What A Long Strange Trip It’s Been – Feb. & Mar. 2020 — Morocco

What A Long Strange Trip It’s Been – Feb. & Mar. 2020 — Morocco

I left home for Madrid, Spain on 28 Jan. 2020.  I picked Nancy up at the Casablanca International Airport, Morocco on 22 Feb. 

I believe everyone is in agreement that our world has changed in the last two months.  For those traveling like us the change presented challenges, worries, options to discuss, fall back plans and decisions.

2 Feb 2020 an email I wrote: “I am not saying to do nothing but a student at AZ State U wants to cancel classes, etc. and more people died of measles, flu, car accidents, gun deaths, etc last year and no one thought this was a pandemic and the President and at least one Secretary told us this isn’t an issue.”   (My underline today not at the time of my email.)

The above is my reply to a short string of emails that I started.  I can’t say I wasn’t aware of the C19 virus within days of leaving home.  I will say it wasn’t for another month before I began to think the virus might not only impact our travels but the lives of friends and family.

Dec. 31 China confirms existence of a new virus.

Jan. 20 first reported case in U.S.

Jan. 22 China shuts down Wuhan

Jan. 22 trump: “We have it totally under control.  It’s one person coming in from China.”

I arrived in Madrid, picked up the 4Runner and drove northwest towards Segovia, Avilla, Salamanca, and the tiny village of Santa Cruz located in the Sierra de la Culebra.  I left Santa Cruz for a night and morning in Ciudad Rodrigo before driving onto Toledo.  Toledo to Marbella for new tires and hi-lift jack for the 4Runner.  Broke the 4Runner’s new tires in with a short drive to a ferry from Spain to Morocco on 10 Feb.After new tires and hi lift jack were installed on the 4Runner I took a 10 Feb. afternoon car ferry to Morocco.

And 33 days later Spain declared a state of emergency due to the C19 virus.  I left Spain and was unaware of any talk of the virus – 33 days later the country locks down!

On 22 Feb. I picked Nancy up at the Casablanca International Airport and we drove to Fez for a 4-day/5-night stay.  Our travel plans were based on us staying in Morocco and the Western Sahara until late April – experience maybe the first week of Ramadan.  Then take the ferry back to Spain for a month or more of spring wild flowers and birds.  We were planning on returning home sometime in mid May to early June. 

Feb. 23 Italy locks down – 50,000 cases.

Feb. 27 U.S. stock market crashes.

Feb. 29 First C19 death in U.S.

Mar. 10 Morocco records first C19 death.

We arrived in Marrakesh on the afternoon of 12 March.  This was the day of our C19 virus awakening and the possibility of not going home anytime soon.  We did the typical Moroccan check-in that includes a 30+ minute conversation with the owner.  This was when we heard Morocco had at least one confirmed virus death, people were buying and hoarding toilet paper just like in the U.S. and Europeans had been told to book flights for home by their Embassies. 

Our riad owner, not the U.S. government made us start to think the C19 virus was something we needed to investigate and understand.  We both spent the remainder of the day and the next morning on the Internet reading as much as we could digest about the C19 virus.  It quickly became apparent that the scientific and medical experts believed this was more than just a serious flu, it was a killer virus that has no medical cure and a vaccine is at minimum 12 to 18 months and maybe several years away from widespread distribution.

Mar. 11 trump holds an Oval office speech – we watched.  Stock market futures crash over 600 points during his talk.

Mar 12 trump: “If an American is coming back or anybody is coming back, we’re testing,  We have a tremendous testing setup where people coming in have to be tested … We’re not putting them on planes if it shows positive, but if they do come here, we’re quarantining.”

Mar. 13 Morocco suspends all flights & ferries to Spain, Italy, France & Algeria.

Mar. 13 I sent an email to several doctors and family: Do we stay or do we go?  Consensus replies was: stay.  It was felt things were worse in the U.S. than Morocco.

Mar. 14 Spain goes into lock down.

Mar. 14 Morocco adds 25 countries to its list of no flights but the U.S. isn’t on the list.

Mar. 14 I spent 6+ hours trying to find a flight out of Morocco to anywhere – no luck.

Mar. 15 Morocco suspends all international flights.

Mar. 15 Watched videos of the complete unpreparness of our federal gov. and the resulting total chaos for returning Americans at U.S. airports – decided we had better chance of not catching C19 virus in Morocco than returning to a U.S. airport.

Mar. 15 Watched VP Pence’s live briefing on NPR – I felt we were hearing scientific/medical facts.

Everyday Nancy and I were spending several hours on the Internet and then discuss “Should we stay or Should we go” (Take off of Clash song in 1981 – thanks to cousin Rick on bringing this to my attention and yes I own the CD.)  It was always the last thing we discussed before going to sleep and the first thing we talked about in the morning.

We knew the C19 virus cases were rising exponentially in the U.S.  But the U.S. is home, family is there, and overall medical care for those with Medicare is good and yes we are in that group of privileged individuals with government provided Medicare.  Morocco has few cases, took action earlier than the U.S., has poor public health care but good private care hospitals but no one – family – to help us if both of us catch the C19 virus.

Mar. 15 Contacted U.S. Embassy by email and provided requested contact information for the two of us.

Mar. 16 Received auto response from Embassy telling us if we die call the emergency number and same if we go to jail – nothing about C19 virus or evacuation flights to U.S.

Mar. 16 Morocco shuts down all restaurants, tourist locations, etc.

We spent our day at our hotel but went out at 4:30 to get dinner and watched the city shut down from our outdoor restaurant table.  About 5:40 I told Nancy it was time to pay the bill and head home – the restaurant staff was moving chairs and tables into the building.

We decided that it would be safer for us somewhere other than Marrakesh.  I decided the safer place at least for the next week would be Taroudant.  Taroudant is 3.5 hrs south; only 80,000 people and I booked a room outside of town.

At this point in time I am beginning to think we won’t be able to travel home until June and maybe later.  No flights out of Morocco and only foreign government sponsored flights are allowed to land and pick-up their citizens.  I am reading the virus will peak in April/May in the U.S.  If the U.S. is to peak in April/May hopefully Morocco will peak earlier and be able to open its airports to at least a limited number of international flights by June.  Therefore we have sort of resigned ourselves to a long stay in Morocco.

Since it appeared we were going to be in Morocco for several more months I began looking for additional places with small populations and off the primary tourist path to visit and hunker down for days, weeks or months.

On our arrival we made the mistake of driving down this street.  Although later we were told Marrakesh was almost empty of tourist on the day of our arrival we did no more than three or four miles per hour due to foot traffic, horse carriages, bikes and taxis.

minute walk. 

Our bedroom and then there is the large bathroom, the larger sitting room and the covered porch which is two-thirds the size of the above three rooms combined.

18 Mar – Washington Post, Forbes, NBC, WSJ, NYT, etc. report on stranded Americans in Morocco, Peru, etc. and no help from the U.S. government in getting these Americans home.

An email by me on the morning of 19 Mar:

“Come to Morocco plenty of food and toilet paper.  Unfortunately no U.S. government in Morocco is helping U.S. citizens.

If you want to see the State Departments total disregard for helping U.S. citizens go to US Embassy Morocco and check out their twitter response and then read the replies (by American citizens).  I believe the last twitter message from Embassy was 30 hours ago; UK updates every hour and has been flying people home for at least the last three days.  Believe the U.S. ambassador was head of Automobile Association and doesn’t believe in climate change.  Arrived in Jan. and haven’t bother to check to see if he is still here.

We took a very nice drive for about 4.5 hours.  I touched an ATM and washed hands and took a gas receipt paper and washed hands. Sitting on our terrace and waiting for dinner in about three hours.

Stay healthy!”

During our drive we beat the rain home but the effects of the rain beat us the next day.

A second email by me on the morning of 19 Mar.: “Hiding out in Morocco. 

Will come home when flights are available or should the gov/US Embassy get its act together. Other countries flew or are flying citizens home and giving hourly updates. 

U S is recommending you try to fly to another country and at this time don’t think helping citizens fly home is necessary. Last BS embassy twitter is 30 hrs ago. DRAIN THE SWAMP, BABY!”

Nancy’s phone woke her up at 3:40 am. Friday 20 Mar.  It was an email from the State Department notifying Americans in Morocco that there would be five flights beginning at 9:30 Friday morning or less than six hours from the time of the message.  Nancy woke me up and I in a less than good humor got up and politely replied to the Embassy requesting two seats for the U.S. and providing all requested information on the two of us. I then notified family we were coming home.  Then back to bed for more sleep.

We got up early and packed.  I asked for our breakfast about 30 minutes earlier than our previously requested 9:00 am time.  We let the owner know we were leaving and would not be staying another night with them (or more).  Settled up our bill and tipped our English translator and more importantly very good cook.

We were out the gate by 10:00 am and that gave us five and half hours to make a three and half hour trip – as long as you don’t drive into a sinkhole.

I hit the hole with the front tire and said something like, “oh shit!”  The rear tire sank up to the axle. 

I opened the door and squeezed out of my seat to the ground, climbed up to the roof rack, open the storage box and threw down our shovel, then unlocked our traction boards and threw them down, climbed down and began digging. 

Nancy volunteered to walk back to our hotel to get help. 

The digging: the tire is in mud but less than a foot forward of the tire or back from the tire is dry almost concrete, rocky dirt.  I am thinking I may get the mud away from the tire but don’t think my collapsible shovel is strong enough to penetrate the dry rock hard dirt.  Don’t think I can create a ramp so as to place the traction boards under the wheel.  Keep digging, Tom.

In the next 15 minutes I made damn little progress in getting us out of the hole.  Nancy returned with the owner and his grounds man.  They spent the next 20 to 30 minutes trying to pull us out with the owner’s Land Rover.  No luck. 

The grounds man called for a tractor.  About 15 minutes later a small farm tractor showed up.  First try – nothing.  The grounds man and an on looker using someone’s pick and my shovel spent ten minutes digging and then the tractor tried a second time.  I was in 4-wheel drive, the tractor was pulling and slowly I began to move – Yes, we are on dry ground!!!

Before I can pay for all this help – everyone was gone.  Gone like in less than five minutes after I was out of the hole.  Not a single person ever put their hand out, they just helped.

We drove back to the hotel.  Dropped the grounds man off.  But he wouldn’t let us leave until he has washed the mud off the 4Runner and cleaned our floor mats.  I gave him money and asked him to spread it around to those who helped us.  As is the custom in Morocco he refused the money but I told him the money was a gift for their generosity in helping us not a payment.

Out the gate and on our way again.  Drove a little faster than the speed limit for the first hour.  Then for the next two-hour we were on a 4-lane divided highway with a posted speed limit of 120 km/72 mph and I averaged a little more than 80.

We arrived at the airport and drove into the parking lot.  Grabbed our bags, locked the 4Runner and began walking toward a very empty airport entrance.

I will state the Embassy people at the airport had everything in a very organized setup.  First table you provide your name and they find you on a computer.  They give you a promissory note to fill out and provided a pen.  You fill out the form and drop your pen into a box – the pens are not reused.  Next table an official checks your paperwork.  This official then points you to the line to stand in for issuance of your ticket.  We were a little surprised that we were flying British Airways rather than a U.S. carrier.  Took us less than ten minutes in line before we were in front of a ticketing agent checked our bags and had our tickets handed to us.  This was a very efficient ticketing process.

Our gate is A2 – middle far left in photograph.  As you can see in the photograph not a lot of people at our gate and the other gates are not in use.

Our flight left about an hour late.  I am guessing the flight was 60% or less full.  We talked with one of the stewardesses for 45 minutes or more before and during the flight.  She told us she was given only a couple of hours from notification at home to takeoff of the flight.  There were almost no provisions on the plane – one water and one bag of nuts per person.

We landed and deboarded.  We were met by a British Airway representative who passed out vouchers for a bus ride from and back to the airport.  Took maybe three minutes to go through passport control.  Five minutes to pickup our bags and then it was out the terminal doors to our bus.  Less than ten minutes later our bus was on its way – and you were lucky if no one was less than three feet away from you.  I will say it was a happy crowded bus and no one was complaining.

We arrived at a Radisson hotel.  Stood in a line for a couple of minutes where everybody kept several steps away from the nearest person to them and then received our room number and entry card plus our dinner and breakfast vouchers.

Before we left our table for the dinner buffet I made a quick stop at the bar for two gin martinis up.  We definitely are no longer in Morocco – (1) a bar is available and (2) the price of the martinis was about one sixth of our daily budget in Morocco.  But after our day even a high priced martini didn’t bring our moods down.

I woke up the next morning and checked on our flight.  Our flight was on British Airway not a U.S. carrier and to leave at 3:30 pm.  We did breakfast and about 11:00 am caught the bus to the airport.

We stood in a very short line to check in.  The British Airway agent asked for my name and I gave it to her.  “Sir you don’t appear in our reservation system.”  A couple of minutes later she finds William Allin which should have been Thomas William Allin.  Five minutes later she has the name corrected and issues my ticket.

“Sir, your wife’s name.”  Nancy answers with Nancy Melissa Key.  “Hmm, I don’t see that name”.  Five minutes later, “Sir do you have your ticket subs from yesterday’s flight?”  I have no reason why but for one of the few times in my life if ever I say yes and hand our ticket stubs to her.  Long story short, the agent spent 20+ minutes on the phone to someone and never let them hang up until she had printed a ticket for Nancy and handed it to her.

Our flight to Dallas was uneventful – just like I want every flight to be.  Shortly after we boarded we were given a form to fill out and told to present it to some unknown person when we land.  Deboarding was slow – they allowed 15 people at a time to get off.  The person who collects our forms tells everyone we have been given the wrong forms, hands us new forms and we fill them out by using the jet way wall as a writing surface.

Once inside the terminal our forms are collected and we are told we are being requested to self-quarantine for 14 days – that’s it.  No temperature taken and of course no test since the government still doesn’t have enough test for hospitals much less airports.

We pass through Pass Port control and into the United States.  We were home.

Again, I must say as little help as the U.S. government and our State Department provided us the Embassy staff at the Marrakesh airport was very professional and friendly.

I can’t think of a time when it’s more important that factual information is provided from the President of your country than a worldwide pandemic or war.  Individual citizens have to make decisions based on this information.  If we had been provided factual information maybe we would have (or could have) left Morocco before Morocco shut down all international flights.  Maybe we would have and maybe we wouldn’t have caught a flight out but I never had the opportunity to make this decision because of misinformation or no information.

I also want to state that even thought this pandemic virus is a complicated issue I felt the scientific and medical community provided easy to understand and straightforward information.  My error was in not reading the scientific and medical information back in Feb. rather than waiting until early to mid March.

This debacle has been eye opener for me.  I have always felt that our U.S. Passport provided a certain security other countries couldn’t provide their citizens and the backing of the U.S. government.  I now know this is no longer a fact.  Our Embassy diplomatic staffs no longer are able to provide timely information or assistance as quickly as other countries’ embassies.

We aren’t going to stop traveling but I now know I must rely on ourselves in times of trouble. 

I hope everyone will get out and see the world.  It’s a wonderful place to explore.

Tom Allin

CORONAVIRUS INFO PROVIDED BY DR. JIM HARRIS – 4/15/2020

April 15, 2020

MARSHALL: [Marshall News Messenger] No new cases reported for Harrison County; cases identified at Heritage House Senior nursing facility

[Marshall News Messenger] Christus Health begins testing to determine if people had COVID-19, have antibodies to fight virus 

Lesson From Singapore: Why We May Need to Think Bigger

This article is worth a careful read. Basically, Singapore, a small city-state capable of tight monitoring (testing and contacts and cell phones), has had a “relapse” and have now had to shut things down tightly. They have gone from the most envied to just another country struggling and trying to figure out what to do and how to do it while remembering:

“All this sounds expensive. But consider that the cost of a shutdown is trillions of dollars. We clearly don’t want to do this again… if it costs a couple of hundred billion to avoid it, that may still be a relatively low price to pay.”

The letters to the editor are also interesting, some helpful. The bottom line is that we are not well enough to leave home yet.

Fort Worth: FWISD board votes to buy thousands of computers, hot spots for students learning at home

The purchase of 3,000 Chromebooks and 6,000 hot spots will cost nearly $2.5 million. Other school districts are making similar purchases.

Longview: There were no new cases of COVID-19 reported in Gregg County on Tuesday, according to Gregg County Health Administrator A.J. Harris. The case count remains 47.

New England Journal of Medicine.ICELAND STUDY:

Spread of SARS-CoV-2 in the Icelandic Population

Part of the study involved screening the population: “Although we asked participants who had respiratory symptoms that they described as more than mild not to participate in population screening, close to half the participants reported symptoms, most commonly rhinorrhea and coughing.….. Notably, 43% of the participants who tested positive reported having no symptoms, although symptoms almost certainly developed later in some of them….. Young children and females were less likely to test positive for SARS-CoV-2 than adolescents or adults and males. Whether the lower incidence of positive results in these two groups resulted from less exposure to the virus or from biologic resistance is not known. In other studies, investigators have found that infected children and females were less likely to have severe disease than adults and males, respectively.

My Comment: The Iceland studies will be exceedingly important as they progress. The population is contained and can be controlled. Travel can be limited. Their physicians and researchers are doing some elegant genetic studies of their population which may reveal genetic variations in susceptibility to this virus. Perhaps more importantly, they can rapidly and seemingly accurately detect genetic differences in the infecting viruses. The virus’ genetic patterns differ depending on the area a patient visited and became infected. Multiple mutations in the viruses are noted frequently.

The virus’s genetic sequences and mutations might have significant importance in the development of functional vaccines. I do not pretend to understand modern virology or genetics, but I will attempt to” translate” what I can. JH

Drug Evaluation during the Covid-19 Pandemic

A readable explanation of how to scientifically perform and evaluate drug studies and medication treatments for our current epidemic and for the future:

Excerpts: During a pandemic that is causing morbidity and mortality to grow exponentially, there is an understandable temptation to make unproven therapies widely available and not wait for rigorous clinical trial data. However, well-conducted randomized, controlled trials in these acutely ill patients can actually be carried out quite rapidly. Thousands of new patients with Covid-19 present for care each day and many can be (and are) quickly enrolled in pragmatic clinical trials. The most relevant clinical outcomes for evaluating these drugs — including death, hospitalization, number of days spent in intensive care, and need for a ventilator — are readily assessed and available within days or weeks…… Rigorous premarketing evaluation of drugs’ safety and effectiveness in randomized, controlled trials remains our primary tool for protecting the public from drugs that are ineffective, unsafe, or both. It is a false dichotomy to suggest that we must choose between rapid deployment of treatments and adequate scientific scrutiny. For the Covid-19 pandemic and other pressing medical challenges, the health of individual patients and the public at large will be best served by remaining true to our time-tested approach to clinical trial evidence and drug evaluation, rather than cutting corners and resorting to appealing yet risky quick fixes. The pandemic will inevitably leave considerable morbidity, mortality, and loss in its wake. Damage to the country’s medication-assessment process — and the public’s respect for it — should not be part of its legacy….At least 25 drugs are under investigation for use in Covid-19, with 10 in active clinical trials. The first published major randomized, controlled trial of an antiviral drug combination (lopinavir–ritonavir) began enrolling patients in China just a week after the virus had been identified.5 Contrary to expectations, its results were negative, providing important clinical guidance…. From the Program On Regulation, Therapeutics, And Law (PORTAL), Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston.

MASKS FOR NY GROCERY SHOPPERS   ???

WHY ROLLING CORONAVIRUS PATIENTS ONTO THEIR STOMACHS IS SAVING LIVES

A good summary article sent by Dr. J. Vassar.

We actually did this in back in the dark ages at Parkland Memorial Hosp. and tried other positions if needed (postural drainage) along with physical therapy (chest clapping) if indicated. JHarris


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City of Marshall and Harrison County COVID-19 Second Amended Declaration of Local Disaster and Public Health Emergency

[Marshall, Texas, April 14, 2020]

In a joint effort, the City of Marshall under the direction of Mayor Terri Brown and Harrison County under the authority of County Judge Chad Sims have today, both issued a Second Amended Declaration of Local Disaster and Public Health Emergency Related to Communicable Disease to extend the timeframe to safeguard our community from the coronavirus (COVID-19).

Under these amended orders, residents of the City of Marshall and Harrison County are still permitted to perform essential duties for their families; including obtaining medical supplies, visiting a health care provider, obtaining supplies they need to work from home, grocery shopping, engaging in outdoor activities while maintaining social distancing, and to perform work defined as an essential service. Citizens at a high risk of illness from COVID-19 and people who are sick are urged to remain in their residence except to receive medical care.

As of 4:00 p.m. on Monday, April 13, 2020, the positive COVID-19 testing data includes:

Total Positive COVID-19 Cases in Harrison County             31*

City of Marshall Positive Cases                                                   24

Harrison County Positive Cases                                                  7

*The Overall Count includes two casualties.

Gender

Male – 12

Female – 19

Age 0-19 –  0

Age 20-39 – 9

Age 40-59 – 7

Age 60+ – 15

“We understand the increase in positive COVID 19 cases can be concerning to residents. A number of these positive cases were diagnosed as a result of previously reported positive case investigations.   We urge residents to continue to stay home to reduce your risk of exposure,” stated Jennifer Hancock, Director of the Marshall – Harrison County Health District.

[Marshall, Texas] In a joint effort, the City of Marshall under the direction of Mayor Terri Brown and Harrison County under the authority of County Judge Chad Sims have today, both issued a Second Amended Declaration of Local Disaster and Public Health Emergency Related to Communicable Disease to extend the timeframe to safeguard our community from the coronavirus (COVID-19).

Under these amended orders, residents of the City of Marshall and Harrison County are still permitted to perform essential duties for their families; including obtaining medical supplies, visiting a health care provider, obtaining supplies they need to work from home, grocery shopping, engaging in outdoor activities while maintaining social distancing, and to perform work defined as an essential service. Citizens at a high risk of illness from COVID-19 and people who are sick are urged to remain in their residence except to receive medical care.

As of 4:00 p.m. on Monday, April 13, 2020, the positive COVID-19 testing data includes:

Total Positive COVID-19 Cases in Harrison County                 31*

City of Marshall Positive Cases                                               24

Harrison County Positive Cases                                              7

*The Overall Count includes two casualties.

Gender Male – 12 Female – 19Age 0-19 –  0 Age 20-39 – 9 Age 40-59 – 7 Age 60+ – 15

“We understand the increase in positive COVID 19 cases can be concerning to residents. A number of these positive cases were diagnosed as a result of previously reported positive case investigations.   We urge residents to continue to stay home to reduce your risk of exposure,” stated Jennifer Hancock, Director of the Marshall – Harrison County Health District. 

On Thursday, April 9, 2020, the City of Marshall City Commission approved an Ordinance consenting to the Amended Declaration of Local Disaster Proclaimed for the City of Marshall by the Mayor on March 31, 2020, and any Matters Incidental or Related to said Declaration.

On March 13, 2020, the City of Marshall suspended all events in city facilities and parks beginning March 16, 2020, and lasting until April 15, 2020. This safeguard included events at facilities, such as the Marshall Convention Center, Memorial City Hall, Marshall City Arena, Marshall Visual Arts Center, Marshall Main Street downtown, Community Centers and all-league events in parks.

As a further action, the City of Marshall implemented further modified operations for city facilities to protect the health of our staff, citizens, and visitors on March 17, 2020. The departments included the Water Billing Department, Municipal Court, Marshall Public Library, Oaklawn Golf Course and all Marshall city playground equipment.

On March 31, 2020, Harrison County Judge Chad Sims and City of Marshall Mayor Terri Brown confirmed the third diagnosed case of the coronavirus (COVID-19) in Harrison County. In response, Judge Sims and Mayor Brown are both issued Mandatory Shelter in Place orders effective at 11:59 p.m. on March 31, 2020, until April 13, 2020, which has now been extended by today’s actions.

The City of Marshall Emergency Management Team will continue to meet with leaders from Harrison County, Marshall – Harrison County Health District, CHRISTUS Good Shepherd Health System – Marshall, and City of Marshall leaders to monitor this fluid situation on an ongoing basis and provide notices to residents.

In order to safeguard our community from more cases, citizens are urged to follow all orders by the Centers for Disease Control’s (CDC), Executive Orders by Governor Greg Abbott, Harrison County, and the City of Marshall Second Amended Declaration of Local Disaster and Public Health Emergency Related to Communicable Disease.

1.         Restrict physical contact and publicly used areas.

2.         Maintain Social Distancing with a safe distance of six (6’) feet between individuals.

3.         Every person in Texas shall avoid social gatherings in groups of 10 or more per Executive Order of Governor Abbott.

4.         Residents should not visit nursing homes, retirement, or long-term care facilities unless to provide critical assistance.

5.         In accordance with the CDC, people shall avoid eating or drinking at bars, restaurants, and food courts, or visiting gyms or massage parlors. Residents may still utilize drive-thru, pickup, or delivery options through the Executive Order.

6.         Regularly wash hands with warm soap and water for at least 20 seconds.

7.         Avoid touching eyes, nose, or mouth.

8.         If soap is not available, use at least a 60% alcohol-based hand sanitizer.

9.         Avoid close contact with people who are sick. All persons should remain in the home if one person in the home exhibits symptoms.

10.       An essential errand should be conducted by only one adult from the household. All other family members should remain sheltered at home.

11.       CDC recommends wearing a cloth face mask in public. The mask will fit snugly, be secured with ear loops, and be able to be laundered and machine dried often. A mask should not be placed on children under age 2, anyone who has trouble breathing, or unable to remove the mask without assistance. A mask with multiple layers of fabric should allow for breathing without restriction. The cloth face coverings recommended are not surgical masks or N-95 respirators as those critical supplies that must continue to be reserved for healthcare workers and first responders.

Total testing data will be released on Wednesday, April 15, 2020, by the Marshall – Harrison County Health District.

A thought on Easter morning

By George Smith

There are people in our society whom too few people think about, much less care about.

It is sad and even loathsome.

What have you done, will you do today and into the future to make a positive difference in some’s  life without expectations of some form of “prid pro pro”?

I haven’t thought of this in years but the memory hit me this morning.

Twenty-five years ago, I was the new publisher of the Las Cruces Sun-Times in New Mexico. In learning about the town, I was shocked to discover Dona Anna County had the highest per capita homeless population in the nation!

Why? It boiled down to three key factors: Good weather year-round (it only rained an average of 28 days a year); a benevolent population that were tolerant of those less fortunate than themselves; and, a benign city and county government that cared not if a disproportionate percent of the population slept in parks, parking lots fields or under bridges.

Every day driving my 5.6 miles to work,
from my isolated hacienda on a golf course, I saw numerous men, women and children panhandling by the roadside, at traffic lights, in parking lots of convenience stores.

One day, not out of a revelation of do-goodliness, but out of a focused business need — I wanted to increase circulation — I, and several of my managers, solicited and signed up more than 20 homeless people to sell newspapers in specific locations.

The deal was simple: Sell papers as independent contractors for 50 cents; the contractor kept a quarter. They all had to fill out contractor forms and were responsible for taxes. The deal was not catch-as-catch-can: in the contract, they acknowledged they were representatives of the paper and could be dismissed under certain conditions, moral and at the discretion of management. We bought the all collared shirts with the Sun-Times logo and told them to go forth, smile amd make money.

The paper’s circulation jumped 15 percent the first month of the experiment and I was a corporate hero.
But not in Las Cruces.

I was summoned to a meeting in the mayor’s office and lambasted for  causing a nuisance by selling newspapers around town, “causing problems at traffic lights” and other areas.

I pointed out the homeless that had been panhandling at traffic lights were now employed and offering a service.
And, they were earning more money to spend in local businesses.

They put me on double-naught secret probation but let me continue the program. Within a year, several of those homeless hawkers were full-time employees of the paper.

Point?

The only point is sometimes people need help. Maybe, just maybe, you can be an integral part of the solution to a problem.

Many of us have a little extra time to think in this era of social distancing. Use a little of the time to think what you can do help others…now and in the future.

Stay safe.


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Harrison County COVID-19 Update – 9 April 2020

[Marshall, Texas, April 9, 2020]

[Marshall, Texas] As our positive coronavirus (COVID-19) case numbers increase, the Emergency Management Team of Harrison County and the City of Marshall agree that the release of more detailed information will not risk violating the resident’s privacy.

The following data represents Harrison County COVID-19 Testing reported to Marshall Harrison County Health District as of 4/9/2020 at 4:00 p.m.

Total Positive COVID-19 Cases in Harrison County              12*

City of Marshall Positive Cases                                                   6

Harrison County Positive Cases                                                  6

*The Overall Count includes one fatality

Harrison County Total Demographics with Age Range

Male – 7

Female – 5         

00-19 – 0

21-39 – 4

40-59 – 5

60+ – 3

The Marshall – Harrison County Health District confirmed that case #9 was a resident of another county. This discrepancy verifies the challenge for our Health District to report testing and cases. Therefore, Harrison County’s positive test result remains at twelve as there have been no new cases reported on April 9, 2020.

In order to safeguard our community from new cases, citizens are urged to follow all orders by the Centers for Disease Control’s (CDC), Executive Orders by Governor Greg Abbott and the City of Marshall First Amended Declaration of Local Disaster and Public Health Emergency Related to Communicable Disease.

1.            Restrict physical contact and publicly used areas.

2.            Maintain Social Distancing with a safe distance of six (6’) feet between individuals.

3.            Every person in Texas shall avoid social gatherings in groups of 10 or more per Executive Order of Governor Abbott.

4.            Residents should not visit nursing homes, retirement, or long-term care facilities unless to provide critical assistance.

5.            In accordance with the CDC, people shall avoid eating or drinking at bars, restaurants, and food courts, or visiting gyms or massage parlors. Residents may still utilize drive-thru, pickup, or delivery options through the Executive Order.

6.            Regularly wash hands with warm soap and water for at least 20 seconds.

7.            Avoid touching eyes, nose, or mouth.

8.            If soap is not available, use at least a 60% alcohol-based hand sanitizer.

9.            Avoid close contact with people who are sick. All persons should remain in the home if one person in the home exhibits symptoms.

10.          An essential errand should be conducted by only one adult from the household. All other family members should remain sheltered at home.

11.          CDC recommends wearing a cloth face mask in public. The mask will fit snugly, be secured with ear loops, and be able to be laundered and machine dried often. A mask should not be placed on children under age 2, anyone who has trouble breathing, or unable to remove the mask without assistance. A mask with multiple layers of fabric should allow for breathing without restriction. The cloth face coverings recommended are not surgical masks or N-95 respirators as those critical supplies that must continue to be reserved for healthcare workers and first responders.


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Open letter to supporters of President Donald Trump

By George Smith

This is not a lecture missive, not an attempt to change your mind about supporting the president.


This is an honest attempt at starting a dialogue about why you support this president. I cannot understand how any thinking individual with an IQ in the double digits can legitimately claim that President 45 is the best president for the times, unless…you are a one-issue voter (anti-abortion, immigration, or are monied gentry with a political connection to the administration).


I want to learn, to understand what it is about Trump that deserves such unvarnished loyalty from his followers.
Here are some facts, based on research, reading, analysis and prayerful thought. I invite anyone to comment on these statements and give sources as to any erroneous material.

1. The president said, “No one could have predicted this (pandemic). In 2014 President Obama, in a future-looking speech during the Ebola scare, said another pandemic would be coming and said this in a speech to the United Nations: “And even as we meet the urgent threat of Ebola, it’s clear that our nations must do more to prevent, detect and respond to future biological threats – before they erupt into full-blown crises.” The next day he hosted  44 nations to advance “our global health security. And we will work with any country that shares that commitment.”

Additionally, in 2017, as the power of the presidency was being transferred, Trump’s team was given a briefing on pandemic responses created following the Ebola crisis.

Why does the president almost daily say a pandemic could not be expected? And, why does he say repeatedly that he accepts no responsibility for the government’s slow response to the pandemic. 

2. Why is President Trump pushing for an anti-malaria drug to be used on the coronavirus? He is not a doctor and has no medical training. Does it not concern you that the Trump Organization and key advisor Rudy Guiliani have stock in one of the biggest companies manufacturing this specific drug?

3. It is a fact this president lies with regularity, almost 17,000 lies told in tweets and speeches in less than 40 months. Any reasonable explanation from a supporter would appreciated.

And, finally:

4. The national debt will have increased by more than $5 trillion by the end of Trump’s first term, an increase of about 20 percent. This is  due to the tax cuts, which greatly benefited big corporations and the ultra-rich, the touted “military buildup” and the response to the pandemic.  What is fiscally “conservative” about this administration, a main plank in the a Republican Party platform?

Seriously, I encourage an open dialogue in these (and any other) points. I want to understand but have heard no hard “facts” from supporters other that “he does what he says and says what he means” and “he is a businessman, not a politician.” 


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Harrison County COVID-19 Testing Update

[Marshall, Texas, April 8, 2020]


[Marshall, Texas] The Emergency Management Team of Harrison County and the City of Marshall understand the need for information regarding the coronavirus (COVID-19) is vital to all of our residents. The Marshall Harrison County Health District strives to provide the most up-to-date information. However, we urge residents to please understand the reporting of this data is a significant challenge due to the number of facilities, agencies, and departments involved. Information on testing data published to the community is the best determination from the data available at the time of posting.

The following data represents Harrison County COVID-19 Testing reported to Marshall Harrison County Health District as of 4/7/2020 at 5:00 p.m.

Positive                 11

Negative              181

Pending               48

Total                      240

In order to safeguard our community from new cases, citizens are urged to follow all orders by the Centers for Disease Control’s (CDC), Executive Orders by Governor Greg Abbott and the City of Marshall First Amended Declaration of Local Disaster and Public Health Emergency Related to Communicable Disease.

1.            Restrict physical contact and publicly used areas.

2.            Maintain Social Distancing with a safe distance of six (6’) feet between individuals.

3.            Every person in Texas shall avoid social gatherings in groups of 10 or more per Executive Order of Governor Abbott.

4.            Residents should not visit nursing homes, retirement, or long-term care facilities unless to provide critical assistance.

5.            In accordance with the CDC, people shall avoid eating or drinking at bars, restaurants, and food courts, or visiting gyms or massage parlors. Residents may still utilize drive-thru, pickup, or delivery options through the Executive Order.

6.            Regularly wash hands with warm soap and water for at least 20 seconds.

7.            Avoid touching eyes, nose, or mouth.

8.            If soap is not available, use at least a 60% alcohol-based hand sanitizer.

9.            Avoid close contact with people who are sick. All persons should remain in the home if one person in the home exhibits symptoms.

10.          An essential errand should be conducted by only one adult from the household. All other family members should remain sheltered at home.

11.          CDC recommends wearing a cloth face mask in public. The mask will fit snugly, be secured with ear loops, and be able to be laundered and machine dried often. A mask should not be placed on children under age 2, anyone who has trouble breathing, or unable to remove the mask without assistance. A mask with multiple layers of fabric should allow for breathing without restriction. The cloth face coverings recommended are not surgical masks or N-95 respirators as those critical supplies that must continue to be reserved for healthcare workers and first responders.


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Coronavirus. COVID-19.

By George Smith

Coronavirus.  COVID-19.

I know some people who are not taking this pandemic seriously. They are flirting with disaster of the most personal kind.

BobJean and I are among the lucky ones. We live of County Road 31, off State Highway 73 in big-time rural Nevada County, Arkansas. 

Our house is at the end of a dirt road and at the end of a 220-yard lane. If you come to our house, you are looking for us or you are lost.

Our intent is to keep this highly infectious disease away from the house on Bedspring Ridge and stay healthy.

To achieve that end, we go to town only when we have to, wearing gloves and masks and wiping down everything we might touch outside our realm of isolation. 

We even wipe down the mail with Clorox wipes, UPS or FedEx packages, too, outside and contents. We used to save grocery sacks for friends; now, we dispose of them.   

Following the advice from a website, we have a “dirty” and “clean” side of our large countertop island. Groceries or other items brought in are put on the dirty side and unpacked; all items are washed and/or wiped down with sanitary wipes and placed on the “clean” side. After all items are put away, the entire counter is wiped down with Clorox wipes.

When I go check on my aunt and uncle, I wear gloves and touch nothing. I take them food occasionally and make sure the containers have been wiped down. 

Overkill? Who knows. But at our age —fast approaching 73 and 75—and with certain medical conditions, why take a chance?

Being a “semi-colon” people (you know, when you hit a semi-colon in a sentence…it means you ain’t done yet!) we have a ton of living to do. We have places to see, grandkids to hug and spoil, ideas to be explored and college students to inspire us to keep living and sharing. 

And, we have each other. After being separated for more than four decades — from being young and stupid (me) to finding each other again was like winning the lottery of life.

This time of our life is too good, to precious, to throw it away by being hard-headed or neglectful or forgetful.

Be smart. Stay safe. Stay healthy.

We are all valuable cargo and our time to live is…right now.


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Harrison County and City of Marshall Clarify Essential Businesses

[Marshall, Texas, April 1, 2020]

[Harrison County and Marshall, Texas] In response to inquiries from our community regarding the Shelter in Place Orders issued on March 31, 2020, Harrison County Judge Chad Sims and City of Marshall Mayor Terri Brown have defined essential vs. nonessential businesses and/or services in Harrison County, including the City of Marshall.

Essential Businesses / Services

Healthcare Operations

•             Hospitals, Clinics and Pharmacies

•             Veterinarians

Grocery Stores

•             Grocery Stores, Certified Farmers’ Markets, Farm and Produce Stands, and Supermarkets

•             Food Banks

•             Convenience Stores

•             Other establishments engaged in the retail sale of canned food, dry goods, fresh fruits and vegetables, pet supply, fresh meats, fish, and poultry, and any other household consumer products (such as cleaning and personal care products)

•             Liquor Stores

•             Some Retail: Stores that also sell groceries or sell supplies necessary for operation of essential businesses, working for home, or maintenance of residences. Example: electronics, appliances, health care products, office supplies.

Food Cultivation

•             Farming

•             Livestock

•             Fishing

Social Services

•             Businesses or non-profit organizations that provide food, shelter, and social services, and other necessities of life for economically disadvantaged or otherwise needy individuals

Media

•             Newspapers, Television. Radio, and Other Media Services

Vehicles

•             Gas Stations

•             Auto Sales

•             Auto Supply

•             Auto Repair

•             Car Wash & Mobile Detailing

Financial Institutions

•             Banks

•             Other Financial Institutions/Lending

Property Maintenance

•             Hardware Stores and Construction Supply Stores

•             HVAC Repairs, Plumbers, Electricians and Exterminators

•             Lawn Maintenance

•             Pool Service

•             Other service providers who provide services that are necessary to maintaining the safety, sanitation, and essential operation of residences, Essential Activities, and Essential Businesses

Mailing

•             Mailing Services, Shipping Services, and P.O. Boxes

Clothes Cleaning

•             Laundromats, Dry Cleaners, and Laundry Service Providers

Restaurants

•             Restaurants and other facilities that prepare and serve food, but only for delivery or carry out.

•             Schools and other entities that typically provide food services to students or members of the public may continue to do so under this Order on the condition that the food is provided to students or members of the public on a pick-up or take-away basis only.

•             Schools and other entities that provide food services under this exemption shall not permit the food to be eaten at the site where it is provided, or at any other gathering site.

E-Commerce

•             Businesses that ship or deliver groceries, food, goods or services directly to residences

Supplying Essential Business support

•             Businesses that supply other Essential Businesses with the support or supplies necessary to operate

•             Printers and Promotional Products

•             Hotels, motels and RV parks

Transportation

•             Airlines

•             Taxis

•             Other private transportation providers providing transportation services necessary for Essential Activities and other purposes expressly authorized in the Order

Care Facilities

•             Home-based care for seniors, adults, or children

•             Residential facilities and shelters for seniors, adults, and children

•             Childcare facilities providing services that enable employees exempted in this Order to work as permitted

Professional Services

•             Legal

•             Bail bonds

•             Accounting

•             Insurance

•             Real Estate Services, Architectural, Appraisal, Survey, and Title Services

Vital Infrastructure

•             Utilities

•             Telecommunications

•             Trash Collection and Disposal

•             Law Enforcement, Fire, EMS/Ambulance, Corrections, Dispatch

•             Animal Shelters

•             Governmental Employees who have not been specifically deemed non-essential and sent home by the government entity

Societal Maintenance

•             Janitorial and Maintenance Services

•             Funeral Industry

•             Defense Industry

•             Space and Technology Industry

•             Technology Support

•             Scientific Research

Religious Services with Social Distancing of 6’ between individuals and gatherings of no more than 10 people

•             Provided in Residences

•             Healthcare Operations

•             Funerals

•             Provided online while being broadcast from a religious facility

Non-Essential Businesses Prohibited from Operation

All businesses not specifically listed as essential above are considered non-essential and are to be closed at all times. A partial list is shown below:

Personal Hygiene

•             Hair Salons and Barber Shops

•             Nail Salons and Spas

•             Tattoo Parlors

•             Tanning Studios

•             Massage Studios

Other Retail

•             Furniture and Home Furnishings Stores

•             Cosmetics, Beauty Supplies, and Perfume Stores

•             Clothing Stores & Boutiques

•             Shoe Stores

•             Jewelry, Luggage, and Leather Goods Stores

•             Sporting Goods Stores

•             Hobby Stores and Game Stores

•             Framing Stores

•             Book Stores

•             Florists

Entertainment

•             Movie Theaters

•             Museums

•             Indoor Recreation, Game Rooms & Children’s Gyms

•             Ranches & Camps

•             Concert and Special Event Venues

Lifestyle

•             Gyms

•             Martial Arts Studios

•             Yoga Studios

•             Restaurants (Dine in), Bars, Clubs, and Lounges

Failure to comply with any of the provisions of this Order constitutes an imminent threat to public health. In accordance with Texas Government Code §418.173, a person who knowingly or intentionally violates this Order commits a Class B Misdemeanor punishable by a fine up to $1,000.00 and/or confinement in jail for a term that does not exceed 180 days, and each day or portion of a day that such a violation continues shall constitute a separate offense.

Harrison County and the City of Marshall are following the Centers for Disease Control’s (CDC) guidelines and recommendations on the steps our community can take to help prevent catching or spreading the coronavirus (COVID-19). This is a situation that continues to evolve and we will do our best to keep our citizens informed of the latest information.

Harrison County and the City of Marshall urge our community to practice healthy habits including:

1.        Restrict physical contact and publicly used areas.

2.        Maintain Social Distancing with a safe distance of six (6’) feet between individuals.

3.       Every person in Texas shall avoid social gatherings in groups of 10 or more per Executive Order of Governor Abbott.

4.       Residents should not visit nursing homes, retirement, or long-term care facilities unless to provide critical assistance.

5.        In accordance with the CDC, residents may still utilize drive-thru, pickup, or delivery options through the Executive Order.

6.        Regularly wash hands with warm soap and water for at least 20 seconds.

7.        Avoid touching eyes, nose, or mouth.

8.        If soap is not available, use at least a 60% alcohol-based hand sanitizer.

9.        Avoid close contact with people who are sick. All persons should remain in the home if one person in the home exhibits symptoms

If you are experiencing fever, cough or difficulty breathing, been exposed to a sick traveler or been exposed to a person with COVID-19 in the last 14 days, please contact your healthcare provider immediately. Inform your physician or emergency department of your symptoms to prevent any potential spread.


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Harrison County and City of Marshall Issue Mandatory Shelter in Place Orders

[Marshall, Texas, March 31, 2020]

Harrison County and City of Marshall Issue Mandatory Shelter in Place Orders

First Amended Declaration of Local Disaster and Public Health Emergency Related to Communicable Disease

[Harrison County and Marshall, Texas] Harrison County Judge Chad Sims and City of Marshall Mayor Terri Brown confirm a second and third positive case of the coronavirus (COVID-19) in Harrison County. In each case, the cause of COVID-19 exposure was travel-related. County and City leadership believe it to be in the best interest to be proactive and take measures to further safeguard our citizens and prevent community spread. In response, Judge Sims and Mayor Brown are both issuing Mandatory Shelter in Place orders effective at 11:59 p.m. on March 31, 2020.

                Under this Order, citizens of Harrison County and the City of Marshall are still permitted to perform essential activities for their families; including obtaining medical supplies, visiting a health care provider, obtaining supplies they need to work from home, grocery shopping, engaging in outdoor activities while maintaining social distancing, and to perform work defined as an essential service. Citizens at a high risk of illness from COVID-19 and people who are sick are urged to remain in their residence except to receive medical care.

                Essential services are defined as all first responders, emergency management personnel, individual performing government functions, healthcare operations, essential infrastructure, grocery stores, farmers’ market, food banks, pet stores, farming, livestock, fishing, social services, media, gas stations, auto supply/repair, banks, hardware, mailing services, plumbers, electricians, exterminators, laundromats, dry cleaners, restaurants, office supplies, airlines, private transportation, home-based services or shelters for seniors, adults or children, professional services (legal, accounting, insurance, real estate, appraisal, survey, and title), childcare, utilities, telecommunications, janitorial, maintenance, healthcare operations, funerals, defense industry, and educational services operating online. A full list of all essential services may be found in the Ordinance at www.marshalltexas.net.

Non-essential businesses shall shut down except for maintaining Minimum Basic Operations.  Essential Businesses exempted from shut-down are encouraged to determine staff who are essential to operations and to send non- essential staff home.

For the purposes of this Order, “Essential Travel” includes travel for any of the following purposes:

•             Any   travel   related   to   the provision of or access to Essential Activities, Essential Governmental Functions, Essential Businesses, or Minimum Basic Operations;

•             Travel to care for the elderly, minors, dependents, persons with disabilities, or other vulnerable persons;

•             Travel to or from educational institutions for purposes of receiving materials for distance learning, for receiving meals, and any other related services;

•             Travel to return to a place of residence from outside the jurisdiction;

•             Travel required by law enforcement or court order; or

•             Travel required for non-residents to return to their place of residence outside the City. Individuals are strongly encouraged to verify that their transportation out of the City remains available and functional prior to commencing such travel.

When citizens need to leave their places of residence, whether to obtain or perform vital services or to otherwise facilitate authorized activities necessary for continuity of social and commercial life, they should at all times comply with the Social Distancing Requirement.

Failure to comply with any of the provisions of this Order constitutes an imminent threat to public health. In accordance with Texas Government Code §418.173, a person who knowingly or intentionally violates this Order commits an offense punishable by a fine up to $1,000.00 and/or confinement in jail for a term that does not exceed 180 days, and each day or portion of a day that such a violation continues shall constitute a separate offense.

                The Emergency Management Team will continue to meet with leaders from Harrison County, Marshall – Harrison County Health District, CHRISTUS Good Shepherd Health System – Marshall, and City of Marshall monitoring the situation on an ongoing basis and providing notices to citizens as needed.

Harrison County and the City of Marshall are following the Centers for Disease Control’s (CDC) guidelines and recommendations on the steps our community can take to help prevent catching or spreading the coronavirus (COVID-19). This is a situation that continues to evolve and we will do our best to keep our citizens informed of the latest information.

Harrison County and the City of Marshall urge our community to practice healthy habits including:

1.        Restrict physical contact and publicly used areas.

2.        Maintain Social Distancing with a safe distance of six (6’) feet between individuals.

3.       Every person in Texas shall avoid social gatherings in groups of 10 or more per Executive Order of Governor Abbott.

4.         Residents should not visit nursing homes, retirement, or long-term care facilities unless to provide critical assistance.

5.        In accordance with the CDC, people shall avoid eating or drinking at bars, restaurants, and food courts, or visiting gyms or massage parlors. Residents may still utilize drive-thru, pickup, or delivery options through the Executive Order.

6.        Regularly wash hands with warm soap and water for at least 20 seconds.

7.        Avoid touching eyes, nose, or mouth.

8.        If soap is not available, use at least a 60% alcohol-based hand sanitizer.

9.        Avoid close contact with people who are sick. All persons should remain in the home if one person in the home exhibits symptoms

If you are experiencing fever, cough or difficulty breathing, been exposed to a sick traveler or been exposed to a person with COVID-19 in the last 14 days, please contact your healthcare provider immediately. Inform your physician or emergency department of your symptoms to prevent any potential spread.

The City of Marshall will hold City Commission meetings utilizing a video and audio conferencing tool, as well as, a standard conference call.  Instructions and direct links to view meetings or speak during Citizen Comment can be found at http://www.marshalltexas.net.


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