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Flagler Reports Another Covid Death; School District Postpones All Fall Sports Indefinitely

July 22, 2020 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

The week ending July 25 includes four of seven days' reporting by the state Department of Health. (© FlaglerLive)
The week ending July 25 includes four of seven days’ reporting by the state Department of Health. (© FlaglerLive)

A 92-year-old woman who died in hospice on July 17 is the ninth Flagler County resident to die of covid-19, and the 11th in the county overall. The state Health Department reports that two non-residents have died in the county, though the local health department says it has records for only one of the two non-resident deaths, a 70-year-old woman who died on May 8.




The 92-year-old woman had been hospitalized, then transferred to hospice, Bob Snyder, the Flagler Health Department chief, said today. In addition, he said, there were 18 covid-related hospitalizations at AdventHealth Palm Coast this afternoon. Capacity at the hospital today was at 11 percent overall, and 28 percent in its intensive care unit. The hospital can and does bounce patients around its network in Central Florida when necessary, and it does have capacity for expanding its ICU.

People reporting to the hospital with Covid-like illnesses are again increasing, rising the week of July 12 to about 55. “If there was a decrease, it was momentary, but I’m looking at the graph and it’s a straight shot up,” Snyder said.

Late this afternoon, and a day after it announced that school would almost certainly be postponed two weeks for students–the school board is expected to ratify that decision next week, but approved it on Tuesday–the Flagler County school district announced that all fall sports would be postponed until further notice. The announcement follows revelations on Tuesday that a Matanzas High School student-athlete who was in training for fall sports had tested positive for the virus, though it isn’t known where the student contracted it. Fall sports include football, bowling, golf, swimming, cross country, and volleyball.




“What does this mean for our athletes?” Jason Wheeler, the district’s chief spokesman, said in a statement. “Our conditioning program will continue as it has since it began last month, with safety protocols in place. Currently, our teams are in Phase 1 of our multi-phased system. However, tryouts and practices will not begin on July 27th as originally scheduled. The head coaches and athletic directors at each school can give additional information to our students and their families. District staff continues to work with school administrators and athletic directors to monitor and reevaluate our protocols.”

The district is still encouraging athletes and potential athletes to complete their online Athletic Clearance so that they may participate in conditioning and be ready for tryouts, practices, and competitions when they are allowed to resume. Again, each head coach can help our families with this process. Our fall sports include football, bowling, golf, swimming, cross country, and volleyball.
Other extra-curricular activities have not been postponed or cancelled, but participants must follow the guidelines issued by the district earlier this summer. (See the full guidelines here.)

On Monday–the same day that the state’s teachers union sued Gov. Ron DeSantis to stop the reopening of schools in person–the Florida High School Athletic Association in a nearly five-hour meeting elected not to follow the recommendations of its own medical committee, which was urging delays, and voted to let all fall sports proceed as scheduled, all the while leaving it to individual school districts to tailor their schedules to their preferences, based on local circumstances.

After several weeks of recording fewer than 14 positive coronavirus cases a week for eight weeks going back to early May–that is, following the April lockdown–Flagler County began to see its case load surge in tandem with the surge across Florida, now a national epicenter of the pandemic. More than half the county’s cases have been recorded in the last four weeks, with a high of 139 last week and 82 so far this week, with three days to go. The state department of health reported today 13 additional cases for Flagler, and a positivity rate of over 10 percent in the first four days of this week (773 tests reported by the state and 82 positive. The local health department, using different county-by-county metrics that include antigen tests, is reporting a 14-day positivity rate of 6.3 percent. There is no uniform standard for covid numbers in the nation.)

Florida reported 9,785 new cases today for a cumulative total of 379,619. The state also reported 139 additional deaths, for a total of 5,345.




Last week President Trump in a Fox News interview attributed the higher number of cases to increased testing. The claim is inaccurate. An analysis by The New York Times published today notes that the “The average number of tests conducted nationwide has grown by 80 percent since early June, to 780,000 per day. Daily case counts have grown by 215 percent in the same period.” Further, “Florida, the state with the largest discrepancy, is reporting more than 11,000 new cases per day, on average, while only about 2,400 cases each day would be expected because of increased testing. California and Texas numbers are also far above what would be expected.”

But Trump, in a significant shift, this week for the first time encouraged people to wear masks. Mask-wearing is an essential means of helping to lower the spread of the disease, particularly by asymptomatic people. While the median age of those  infected had fallen to the 30s as the June surge began, the median age has again risen slowly into the low 40s, reaching 42 today statewide. That means half the nearly 10,000 people who tested positive in the past day were younger than 42, and half were older.

Coronavirus Resources


Wearing masks is an important and inexpensive way to control the spread of covid-19.

  • Covid-19 Daily Data for Florida and Flagler
  • FlaglerRogue, an Ongoing, Verified and Independent Database of Positive Cases in Flagler Schools
  • R Value: A Key Measure of How Fast the Virus is Growing
  • Rebekah Jones Dashboard
  • Florida Department of Health Coronavirus Dashboard
  • Hospital Bed Capacity Across Florida
  • Dr. Stephen Bickel's Resource List of Covid Information
  • Covid Hospitalizations in the Nation: Profiles
  • The Covid Tracking Project
  • Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation: Covid Projections
  • Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine World and U.S. Dashboard
  • Live tracker: How many coronavirus cases have been reported in each U.S. state?
  • Johns Hopkins Cornavirus Tracking project
  • Worldometer Coronavirus Dashboard
  • Centers for Disease Control Coronavirus Landing Page
  • World Health Organization Coronavirus Landing Page
  • Covid Exit Strategy: Tracking States' Reopening
  • Covid Data Reports, Florida Emergency Management
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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Jonathan says

    July 23, 2020 at 4:07 am

    I’m sorry to say it like an asshole but… SHE WAS 93! Just like the 105 year old retired FSU professor the 99.9% didn’t die from COVID19! She most likely died from old age like every other old person will! Anyways she’s 93 so there is absolutely no reason to cancel fall sports! If it was a 15+ year old then I’d say it’s okay, this is completely obsered!!!

  2. Born and Raised Here says

    July 23, 2020 at 8:45 am

    Student Athletes have to get on the field. The FSHAA has approved Fall Sports.
    By denying Flagler County Student Athletes to play this fall, you are denying them an opportunity to a College education athletic scholarship.
    More Student athletes in Florida get college scholarship than any other State in the U.S. The School Board is hurting education in Flaler County, they are now allowing our students athletes to go outside the County to high school and continue there education and Sport participation.
    Athletics sports account for more revenue than any other activity in College. These Student atheists must play this fall to get recruited to go to college.

  3. Glenn says

    July 23, 2020 at 3:11 pm

    They should just get rid of school sports. Its 2020 , and there is a lot more we can be using the money for then a bunch of sports which serve no educational purpose. It seems sports will be a thing of the past and not needed in our new society.

  4. Mom says

    July 23, 2020 at 10:05 pm

    There are some children that depend on sports to get a college education. So I’m going to say that they do serve an “educational purpose”. SMH

  5. Willy Boy says

    July 24, 2020 at 5:18 am

    After beer, sports are the opiate of the masses.

  6. HudsonMmM says

    July 24, 2020 at 2:21 pm

    It doesn’t matter if the dead were 99 years or 9. Covid-19 is involved. Since Fl has no means or ability to trace and long incubation period we are left to try and handle this with knowledge from Fauci, Johns Hopkins and not the White House. As long as the number of sickness grows we the people should avoid the opening of schools and sports. Indeed, the dead should remind us of the endgame, no matter what the age. Covid-19 is novel. Our acclaimed scientists are committed to research every day. Until there is a vaccine one would be wise to wear a mask, don’t touch your face, distance your body from others especially if they are invincible like tRump and bereaved and was your hands!

  7. Born and Rasied Here says

    July 24, 2020 at 6:34 pm

    College Sports is the biggest revenue maker of any other activity in College, You get rid of College Football , you basically have no college,

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