Region’s County Officials Unite to Implore Residents: ‘Don’t Get Casual About COVID’

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Dutchess County, NY sent this bulletin at 11/19/2020 04:00 PM EST

Region’s County Officials Unite to Implore
Residents: ‘Don’t Get Casual About COVID’

County Leaders and Health Officials highlight dramatic increase in COVID-19 cases relating
to casual, social gatherings; urge vigilance and safety precautions during holiday season

Poughkeepsie, NY … A week prior to Thanksgiving and the start of the winter holiday season, leaders from Dutchess, Orange, Putnam and Ulster counties gathered virtually today to ask residents to remain vigilant in the coming weeks and curtail small social gatherings. Such parties or “hangouts,” even among friends and family members, have led to a recent increase in local COVID-19 cases, raising the Mid-Hudson region’s positivity rate, affecting the ability of schools and businesses to remain open and further stressing the region’s healthcare resources.

Dont Be Casual About COVIDMany residents assume COVID-19 cases are on the rise due to exposures at workplaces, schools and businesses. In recent weeks, however, the Mid-Hudson region has seen a surge in cases resulting from gatherings in casual settings such as homes, where many residents have become lax about adhering to proper safety guidelines – proper mask wearing, hand washing and social distancing – and one infected individual can expose many more. With the broad roll-out of a COVID-19 vaccine still months away, the region’s leaders implored residents to keep their gatherings small, preferably to immediate members of their household, and continue to follow COVID-19 safety guidelines whenever people are interacting with others beyond their immediate household.

Dutchess County Executive Marc Molinaro said, “With the holidays soon upon us, accompanied by the traditional get-togethers, we are at a critical moment in the COVID-19 pandemic. Each of us can keep our families, community and region safe. Keeping our gatherings small and putting get-togethers on pause are sacrifices we can make to protect our health and the health of those we love. We need to dig deep, summon the compassion and do our part to stay healthy.”

As of Wednesday, Nov. 18th, the most recent data available from New York State, the Mid-Hudson’s regional positivity rate was 4.6 percent, with a seven-day average of 3.8 percent.

In recent weeks, counties throughout the region have seen confirmed positive cases grow exponentially, largely attributable to individuals who were infected at a casual gathering presenting in the community and exposing those around them.

Orange County Executive Steven M. Neuhaus said in the past week, two COVID-19 deaths in his county were residents in their 20s, proving the virus can affect every individual differently, regardless of age or underlying condition.

“Thanksgiving and other holidays are usually a wonderful opportunity to get together with our loved ones, but we must remain vigilant against the spread of the virus as we continue to see an uptick in cases. Out of an abundance of caution, please avoid large family gatherings this Thanksgiving, and celebrate with those within your immediate household. Our future success in getting safely through this pandemic depends greatly on the precautions that you take today,” Orange County Executive Steven M. Neuhaus said.

The effects of COVID-19 exposure from social gatherings ripple through a community, impacting those exposed, their contacts, local schools where exposed individuals attend and businesses at which they work.

As they have since the start of the pandemic, leaders today again asked residents to stay home if they feel they have broad symptoms – such as fever, cough, sore throat or congestion, among others – as it’s better to remain home for a day or two only to find they don’t have COVID-19 and not expose others, as opposed to needing to quarantine for 14 days as the result of a confirmed positive case.

Putnam County’s Deputy County Executive Tom Feighery noted that Putnam saw a direct correlation between people ‘letting down their guard’ (not following safety measures in casual, social settings) and COVID-19 transmission in the six days following Halloween when positive case doubled in that county.

“We appreciate all of the essential workers, especially all the Health Departments for their efforts and hope the public will do their part,“ said Deputy County Executive Feighery.

COVID-19 cases stemming from casual gatherings have a ripple effect on counties’ contact-tracing efforts, by creating an increased workload for contact tracers, which slows down the entire tracing process for all infections. Leaders today asked residents who think they may have been exposed to COVID-19 to please reach out to possible contacts so they can get tested and begin the quarantine process.

Ulster County Executive Pat Ryan described a small Halloween party attended by just three families in late October. Four children who attended that small gathering were COVID-positive, unbeknownst to themselves or their families. Since then, 15 positive cases have been traced back to that casual get-together, impacting a local college, elementary school, middle school and high school, proving the wide impact of “living room spread.”

“We know that this is a make or break moment for us as a county and a community,” Ulster County Executive Pat Ryan said. “As we see our numbers increase to levels that we have not seen in months, we must remain proactive to blunt a much more significant second wave. We will be doing everything that we can to remind residents to continue to social distance, wear masks, and take all precautions necessary.”

County Executive Molinaro concluded, “We have been battling this pandemic for eight months, and we don’t want our best efforts to go to waste. COVID-19 remains a deadly disease, and we must not become complacent and casual in our efforts to fight it. Even when you gather among your immediate family, please wear a mask, wash your hands and remain at a safe distance. The pandemic doesn’t let up for the holidays – neither can we.”

Attention Residents of Beacon Housing Authority … It is that time of year again!

BHA is providing Holiday Cheer to all residents. Each household will receive the following flyer below. Should you choose to participate in the Holiday Event please complete the bottom portion of the flyer and return it to the office no later than November 30th, 2020. We look forward to hearing from all our residents.

BE SAFE AND BE KIND TO ONE ANOTHER, WE’RE ALL IN THIS TOGETHER!

An update from Beacon City Mayor Lee Kyriacou … Please review information below and share with friends and family.

This is Mayor Lee Kyriacou with a couple of Beacon updates.

  1. COVID Counts:  Dutchess County is seeing an overall increase in the number of active cases – now at 533 active COVID cases – which includes spikes in very specific locations.  Beacon had a specific location spike a while back at one of our residential care facilities.  That event is in the past, and Beacon’s number of active cases came back down to single digits, but is now up modestly to 26 active cases.  While still quite small compared to our Spring peak, we need to remain vigilant.  Please, continue social distancing and appropriate mask wearing.  Stay home if you feel ill and wash your hands frequently. 
  2. Governor’s Executive Order:  In light of rising COVID case counts, Governor Cuomo issued an Executive Order on November 12th that:
    • Gatherings:  Limits non-essential private residential gatherings to 10 people or fewer.
    • Bars & Restaurants:  Requires bars and restaurants to close in-person dining by 10 PM until 5 AM; curbside take-out/delivery can continue after 10 PM.  
    • Gyms & Fitness Centers:  Requires gyms to close in-person operations by 10 PM until 5 AM.
  3. Community Forums: The city will be hosting two additional virtual community forums on policing and public safety, the first one will be this Saturday at 10 am. We are looking to hear from new voices, to broaden the input we are receiving from the community.  To access the forums, please visit www.cityofbeacon.org.

I know it’s been hard on so many in Beacon, but please, continue to make responsible choices.  Thank you for all those volunteering to help others.  Keep it up.

Molinaro Hosts Latest Virtual Town Hall

County Executive discusses latest COVID-19 data; answers residents’ questions

Poughkeepsie, NY … Dutchess County Executive Marc Molinaro yesterday hosted his 45th online Town Hall Forum in eight months, providing residents with the most current updates about the COVID-19 pandemic and answering residents’ questions relating to COVID-19 and other topics.

An archive of all of County Executive Molinaro’s virtual discussions, including today’s event, is available on the Dutchess County Government YouTube page.

Among the highlights of today’s discussion:

• County Executive Molinaro updated residents on the most current data posted on the Dutchess County COVID-19 Community Impact Dashboard:

o 257,868 Tests completed
o 6,308 Confirmed cases
o 576 Active cases
o 32 Hospitalizations
o 176 Deaths
o 5,556 Recovered
o 7-day rolling avg. regional positivity rate 3.7% (Dutchess County’s 7-day rolling average was 2.5% as of Tuesday, Nov. 17th)

• Reiterating the message Dr. Anil Vaidian, the Commissioner of the County’s Department of Behavioral and Community Health (DBCH) from earlier this week, County Executive Molinaro reminded residents the majority of COVID-19 cases in Dutchess County are not from the high-profile clusters of recent weeks, such as at colleges or assisted-living facilities. Rather, he said, most local cases arise from:

o Community and socialization, such as small gatherings in residents’ homes;
o Households in which one member of the immediate family becomes ill and infects other family members; and
o Travel, including international travel.

More than eight months since the first confirmed case of COVID-19 was reported in Dutchess County, the County Executive implored residents today not to become complacent regarding Coronavirus – known colloquially as “pandemic fatigue” – and reminded them to continue proper hand-washing, mask-wearing and social distancing to stop the spread.

• With an increase of local COVID-19 cases, and in response to a rise in inquiries, Dr. Vaidian, DBCH Commissioner an infectious disease specialist, has begun providing twice-weekly video briefings about the COVID-19 pandemic for residents and media. His briefings, which are available on Dutchess County Government’s YouTube and Facebook pages, are released each Monday and Friday, and have each generated thousands of views.

• The Th!nk Dutchess Alliance for Business on Tuesday announced Amazon is considering locating a logistics center to in East Fishkill, following the alliance’s considerable efforts to lure the world’s largest online retailer to the former IBM West Campus. Though Amazon is considering several locations for its new site, Dutchess County remains the frontrunner for the company’s $135 million investment that will create up to 500 new jobs over the next three years.

Following the County Executive’s virtual town hall forum to discuss his 2021 Executive Budget on Thursday, Nov. 19th at 6 p.m., he will next host an online conversation with residents on Wednesday, Nov. 25th at 2 p.m.; both discussions will be available to watch on the County’s Facebook page. As with all of County Executive Molinaro’s online forums, American Sign Language and/or close-captioning are available.

Attention Residents of Beacon Housing Authority … Important information regarding NYS Health Plan Marketplace.

Please review the information below and share with your friends and family.

Revise la información a continuación y compártala con sus amigos y familiares.

Free Groceries in Beacon / Comestibles gratis en Beacon

“Dutchess Delivery Golden Living” – News for our Senior Citizen Community

DutchessDelivery The latest issue of Golden Living News for Seniors is now available! Note: the Office for the Aging is closed on Thursday, November 26th for Thanksgiving Day. Clients of our Home Delivered Meals program will receive their meals in advance of these holidays, and will also receive their Friday, November 27th meal in advance of Thanksgiving. The Office for the Aging is open for all other regular business on Friday, November 27th – but please contact us before visiting. In the interests of physical safety, much OFA business can be handled remotely while you stay safe at home. Topics include:  New York Medicaid Look-Back Changes Coming in 2021 Success in OFA’s First Try at Drive-In Bingo Tax-Aide Program Seeks Volunteers Other Aging News Online View or download this issue on DutchessNY.gov (.pdf) >>> www.dutchessNY.gov Visit us on FacebookVisit us on Twitterrss icon imageSign up for email updates          Update your subscriptions, modify your password or email address, or delete your account (including all subscriptions) at any time using your Subscriber Preferences Page. You will need to use your address to log in. If you have any questions or problems with the subscription service, please contact support@dutchessny.gov. This service is provided to you at no charge by Dutchess County, NY. DutchessDelivery footer image Dutchess County, NY · 22 Market Street · Poughkeepsie, NY 12601-3222 · (845) 486-2000 GovDelivery logo

Attention Residents of Beacon … Take part in virtual Community Forums … Stay informed and have your voices heard.

The City of Beacon will be holding Monthly Community Forums on Policing & Public Safety. Please review the information below and register to participate.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo talks about the rise in COVID-19 cases.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo talks about the rise in COVID-19 cases l GMA

JOB OPPORTUNITY with Community Home Care … Please review and share with family and friends.