Northam Refrains from Expanding COVID-19 Restrictions. For Now.

by Kerry Dougherty

Some folks will thank him. But I won’t. I refuse to express gratitude to Gov. Ralph Northam for not announcing more COVID-19 restrictions during yesterday’s press conference that would strip away even more of our liberties.

Like most Virginians, I am, however, relieved. Governors across the country — mostly Democrats — appear to be in an arms race to see just how arbitrary and oppressive their emergency orders can get before leading to an insurrection.

Reading slowly from his notes, as always, Northam warned that if numbers continue to spike “everything is on the table.”

Lucky us.

Numbers may be up, but Virginia still has plenty of hospital beds — 6,954 including surge beds. ICU’s are operating at 77 percent and no hospital in the commonwealth is reporting a shortage of supplies or PPE.

It’s worth remembering that of the 3,768 confirmed COVID-19 deaths in Virginia, 1,997 or 52.9% were in nursing homes. Another 29 deaths in long-term-care facilities were reported yesterday.

We can’t get the vaccine to the elderly fast enough.

Southwest Virginia is essentially having its first wave of the virus and the governor warned that some folks there can’t go to hospitals near their homes because of a bed shortage.

That’s a shame but an unfortunate situation that didn’t start with COVID-19.

I’ve written about this before, but for those eating paste in the back of the room I’ll repeat it: In the fall of 2019 a friend of mine on the Outer Banks became critically ill. There were no beds for him in Elizabeth City and none in Chesapeake, Norfolk or Virginia Beach, either. He wound up in a Greenville hospital, far from his home.

Hospitals make no money on empty beds. Many operate at or near capacity.

For now, Northam is blaming Tennessee’s lack of a mask mandate for Virginia’s Southwest situation. Ridiculous.

Northam quote of the day: “It’s all about looking at the data.”

Good one, gov.

Now show us the data that put 5-year-olds in masks two weeks ago. Oh, and how about the data that reduced the number of spectators allowed at OUTDOOR sporting events to 250, even in stadiums that hold more than 60,000.

When a reporter asked about the Campbell County Board of Supervisor’s vote this week to become Virginia’s first “First Amendment Sanctuary” Northam replied, “I will remind everyone in Virginia that we’re not the enemy. The enemy is the virus. So we all need to work together to attack the virus, not each other.”

Campbell County officials voted unanimously to ignore the governor’s unconstitutional COVID emergency orders and directed law enforcement to do that as well. Appomattox County is poised to follow suit.

This could get interesting.

This column was republished with permission from Kerry: Unemployed & Unedited.


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Comments

10 responses to “Northam Refrains from Expanding COVID-19 Restrictions. For Now.”

  1. Steve Haner Avatar
    Steve Haner

    Not saying hell month isn’t coming, but this visual dashboard at Johns Hopkins looks pretty benign right now. Of course it reflects a plateau at a fairly high level. The deaths being reported now reflect the case surge from 2-3 weeks ago.

    https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/data/new-cases-50-states

    So we’ve got Kerry dissing the Governor and Peter defending him and trashing Kerry, with most of us in the middle just trying to stay well. Frankly both are wrong. If the week-long media fear fest about a Thanksgiving travel surge starts to fade, most folks will pay even less attention to the next round of warnings. It’s winter. We’re stuck inside. Less natural Vitamin D. Cases will increase.

    1. Matt Adams Avatar
      Matt Adams

      Sadly, this is the same behavior we’ve been witnessing since March. People want to reside in the middle, stay healthy but also make a living. The extremes on both sides are given more air time than they should be.

    2. Kerry is definitely wrong about one thing:

      I would never eat paste in the back of the room – paint tastes much better…

  2. djrippert Avatar

    There are two ways to look at the present surge in Virginia – vs the past in Virginia or vs other states right now. Northam uses the latter comparison. However, that choice leaves open the question of why today’s restrictions are less onerous than the restrictions in April despite Virginia breaking new case records on a daily basis. Were the April – era restrictions excessive? Should we have the same (or more) restrictions now than we had in April? Have we learned enough about the virus that we can stand record levels of cases without suffering the same impact in hospitalizations, ICU admissions, ventilator use and deaths? Something else?

    On Nov 28 Virginia (population 8.5m) hit an all time high of 3,242 new cases. Los Angeles County (population 10m) has been averaging 4,751 new cases per day. So, Virginia sits at 38 per 100k and LA sits at 48 per 100k. In Virginia, no new action is required. In LA County, “public and private gatherings of people from more than one household are banned. Walking, driving, travel on public transport, bikes, motorcycles and scooters are prohibited, other than for those undertaking essential activities. Still, activities such as golf, tennis and pickleball are permitted, according to the order.”

    https://fortune.com/2020/12/03/los-angeles-new-lockdown-rules-walking-driving/

    I’m left to wonder two things …

    1. How can they both be right?
    2. How do you get to the golf course or tennis court to tee it up or play pickleball if you can’t walk, drive, travel on public transport, bikes, motorcycles and scooters? Beam me over to to the pickleball court, Scotty.

    1. Baconator with extra cheese Avatar
      Baconator with extra cheese

      Did you hear the presser where Dr Governor Coonman said we passed a milestone and 400,000 Virginians have died of Covid.. it was great!
      I’m glad he’s good at Sciencin’!

    2. Steve Haner Avatar
      Steve Haner

      Golf not essential? For many nothing is more essential. My time at the Y is essential.

      Perhaps, DJ, we are simply kidding ourselves that the mitigation strategies actually make much difference, especially when the weather suits the bug and makes outdoor activities so much more difficult (here, not in L.A.) Millions ignored the advice about last week and will equally blow off what they hear about Christmas and New Years. Into wind you spit, grasshopper.

      1. My wife, son and I drove to Florida to visit my 82 year-old father for Thanksgiving. He lives in a retirement community down there and has been relying on a glass of bourbon and a cigar once [or maybe twice] a day to keep the covid at bay. ๐Ÿ™‚

        I’ve driven to Florida and back at this time of year at least 7 times in the last 15 years and the traffic on I-95 was worse this year than it has ever been. I honestly think there were more people on the highway than there were last Thanksgiving.

    3. I wonder why the ban on motorcycles? You can’t get much more “socially distanced” than riding solo on a motorcycle.

  3. We tested negative on the antigen test last week. Me and my Mom got that so we could follow Pa. Gov Wolf’s rules to be tested before entry to Pa. or else quarantine for 2 weeks.

    But these testing places are not really expecting non-exposed people to get the test voluntarily. CDC is saying to get tested before and after holiday travel. Try going to CVS and telling them you are there for a test because Gov Wolf or CDC said so.

    The public needs some clarity and where to go for elective test not due to exposure.

  4. TooManyTaxes Avatar
    TooManyTaxes

    I was speaking with one of my clients in Canada today. The Canadian government announced that any widespread COVID-19 vaccinations shouldn’t be expected until the August-September timeframe. At least Kaine and Warner don’t seem to be advocating for Medicare for all or a government takeover of healthcare.

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