Opelika Observer 07-29-2020 E-edition

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Wednesday, July 29, 2020

VOL. 12, NO.43

pelika Observer O

Opelika, Alabama

“An award-winning publication for local people, by local people.”

A COMMUNITY PRAYS People gather at EAMC to pray for patients, staff

Lee County needs plasma donations By Hannah Lester

hlester@opelikaobserver.com

Photo by Robert Noles/Opelika Observer Opelika resident and Revenue Commissioner Oline Price joined community members in a time of prayer for the patients and staff at East Alabama Medical Center last Thursday night. Price's husband, Alabama State Senator Randy Price is currently being treated at EAMC for COVID-19. Turn to A8 for more photos from the event.

Main Street Alabama focuses on refreshing downtown Opelika

By Wil Crews Opelika Observer Main Street Alabama, a nonprofit that stresses publicprivate partnerships, broad community engagement and

strategies that create jobs, spark new investments, attract visitors and spur growth, recently visited Opelika to review the state of the city’s downtown area and provided

recommendations for a five-year plan. Main Street sent a resource team that spent three days exploring Opelika’s main street and downtown; they presented their fi ndings and recommendations in a press conference last Thursday. The resource team consisted five members: Mary Helmer, director of Main Street Alabama; Trisha Black, of Main Street Alabama; Courtney Bennet, of Montevallo See DOWNTOWN, page A6

See DONATIONS, page A3

Opelika Chamber adds $1,000 golf ball drop to annual tournament By Will Fairless WillFairless@opelikaobserver.com

The Opelika Chamber of Commerce is adding a new event to its annual Member Golf Tournament. This year will be the 21st that the Chamber has put on the golf tournament, and it will be held at Robert Trent Jones - Grand National on Tuesday, Aug. 18. The new event is a “golf ball drop” presented by United See GOLF, page A3

Index OPINION. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .A4 SOUTHERN HOSPITALITY. . . . . . . .A9 RELIGION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .A11 COMICS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .A14

East Alabama Medical Center and Lifesouth Community Blood Center in Opelika are urging community members to consider donating plasma. EAMC is giving convalescent plasma from people who have previously tested positive for the coronavirus to current patients suffering with the disease. Some patients have shown positive improvements after being given the plasma, said Stefanie Ledbetter, director of quality at EAMC. The plasma has the coronavirus antibodies included, said Sharon Carpenter, district director of Lifesouth.

Carpenter said people typically come and donate blood and both blood and plasma are included. A plasma donation, however, is the extraction of the plasma only. “You are on a machine, it takes your blood out, it separates your plasma from your red cells, it gives you your red cells back and we keep the plasma,” she said. When a person donates plasma, instead of just blood, more of the necessary material is extracted, Carpenter said. “A whole blood procedure is only going to give us one plasma product, if you do a plasma-only procedure, we can get multiple

SPORTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .B1 POLITICS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .B9 PUBLIC NOTICES . . . . . . . . . . . . B11

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