Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Need a numerator, a denominator and a county-specific location and classification category (urban, suburban, township, rural, etc.). Then you can see the results. However, rates are also deceiving as the lower the denominator the easier mathematically to get a higher rate. I.e. if there are 100 people in a small town it is a lot easier to get a 50% rate (50 people) than in a city with 2,000,000 people (1M people).
If 50 people had confirmed covid in a town of 100 people, that wouldn't be a deceiving mathematical anomaly, it would be a public-health disaster.
Anonymous wrote:Need a numerator, a denominator and a county-specific location and classification category (urban, suburban, township, rural, etc.). Then you can see the results. However, rates are also deceiving as the lower the denominator the easier mathematically to get a higher rate. I.e. if there are 100 people in a small town it is a lot easier to get a 50% rate (50 people) than in a city with 2,000,000 people (1M people).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People will always want "something better." I remember as a child when my family moved from a small apartment to the suburbs into a rental house. And, then to the purchase of a tiny little house and then a bigger house that had three bedrooms and two bathrooms (No den, just a living room.)
And, i think people will be looking to move "out" more after being confined with the Covid.
Now is the wrong time to push for high density housing.
The mayor and Trueblood asset that high density is exactly what is needed and “even more critical” now, the magic elixir:
An updated Comprehensive Plan is even more critical now, given the current disruptions that the COVID-19 pandemic is causing for the District’s residents and businesses,” said Mayor Bowser. “As we move from response to reopening and recovery, this Comprehensive Plan will serve as an essential guide to ensure that the District not only recovers, but emerges stronger, healthier, more resilient, and more equitable than ever.”
I would be very interested to read any updated provisions that the mayor has added recently to the proposed Comp Plan amendments to respond specifically to the pandemic and the aftermath and to strengthen public health and resiliency. She says it, but I can’t find any substantive differences from the amendments and UP-FLUM map that the Office of Planning was pushing last fall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP, that's numbers, not rates.
Per capita as posted earlier.
1. New York
2. New Jersey
3. Massachusetts
4. Connecticut
5. Rhode Island
6. Louisiana
7. District of Columbia
8. Michigan
9. Delaware
10. Pennsylvania
12. Illinois
13. Maryland
Those are states, not counties.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP, that's numbers, not rates.
Per capita as posted earlier.
1. New York
2. New Jersey
3. Massachusetts
4. Connecticut
5. Rhode Island
6. Louisiana
7. District of Columbia
8. Michigan
9. Delaware
10. Pennsylvania
12. Illinois
13. Maryland
Anonymous wrote:PP, that's numbers, not rates.
Anonymous wrote:Click on the fatality rates tab and look at the map.
There are other data sources out there too. Google something like highest covid rates per county.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Increasing density is an excellent way of spreading coronavirus, which we're likely to be dealing with for several more years.
Some of the highest rates of confirmed cases of covid in the US are in rural counties.
Where? I am simply curious. I read your statement and did some googling and could not find much good data outside of metro areas. Do you have any data to share? Thank you.
https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/us-map
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Increasing density is an excellent way of spreading coronavirus, which we're likely to be dealing with for several more years.
Some of the highest rates of confirmed cases of covid in the US are in rural counties.
Where? I am simply curious. I read your statement and did some googling and could not find much good data outside of metro areas. Do you have any data to share? Thank you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People will always want "something better." I remember as a child when my family moved from a small apartment to the suburbs into a rental house. And, then to the purchase of a tiny little house and then a bigger house that had three bedrooms and two bathrooms (No den, just a living room.)
And, i think people will be looking to move "out" more after being confined with the Covid.
Now is the wrong time to push for high density housing.
The mayor and Trueblood asset that high density is exactly what is needed and “even more critical” now, the magic elixir:
An updated Comprehensive Plan is even more critical now, given the current disruptions that the COVID-19 pandemic is causing for the District’s residents and businesses,” said Mayor Bowser. “As we move from response to reopening and recovery, this Comprehensive Plan will serve as an essential guide to ensure that the District not only recovers, but emerges stronger, healthier, more resilient, and more equitable than ever.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Increasing density is an excellent way of spreading coronavirus, which we're likely to be dealing with for several more years.
Some of the highest rates of confirmed cases of covid in the US are in rural counties.
Anonymous wrote:Increasing density is an excellent way of spreading coronavirus, which we're likely to be dealing with for several more years.