survive this mess. I will continue to donate to support out of work hospitality workers but we don’t need to wait for that to be safe.
For what it's worth, do you happen to live in an HOA? I think it is highly likely that most HOAs didn't properly follow their bylaws when closing playgrounds. And even if they did, I think it's highly likely they didn't actually establish any enforcement options (e.g., fines) for violations.
No.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Takoma Park and as liberal as they come and I will never vote for Elrich again over this. The lack of communication is appalling.
+1
As is his emphasis on eating out being the driver of reopening. I could not care less about eating at a restaurant--open the freaking playgrounds and stores and pools, FFS.
Yep. I dont need restaurants to open. I need him to open pools, playgrounds and curbside pickup at the library - the things young families need to survive this mess. I will continue to donate to support out of work hospitality workers but we don’t need to wait for that to be safe.
For what it's worth, do you happen to live in an HOA? I think it is highly likely that most HOAs didn't properly follow their bylaws when closing playgrounds. And even if they did, I think it's highly likely they didn't actually establish any enforcement options (e.g., fines) for violations.
Anonymous wrote:The people who think this is about haircuts are so misguided.
People need camps to open so they can have childcare for their kids.
Small businesses need to be able to operate beyond curbside pickup.
It’s about important things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The people who think this is about haircuts are so misguided.
People need camps to open so they can have childcare for their kids.
Small businesses need to be able to operate beyond curbside pickup.
It’s about important things.
And daycare for the younger set.
Anonymous wrote:The people who think this is about haircuts are so misguided.
People need camps to open so they can have childcare for their kids.
Small businesses need to be able to operate beyond curbside pickup.
It’s about important things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Takoma Park and as liberal as they come and I will never vote for Elrich again over this. The lack of communication is appalling.
+1
As is his emphasis on eating out being the driver of reopening. I could not care less about eating at a restaurant--open the freaking playgrounds and stores and pools, FFS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Takoma Park and as liberal as they come and I will never vote for Elrich again over this. The lack of communication is appalling.
+1
As is his emphasis on eating out being the driver of reopening. I could not care less about eating at a restaurant--open the freaking playgrounds and stores and pools, FFS.
Yep. I dont need restaurants to open. I need him to open pools, playgrounds and curbside pickup at the library - the things young families need to survive this mess. I will continue to donate to support out of work hospitality workers but we don’t need to wait for that to be safe.