VOLUME 2 ISSUE 8
AUGUST 20 - AUGUST 26, 2021
MARION $2 COUNTY FOOTBALL PREVIEW PAGE B1
County gives preliminary OK for $71 million
Pandemic Fatigue, Politics and Positivity
By Matthew Cretul matthew@ocalagazette.com
A
s the COVID-19 pandemic stretches into its second year and cases continue to rise in Marion County and the state, some Ocala healthcare workers find themselves not only physically and emotionally fatigued but also caught in the politicization of the pandemic. Through it all, they tirelessly work to help stem the virus’ impact and deal with the misinformation they encounter along the way. Fighting a battle on two fronts “The hospitals are overcrowded,” said Dr. Anish Khanna, the facility medical director for the TeamHealth hospitalist group that contracts with Ocala Health System facilities in Ocala. He said there is a commonality among those who wind up in the hospital.
By Carlos Medina carlos@ocalagazette.com
“If you were to go around and take out all the unvaccinated people from the statistics of who’s hospitalized, our hospitals would be empty. Not only are they unvaccinated, but they’re also younger and sicker than previous patients,” he said. Stacey Bates is an advanced practical registered nurse with Ocala Lung & Critical Care. She works in the ICU at West Marion Hospital, and she also sees similarities in who winds up as her patients in the ICU. “What I have personally seen, and I work in the ICU five days a week, and I follow my patients on my days off, I can only think of three patients at the most that were vaccinated,” said Bates. As the pandemic has changed, so has her patient population. “The first wave... at that time it was an older population that was getting sick, nobody was vaccinated… but that is what is so different with this third wave, it’s a
younger population. We’re seeing young people dying, and there’s a certain level of frustration because you feel like this could be prevented if people would get vaccinated,” she said. Dr. David Kuhn of Trinity Clinic understands that some may have questions about the vaccine or a hesitancy to receive it, and he tries to take it one hesitant patient at a time. He attempts to answer all the questions his patients have, but he finds it troubling when he encounters individuals who act in bad faith, attempting to undermine Ocala’s healthcare providers who are working tirelessly and doing all they can. “It’s one thing to make a personal calculation to opt-out of the vaccine for personal reasons or health reasons, that’s obviously OK. But to actively and even militantly try to interfere with what we’re trying to get accomplished during
The Marion County Commission on Aug. 16 gave tacit approval on spending $71 million in American Rescue Plan Act money but put off a final decision until October. Instead, the commission loosely agreed to spend all but $7 million of the money on mostly water and sewer projects. The commission also tentatively approved spending $500,000 on a broadband internet feasibility study. They will make a firmer decision on where the money goes in October, including how much will go toward nonprofit agencies. On June 1, the county received half of the money allocated under the act which was approved by President Joe Biden in March. During the Aug. 17 meeting, a string of community nonprofit agencies showed up to urge the commission to commit millions for the benefit of local agencies. The Ocala Marion County Community Foundation sent the county a proposal for $8.4 million which it would administer and disburse. The Ocala Metro Chamber & Economic Partnership requested $2.5 million for a COVID Healthcare Incentive Program (CHIP). The money would be used to attract healthcare industry jobs to the area. County staff, meanwhile, submitted $71 million in projects, mostly water and sewer related. The commissioners agreed in consensus to the $64 million in county projects, with the caveat that
See Providers, page A2
See County Money, page A4
School board votes for mask mandate with opt-out By Matthew Cretul matthew@ocalagazette.com
Eric Cummings speaks during a meeting of the Marion County Public School Board. [Bruce Ackerman/OG]
In the face of hundreds of students quarantined due to COVID-19 after the first four days of classes, the Marion County School Board on Aug. 16 agreed to implement a temporary policy mandating masks, but with a parental opt-out provision. The opt-out would not require a medical or religious exemption. The move changes the policy that kept masks strictly optional when schools opened on Aug. 10. The resolution takes effect immediately, but enforcement began on Aug. 19.
Lindsey Ardmore attended the meeting and was the first to speak during the public comments. Ardmore has previously spoken out against mask mandates during past meetings, and she reiterated her stance at the Aug. 16 meeting advocating for parental choice, or at the very least an opt-out policy for parents who do not want their children to wear masks. “My daughter is a gifted kindergartner at MSA (Madison Street Academy). She is brilliant, but she cannot handle a mask. She has sensory integration issues. She can’t focus. She’s reading at a second-grade level, but she can’t focus if she’s got a mask on her face.
It’s just not fair to her… or the other kids that have other issues like her that don’t necessarily look like they have that,” Ardmore said. Samantha Shipwash also spoke against mask mandates during the meeting and said no children wear masks in her thirdgrader’s class. She also said she would probably lose her mind if she had to homeschool, and she believed that if masks became mandatory, “a lot of people are going to start pulling their kids out of public school.” Not all of those who spoke during the public comments portion of the meeting were against mask policies, however. Dr. David Kuhn See Mandate, page A3
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Editorial.................................... A5 State News................................ A6 City Council Elections........... A8 Creative’s Corner.................... B5 Arnette House Regatta..........B6 Calendar................................... B9