►
Description
Mayor Walsh hosts a media availability to discuss updates relating to COVID-19.
A
Thank
you
very
much.
I
want
to
begin
by
apologizing
that
we
don't
have
an
asl
interpreter
available
today,
but
we
do
have
interpretation
on
video
as
well
as
full,
captioning
and
we'll
have
it
available
by
tomorrow
for
the
press
conference.
A
I
want
to
start
just
by
taking
a
moment
of
silence
for
the
victims
of
sandy
hook
elementary
school
shooting
in
newtown
connecticut,
on
the
8th
anniversary
of
this
tragedy.
25
people
killed
that
day,
including
20
children,
six
school
staff
members
I
just
want
to
let
the
families
know
that
you're
in
our
thoughts
and
prayers.
So
if
you
have
a
moment
of.
A
Silence
the
latest
sound.
Thank
you.
The
latest
coven
19
numbers
these
are
these
are
weekend
numbers
we
don't
have
any
new
numbers.
We
do
have
numbers
for
boston
today,
but
we
don't
have
new
state
numbers.
Six
hundred
seventy
seven
confirmed
cases
over
the
weekend.
A
Forty
forty
one
new
deaths
were
reported
here
in
boston
today,
three
hundred
and
seventy
four
new
cases
bringing
our
total
cases
to
thirty
three
thousand
three
hundred
and
twenty
three.
We
had
one
new
death
today,
bringing
our
totals
to
953,
and
I
just
want
for
the
families
that
are
sick
and
suffering
or
from
cover
19.
What
you
know,
you're
in
our
thoughts
and
prayers
and
our
hearts
in
prayers
go
out
to
the
families
who
lost
loved
ones.
During
this
covet
pandemic
crisis.
A
Our
latest
complete
test
data.
For
the
week
ending
december
6th,
we
had
an
average
of
552
people
tested
each
day.
That's
nearly
it's
up
about
38
from
the
previous
week,
testing
activity
increased
since
thanksgiving
and
we'll
continue
we're
going
to
continue
working
on
expanding
testing
here
in
boston.
A
This
week,
mobile
units
are
available
at
several
locations
in
jamaica,
plain
at
the
mildred
haley
apartments.
On
heat
street,
from
today
to
thursday,
in
roxbury
at
the
washington
park,
mall
on
warming
street
from
tuesday
through
saturday,
at
our
new,
high-capacity
site
in
high
park
at
the
boston
renaissance
charter,
school
on
high
park
avenue
and
also
through
tomorrow
through
sunday.
I
want
to
thank
the
thank
the
boston
renaissance
shot
of
school
for
allowing
us
the
opportunity
to
use
their
facility.
I
believe
this
is
the
drive-through
location
as
well.
So
thank
you
for
that.
A
We're
asking
people
to
call
ahead
before
you
visit
any
of
these
sites
for
information
on
ours
or
for
over
for
our
30
testing
sites
all
over
the
city
of
boston.
You
can
go
to
boston.gov
coronavirus
or
call
311,
and
we
can
help
you
with
getting
a
test
for
the
week
ending
december
6.
The
average
number
of
positive
tests
each
day
in
boston
for
residents
was
438
people
that
number
spiked,
obviously
after
thanksgiving
and
we've
stayed
at
that
elevated
level
for
most
of
december.
A
So
far,
so
we're
pretty
much
into
our
third
week
now
of
high
numbers,
our
community
positive
positivity
rate
for
the
week
ending
december
6
was
7.2
percent
and
that's
up
from
five
point.
Two
percent
the
week
before
dorchester
east
boston
high
park
remain
in
the
neighborhoods,
with
the
highest
positivity
between
ten
and
twelve
percent.
A
Roxbury
roslindale
and
south
boston
are
all
over
eight
percent
and
we
also
saw
increased
positivity
rate
in
every
single
neighborhood
in
our
city.
So
last
week
was
one
of
those
weeks
that
every
neighborhood
went
up
to
some
some
percentage
degree.
So,
wherever
you
live
or
work
in
boston,
the
covet
virus
certainly
has
been
spreading.
A
A
A
I
speak
to
our
hospital
leaders
frequently.
They
certainly
have
surge
plans
ready
and
we'll
be
able
to
expand
the
capacity
and
treat
everyone
who
who
needs
it.
They
are
not
in
danger
at
the
moment
of
being
overwhelmed
on
hospitals,
but
they
are
seeing
seeing
confirmed
the
continued
spread
of
the
virus.
A
A
If
these
trends
don't
stop,
it
will
be
a
very
difficult
winter
for
our
hospitals
and
for
a
lot
of
people.
So
our
public
health
experts
have
been
analyzing
this
data
closely
and
developing
a
plan,
and
rather
than
wait
until
the
situation
gets
worked
worse.
We're
going
to
be
proactive
here
in
the
city
of
boston
and
other
towns
here
in
massachusetts,
we're
going
to
take
action
now
to
reduce
in-person
activity
in
our
city,
we're
working
to
slow
the
spread
of
the
virus
in
our
city
and
prevent
our
hospitals
from
getting
overwhelmed.
A
Our
goal
with
this
three
week
pause
is
to
slow
the
spread
now,
so
we
can
avoid
more
severe
shutdowns
later
on.
Our
focus
is
planning.
This
action
has
been
to
prioritize
essential
activities
like
getting
more
high
needs
students
and
children
back
into
our
schools,
as
we
are
doing
today,
and
I'm
going
to
talk
about
a
couple
minutes.
In
addition,
we've
been
in
close
contact
with
the
communities
all
across
greater
boston,
we're
going
to
take
a
regional
approach
for
maximizing
effectiveness.
A
Several
cities
and
towns
are
taking
steps
this
week
with
modifications
fit
to
their
particular
needs.
They
include
the
city
of
newton
somerville,
brockton,
town
of
winthrop,
town
of
arlington
city
of
lynn
in
other
cities
and
towns
that
we'll
be
announcing
over
the
course
the
next
couple
days,
actions
that
each
of
them
are
taking
before
I
mention
some
of
the
activities
affected
in
boston.
I
want
to
be
clear.
A
A
After
three
weeks,
we
will
then
re-evaluate
the
situation
to
see
where
we
are
with
the
virus
here
in
the
city
of
boston.
If
these
metrics
have
moved
in
the
right
direction
and
we
hope
they
will,
we
will
lift
these
restrictions.
Some
of
the
changes
include
museum
movie,
theaters,
aquariums
and
indoor
event.
Spaces
will
temporarily
be
closed
to
in-person
use
fitness,
centers
health
clubs,
gyms
clothes
for
general
use,
one-on-one
personal
training
can
continue
with
space
restrictions.
A
A
Indoor
facilities
for
lower
contract
contact
activities
will
also
temporarily
be
closed,
including
boiling
alleys,
batting
cages,
driving
ranges
and
rock
climbing.
I
want
to
just
say
to
all
the
business
I
want
to
thank
you
for
your
support
and
the
cultural
institutions
for
your
cooperation
and
support.
During
these
very
difficult
times.
A
The
vast
majority
of
people
have
worked
very
hard
in
full
compliance
at
every
single
stage
and
and
you
will
have
our
full
support
in
the
reopening
and
the
recovery
efforts
activities
that
continue
as
part
of
phase
two
include
these.
This
continues.
Retail
stores,
personal
services
like
hair
salons,
barber
shops,
can
remain
open.
Outdoor
theater
and
performance
venues
at
25
person
limit
office
space
will
remain
at
limited
25
capacity,
but
I
want
to
all
urge
all
employers
to
make
sure
that
anyone
who
can
work
from
home
is
working
from
home.
A
In
addition,
indoor
dining
at
restaurants
and
bars
may
continue
with
strict
adherence
to
guidelines
that
includes
six
foot.
Spacing
six
people
per
table.
90
minutes
90,
90
minutes
time
limits
and
9
30
closing
times.
One
change
during
this
pause
is
bar.
Seating
will
not
be
allowed,
except
with
special
approval
granted
by
the
boston
licensing
board.
A
That's
to
ensure
materials
are
in
place
to
protect
both
staff
and
customers.
I
know
that
many
people
have
concerns
about
indoor
dining.
These
are
concerns
about
the
possibility
of
viral
transmission.
There
are
concerns
about
the
ability
of
restaurants
to
survive
closure
during
these
restrictions.
I
hear
both
of
the
concerns
and
we're
responding
to
both
of
the
concerns.
A
A
We
will
have
emergency
license
board
meetings
every
monday
to
address
any
violations
from
the
previous
week,
but
I
also
want
to
appeal
to
restaurant
restaurant
patrons
and
small
business
customers
to
be
part
of
the
solution.
We
hear
from
owners
that
it
can
be
difficult
to
police
customers
who
keep
their
masks
off
or
ignore
distancing
guidelines.
A
You
can
find
out
more
detail
about
how
the
order
affects
each
sector.
If
you
go
to
boston
dot,
gov
slash
reopening
tomorrow
morning,
we'll
be
hosting
a
series
of
webinars
for
small
businesses
to
go
over
the
changes.
They
start
at
9am
with
a
general
overview,
followed
by
special
sessions
for
restaurants,
gyms
and
performance
spaces.
A
A
If
you
have
any
questions
or
concerns
about
anything
that
I'm
saying,
the
reopening
boston
fund
is
still
accepting
applications
to
help
small
businesses
with
debt
free
grant
loans,
and
I
don't
want
anyone
to
think
that
we're
taking
these
decisions,
like
likely,
we
are
making
sure
we're
basing
everything
on
a
public
health
situation
and
we're
looking
for
the
economic
impacts
and
restrictions
which
are
real
and
their
human
impacts
as
well.
We
weigh
everything
in
the
balance.
A
I
don't
ever
take
lightly
the
impacts
of
workers,
business
owners,
non-profit
organizations
that
are
certainly
affected
by
our
actions
today,
but
public
health
needs
are
clear
at
this
moment.
We
must
take
action
to
slow
the
spread
and
protect
our
health
care
system,
and
we
must
prioritize
the
absolutely
essential
needs
of
our
city.
A
A
This
level
of
protection
goes
far
beyond
cdc
guidelines
beyond
state
guidelines
and
beyond
what
the
vast
majority
of
districts
all
across
this
country
are
doing
right
now
I
give
tremendous
credit
to
superintendent,
brenda,
casillas
and
her
team
for
doing
incredible
work,
prioritizing
our
students
who
most
need
our
supports.
These
are
challenging
times.
A
A
So
I
want
to
address
the
vote
that
the
teachers
union
took
yesterday,
criticizing
the
district
and
the
superintendent
that
action
doesn't
help
our
collective
efforts
during
this
critical
time.
I
value
deeply
the
work
that
our
teachers
are
doing
and
have
done
all
year
under
very
difficult
circumstances.
I
am
sympathetic
to
their
concerns
about
covet
safety.
A
A
I
want
to
repeat
that
100
percent
of
all
the
safety
measures
that
the
teachers
union
requested
are
implemented
in
the
schools
that
we
opened
today.
The
result
is
that
today,
many
more
high
needs
students
and
their
dedicated
teachers
and
support
staffs
are
in
schools,
they're,
working
together
being
safe
and
they're
learning.
A
I
have
the
absolute
confidence
in
superintendent,
brenda,
casillas
and
her
team's
commitment
to
these
values
and
all
of
this
work
in
hard
times.
We
certainly
need
to
come
together,
but
one
key
piece
missing
from
the
puzzle
right
now
is
federal
support.
A
national
relief
and
stimulus
package
is
long
overdue.
A
The
actions
we
take
today
would
be
much
more
straightforward,
with
federal
backing
for
the
workers
and
businesses
that
are
impacted
and
affected
by
it.
The
biden
harris
administration
plans
to
act
immediately
to
bring
comprehensive
supports,
but
the
american
people
can't
wait
until
the
inauguration
on
january
twentieth.
Twenty
twenty
one,
the
emergency
unemployment
benefit,
is
set
to
expire
on
the
last
day
of
this
year.
A
The
cdc
moratorium
on
evictions
is
set
to
expire
on
that
same
day,
this
little
over
two
weeks
from
now,
and
it
could
be
the
worst
part
of
the
pandemic
that
we've
seen
that
we're
going
through
right
now.
This
is
going
to
deepen
the
crisis
conditions
in
every
american
community,
including
the
city
of
boston.
A
I've
sent
letters
and
made
phone
calls
on
every
essential
issue
from
food
benefits
to
child
care,
to
small
business
relief
to
immigration,
protection,
low
income,
housing
and
homeless,
supports
arts
and
culture
organizations,
but
it
shouldn't
take
mayors
and
governors
begging.
The
federal
government
for
help
congress
and
the
sitting
administration
needs
to
do
their
job.
A
A
In
the
meantime,
we
need
everyone
to
stay
focused
right
now
and
stay
vigilant,
we're
asking
people.
This
has
to
be
a
collective
effort.
We
need
everyone
to
do
their
part.
We
cannot
let
we
cannot
let
our
god
down,
not
even
for
a
little
bit.
We
need
to
keep
wearing
masks.
We
need
to
keep
washing
our
hands
with
soap
and
warm
water.
We
need
to
avoid
large
crowds,
we
need
to
avoid
gatherings.
We
need
to
avoid
parties
when
you
go
out
only
go
out
for
essential
items.
A
Please
follow
the
guidelines
while
you're
visiting
businesses,
and
I
ask
everyone
to
make
decisions
today
to
based
on
safety
and
commitment
for
safety
over
the
holiday.
We
are
living
with
what
happens
right
now?
What
happened
over
the
thanksgiving
season
right
now?
We
can't
let
that
happen
again.
If
you
look
at
the
trend
a
couple
of
days
before
thanksgiving
we're
averaging
about
125
cases
of
coronavirus
per
day
in
the
city
of
austin,
five
days
after
thanksgiving,
we
were
at
over
500
cases
per
day
and
those
numbers
have
not
come
down.
A
A
Today's
rollback
is
about
making
individual
sacrifices
for
the
greater
good
and
it's
about
how
we
approach
and
how
we're
going
to
approach
the
holiday
as
well.
The
holiday
is
a
time
for
collective
renewal
during
dark
the
dark
winter
months.
That's
what
we'll
focus
on
this
year
more
than
ever
before,
only
in
different
ways.
A
I
do
want
to
end
the
press
conference.
On
a
positive
note,
because
it
seems
like
I'm
all
doom
and
gloom
today
this
morning,
the
first
shipment
of
vaccines
began
arriving
at
our
boston
hospitals.
If
you've
been
watching
tv,
you've
been
seeing
it
been
seeing
people
get
their
shots
in
this
week.
Each
of
our
hospitals
is
going
to
begin
vaccinating
healthcare
workers
in
our
city.
A
A
I
ask
everyone
to
follow
the
lead
of
our
healthcare
heroes
and
medical
experts
and
take
the
vaccine
when
it
comes
here.
It's
another
act
that
we
can
all
take
as
individuals
to
protect
ourselves
and
our
families
and
bring
our
communities
safely
through
this
crisis.
I
also
want
to
give
a
special
shout
out
to
our
hospital
workers
who
right
now
are
exhausted
because
we're
seeing
increased
numbers
of
covate
activity
in
the
hospitals.
A
Not
only
are
they
taking
care
of
the
covert
patients
they're
also
taking
care
of
their
other
patients,
and
they
also
have
families.
So
I'm
asking
each
and
every
person
to
physically
distance
wear
your
mask
on
behalf
of
all
of
our
healthcare
personnel
right
now,
we're
in
the
hospitals,
the
doctors,
the
nurses
and
all
the
staff
in
the
hospitals
that
are
working
for
us.
With
that,
I
will
open
up
the
questions.
B
A
Thank
you.
The
first
part
of
your
question
is
enforcement
is
going
to
be
inspectional
services,
we'll
be
going
out
and
doing
checks
on
restaurants
believe
it
or
not.
We
do
get
calls
from
patrons
that
will
tell
us
that
some
place
might
be
overcrowded
or
people
are
walking
without
masks,
so
we
are
going
to
be
going
out
there
writing
up
writing
up
violations
and
that's
why
we're
going
to
have
a
hearing
every
single
monday
morning
to
address
those
violations.
The
intention
is
not
to
collect
fines.
A
The
intention
is
not
to
not
to
be
hard
on
businesses.
The
intention
is
to
keep
people
safe
and
healthy,
and
that's
what
we
want
to
do
during
this
period
of
time
our
focus
on
reducing
overall
in-person
activity
as
we're
doing
right
now.
We
are
not
targeting
specific
industries
here
in
the
city
of
boston
for
being
the
cause
of
the
spread.
We
are
returning
to
phase
two
step
two,
so
we're
going
back.
A
A
It's
not
necessarily
the
violations.
The
restaurants
aren't
initially
having
mass
violations
in
the
city,
but
restaurants
will
eventually
be
shut
down.
If
our
numbers
continue
to
go
up,
if
we
continue
to
have
problems
in
our
hospitals
and
once
we
get
to
a
point
where
we're
over
capacity
or
not
we're
not
going
to
wait
to
overcapacy,
we
get
to
a
point
where
it's
going
to
be
dangerous
and
critical
for
capacity.
We
will
have
to
take
the
next.
A
Film
production
won't
be,
I
believe
we
have
one
film
in
boston
and
they
they
presented
us
with
a
public
health
guideline
protocol,
so
they
have
a
really
stringent
plan
in
place.
So
a
lot
of
these
different
organ,
a
lot
of
there's
a
few
places
exempt
we'll
get
you
a
copy
of
it
all
we'll
look
at
the
protocol
that's
in
place.
If
we
think
that
the
protocol
is
strong
enough
and
it's
limited
enough,
we'll
be
able
to
keep
some
of
those
sectors
open
retail
office
is
40
retail's,
not
not
impacted.
A
Yet
that's
in
phase
two
step,
two,
no
useful
suppose
things
are
fine.
C
A
The
biggest
thing
that
we
want
to
see
with
these
roll
backs
is
that
our
numbers
come
down
and
that
our
hospitalization
comes
down
and
that
we
we
get
to
an
average
rate
right
now.
As
I
said,
the
last
seven
days,
434
people
people
have
been
testing
positive
cover,
19.
The
rate
is
over
10
or
something
like
that.
Eight
seven
point:
two
percent:
our
goal
is
to
bring
these
numbers
down
so
that
we
don't
have
a
stress
in
our
hospital
system
and
then
also
on
top
of
that
as
january
approaches.
A
Our
goal
for
boston
public
schools
is
sometime
in
january,
begin
the
phased
in
reopening
plan.
We're
going
to
go
back
with
the
highest
needs,
students
first
and
then
we're
going
to
go
k0k1k2
one
two
three
four
to
eight
in
in
high
school
and
we'll
be
we'll
be
launching.
Hopefully,
dates
are
on
that
at
some
point,
but
right
now
it
doesn't
make
sense,
because
the
numbers
numbers
are
going
the
wrong
direction.
A
I'd
say:
that's
one
part
of
it.
Definitely
one
part
of
it
as
a
result
of
thanksgiving
in
the
increase
in
thanksgiving,
and
I
mean
I
don't
think
thanksgiving
is
the
only
reason
why
the
numbers
are
getting
higher,
but
it's
it
right.
It
seems
like
it's
the
main
reason
you
know
standing
here
a
week
from
now
we'll
know.
If
the
numbers
have
gone
down
a
bit,
then
it
wasn't
just
thanksgiving
if
the
numbers
stayed
consistent,
it's
it's
going
to
be
thanksgiving
holiday
season
that
we're
seeing
these
numbers
increase.
A
We're
working
towards
that
we're
working,
we
don't
have
student,
we
only
have
100
and
200
students
in
schools
right
now.
So
what
we're
working
on
right
now
is
a
plan.
How
do
we
test
it?
There's
no
district
in
the
country
doing
that,
because
the
availability
of
tests
so
we're
working
to
try
and
build
up
the.
D
You
know:
we've
been
focused
on
these
hospital
metrics
emergency
room
department
visits
the
capacity
of
our
icu
beds,
as
well
as
the
overall
number
of
beds
available,
not
on
medical
and
surgical
beds,
and
we
have
thresholds
and
we
haven't
hit
those
thresholds
yet,
but
you're
likely
to
see
by
the
next
time
we're
up
here
we're
going
to
hit
some
two
of
those
thresholds
and
so
we're
seeing
our
overall
medical
beds
be
reduced
and
we've
seen
right
now
we
have
over
300
covid
positive
patients
in
the
boston
hospitals.
D
We
haven't
been
at
that
number
since
june,
so
we've
seen
more
patients,
we've
started
to
see
less
beds,
which
definitely
means
our
capacity
in
our
hospitals
is
starting
to
something
to
be
something
we're
concerned
about,
which
is
why
we're
leading
into
this
next
phase.
A
Yeah,
the
question
is:
how
concerned
am
I
about
seeing
a
surge
from
the
holidays
and
potential
extension
of
what
we're
doing
here
even
going
back
further,
I'm
very
concerned
about
that.
I'm
really
concerned
about
the
holiday
travel.
I'm
really
concerned
about
holiday
parties.
I'm
concerned
about
house
parties,
I'm
concerned
about
seeing
these
numbers
go
up
every
day.
A
You
know
the
the
public
health
experts,
dr
fauci,
and
the
cdc's,
and
even
our
own
public
health
folks
around
here
said
that
we
would
see
increases
potentially
in
november
december
january
february,
could
be
the
worst
months
of
the
entire
pandemic.
Everything
they've
said
has
come
to
fruition.
We've
seen
increases
in
november
and
december.
A
Our
numbers
in
december
are
pretty
high
and
january
february's,
not
here
yet,
and
in
coming
off
the
heels
of
christmas
and
in
the
holiday
season,
we
could
see
really
bad
numbers
and
what
that
means,
when
you
see
really
bad
numbers,
is
more
death,
more
hospitalization,
more
ventilators,
straining
on
our
hospital
systems.
That
would
hurt
everyone
else
that
might
be
going
in
for
cancer
screenings
or
or
hot
procedures,
and
things
like
that,
because
that
gets
pushed
aside.
A
That'll
get
put
off
because
of
the
concern
of
people
going
to
hospital,
so
I'm
alarming
people
right
now,
I'm
sounding
the
alarm,
letting
people
know
the
seriousness
of
this.
This
is
serious
when
you
see
you
know
new
york,
this,
the
the
state
of
new
york,
shutting
down
indoor
dining
they're
they're
a
little
ahead
of
us
as
far
as
hospital
capacity,
meaning
more
people
in
hospitals.
A
I
had
a
conversation
with
the
mayor
of
philadelphia,
jim
kennedy,
the
other
night
and
we're
talking
about
his
decision
to
shut
restaurants
down
in
philly
they're
they're,
ahead
of
us
as
well
as
far
as
hospitalization.
A
This
is
real
concerning
this
is
real
concerning
for
us
and
our
economy
and
when
I
say
our
economy,
our
businesses
have
taken
such
a
dramatic
hit
this
year
that
one
more
blow
like
what
happened
in
march
april
may,
we
had
to
shut
everything
down,
could
put
many
more
out
of
business.
It's
my
understanding.
Talking
to
the
restaurant
association
last
week,
3
400
restaurants
in
massachusetts
have
gone
out
of
business.
They
need
help.
They
need
help
on
a
state
level.
There's
a
piece
of
legislation
right
now
in
the
economic
development
bill
at
the
state.
A
I'm
asking
this
the
legislatures
to
get
that
bill
done
we're
also
talking
about
a
potential
peace
legislation.
That's
going
to
benefit
restaurants
as
well.
By
looking
at
that
we're
going
to
be
talking
about
that
peace
legislation
and
then
also
the
federal
government
has
to
act.
This
is
not
a
time
for
inaction.
This
is
time
for.
B
A
Hard
to
say,
frustration,
disappointed
it's
a
it's
a
virus
and
it's
a
pandemic.
I
mean,
I
think,
that
obviously
we'd
love
to
be
in
a
different
place,
but
you
can't
you
can't
get
frustrated
or
aggravated
with
a
pandemic.
What
you
have
to
do
is
learn
to
live
with
it
and
we
have
to
be
able
to
to
make
arrangements
around
it,
and
you
know.
A
I
just
think
that
when,
when
I
hear
stories
of
you
know,
people
visiting
loved
ones
and
maybe
passing
on
the
virus
and
they're
visiting
somebody,
we
have
to
be
careful,
but
when
I
hear
people
having
house
parties
and
in
total
disregard
of
masks
and
that
that's
a
little
frustrating,
because
that
that
I
know
people
want
to
want
to
congregate-
and
I
do
too,
although
christmas
is
coming
christmas,
eve
is
one
a
big
day
for
us
in
our
house,
and
you
know
we
generally
bounce
around
from
house
to
house
and
families
all
together
and
christmas
day,
the
bunch
of
us
together
again
and
not
this
year.
A
We
just
can't
do
it
this
year
because
of
the
the
potential
impacts
of
bringing
covert
into
your
home,
and
you
don't
know
what
the
impacts
of
covert
is
going
to
be
on
people,
particularly
people,
with
pre-existing
condition
or
older
people.
It's
this
this
this
virus
is
deadly
to
them,
and
we
don't
you
don't
want
to
do
that
to
your
family.
A
Absolutely
I
mean
I
think
that
that
no
confidence
vote
came
with
six
days
left
to
school,
and
you
know
I
was
reading.
I
think
you
did
the
story
actually,
the
other
day
where
some
of
the
union
was
quoted,
saying
we're
excited
about
getting
high
needs
special
needs
students
into
school
and
that's
what
we're
doing
today
and
then
there
was
a
voter,
no
confidence
yesterday,
which
I
don't
understand.
So
I
think
that
you
know
we're
living
in
a
pandemic.