All posts by Barbara Nevins Taylor

Remembering John Lewis

Nick Taylor 

I worked as press secretary for John Lewis during his first campaign for Congress. The election in early 1977 was to fill the seat left by Andrew Young after Jimmy Carter appointed him U.N. ambassador.  It was a crazy race.

You would think that in Atlanta John Lewis would be a shoo-in.  But that was then, before the best-selling autobiography and graphic novels, before the honorary doctorates and commencement speeches, before the Presidential Medal of Freedom.  His fame was narrower.  You had to have followed the civil rights movement, which he joined as a teenager causing his elders including Dr. Martin Luther King to call him “the Boy from Troy,” his Alabama hometown where he grew up the son of sharecroppers.  Unlike today, few knew of his courage on behalf of equality and voting rights, his lunch counter sit-ins, his Freedom Rides on segregated buses, his march into brutal attacks by Alabama troopers, his fierce address at the 1963 March on Washington.  And few knew of his humility and selflessness.

 Maynard Jackson, John Lewis, Stanley Wise
Atlanta Mayor Maynard Jackson poses with John Lewis, then a candidate for Congress, and Stanley Wise, a friend and aide.

Twelve candidates from both parties were first tumbled into a March non-partisan primary.  It included another civil rights leader, Rev. Ralph David Abernathy, and future Republican Representative and Senator Paul Coverdell.  Another Black candidate was John’s most vicious attacker.  State Representative Billy McKinney said “his wife feeds him cue cards” and worse, “He’s just not smart enough to be congressman.”  On the morning of the primary, we reached John’s strip mall headquarters to find it had been broken into overnight, the phone lines cut and the lists of volunteer drivers stolen. These drivers were key to an election in Atlanta. They picked people up from their homes and drove them to the polls to vote. The tradition was so ingrained that without a ride, some just couldn’t get to vote. 

But enough of them did.  John and the white Atlanta City Council President Wyche Fowler finished in the top two slots.  McKinney got 2 percent of the vote, and John and Fowler headed into an April runoff.

John and our team campaigned nonstop moving from one campaign event to another, meeting voters, handing out literature, shaking hands at factory shift changes, and doing interviews. We were always behind schedule because John leaned in and listened to everyone who wanted to talk to him.  

Atlanta billed itself as The City Too Busy To Hate and while Maynard Jackson was the mayor and had easily won a second term, there was still a lot of prejudice.  This was barely a decade after the Civil Rights Act was signed into law and not enough respect was given.  Even though John headed the Voter Education Project in the years before the race, a reporter at the Atlanta Constitution called John a “former civil rights leader.” John objected, saying he still worked for civil rights. He won the Constitution’s endorsement.  But Atlanta sanitation workers went on strike a week before the runoff.  John took their side against the mayor, and people in the suburbs didn’t like their garbage piling up.  

John Lewis and Media Strategist Marvin Kaminsky
John Lewis and Media Strategist Marvin Kaminsky, 1977

Fowler won the runoff.  That night John told the big crowd in a ballroom at the Atlanta Internationale Hotel, “We won tonight a kind of victory.  Two months ago, nobody knew who John Lewis was.  This is only the beginning.” 

After the work of the campaign, we spent time with John and his beautiful, smart and very focused wife Lillian in their art-filled southwest Atlanta home.  Their son John Miles was an infant and he kept everybody busy.  

John kept his dream of elective office.  After the campaign, he headed ACTION, the federal volunteer agency, under Carter and in 1981 won a seat on the Atlanta City Council.  When Barbara and I got married in 1983, John and Lillian came to our wedding. 

The next year Barbara got her dream job as a reporter for WCBS-TV and we went looking for apartments in New York. The only apartment that compared to the one we owned in Atlanta, was a duplex in a small house on Jones Street in the Village. We saw that it was a competitive situation. Many people came to see, and many people wanted it. The building owner, Harley Jones, an architect told us we’d need letters of reference.

Architect Harley Jones in front of his home on Jones Street.
Architect Harley Jones in front of his home on Jones Street.

Who would sway him, we wondered.  We covered politics in Atlanta and it was a small city where we knew everyone. Then-Governor Joe Frank Harris wrote us a recommendation, but we thought that wouldn’t be enough. Mr. Jones was an African-American man who had clear memories of the civil rights movement. We asked John.

A few days later, Barbara got a call at WAGA, the TV station where she worked. It was Harley Jones. He said, “I just got a letter of reference for you from John Lewis. Anyone who is recommended by John Lewis can live in my building.” 

What a relief. 

John and Lillian made us a going away party at their home and Julian Bond, Sharon Adams, Tom Houck and other good friends were there. 

Two years later, in 1986, John beat Julian in the Democratic primary and went on to win Georgia’s Fifth District congressional seat.

John got the respect that he deserved in Congress and we remained in touch.  I took a young  friend, Terrence Darby, to Washington to meet John in his office in the early ’90s. The smart teenager was having a lot of trouble reconciling his intellect and blackness.  Book smarts weren’t prized on the streets of New York then.   

John took the time and gave TD his full attention.  That attention is the gift John always gives you.

When Columbia University awarded him an honorary degree — one of some fifty he received before he died — in 1997, he and Lillian invited us to join them for the  ceremony and the lunch that followed.  His sponsor was at the table, a white man whose name I don’t remember.  He said he didn’t know John, just admired him and thought Columbia should, too.

Then last spring, 2019, John received an honorary degree from City College of New York, where Barbara graduated and now is the acting journalism director. While the proud parents and the graduates gathered on seats on a broad lawn in Harlem, I found John inside the Spitzer School of Architecture building waiting to put on the robe signaling another new doctorate.  I felt lucky to have the chance to hug him and celebrate his latest honor.

John’s commencement speech to the graduates was his life message to us all: Find “good trouble” to get into.  Look around you, see what’s wrong, and do what’s right.  And fight every day.  Don’t give up.  Never give up. 

I spoke to John early this year when I learned that he was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. He said he was starting treatment and felt upbeat about his chances.  Not long before he died he was photographed, wearing a mask against the COVID-19 pandemic, with Washington’s Black Lives Matter street mural in the background. 

John Lewis never gave up.  Remembering him, we remember that we can never be complacent, that we can never assume that rights achieved won’t be stripped away.  We have to fight for the things that matter every day.

 

 

 

Some Beachgoers Wear Masks. More Should

 

Barbara Nevins Taylor

We left our relatively safe Zip Code in Manhattan yesterday to visit my mom’s grave for her birthday and her Yarzheit.  The cemetery is about fifteen minutes from the beach and we heard the ocean calling to us. 

The Atlantic Ocean, Robert Moses State Park, Babylon, New York. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com
The Atlantic Ocean, Robert Moses State Park, Babylon, Long Island. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com

If you haven’t been there, the causeway across the Great South Bay to Robert Moses State Park is worth the ride and it leads to a beautiful beach.  Nick grew up on Estero Island, or Fort Myers Beach, Florida and as a kid I went to the beach at Far Rockaway in Queens almost every summer day.  We love the beach.

People enjoy the water at Robert Moses State Park, Babylon, Long Island. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com
People enjoy the water at Robert Moses State Park. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com

We don’t want to bake in the sun any more. But we do want to put our feet in the surf and feel the rush of pleasure when your toes sink into the sand and the surf laps against your ankles.

Nick Taylor waiting for surf at Robert Moses State Park, Babylon, Long Island. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com
Nick Taylor waiting for surf at Robert Moses State Park. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com
Barbara Nevins Taylor with the surf at Robert Moses State Park, Babylon, New York. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com
Wearing mask and one glove at Robert Moses State Park. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com

Sure we felt a little crazy because we wore masks and gloves, just in case. On the beach people, for the most part,  did spread out and social distance. 

Baking in the sun at Robert Moses State Park. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com
Baking in the sun at Robert Moses State Park. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com

Socially Distanced Sunbather, Robert Moses State Park, Babylon, Long Island. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com

But there were enough people who didn’t wear masks to make us want to head away from them.

People Not Wearing Masks on the beach at Robert Moses State Park,Photo by ConsumerMojo.com
People without masks on the beach at Robert Moses State Park. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com
People lounging, standing and not wearing masks on the beach at Robert Moses State Park, Babylon Long Island. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com
People lounging, standing and not wearing masks on the beach at Robert Moses State Park. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com

COVID-19 cases had been going down on Long Island. But we found out later that on July 13, the day we went to the beach, 102 people in Suffolk County tested positive for the virus. 

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, in a news release, said, “It’s also clear based on contact tracing that many of the new cases in New York are a result of a lack of compliance during the July 4 weekend and illustrate how quickly the virus spreads, with one party, for example, infecting more than a third of attendees,” Cuomo continued. “I cannot be more clear: Look at what’s happening in the rest of the country — if we are not smart, if we don’t wear masks and socially distance, cases will spike. No one wants to go back to the hell we experienced three months ago, so please stay vigilant.”

The party Cuomo referred to was in Suffolk County.  State and local contact tracing found that 35 percent of people who attended the Fourth of July party  became infected with COVID-19. 

Back in our Zip Code, we still feel safe despite people flocking to bars and drawing more complaints for COVID-19 non-compliance than anywhere in Manhattan.  We’ll continue to watch the numbers and see where and when it’s safe to go the beach again. 

 

 

 

Come Back to Paris

by Nick Taylor

Happy Bastille Day!

We received an invitation from Paris we wish we could accept. The Hotel des Marroniers on the Rue Jacob emailed to invite us back.

This time last year, though it seems much longer now, we stopped in Paris returning from a trip to Greece and spent three nights at the delightful small hotel. 

Red carpet entry way of Hotel des Marroniers. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com
Hotel des Marronniers on Rue Jacob. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com.

Cozy describes it best.  We stepped around the suitcases we stacked in a corner of our room, held our breath in the tiny elevator, and chatted with the receptionist on duty as we handed and retrieved our key across a narrow counter.

A small room in the Hotel des Marroniers

Best of all, we fanned out to absorb the delights of wonderful Paris — walks along the Seine and in the Luxembourg Gardens, the Musee d’Orsay, people watching at Cafe Deux Magots, popping into galleries and exhibitions.  

The Light by Maximilen Luce, Photo by ConsumerMojo.com
Into The Light by Maximilen Luce in the Musee D’Orsay, Photo by Consumer Mojo.com

That was before . . .

Paris, like New York, adopted drastic measures to fight the COVID-19 pandemic that swept — is still sweeping — the world disrupting lives and commerce.  Cities felt the problem worst.  The urban joys of density and mingling were suddenly forbidden and potentially fatal.  Sneezing, coughing, and just talking spread the virus.  Elbow bumps replaced handshakes, and then no contact at all — stay six feet away from other people.  Wear gloves.  Wear a mask.  Restaurants, bars and theaters closed, concerts canceled, offices emptied.  People were told to stay home, so nobody went anywhere unless they escaped to the countryside.  Here in New York, front line health care workers were bivouacked in hotels.  In Paris, hotels housed the homeless.

The shutdown in Paris and throughout France was severe enough to stop COVID-19 in its tracks.  The same throughout the European Union.

Now Europe is coming back to life.  “Travel to Paris in total security!” said the Hotel des Marronier’s invitation announcing its July 1 reopening.

email invitation to visit Paris

The Left Bank hotel isn’t the kind of place where social distancing is possible. Its compactness is part of its charm, at least for us.  The hotel’s reopening announcement detailed its COVID-19 hygiene and safety protocol — masks, gloves, sanitizing gel, disinfecting all the things you touch, and so on.  A continental breakfast will replace the buffet.

Breakfast room at Hotel des Marroniers, Photo by ConsumerMojo.com

 Guests can pay without touching anything, and get receipts by email.  So we’d probably survive being in its close three-star quarters.

It would be fun to be a part of Paris coming back to life.  In New York, the city is closing streets so restaurants can set up tables to keep people far enough apart.  In Paris, restaurants are used to that, tables spilling from sidewalks onto streets and cars mercifully absent.  And Paris allowed its cafes to fully reopen in mid-June.

But we can’t go.  Europe doesn’t want Americans.  New York got its COVID-19 case and death count down by wearing masks, avoiding crowds, and reopening slowly.  We know where the European Union’s coming from.  Now New York and its neighbors New Jersey and Connecticut, early pandemic hot spots, are watching cases spiking in the South and West where things opened up too soon and folks weren’t careful.  Fifty thousand new cases, the highest yet, were reported in the country on July 2.  Our governors are asking visitors from sixteen states including Texas and Florida to quarantine themselves for two weeks if they come here.  Good luck.  Americans don’t need a passport to cross state borders.

Americans traveling to France, or to anywhere in the Eurozone, is another story.  The European Union, reacting to the soaring case counts in this country,  won’t admit most travelers from the United States.  Thanks to an utter lack of national leadership and reckless governors defying health experts, the United States is in the Banned Travelers Hall of Fame along with such international paragons as Russia and Brazil.  

Even people who have homes in France, like our our friends artist Pierre Clerk and his wife Linda Mandel, find themselves up against the lockout, too. 

Barbara Nevins Taylor, Nick Taylor Linda Mandel, Pierre Clerk in Pomerol, France
Barbara Nevins Taylor, Nick Taylor Linda Mandel, Pierre Clerk in Pomerol, France. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com

They need to get back for business reasons. Pierre has a show scheduled in Belgium in the fall and his dealer wants to choose the pieces from his studio in southwest France. 

Courtyard at Bordeaux home of Pierre Clerk and Linda Mandel
Courtyard at Bordeaux home of Pierre Clerk and Linda Mandel. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com

You can watch a video Barbara did when Pierre was 85, here. It gives a good idea of what their beautiful home looks like, and Pierre’s striking work.

But back to travel to France.  The French Consulate in New York offers an elaborate explanation about who can enter France. Americans would have to quarantine for fourteen days, but the European Union ban on Americans superseded that.  

Even before the full impact of the pandemic hit home, and before protests erupted worldwide over racist killings of black men in the United States, the State Department issued a Level 2 travel advisory for France urging “increased caution.” Unions had been waging strikes and protests over pension reforms, but we don’t remember news of terrorism.  And even traveling cautiously won’t be possible until we COVID-19 pariahs in the U.S. can get back to Paris and Europe again. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Absentee Ballots Didn’t Work For All New Yorkers

Gavin Murphy showed up at his polling place in Greenwich Village to vote in the June 23 primary.  But he would have preferred to vote by mail with an absentee ballot.

 

Greenwich Village voter

“I received my ballot too late to make the deadline,” he said, and he wasn’t alone. Many New Yorker did not receive their absentee ballots in time to vote by mail. 

Few People in Polling Place in Greenwich Village
A little before noon, few people showed up at this polling place in Greenwich Village.

The New York City Board of Elections (BOE), an appointed board which runs elections in the city, seemed to have a big problem keeping up with the switch to absentee voting.  The New York Times reported that three days before the primary, 29,000 voters who had requested ballots had failed to receive them. Others reported on social media that they had received ballots with no return envelope, or with no ballot.

Tweet about absentee ballots

My husband and I received the applications for absentee ballots, filled them in and mailed them at the same time. He received his ballot the Saturday before election day, filled out his ballot and put it in the mail by Monday’s deadline.  It needed to be postmarked by June 22, the day before election day, in order to be counted.  My ballot failed to arrive. That meant I had to vote in person.

At my polling place in Greenwich Village, there were few people voting.  You can say that was a good thing for social distancing. But if people had trouble getting ballots and then didn’t show up to vote that doesn’t bode well for the November election. If this was a dress rehearsal, there’s a lot of work to do before the big show.

In the Bronx, some voters complained about long lines and long waits.  A woman who posts as Chan said it took two hours to get to vote. 

Long lines at Bronx Polling Place

The polls stay open until 9 p.m. and as we write this, there is still time to vote. But BOE’s handling of the absentee ballots puts the spotlight on an election board that has had a history of errors with  wrongly purged voters, broken machines and long lines.

 Voters like Gavin Murphy want the BOE to get its act together before absentee ballot applications go out for the general election.  “If we are going to be prepared for the actual election in November,” he said, “we need much stronger infrastructure to be able to deliver on the actual vote by mail. Many people are going to be a little concerned about their health and they should be able to exercise their right to vote without having to sacrifice health concerns.”

The Board of Elections did not respond to our request for comment.

Boarding Up Windows Against Looters

 

by Nick Taylor

We went out this afternoon to look around. Television coverage has shown us New York City streets in chaos. During the day marches, including those here in New York, are peaceful.

Protestors at Sheridan Square
Protestors march down Seventh Avenue. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com

But when night falls, looters and thieves take over from peaceful marchers. Like most Americans, we have watched and agonized about this since Memorial Day, when George Floyd died in Minneapolis with a police officer’s knee on his neck for almost nine minutes. 

The large gatherings give the bad actors cover. Like politicians, the looters and thieves never let a crisis go to waste. It’s organized street crime. They rush in with crowbars, smash windows, rob stores, and throw their loot into cars and vans summoned by phone or text or social media. Luxury goods, mobile phone, and liquor stores seem to be the main targets, but they’re not the only ones. Bodegas that often are the only shops that serve their neighborhoods have been victims, too.

Just smashing things sometimes is the only object. Destruction for the thrill of it. Pick up a Citi Bike and throw it through a window. Turn over a trash can and set it on fire. The chaos aids the looters.

Surveillance cameras, which might be a small deterrent in normal times, are as good as blind. Everyone wears masks these days to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. The thieves and window smashers look like health conscious citizens until they take out their crowbars. 

We hear helicopters all the time now in our part of New York City. On Sunday night the looters hit stores in Soho. Mayor Bill de Blasio declared a curfew in response, from 11 p.m. Monday to 5 the next morning. The thieves didn’t wait until 11.  They started as soon as it got dark, hitting stores on Broadway and in the East Village and as close as Bleecker Street near Sixth Avenue. Where were the police? In the television coverage, they looked outmaneuvered by kids on bikes and skateboards. In some cases, local citizens were the only thing standing between the thieves and the stores they wanted to hit. 

Sign on Bleecker Street Recall De Blasio
A sign appeared on Bleecker Street calling for the recall of Mayor Bill de Blasio. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com

After the looting we saw a sign on Bleecker Street for a recall of de Blasio. People support the protesters and are furious about the looting.

Worker boarding up a restaurant on Cornelia Street
Worker boarding up a restaurant on Cornelia Street as precaution. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com

As we walked from street to street in the West Village, we saw plywood-covered windows and men with saws and nail guns hard at work boarding up restaurants and retail stores. 

Iconic Bleecker Street with stores boarded up.
Iconic Bleecker Street with stores boarded up.
Worker boarding up a store on Bleecker Street
Worker boarding up a store on Bleecker Street. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com

Against this backdrop, a group of 50 or 100 protesters marched down Seventh Avenue chanting, “Hands up. Don’t shoot.” They knelt in the street and police cars shielded them from traffic.

Protestors taking a knee at Sheridan Square
Protestors taking a knee at Sheridan Square. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com

Governor Andrew Cuomo said in his Tuesday news conference the police were so poorly deployed against the nighttime looting he wanted to send in the National Guard, but the mayor declined the offer. De Blasio moved the curfew start up to 8 p.m. and the NYPD announced a ban on vehicles below 96th Street. But if the looters continue to rule the streets and the police stay absent, the governor may have no choice. 

This tweet appeared right before the 8 p.m. curfew. 

Tweet about crowd at Barclays Center

 

New York City Under Curfew

At 8:28 p.m. on Monday, our phones buzzed. It was an alert warning us that a curfew in New York City would go into effect at 11 o’clock.  Governor Andrew Cuomo and New York Mayor Bill de Blasio declared the curfew after five days of protests were hijacked on Sunday by looters, vandals and people attacking the police.

If we weren’t older and worried about contracting the coronavirus, we would have been out there with the peaceful protestors calling for fair treatment by the police and in life for black and brown people. The death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, by a police officer pressing the life out of him with his knee for almost nine minutes while other officers stood by, brought people in cities throughout the country to the streets.

In New York, some police officers caught on video crossed the line, shoving protestors to the ground, driving into a crowd, and waving a gun. We hope they are prosecuted.

Police vehicles driving into a crowd

But on Sunday and Monday night things in New York got uglier. Thugs smashed windows and looters stole from local businesses and international brands. These opportunists, who cared nothing for George Floyd, hijacked protests that demanded the justice he deserved.

For three nights we fell asleep to the sound of helicopters. The helicopters woke us again at 4 o’clock on Monday morning, and that was because of the looting.  Announcing the curfew, the governor distinguished between the support for protestors and people who clearly have jumped in to steal or simply cause violence.

“I stand behind the protestors and their message, but unfortunately there are people who are looking to distract and discredit this moment,” Governor Cuomo said. “The violence and the looting has been bad for the city, the state and this entire national movement, undermining and distracting from this righteous cause. While we encourage people to protest peacefully and make their voices heard, the safety of the general public is paramount and cannot be compromised. Tonight the mayor and I are implementing a citywide curfew, starting at 11 p.m., and doubling the NYPD presence across the city.”

We support the protestors calling for change. We abhor the violence by the police and the people who are taking advantage of a tense situation. 

 

Keep Flags Lowered To Honor Victims

by Nick Taylor

 

Nearly 100,000 COVID-19 deaths and the U.S. has now lowered its flags for Memorial Day.  The White House says that this year, dropping the flag also honors the pandemic victims 

We called for this action a month ago, when the death toll was almost 50,000.  Memorial Day is when we remember America’s war dead, but we also lower the flag at times of national tragedy. We are a nation in mourning. In normal years,  for many, Memorial Day is about personal mourning. My friend Gerry Chambers and others I know spend the days this weekend decorating the graves of their loved ones. And now we have the horrific personal loss for 100,000 families. Their losses are ours.

The New York Times devoted its front page on the eve of Memorial Day to the names of COVID-19 victims. That wasn’t enough space. The story jumped and filled two inside pages, too.

The tradition of lowering the flag to half-staff is codified. USA.gov says, “The United States flag flies at half-staff (or half-mast) when the nation or a state is in mourning. The president, through a presidential proclamation, a state governor, or the mayor of the District of Columbia can order flags to fly at half-staff. Most often, this is done to mark the death of a government official, military member, or first responder; in honor of Memorial Day or other national day of remembrance; or following a national tragedy.”

Let us grieve for those who have died, and let us show our concern for the health care and other essential workers who put themselves in danger every day.  And let us pray that the federal administration’s chaotic, uncoordinated, failed response to this contagion gives way to actual leadership that so far as been pitifully lacking. 

Service members assigned to the Javits New York Medical Station perform an X-ray scan on a COVID-19 patient in the facility’s intensive care unit. U.S. Army Photo by Sgt. Deonte Rowell.

 There’s no end in sight for the tragedy we are experiencing. The death count continues as real people, our loved ones, die. In four months we have gone beyond the 58,000 American deaths in eleven years of the Vietnam War. Soon we  will have doubled the 53,000 Americans who died in two years in World War II. 

Mr. Trump tells us he’s a wartime president.  He first floated the notion on March 18, when he tweeted that “we are at war with an invisible enemy.

Trump Tweet and Invisible Enemy

But no effective national war is being fought against this virus. That President Trump has failed to take the battle to the enemy is clear.  His battle plan consists of spin and deflection.  He won’t take responsibility.  The tools at the federal government’s disposal lie unused.  At the coronavirus task force briefings, he has stood before the cameras and bragged about his TV ratings and the number of his Facebook followers.  He has wondered out loud if household disinfectants could be injected and ultra-violet light beamed inside the body to kill the virus, triggering a chorus of corrections to keep people from killing themselves. He told us he takes an unproven prophylactic drug that has caused fatal side effects.

What the president seldom expresses is any convincing sense of empathy for those fallen in the war he says he leads.  

U.S. Army Chaplain and Healthcare Workers Escorting A Covid-19 Victim
U.S. Army Chaplain and Healthcare Workers Escorting A Covid-19 Victim in New York City. Photo by U.S. Air National Guard Major Patrick Cordova.

Empathy has arisen from the health care workers, from governors and other leaders, from the vast majority of Americans.  This sense of togetherness, that we share a sadness for the COVID-19 victims, we share the grief of their survivors, we share concern for the doctors and nurses and other workers who make our lives livable — the grocery store clerks, the police and firefighters, the delivery workers, the sanitation crews — while we shelter at home, all of this demands a high measure of respect.

Heroes Work here on Urgent Care window
Northwell Health Urgent Care, Greenwich Village. Photo by ConsumerMojo.com

Each night at seven, New Yorkers lean out their windows to clap and cheer and bang pots and pans for the nurses and doctors working in the storm of Covid-19 infections.  We’re saluting people who put their own health on the line to keep others from dying.  

Louisiana National Guard Soldiers and Airmen collect nasal swabs from patients during a drive-through, community-based COVID-19 testing site located in New Orleans, La., U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Master Sgt. Dan Farrell.

They can’t stay at home like the rest of us.  They’re often short protective gear, they work brutal hours that leave them exhausted and, before they go home at risk to their own families, far too often they’re the last person a coronavirus victim sees.  And the virus has killed too many of them.

Our evening demonstrations are a small way to honor these true heroes.  We can do better, though. Let’s keep our flags lowered.  There’s no higher measure of respect than to lower our flags to honor our fighters, all the ones we’ve lost and the ones still fighting every day.

We won’t get a proclamation from this president to mourn his administration, so we should do it on our own.  We have that right.  Let us continue to mourn the victims of the war that the president won’t fight and mourn his failure as a leader.

 Even as shelter-in-place orders are eased and we try to tiptoe back towards normal, the death count keeps rising.  Let’s look to the flags flown at half-height and remember that we’re experiencing an ongoing national tragedy.  Maybe then we’ll remember to protect ourselves and others until we can raise our flag on high again. 

 

Online Journalism Class

 

 

Coronavirus turned our lives upside down and made reliable journalism more important than ever. The online summer session of Introduction to Journalism rises to the challenge of our times. The class will immerse students in journalism fundamentals and teach them how to research, report and write stories that have significance for their communities. Their best work will be featured on HarlemView, a website funded in part by the Moxie Foundation to stimulate community engagement.

 

Students from every discipline and walk of life can benefit from this deep dive. You will learn how to write clearly, concisely and tell a meaningful story. These skills transfer to all aspects of your lives and the class will help you communicate your ideas and concepts more successfully.

 

Introduction to Journalism

Barbara Nevins Taylor

MCA 233 Summer Session June 1 to June 25

        23300 -1LL

M, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday

11:05 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.

 

Why Didn’t I Get My Stimulus Money?

Danielle McDonald-Vanty found a community of people on Facebook to try to get answers about what happened to their stimulus payments. “I’m in these groups to communicate with others in the same boat,” she told me in a message. It’s a good outlet, but ultimately no substitute for the money they haven’t gotten yet, money they need to keep their families afloat.

Facebook stimulus page

It may be awhile before Danielle’s family and millions of others get the stimulus money. The IRS can only make a direct deposit into your bank account if you gave them direct deposit information for refunds when you filed tax returns in 2018 or 2019. The IRS made direct deposits beginning the week of April 13. It will continue for the next several weeks as it steers money to 80 million Americans, says the House Ways and Means Committee.

But if you used a tax preparer, the IRS is not likely to have your direct deposit information. Danielle used a preparer. They received the direct deposit, she explained, “. . . so they could deduct their fees and advance loan before putting the remainder of the refund on my bank card.”

Coronavirus and the stay-at-home orders threw their family into financial limbo. Before the virus struck, they had decided to move from Springfield, Massachusetts to the Fayetteville, North Carolina area. Her husband Clarence was recovering from an accident at the wholesale grocery warehouse where he  worked.  She planned to transfer her IHop job as a waitress/shift supervisor to North Carolina. “My new location was closed when we got here,” she said. Since March they have been living with her in-laws because they haven’t been able to move into an apartment of their own. “It’s a big mess. My three children can’t even go to school,” Danielle said.

So the $3900 from the stimulus CARES Act would really help. But the IRS and Treasury officials acknowledge the money will be slow reaching families like Danielle’s. In 2019, 64 million taxpayers, or 41 percent, did not provide bank or financial account information to the IRS, according to the IRS taxpayer advocate.

The House Ways and Means Committee estimates that 101 million Americans will receive paper checks, including Social Security recipients, veterans and others. Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin told Jake Tapper on CNN on April 19 that the checks will have President Trump’s signature on them. It’s estimated 5 million checks will go out a week and it will take approximately 20 weeks to get them all out. The people with the lowest incomes will get the checks first.

How Can You Speed Things Up?

The IRS is encouraging people to log on to Get My Payment to update their information. 

Get My Payment page from IRS

You can update your address if you have moved or provide direct deposit information. 

You should also use this app if you have not filed taxes and the IRS has no record of you.

Danielle just signed on to the app and the message said that the IRS will give her a deposit date when they have one.  “I’m keeping my fingers crossed along with the thousands of people I have met on Facebook,” she said.

 

 

Finding Comfort from Making Masks

 

by Jeanne Robin

I belong to two volunteer sewing groups. One sews garments for Jewish burial and one, called Days for Girls, sews bags for menstrual kits for girls in countries where they would not be able to leave the house without it. When I heard that people on the front lines against COVID-19 needed personal protective equipment (PPE) and that hospitals needed people to make masks, I thought, “That’s an army I can join!”

I have a gazillion sewing machines — actually more like nine, of which four work — and a degree in Fashion Design from the Fashion Institute of Technology.

Jeanne Robin's sewing machine in front of a window
One of Jeanne Robin’s sewing machines.

I’ve had many hand-made craft jobs that required an assembly line mentality where you do one action at a time on many pieces. A lot of people in Portland, Oregon, where I live, started sewing maks immediately. But I wanted to do some research before I started so that I could make the most effective and comfortable masks.

The Fabric Patch, a quilt store in Ephrata, Washington, had two mask patterns on its website. They had consulted medical folks and tested different fabrics and closures. One is a rectangular pattern that saves fabric; it’s easier to make but less effective. I landed on the pattern with two layers of cotton fabric and an interior layer of a non-woven fabric. They are protective, washable, snug-fitting and comfortable, not to mention kind of trendy and cute.

You could make them with elastic strands that wrap around the ears, but those can hurt, especially if they’re worn for hours at a time. And the elastic is impossible to find these days. That made me try other options such as grosgrain ribbon, cotton laces and parachute cord. I have the ties loop around the back of the head and tie at the nape of the neck.

Then things got crazy!

My boyfriend Bob asked if I’d make masks for him and his son. I did.

Jeanne Robin's boyfriend Bob with mask
Jeanne’s boyfriend Bob

And while I was doing it I made one for myself. I put mine on, snapped a selfie, and in a flight of fancy decided to post it as my Facebook pic with a nod to the J. Peterman Catalog from “Seinfield” that featured the weird and wonderful.

Jeanne Robin with white mask
Jeanne Robin

My post read:  Seamstress/model: N95 style mask. Cotton fabric exterior, 1 layer non-woven interfacing (breathable but small particles can’t pass), whatever works ties.

I clicked on “Post” with a sense of the absurd.  It was a gag!

My Facebook blew up!

“Are you making these?” “Can I get one?”  “Three?”  “Five?”  Twelve?”

I was shocked and thought people were kidding. Who knew?

In the next three days I had 134 mask orders from family and friends all across the country. Four went to Israel where people are mandated to wear them and masks are unavailable. I charged $10 per mask to cover material costs, shipping and to cover donated masks.

I inventoried the materials I had in my house. I only had enough to make thirty masks. I had to prioritize who got them first. People were anxious. A friend runs a preschool that serves medical families. Her staff decided they wanted to remain open for the families. They were opening on Monday. That order jumped ahead of the friends-and-family line. I made twelve masks with a pocket for a replaceable filter (coffee filter or paper towel) for her teachers.

Who was next? My nephew Zach, who works in a grocery store? My nieces, Arianna and Sofia, who are going to the store for their parents? My sister Laura, who is a doctor and lives with her son Ari in Ashland, Oregon?

Laura Robin, Ari Bandoroff and Scott Bandoroff wearing Jeanne Robin's masks
Laura Robin, Ari Bandoroff and Scott Bandoroff

My friends who are nurses, my friends with auto immune diseases, my elderly friends at the nursing homes where my mom lived, or my friend who just finished her chemo? Now I had to order more materials and figure out how to pack and send. I tried to order more but it seemed the whole world was making these. Everything was back-ordered.

So I ordered a few different secondary materials and hoped that something would arrive. The fabric I bought at the fabric store or craft store had to be ordered and picked up curbside a day or two later. There is presently a limit of two yards of interfacing per customer. I’ve done all my shopping trips in my slippers with the dog in the car.

Making the first batches took a while to figure out. People were texting and calling out of the woodwork: “Can I get a mask? I really need one!”

Masks made by Jeanne Robin in a plastic case

I can’t believe I had to say, “I have 120 orders in front of you. Can you tell me why you need one so badly?”

“I work for the Oregon Health Authority and I’m an epidemiologist.”

I felt like a drug dealer. “Okay… I’ll put it in the basket on the porch. Come by tonight. Just leave the money in the can.” I’ve never had so many people come to my house!

My friend who makes the gorgeous Jewish shawls called tallitot told me she was making masks and was looking for tips. I told her about my assembly line and she climbed on board. Now we’re both cranking out awesome masks.

I’ve finished all of the family and friend masks at this point. I am using Stamps.com so I do not need to go into a post office and can just drop them into the drive thru mailboxes. I left one for my mail carrier. I gave a few to my elderly friends via social distancing — I had to call the front desk of the retirement community and someone came to my car and collected them. I sent some to a nurse.

Jeanne Robin's

I could not have imagined how much getting a good mask means to the people who receive them. You would have thought I gave them a pot of gold. It gives them, and me, great comfort. People tell me that when wearing the mask, if they happen to brush within six feet of someone in a store they don’t feel panicky. When they told me the masks are comfortable but a little hard to tie, I discovered spring loaded closures. That way they don’t need to be tied or retied. I keep sewing faster and better and making modifications. 

I also belong to a group of crafters who are doing projects for good. The call went out for all the sewers to make masks for the retirement community where my mom lived. They asked for 900 masks. There are also calls for gowns and other PPE. Donated fabric is on the porch of the woman who leads both these groups. I have finished 150 masks. I created a site with limited merchandise on Etsy(KiBitz) to sell to friends of friends and anyone who comes across it. Right now I do not want a lot of Etsy orders.

Now that my friends and family feel a little more secure, I want to focus on making masks to give away. They’ll go to Cedar Sinai Park, the hospital, the delivery folks and other people who are doing the work in the world. They need all the thoughtfulness and comfort we have to offer. Seeing where this pandemic brings us, I may expand what I offer on Etsy, but the next few weeks will focus on donations until more commercial PPE is available to those who need it.

Mask Lady Hustles To Fill Orders

Gabrielle Carson sat up in bed one March morning, shortly after New York Governor Andrew Cuomo’s “Pause” order, and said, “I’m going to make masks.” She, like many other New Yorkers, had closed her business to comply with social distancing. Her shop sells made-to-order party clothing of her own design. 

Gabrielle Carlson Studio

She realized she could mobilize the team of freelance people who sew for her regularly, provide them employment and also help healthcare workers. Gab, as her friends call her, reached out to political contacts and offered to make the N-95 masks that healthcare workers need to treat Covid-19 patients. But she couldn’t break through the bureaucracy.

Undaunted, she thought, “Why don’t we just make regular masks? Maybe people will wear cotton masks and leave the surgical masks for our healthcare workers.”

So she called suppliers. She started with a notions store, Daytona Trim, in New York’s garment district. The owner, a man she knows only as Abraham, said he could supply the elastic. “He’s the nicest guy. He told me to come on a day when everyone who needed elastic for masks would come. But he would leave everything outside.”

Then Gab went online looking for cotton. She settled on Japanese cotton from B&J Fabrics, which specializes in sustainable fabrics. She ordered it and they too told her they would leave it outside of their door on Seventh Avenue.

But then she had a problem. Before she could cut the fabric, she wanted to wash it. “All the laundromats are closed. I began calling friends asking if I could come over to use their washing machines, or the washing machines in their buildings.” Several agreed and with the cotton washed, she was ready to make the pattern and cut the pieces to give the people who sew for her.

“All of my contractors are either Chinese or French and they have been working with me for many, many years,” she said. “But everyone seemed to have a problem that made it impossible for them to do the work.”  So she began calling people who knew people. “I called a factory owner in midtown and he persuaded women to come in and work. But then he closed the factory and the women took the work home.”

Her approach changed. If she couldn’t find a central location, she’d go to the people who do the work. Now, she said, “We cut the pieces in the studio and then I have to deliver them to the women doing the sewing and later pick them up.” She laughed as she told me the story, talking on her cell phone as she headed to pick up a bundle of freshly made masks on the Lower East Side. 

“We have 100 washable masks coming in every other day,” she said, sounding amazed. “But we need that number coming in each day. Suddenly, I became the mask lady.” When she started out, she hadn’t realized that the masks would catch on like they have.  She sent an email with a photo to her clients.

order form for Gabriel Carlson masks

 

The orders started coming in immediately. “Some people order twenty, some order one. I’ll ship two for a couple and then they order for the lady next door. One lady bought 500 for everyone in her company.”

While President Trump won’t wear a mask, and said the federal government is not a “shipping clerk,” Gabrielle Carlson wears a mask and acts as her own shipping clerk.

“I placed 85 packages on the counter at the post office and the lady said, ‘What’s this?’ I said masks and she smiled and started to process them.” This new business has made her acutely aware of how kind and resilient people can be. “I’m grateful for those who are willing to work, cut and sew. We’re seeing extraordinary humanity.”

You can order at GabrielleCarlsonFaceMasks.

 

 

 

Infrastructure Post Pandemic

 

by Nick Taylor

First it was $2 trillion in “stimulus” as business dried up and jobs disappeared with social distancing.  Now there’s talk of more trillions being shoveled into infrastructure.  Wherever the coronavirus crisis takes us, it’s clear that the infrastructure we invest in anticipates as best we can whatever the new normal proves to be.  And some of it we can do some of it now while we are social distancing.

FDR’s New Deal jobs programs didn’t end the Great Depression of the 1930s.  World War II did that.  But those programs and what they built moved America from the 19th into the 20th century.

New and refurbished roads and bridges were only part of it.  Hundreds of airports ushered in the age of commercial aviation.  Dams harnessed water power that brought electricity to vast portions of the rural south and west.  Water and sewer systems replaced hand pumps and outhouses.  New hospitals put more people within reach of medical care.  Students learned better in new and rebuilt schools.  Local, state and national parks welcomed families to enjoy leisure as they never had before.

And the roads and bridges weren’t just make-work.  They sped workers to jobs, farmers to markets, and trucked goods to consumers.

When the war ended and citizens finally could take stock of their new country, they learned the infrastructure programs that had given work to the Depression’s jobless had accomplished much more.  A people that traveled more, placed more stock in education and health, and had more leisure to enjoy now had a country that allowed those things.

The infrastructure we need now should move us fully into the 21st century. 

My wife Barbara now teaches her journalism and video reporting classes at CCNY virtually, using Zoom.  Quarantine cocktail parties are big on Zoom, too.  Late night hosts using Webex and Skype for guest interviews from their basements.  Social distancing will be with us for a while, and we’ll continue to connect virtually even when it’s over.  

Extending broadband coverage into every corner of the country is one of the infrastructure investments we must make.  An internet connection today is like electricity a century ago, and there’s no excuse for everyone not having it.  

The post-pandemic world will need more access to health care.  Astronomic unemployment from the shutdown is throwing millions off their health insurance.  If jobs don’t come back soon the population on Medicaid will soar. People will need to find preventive and corrective health care.  They’ll need community health centers they can walk into without having to drive miles to reach.  This is infrastructure that will keep people at work as the economy tries to recover from a body blow the likes of which we’ve never seen.

Some of our infrastructure investment must shore up defenses where we are vulnerable: our electric grid, our largely online financial world, our voting systems, our social media that can be manipulated to turn Americans against one another.  Attacks in these sectors will only ramp up as we emerge to a new version of normal.

Much physical infrastructure work can’t be done under social distancing rules designed to stop coronavirus spreading.  The work that can be done, should be.  Meanwhile, the work on our virtual infrastructure needs that can be done at computer keyboards should go forward.  We want an infrastructure that fits our new world when the crisis lifts and we can emerge into that world.

For more on the New Deal and the jobs program read my book American-Made.

 

Coronavirus Caught Up With Our New Zealand Trip

 Our friends Mike and Donna Ambrose from Savannah were on a wine tour in New Zealand when the coronavirus started shutting down travel all over the globe. This is Mike’s story about their tour and trip home to an altered world.

by Michael Ambrose

We had been looking forward to this trip for over a year. We started out in Sydney, Australia, for two days and then flew to New Zealand for sixteen days of wine tasting and touring the amazing countryside. Our guides Per and Britt Karlsson own BKWine Tours.  We traveled the wine regions of South Africa with them in 2018 and Argentina and Chile the year before. 

We loved this trip, but it ended far differently than we expected. The coronavirus stalked us throughout our entire visit, and finally caught up with us one day before our journey ended. But first, the good parts.

 Donna and Mike Ambrose Traveling
Donna and Mike Ambrose vacationing in New Zealand.

Sydney was our first stop. It is a beautiful, exciting city. We toured the  spectacular Opera House.

Sydney Opera House facing the water
Sydney Opera House, Photo by Mark Yang. Public Domain.

And we visited both the Zoo and Aquarium. The restaurants along the harbors served excellent food and very good wines. We saw news that infections of COVID-19 were increasing around the globe, but at the time, there were very few cases in either Australia or New Zealand.

When we flew out of Sydney to Auckland, the city was operating normally. But one day later, Tom Hanks reported that he and his wife, Rita Wilson, had both contracted the virus. She thought she’d been exposed while performing at the Sidney Opera House twenty-four hours after our visit to the site. The next day, Australia began shutting down, limiting incoming visitors.

Auckland, New Zealand Skyline
Auckland, New Zealand, Photo by Holgi. Courtesy Pixabay.

Meanwhile, our tour of New Zealand started in Auckland. For sixteen days we traveled south, more than one thousand miles to Queenstown on New Zealand’s South Island. Six of our group of twenty-four were from the U.S. and the rest were Europeans. We took in beautiful sights including national parks and museums.

But the primary purpose of our trip was to visit wineries, and of course, taste wines. Our schedule included the Mondillo, Carrick, Arum and Gibbston Valley wineries. This area called Central Otago is known for Pinot Noir, Riesling, Pinot Grigio and some Gewurztraminer.  Harvest had begun and we tasted grapes right from the vines.

New Zealand grapes on the vine.
New Zealand grapes, Photo by Step2228. Courtesy Pixabay

The scenery in the area was breathtaking and every afternoon, we found ourselves lodging in beautiful, modern hotels. Life was good.

New Zealand thermal area
Rotorua Thermal Area, North Island of New Zealand. Photo by Michael Ambrose.
Mt. Cook, New Zealand
Mt. Cook, New Zealand’s South Island. Photo by Michael Ambrose.

When Donna and I turned on the TV, we heard the growing concern from country leaders all around the world. But it seemed remote. About a week into the trip the White House started urging Americans to return home as soon as possible. We decided to delay, especially after viewing the massive lines of Americans trying to find flights back to the US. Our return tickets were confirmed and we felt pretty safe.

In the second week of our New Zealand trip, our anxiety increased as several airlines started cancelling flights. Many of our friends on the trip were worried. Florinda, from a small town outside of Rome, was locked out of returning home when Italy shut the doors. As the week progressed, our friends from Paris and Sweden had their flights cancelled. Singapore joined Australia in shutting out incoming flights. Some airlines cancelled all of their flights.

We reached Queenstown with only three days left on our trip.

Queenstown New Zealand, Photo by Lawrence Murray. Creative Commons License
Queenstown, New Zealand. Photo by Lawrence Murray. Creative Commons License
Lake Wanaka Vines, New Zealand. Photo Courtesy Pixabay
Lake Wanaka Vines, New Zealand. Photo by TPSdave. Courtesy Pixabay.

Vineyards near Queenstown cluster near Lake Wanaka to the north and Central Otago to the northeast. We were headed to Central Otago for a tasting when Per and Britt got word the Rippon Winery had cancelled. Responding to the coronavirus, New Zealand’s government was restricting group sizes and there were too many of us. Back in Queenstown, we stopped at an Italian restaurant that told us they needed our names, current address and email. Later at the hotel, we joined friends in the bar for a drink and the bartender demanded the same information. This was our introduction to what we now know is called contact tracing, how epidemiologists track the spread of a pandemic.

The next morning, the Peregrine Winery cancelled our visit, but we were able to have lunch and two winery tastings. Back in town, the hotel called off our final night’s banquet. Walking the streets of the resort town, we found all of the restaurants closed. The only two eating establishments open were McDonalds and KFC. They were serving takeout only.

Sauvignon Blanc enjoyed with KFC
Carrick Sauvignon Blanc enjoyed with KFC in Queenstown. Photo by Michael Ambrose.

So instead of a farewell dinner with our friends, Donna and I dined in our room with a box of eight chicken wings, coleslaw, and a good bottle of Carrick Sauvignon Blanc from Central Otago. By the way, chicken and Sauvignon Blanc pair well together. To top off the evening, we were notified that our flight from Washington, D.C., to Savannah was cancelled. Meanwhile, our friends from Europe were stranded. They could not make connections.

Our hotel, the Millennium, then announced that it would close its doors on March 25th. It was the evening of March 23rd. What had been a mild worry suddenly took center stage. But late that night, I got notification that we had been rebooked to Newark and from there, we would fly to Savannah. Other couples were not so lucky. Some had booked flights to Sydney, but those were cancelled when it was discovered that they could stay in the airport no more than eight hours. If their connection was longer, they would have to stay in quarantine for fourteen days.

Queenstown streets emptied by coronavirus

On departure day, March 24th, we walked down into town. Streets that were packed with tourists two days earlier were utterly deserted. We wanted to get to the airport early for our late afternoon flight out, but  were told that passengers were not allowed into the terminal more than three hours before their departure, so we were unable to confirm our other flights: Queenstown to Auckland to Los Angeles to Newark to Savannah. It was a tense experience, but we were lucky. Six of our friends are still stranded in Auckland and will probably be there until mid-April.

We changed planes at a deserted LAX

Changing planes at LAX, we walked through an almost empty terminal. Our flight to Newark, on a plane that normally carries three hundred passengers, had fewer than fifty on board. Our flight to Savannah, on a plane that carries seventy-five, had only seven. We were never questioned in any way about our travel destinations, nor were we tested for fever or have blood samples taken. Because we had the mobile passport app on our phones, we were fast-tracked through customs and immigration.

We got home on March 25th and are glad to be here. We decided to self-quarantine for two weeks because we worry that traveling through so many airports might have exposed us, even though we wore gloves and masks.  And I think we will all be homebodies for a good while. The planet is not what it was sixty days ago. 

I hope this information helps you on your travel plans whenever they’re possible again. Best of luck to all of you.

Michael Ambrose is a wine expert and consultant who had a long career in the food and beverage industry.

Andrew Cuomo Offers Inspiration

 

Life seems bleak in New York. But there are a few bright spots. Pablo Valdez still bakes every day at Patisserie Claude on West Fourth Street. And New York Governor Andrew Cuomo serves as a beacon of light in the middle of denial and muddled action from the White House about the spread of the coronavirus. In his latest news conference, Cuomo offers inspiration. It may be what we intuit, but it’s worth hearing. 

Shortage of ICU Beds Across U.S.

Millions Of Older Americans Live In Counties With No ICU Beds As Pandemic Intensifies

 

More than half the counties in America have no intensive care beds (ICU), posing a particular danger for more than 7 million people who are age 60 and up ― older patients who face the highest risk of serious illness or death from the rapid spread of COVID-19, a Kaiser Health News data analysis shows.

Intensive care units have sophisticated equipment, such as bedside machines to monitor a patient’s heart rate and ventilators to help them breathe. Even in communities with ICU beds, the numbers vary wildly ― with some having just one bed available for thousands of senior residents, according to the analysis based on a review of data hospitals report each year to the federal government.

Consider the homes of two midsize cities: The Louisville area of Jefferson County, Kentucky, for instance, has one ICU bed for every 442 people age 60 or older, while in Santa Cruz, California, that number stands at one bed for every 2,601 residents.

Differences are vast within each state as well: San Francisco, with one bed for every 532 older residents, and Los Angeles, with 847 residents per bed, both have greater bed availability than does Santa Cruz.

Even counties that rank in the top 10% for ICU bed count still have as many as 450 older people potentially competing for each bed.

The KHN findings put in stark relief a wrenching challenge hospitals in many communities — both urban and rural ― could face during the coronavirus pandemic: deciding how to ration scarce resources.

“This is just another example of geography determining access to health care,” Arthur Caplan, a bioethics professor at NYU Langone Medical Center, said when told of KHN’s findings.

Overall, 18 million people live in counties that have hospitals but no ICU, about a quarter of them 60 or older, the analysis shows. Nearly 11 million more Americans reside in counties with no hospital, some 2.7 million of them seniors.

Dr. Karen Joynt Maddox, a professor at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, said that hospitals with larger numbers of ICU beds tend to cluster in higher-income areas where many patients have private health insurance.

“Hospital beds and ICU beds have cropped up where the economics can support them,” she said. “We lack capacity everywhere, but there are pretty big differences in terms of per capita resources.”

Doctors in rural counties are bracing for the possibility they may run out of critical care beds. Northern Light Sebasticook Valley Hospital, in central Maine, has one ventilator and 25 beds. Two of those are “special care” beds that don’t meet full requirements for intensive care but are reserved for the sickest people. Such patients are often transferred elsewhere, perhaps to the city of Bangor, by ambulance or helicopter.

But that may not be possible if COVID-19 surges across the state “because they’re going to be hit just as hard if not harder than we will be,” said Dr. Robert Schlager, chief medical officer at the hospital in rural Pittsfield. “Just like the nation, we probably don’t have enough, but we’re doing the best we can.”

Hospitals also say they can quickly devise plans to transfer cases they can’t handle to other facilities, though some patients may be too ill to risk the move.

Certainly, being in a county with few or no ICU beds may not be as dire as it seems if that county abuts another county with a more robust supply of such beds.

In Michigan, health planners have determined that rural counties with few ICU beds, such as Livingston and Ionia, in the central part of the state, would be served by major facilities in nearby Lansing or Detroit in a major crisis.

Dr. Peter Graham, executive medical director for Physicians Health Plan in Michigan, is affiliated with Sparrow Health System in Lansing. He is making no assumptions. It’s possible central Michigan could take overflow COVID-19 patients from Detroit if that’s where the disease clusters, he said. Or patients might have to be transferred hundreds of miles away.

“It’s just obvious people are going to need to move” if local facilities are overwhelmed, he said. “If we’re able to find a ventilator bed in Indianapolis, in Chicago or Minneapolis or wherever, it is go, get them there!”

Yet experts warn that even areas comparatively rich in ICU beds could be overwhelmed with patients struggling to breathe, a common symptom of seriously ill COVID-19 patients.

“No matter how you look at it, the numbers [of ICU beds] are too small,” said Dr. Atul Grover, executive vice president of the Association of American Medical Colleges. “It’s scary.”

Lenard Kaye, director of the University of Maine Center on Aging, a state with a large older population and relatively few ICU beds, agreed. “The implications are tremendous and very troubling,” he said. “Individuals are going to reach out for help in an emergency, and those beds may well not be available.”

Health workers might need to resort to “triaging and tough decisions,” Kaye said, “on who beds are allocated to.”

That concern isn’t lost on Linnea Olsen, 60, who has lung cancer and knows she is especially vulnerable to any respiratory virus.

Olsen worries about a potential shortage of ventilators and ICU beds, which could lead doctors to ration critical care. Given her fragile health, she fears she wouldn’t make the cut.

“I’m worried that cancer patients will be a low priority,” said Olsen, a mother of three adult children, who lives in Amesbury, Massachusetts.

Olsen, who was diagnosed with lung cancer almost 15 years ago, has survived far longer than most people with the disease. She is now being treated with an experimental medication — which has never been tested before in humans ― in an early-stage clinical trial. It’s her fourth early clinical trial.

“I’m no longer young, but I still would argue that my life is worthwhile, and my three kids certainly want to keep me around,” she said.

She said she has “fought like hell to stay alive” and worries she won’t be given a fighting chance to survive COVID-19.

“Those of us with lung cancer are among the most vulnerable,” Olsen said, “but instead of being viewed as someone to be protected, we will be viewed as expendable. A lost cause.”

The total number of ICU beds nationally varies, depending on which source is consulted and which beds are counted. Hospitals reported 75,000 ICU beds in their most recent annual financial reports to the government, but that excludes Veterans Affairs’ facilities.

The United States has about three times as many ICU beds per capita as Italy and 10 times as many as China, two countries ravaged by COVID-19, according to a new report from the Society of Critical Care Medicine. The supply of ventilators also exceeds other developed countries, another study found. But as with ICU beds, “there is wide variation [in ventilators available] across states,” the study found.

Many experts predict that demand may soon exceed the supply. Over a period of months, the country may need 1.9 million ICU beds — 20 times the current supply ― to treat COVID-19 patients, according to the American Hospital Association.

Dr. Tia Powell, who co-chaired a 2007 New York State Department of Health group that set guidelines for rationing scarce ventilators, said preventing wildfire-like spread of disease is critical to keeping sick patients from overcrowding hospitals.

“If it spreads slowly, you’re much less likely to run short of critical supplies,” she said. “If you need all of your ventilators right now, this week, that’s what makes trouble.”

Even slowing the pandemic does not guarantee hospitals can cope. While some hospitals are planning to treat patients with less serious illness in tents, it’s far more difficult to create intensive care units or even expand existing ones, said Dr. Greg Martin, president-elect of the Society of Critical Care Medicine, which represents intensive care doctors.

Martin said ventilators need to be hooked up to oxygen and gas lines to supply the appropriate mix of air patients need. To convert a standard hospital unit to an ICU, “you would literally need to tear down the wall and run the piping in,” he said.

Few areas — such as operating rooms, emergency department and units used for post-anesthesia care ― have the hookups needed, according to Martin.

Intensive care units also require specially trained doctors, nurses and respiratory therapists. While nurses in other areas of the hospital may care for six patients, ICU nurses typically focus on one or two, Martin said.

“Mechanical ventilation of a fragile patient is rather dangerous if provided by someone other than these trained ICU professionals, which is why mechanical ventilation is not typically done outside of the ICU,” the group said.

Bob Atlas, president and CEO of the Maryland Hospital Association, noted that hospitals and government officials have been discussing ways to boost staffing levels, such as calling on doctors with expired medical licenses, or those licensed to practice in other states, to treat patients in viral hot spots.

Also up for discussion: loosening rules for “scope of practice,” regulations that spell out the duties medical professionals are permitted based on their training.

Atlas and others said they hope steps hospitals have taken to free up beds, such as deferring nonessential surgery, will keep the system from collapsing.

“It’s not as if every Medicare beneficiary will need an ICU bed,” he said. He also said hospitals could wind up treating only the sickest patients.

Greg Burel, the former director of the Strategic National Stockpile, said he hoped that hospitals lacking ICU beds could quickly iron out transfer agreements to move critically ill patients.

“Let’s hope we don’t get there,” he said.

Novant Health Brunswick Medical Center, on North Carolina’s coast, ordered additional ventilators two months ago in case COVID-19 went global. It has six and expects four more, said Shelbourn Stevens, its president. But it has only five intensive care beds among its 74-bed total.

Drawing on decades of experience with emergency care after hurricanes, the hospital’s staff is decreasing elective-surgery cases and preparing to rapidly increase screening for the new coronavirus.

“I’m very comfortable with our plans right now,” Stevens said. “Disaster planning is in our bones, so to speak. Our team knows how to react.”

But the hospital’s critical-care capacity is limited. North Carolina’s Brunswick County, where it is located, has one bed for every 2,436 residents 60 and older. Such a population could overwhelm the facility in a COVID-19 surge.

If necessary, patients could be transferred to the larger New Hanover Regional Medical Center, a short helicopter ride away, in Wilmington, North Carolina, Stevens said. But with 57 intensive care beds, New Hanover County, which includes Wilmington, still ranks in the lower two-thirds of counties for ICU beds per senior residents.

If the pandemic becomes severe, no amount of critical-care beds will be enough, experts say.

“I liken it to sitting on a Gulf shore when a hurricane is offshore,” said Dr. Graham, from Michigan. “It’s a question of how soon and how hard.”KHN senior correspondent JoNel Aleccia contributed to this report.

METHODOLOGY

Kaiser Health News evaluated the capacity of intensive care unit (ICU) beds around the nation by first identifying the number of ICU beds each hospital reported in its most recent financial cost report, filed annually to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. KHN included beds reported in the categories of intensive care unit, surgical intensive care unit, coronary care unit and burn intensive care unit.

KHN then totaled the ICU beds per county and matched the data with county population figures from the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey. KHN focused on the number of people 60 and older in each county because older people are considered the most likely group to require hospitalization, given their increased frailty and existing health conditions compared with younger people.For each county, KHN calculated the number of people 60 and older for each ICU bed. KHN also calculated the percentage of county population who were 60 or older.

KHN’s ICU bed tally does not include Veterans Affairs hospitals, which are sure to play a role in treating coronavirus victims, because VA hospitals do not file cost reports. The total number of the nation’s ICU beds in the cost reports is less than the number identified by the American Hospital Association’s annual survey of hospital beds, which is the other authoritative resource on hospital characteristics. Experts attributed the discrepancies to different definitions of what qualifies as an ICU bed and other factors, and told KHN both sources were equally credible.

*This article is republished from Kaiser Health news. 

Chamber of Commerce Interests Oppose COVID-19 Order

by Nick Taylor

You’d think the the U.S. Chamber of Commerce would put itself on the side of the fight against COVID-19. But it doesn’t change its stripes. Even with the country facing a level of disaster unseen since the Great Depression, the Chamber of Commerce stands against an effective fight against the coronavirus. It sided with corporate over central decision-making about how to produce scarce protective gear and speed it to health workers where it’s needed most. It did the same kind of thing during the Great Depression when it opposed the creation of the Works Progress Administration (WPA).

This time around it let Washington and the White House know it opposes a government move to invoke the Defense Product Act (DPA). The Korean War-era law allows the government to order the production of wartime supplies. In this case, the supplies are gloves and masks, other protective coverings, and disinfecting wipes, the war is the war against coronavirus, and the troops are the nurses and doctors and intake workers on the front lines.  Every model of the path of the pandemic suggests the number of patients sickened by the virus will explode in the near weeks ahead, and the workers at most risk will need every protection they can get.  

New York City, California, and Washington State are seeing the most cases, and will have the greatest need.  But there’s no coordination of either the production of the needed equipment or delivering it to where it needs to be.

On March 20, 2020, a chamber news release said it supported a study of the need to invoke the DPA. Neil Bradley, Executive Vice President and Chief Policy officer of the chamber, said, “We have insufficient stockpiles of medical countermeasures and other critical products, but we must avoid domestic production mandates that could inadvertently reduce supplies of critical products in the short term. While the administration is working closely with industry to address immediate needs, we need a firmer analysis before proceeding with the reported domestic production executive order that could be counterproductive. Further, such moves could deprive vibrant U.S. companies of access to international markets and inputs in a way that could undermine economic recovery,” 

President Trump said he didn’t need to use the Defense Production Act because companies are already working with the government to make and deliver the medical supplies. The chamber told The New York Times that corporate executives were working “hand in glove” with the government.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo painted a more dire picture to Wolf Blitzer on CNN. He said, “They [the federal government] should take over the acquisition of all the medical supplies. You hear all day long about how people are running out of masks and PPE and protective gear, ventilators, et cetera. We now have a situation where every state on its own is trying to acquire these goods, and, Wolf, we’re actually competing against each other. So we find a mask manufacturer, I’m trying to contract with them, California’s trying to contract with them, Texas is trying to contract with them. Masks that we paid 85 cents for, we’re now paying $7. Okay? Why have all of these states competing against each other to buy the equipment and have hospitals saying, we’re going to close down if we don’t get the equipment? Let the federal government take over that responsibility. A situation like this, you do what you can and everyone does what they do best. Here, the federal government should say, ‘I’ll do all the acquisition, stop competing against each other,’ and then the federal government allocates that equipment, depending on need.”

During the Great Depression, the Chamber of Commerce also chose business over dramatic action in the crisis.  President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal administration had proposed the Works Progress Administration to put millions of unemployed Americans back to work and rebuild the national infrastructure.  Its jobs and pay would not compete with private industry.  But the chamber opposed creating the WPA, saying it would be cheaper to write checks to the unemployed than put them to work.

FDR didn’t listen.  The WPA’s investment gave the country new roads, bridges, airports and hospitals, and a workforce with the skills to meet the demands of World War II.  

Using the Defense Production Act today would be a similar investment, an investment in the brave souls working in the face of the enemy and in the health they need to keep the rest of us safe.

For more on central action in a crisis, read my book American-Made.

Book cover of American-Made by Nick Taylor