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Insight News • September 14, 2020 - September 20, 2020 • Page 3 WINNER: 2020 T YPOGRAPHY & DESIGN, 1ST PLACE, PHOTOGRAPHY (PORTRAIT & PERSONALIT Y), 1ST PLACE, WEBSITE, 3RD PLACE
Insight News September 14, 2020 - September 20, 2020
Vol. 47 No. 37• The Journal For Community News, Business & The Arts • insightnews.com
Michelle Obama: We must vote like our life depends on it! Compiled from AARP sources By Brenda Lyle-Gray Columnist
photo/Vault Health
School and child care staff are currently limited to one test per person under this program. They will use the same process for anyone taking a Vault Health COVID-19 saliva test, which includes spitting into a funnel while connected with a Vault test supervisor over a Zoom video call.
As school resumes across state, more than 250,000 saliva tests provided to school and child care employees in effort to limit exposures and disease spread
Governor Walz Announces Free COVID-19 saliva tests for teachers, school staff Governor Tim Walz announced that teachers, school staff, and childcare providers across the state have received access to their free COVID-19 saliva test, totaling more than 250,000 tests. The saliva tests are part of the Safe Learning Plan for the 2020-21 School Year and consistent with the Walz administration’s commitment to providing access to COVID-19 testing for Minnesotans working in child care and prekindergarten to grade 12 schools. “As a classroom teacher for more than 20 years and a parent of a child in public schools, I know that a safe classroom is the foundation for learning,” said Walz. “Those educating and caring for
Minnesota’s next generation deserve the peace of mind that these COVID-19 tests will provide.” The Minnesota Department of Education (MDE) has emailed thousands of unique codes that can be used to request a saliva test, which schools will distribute to all staff currently employed by Minnesota’s school districts, charter schools, tribal schools, and nonpublic schools. Additionally, the Department of Human Services (DHS) has provided codes to all staff currently working in licensed child care settings and certified centers. “All families in our state, including our littlest
Minnesotans, want to know their teachers, school nutrition workers, and child care staff are supported. This means if they are exposed to COVID-19 as a frontline worker, we work to make sure they have access to testing,” said Flanagan. “Our goal is to create safe in-person learning for as many children as possible, and saliva tests are one piece of the puzzle to support that plan.” The tests are provided through a partnership with Vault Health and Infinity Biologix (formerly RUCDR Infinite Biologics, a unit of Rutgers University Human Genetics Institute of New Jersey), the nation’s leading providers of saliva testing. Walz recently
announced that the state would be partnering further with the company, to make saliva testing available to all Minnesotans. Teachers and staff are not required to take the tests before coming back to the classroom or to continue working in a child care setting. State officials urge them to get tested when they need it, such as when they’re feeling symptomatic or when they believe they may have been exposed to someone who is COVID positive. The tests must be used by the end of 2020, though the state is exploring options to extend access for the remainder of the 2020-21 school
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Hurricanes and wildfires are colliding with the COVID-19 pandemic – and compounding the risks By Ali Mostafavi, Associate Professor of Civil Engineering, Texas A&M University With Hurricane Laura hitting Louisiana and Texas as an “extremely dangerous” Category 4 storm and wildfires menacing the western U.S., millions of Americans are facing the complex risks of a natural disaster striking in the middle of a pandemic. The steps people normally take to prepare for a severe storm or to evacuate can contradict the public health recommendations for protecting themselves and others from COVID-19. That’s what millions of people were facing as Hurricane Laura intensified in the Gulf of Mexico. More than half a million people were under evacuation orders, including the cities Galveston, Beaumont and Port Arthur, Texas. My urban resilience lab at Texas A&M University has been examining interactions between urban infrastructure, systems and people in disasters. At the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, we launched a study into the effect of the pandemic on urban systems during a natural disaster, applying similar methods we used during extensive research on Hurricane Harvey, which flooded Houston
Minnesota state, county, and city officials are encouraging registered voters to vote from home casting absentee ballots. The coronavirus has not gone away, and a safe vaccine might not be available until this time next year. The pandemic still looms, and an uncertain winter with seasonal flu and COVID19 in the atmosphere simultaneously will test the constitution of citizens and frontline medical personnel and scientists. That event could take place three months from now and we must be prepared. No one is required to offer an explanation as to why they choose not to walk through the voting polls’ front doors. The ‘witness’ signature requirement for registered voters casting mail-in or absentee ballots has been waved. Early in-person absentee voting will be available starting September 18th at your local election polling locations. 46 days before the election, ballots will be distributed to voters who have already registered. For those voters who registered late, ballots will be sent out on a rolling basis. Ballots must be postmarked by Election Day, November 3rd. However, they can be received within seven days of the election. Ballots must be mailed or delivered to your county elections office by 3 p.m. on Election Day, November 3rd. Registering to Vote Registered voters in Minnesota have the choice to: Register to vote online – Office of Secretary of State voter registration portal.
Michelle Obama Voters must register online or by mail by October Voters can apply for 13th. an absentee ballot any time except on Election Day. Download and print a voter registration form – in person delivery to county election’s office or mail-in. The form can also be mailed or delivered to the St. Paul Secretary of State’s office. Leave time for election officials to mail your ballot. Registered voters with a valid form of identification confirming name and address can vote at their local polling place(s) on Election Day. A listing of acceptable forms of identification can be found on the Secretary of State’s website. Voters who have health complications, live in a nursing home, or are hospitalized can designate an agent, e.g. family member, attorney - to pick up and return the absentee ballot in place of them. A separate form must be completed and returned to their local election office with their absentee ballot application. Safeguards Against Voter Fraud There have been no cases to-date reported of anyone trying to vote illegally with a stolen ballot. Any person who steals a ballot from a mailbox, and then tries to cast it at a local election’s office, would
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photo/PeopleImages
photo/AP Photo/Gerald Herbert
Evacuations during Hurricane Laura could increase the risk of exposure to COVID-19. in August 2017. Our research shows that compound disasters have complex ramifications. At the intersection of a natural hazard and a pandemic is a decision process fraught with contradictions. Storm prep and evacuations raise the risks During the three days before Hurricane Harvey hit, the number of grocery store and gas station visits in the Houston area increased by 50% to 100%. People didn’t think twice about running to the store. As Hurricane Laura headed for the Louisiana and
Texas coasts, residents were in very a different situation. The rise of COVID-19 illnesses and deaths across the South during the summer meant people were encouraged to self-quarantine and limit their social contact to prevent transmitting the coronavirus. They could still wear masks in stores, but keeping the recommended six feet apart gets harder when stores get crowded. It means spending more time waiting with others in lines and jostling in the aisles. Research shows that both the amount of virus and the amount of time a person is exposed to it have an impact on whether they get infected and
News
Hennepin County and Minneapolis push to ensure everyone is counted in the 2020 Census
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how severely. An even more onerous complication – for both authorities and residents – is evacuation. The decision to evacuate in the face of even a single hazard, whether a wildfire or a hurricane, is difficult. Sheltering in place can mean life-threatening conditions, prolonged power outages and disrupted access to critical facilities. Evacuating means leaving behind one’s house and possibly animals to an uncertain fate. That’s complicated
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COVID-19 inspires an uptick in Black family history research and genealogy Genealogy is history and history involves the exploration of family trees and, of course, people. The COVID-19 crisis has inspired an increase in African American genealogical research activity. During the pandemic, people are spending time tracking ancestors, building family trees online, and taking DNA tests to make sense out of family histories. The reasons vary from the luxury of lockdown time to pursue and peruse documents online to the recent surge in social unrest. Whatever the reason or reasons, Black family genealogical research is often complicated by the history
of slavery in this country. The 1870 Census is the first census that lists African Americans by name and location and within the larger census, whereas it was rare to find a black person included in earlier census records as anything less than an unnamed human property like cattle. There are slave records and other deeds that include names but it is still a challenge to locate ancestors. African Americans in Minnesota have a few resources available to assist in family research. Family Search has a list of African American resources and records. The
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Decline in childhood immunization because of COVID-19
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