– City Forward Collective Executive Director Patricia Hoben says safe, in-person schooling in Milwaukee schools is possible, but admits that the availability of COVID-19 is insufficient.
City Forward Collective is an organization that targets inequalities in education. Hoben raised his thoughts on reopening schools at a Rotary Club of Milwaukee assembly held in user and virtually.
According to Hoben, the teacher-student dynamic provided through in-person coaching will be replicated in a virtual school environment. She said state and city reopening rules were sufficient to allow students to physically return to campuses, yet some Wisconsin schools are already facing roadblocks from COVID-19.
Brodhead High School in southern Wisconsin announced Monday a transfer from transient to virtual amid a COVID-19 outbreak.
“I don’t think there is enough evidence available,” Hoben said when asked if schools are available to involve imaginable outbreaks of COVID-19 among academics and staff.
Hoben touted an eight-page school reopening checklist that she said was based on reopening rules given to restaurants and bars. The checklist, Hoben said, includes a recommendation on checking for COVID-19, but schools are not required to check their academics and staff.
Read the full story on WisBusiness. com: https://www. wisbusiness. com/?p=1454909
– Good weather for the week ending Sept. 6 allowed manure to be spread and winter wheat sown as fields were cleared, according to the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service.
Sow winter wheat 22% complete, 19 days ahead of last year and two weeks ahead of average. The bean and sweet corn crops were coming to an end, and farmers continued to harvest corn for silage, which is 24% complete, 22 days before last year and nine days before last year. ahead of the average.
Daytime highs were more common in the 1970s, but did not increase in the 1960s in northern Wisconsin. Overnight lows fell into the upper 40s and 30s. Scattered thunderstorms brought in a small amount of moisture, soils remained unfavorably dry in some areas.
Corn and soybeans temporarily ripened due to drier weather and shorter days. Corn at the mass level or beyond 94%, more than 4 weeks before last year and 10 days before the five-year average. Bumpy corn 65%, 3 weeks ahead of last year and one week ahead of average; and situations rated 78% smart to correct statewide, 2% fewer age problems than last week.
Soy coloring 50%, two weeks earlier than last year and five days earlier than the average. 12% of soybeans dropped leaves, 12 days before last year and five days before average; and situations rated 81% from smart to excellent, one percentage point less than last week.
Harvested oats were complete at 97, more than a month ahead of last year and two weeks ahead of average.
The potato harvest is 40% complete, 10 days earlier than last year and one week earlier than average. Potatoes’ condition rated 93% smart to excellent, 4% more age-related issues than last week.
The third alfalfa cut was reported as 95% complete, 20 days before last year and 4 days before average. Farmers continued with the fourth hay cut, declaring 46% complete, 15 days earlier than last year and one day earlier than average. All hay situations were rated 72% smart to excellent, 2% fewer age issues than last week.
Pasture situations were rated as smart by 59% for the entire state, 3% less than last week’s age issues.
– Madison Region Economic Association President Paul Jadin is planning to retire.
A network leader search committee and the QTI are actively recruiting successors.
“It has been a great privilege to lead the Madison region through the Advance Now strategy for the past several years,” said Jadin. “Our region is now more competitive on the global economic scene and is in a position to welcome a new leader through the Advance Now 2. 0 strategy. “
Interested applicants can do so here: https://www. qtigroup. com/job-posting/president-and-chief-executive-officer/TC28024584
– Dr. John Raymond, president of the Wisconsin School of Medicine, said the seven-day average daily cases that arose from 678 on Aug. 31 to 880 was a “worrying trend. “
The state also broke a new record yesterday, recording 17. 6% of the tests as positive, bringing the seven-day average of the positive percentage to a record 11. 3%.
“Wisconsin has a marked backlog in new cases,” he said, highlighting the doubling of time in the state for cases, 44. 9 days, which may lead to 80,000 more cases through mid-October. The number of breeders in Wisconsin is 1. 2; which indicates how many other people a contagious user can infect before they show symptoms.
Wisconsin has reported 717 new ones after receiving 4,083 tests. The cumulative number of the state is 82,477, with 73,122 recovered.
People between the ages of 20 and 29 account for 25% of the reported COVID-19 cases in the state, or 20,707 cumulative cases after adding 1,788 cases shown in the last 8 days. It is followed by other people older than 30 to 39 years with 16%, with 13,394 cases, adding 868 cases since last Monday.
2% of young people aged 20 to 29 and 4% of those aged 30 to 39 were hospitalized. But the organization accounts for less than 1% of the state’s death toll, or 8 and 15 deaths, respectively. This is an accumulation of 3 deaths in the 30-39 year organization from last week.
By breaking down age teams differently, DHS knowledge shows that 18-24 year olds have 15,941 displayed cases, more than all other age teams. It also has an infection rate of 2. 7 consistent with 1,000 people. This is largely followed through the age organization from 25 to 34 with 15,315 cases shown.
“It appears that the higher business burden component is similar to the return of academics to college,” Raymond said at a briefing for the Metropolitan Milwaukee Trade Association. However, he said that all schools face the same burden from COVID-19.
This is a trend that fitness officials “should follow,” he said. While other young people tend to revel in few or no symptoms compared to older populations, interaction with friends, family, colleagues, and teachers can also lead to a secondary build-up in the number of other people possibly requiring hospitalization. Raymond predicted it would take place in “another month or so. “
– Raymond said he plans to “get any vaccine on the market first. “
He predicted Moderna or Pfizer would be the first to hit the market.
“American vaccine manufacturers make vaccines that are safe,” he said. “I don’t think there are serious pollution problems. “
The next vaccines do not use the live virus, so there would possibly be no problem with the chemicals used to inactivate the virus or incomplete inactivation of the virus itself, Raymond said. Vaccines use the injection of RNA or a small protein from the virus.
However, he said the accelerated schedule did not allow for exploration of the long-term side effects of the vaccines, as the subjects had only tried the vaccine for two to 3 months.
Last night, national reports published that a phase 3 testing an anti-coronavirus vaccine at dozens of sites across the country had been suspended due to an obvious serious-looking effect. The vaccine is being developed through AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford and the reaction reached a player in the UK.
– The state death toll from COVID-19 remains at 1,168, and the 1. 4% death rate continues to decline, for Raymond.
He attributes the decline in the death rate to new cases occurring in the younger population, the testing of group homes and workplaces, increased supportive care and prior testing.
Seniors ages 70-79 and 80-89 with cases shown in combination account for more than part of the state’s deaths, with 287 and 314 deaths, respectively. Aging teams have noted a backlog of five and 15 deaths in the past seven days.
Regarding the national death toll of around 190,000 deaths from COVID-19, Raymond said he is tracking the “excess mortality” of 250,000 for all reasons in the country. Deaths are predicted based on trends for the past five years; the “excess burden of death” is the extent to which America is on the right track.
Counties reporting deaths include: Milwaukee (502), Root (91), Waukesha (78), Kenosha (65), Brown (58), Dane (40), Walworth (32), Washington (29), Rock (28), Outagamie (21), Winnebago (21), Waupaca (21), 19), Grant (18), Ozaukee (18), Marathon (14), Fond du Lac (12), Sheboygan (9), Clark (8), Jefferson (7), Marinette (7), Sainte-Croix (7), Eau Claire (6), Pierce (6), Dodge (6), Forest (4) and Richland (4).
Adams, Barron, Door, Oconto, Sauk, Taylor and Wood counties each have 3 deaths.
The counties of Buffalo, Burnett, Calumet, Columbia, Green, Kewaunee, La Crosse, Langlade, Manitowoc, Monroe, Polk, Portage, Trempealeau and Waushara reported two deaths.
Ashland, Bayfield, Iron, Jackson, Juneau, Lincoln, Marquette, Oneida and Rusk counties report a death.
Click for more resources and updates on coronavirus: https://www. wispolitics. com/wisconsin-coronavirus-resources/
COVID-19 hospitalizations total 289, a decrease from last week, still above early July lows of about 240 patients, according to the Wisconsin Hospital Association’s Coronavirus Data Panel.
There are 91 intensive care COVID-19 patients, fewer patients than last week.
About 48% of all Wisconsin COVID-19 patients (138) are in southeastern Wisconsin. That’s a 10% drop for the week.
The agreement also reports 37 or fewer patients in the state’s six other public fitness regions. Wisconsin’s Fox Valley domain has seen an increase in hospitalizations during the week after about 20 patients.
7. 4% of known COVID-19 cases so far have resulted in hospitalization. This number has been declining frequently since the start of the pandemic, when 30% of patients were hospitalized. Raymond attributes this favorable trend to younger demographic teams contracting the virus, with more tests receiving prior care and more support than when the pandemic began.
Healthcare continues to account for about 8% of COVID-19 instances shown at 6,642 after adding 424 more instances in the past seven days, according to DHS.
Meanwhile, WHA knows that five hospitals have fewer than a seven-day supply of glasses, seven have a limited inventory of gowns, and six hospitals have limited paper medical masks, all up from last week.
See the WHA Hospital dashboard here: https://www. wha. org/Covid-19Update
MEILLEURES STORIES #
# As Instances of COVID-19 in UW-Madison, Republican Leaders Push for Big Ten Soccer
# UW sets, breaks coronavirus records over the weekend, forcing home stay
# Federal moratorium on evictions affects residential housing in Wisconsin
#LE SUBJECTS #
AGRIALIMENTARY SECTOR
– Beef and red meat exports recovered in July, but still below last year https://www. midwestfarmreport. com/2020/09/08/july-beef-and-red meat-export-rebound-yet -still-under -year- from /
BANK
– WaterStone Bank will open a branch at the former Bank Mutual https://www. bizjournals. com/milwaukee/news/2020/09/08/waterstone-bank-to-open-branch-in-former. html
– US banks report growing concern about home loans https://www. bizjournals. com/milwaukee/news/2020/09/08/us-banks-signal-mounting-concern-over-real-estate. html
# ECONOMY
– Little change, more certainty in the Milwaukee Metro hiring outlook as the fourth quarter approaches https://biztimes. com/little-change–more-certainty-in-metro-milwaukee- hiring-outlook- heading-into-q4 /
Education
– UW-Platteville will offer a hashish-like certificate http://www. wisconsinagconnection. com/story-state. php?Id=959&yr=2020
Environment
– A spawning success: the fish lift is helping to increase the number of lake sturgeons https://www. wpr. org/spawning-success-fish-elevator-helping–lake-sturgeon-numbers
FINANCIAL SERVICES
– New moment for Republican PPP stimulus proposal, Covid Responsibility Shield https://www. bizjournals. com/milwaukee/news/2020/09/08/moment-ppp-stimulus-covid-liability. html
– Sen. Tammy Co-Sponsor of the $ 10 Billion Save Our Stages Act https://www. bizjournals. com/milwaukee/news/2020/09/08/sen-tammy-baldwin-cosponsors-save-our-stages- act . html
HEALTH CARE
– Ascension St. Joseph Hospital opens a new OB emergency https://biztimes. com/ascension-st-joseph-hospital-opens-new-ob-emergency-/
#LEGAL
– You name the police force a Democratic critic https://apnews. com/733b8512c48462b5e3574105bc0187d3
Administration
– MMAC Advances Region of Choice Initiative to Increase Black and Hispanic Representation: ManpowerGroup Award https://www. bizjournals. com/milwaukee/news/2020/09/08/mmac-makes-progress -on- region-of- choice -initiative. html
Political
– The crusade in person can be harmful in a pandemic. Wisconsin politicians are looking for tactics to do it anyway. https://www. wpr. org/person-crusadeing-can-be-harmful-pandemic-wisconsin-politicians-are-locating-tactics-do-it-anyway
– With Chad Vader, even rebels can vote for https://madison. com/ct/news/local/with-chad-vaders–even-rebel-scum-can-vote-absentee absent / article_2d05d70a-01fb – 53fb-bb57-b3552fa5b645. html
– Work targets for bipartisan proposals on police and racial inequalities early next year https://www. wpr. org/task-force-aims-bipartisan-proposals-policing-racial-inequality -early-next-year
REAL ESTATE
– BMO tower tenants operating new excavations with a reduced number of workers https://biztimes. com/bmo-tower-tenants-operating-in-new-digs-with-reduced-worker-numbers/
RETAIL
– Some staffing corporations facing major adjustments as remote execution expands https://www. wpr. org/some-businesses-cater–staff-facing-big-adjustments -remote-work-grow
Tourism
– The Iron Horse Hotel Company, operating at partial speed, will reopen Ash for an indoor dinner on weekends https://www. bizjournals. com/milwaukee/news/2020/09/08/iron-horse-hotelArrayhtml
Transport
– The new bus line would serve Amazon. com’s Oak Creek facility and its 1,500 jobs https://www. bizjournals. com/milwaukee/news/2020/09/08/bus-line-would- serve -amazoncoms-oak-creek- site. html
– Are you looking to buy a used in the pandemic? All too. https://www. bizjournals. com/milwaukee/news/2020/09/08/looking-to-purchase-a-used–so-is-everyone-else. html
PRESS RELEASES
See those press releases and others:
http://wisbusiness. com/index. iml?Content=82
– AG Kaul Announces $ Million Multi-State Agreement With Honda
– Alliant Energy: Once a Leading Utility in Economic Development