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From YouTube: COVID-19 Virtual Press Conference on April 10, 2020
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A
We'll
go
ahead
and
get
started
again.
My
name
is
Chuck
Kearney
I'm
Director
of
Media
Relations
for
Indiana
University,
and
welcome
to
our
weekly
briefing
with
the
city
of
Bloomington
mayor's
office,
the
county
of
Monroe
County,
IU,
Health
and
Indiana
University,
a
reminder
of
who
is
going
to
be
here:
Mayor
John,
Hamilton,
Bloomington,
knurl,
County,
Commissioner,
Julie,
Thomas,
IU,
Health,
South,
Central
Region,
president
Brian
shock
me:
North,
County,
Health,
Department,
administrator
penny,
Caudill,
Monroe,
County,
emergency
management,
director,
Allison,
Moore
and
IU,
associate
vice
president
for
Public
Safety
and
institutional
assurance,
Ben
hunter.
B
Okay,
thanks
thanks,
so
much
for
everybody
being
here,
I'll
give
some
quick
updates
the
continuity
of
city
government.
Our
work
focused
on
city
government
is
continuing
to
evolve,
including
implementing
new
mask
protocols.
Can
you
all
hear
me?
Okay,
all
right.
Okay,
new
mask
protocols
really
consistent
with
the
changing
just
a
week
ago
or
so
of
CDC
and
Health
Department
and
others
we're
also
implementing
the
families
first
corona
relief
act,
which
more
than
40
of
our
employees
so
far
have
signed
up
for
that
which
gives
some
relief
to
employees
for
paid
time
off
an
extended
family.
B
Medical
leave
I
want
to
report
as
well.
The
Social
Security,
sorry,
social
services,
workgroup
is,
is
hard
at
it.
They've
really
identified
about
230
slots
of
child
care
that
are
needed
there
seriously
negotiating
working
on-site
staffing,
finance
arrangements
for
that
to
help
support
the
essential
workers
in
our
community,
both
health
care
workers
and
their
needs
for
child
care,
as
well
as
first
responders
housing
effort,
also
underway
with
that
group.
B
The
food
security
work
is
also
underway
from
that
social
services.
Workgroup
the
employment,
stabilization
and
recovery
work
group
also
has
been
very
busy
this
week.
Many
of
you
know
this
as
well
already
there's
two
and
a
half
million
dollars.
That's
been
appropriated
now
for
economic
recovery.
Locally
applications
opened
yesterday.
That
was
an
18
day
process
from
the
beginning
of
that
group
to
opening
up
those
applications
for
that
funding,
they
hope
to
begin
distribution
within
a
week.
They've
also
stood
up.
Something
called
ask
the
mill
and
some
technical
assistance
on
the
economy.
B
Side
and
I
won't
go
into
longer.
On
that
they're.
Continuing
longer-term
planning,
I'll
close
with
just
a
personal
note,
I,
don't
know
if
everybody
saw
this,
but
I
thought
I
ought
to
at
least
mention.
We
did
put
out
a
release
today
that
my
wife
has
become
a
confirmed,
Kovan
19
patient.
She
is
self
isolating.
We
got
test
results
yesterday.
I
we've
gotten
tons
of
good
wishes.
B
The
virus
is
the
enemy,
and
it's
okay
when
when
to
share,
what's
going
on,
so
we
wanted
to
do
that
and
we
will
be
following
all
the
protocols
and
treatments,
as
advised
by
our
wonderful
health
professionals.
So
I
just
wanted
to
note
that
as
well
and
I'll
hand
it
back
to
you
chuck.
Thank
you.
Oh
Thank,.
A
C
It
thank
you,
I
had
unmute.
Thank
you.
Computer
got
a
little
stuck
yeah
best
wishes
to
Don
and
and
your
family,
and
to
anyone
in
the
community
who's
who's.
Dealing
with
this.
Personally,
it's
it's
a
it's
tough
diagnosis.
I
just
want
to
start
off
a
really
positive
note
and
talk
about
the
National
Public
Health
Week
that
we're
in
the
middle
of
appropriately
enough
special
thanks
to
penny
Caudill
and
her
staff
to
all
the
the
good
folks
that
are
working
in
the
medical
field
in
our
community
who
are
getting
us
through
this
every
day.
C
So,
thanks
to
everyone
in
that
capacity,
we
do
want
to
thank
all
the
essential
workers
in
our
community
and
for
me,
my
staff,
my
colleagues,
the
legal
staff,
Allison
Moore,
just
a
lot
of
really
good
folks
who
continue
to
work
really
hard
day
after
day
after
day,
without
without
a
day
off
to
do
what's
best
for
our
community.
As
mayor
held
to
mentioned,
they
are
looking
for.
There
is
a
look
search
now
for
people
who
can
assist
essential
workers
who
need
child
care.
C
You
can
find
information
about
this
on
our
County
website,
seokmin
Road
on
us,
and
there
there's
there
about
230
children
of
essential
workers,
and
we
need
healthy
child
care
workers
who
could
be
educators,
teachers,
college
students,
anyone
with
childcare
experience,
full
or
part-time,
and
so
all
that
information
is
on
our
website.
Also
a
note
for
businesses
outside
the
city
of
Bloomington
who
are
involved
in
any
way
in
the
tourism
field.
We
have
food
and
beverage
support
dollars
available.
C
The
council
still
has
to
appropriate
those
this
week.
Hopefully
they
will
I
believe
they
will,
and
if
anybody
is
interested
in
applying
for
a
no
interest
loan
or
a
grant
from
this
fund,
we
invite
you
to
visit
the
Monroe
County
website.
Cdot
Monroe
died
on
us
and
to
and
to
fill
out
in
short
one-page
application
for
us,
and
we
will
be
looking
at
those
on
a
weekly
basis
on
a
rolling
basis.
C
D
Good
afternoon
again,
I
would
also
echo
thanks
to
all
those
who
are
doing
a
great
job
in
our
community.
We
have
a
great
height
set
of
before,
but
we
have
next.
We
have
next
to
none
in
our
health
department
and
support
in
this
county,
and
we
need
to
be
proud
and
really
reward
them
for
the
great
work
that
they're
doing
this.
Just
fantastic
great
collaboration
and
we
couldn't
be
more
pleased
and
I,
couldn't
be
more
pleased
to
be
yours
and
a
part
of
it.
D
We're
all
so
grateful
for
all
of
our
team
members
that,
as
Julie
said,
they're
working.
You
know
some
other
seven
days
a
week
and
nurses
who
are
too
working
tired
by
getting
respite
through
generous
support
through
donations
of
food
we've
been
able
to
have
hotels,
who've
supported
us
and
university.
The
dormitories,
and
just
it's
just
been
fantastic,
far
team
to
know
that
they're
cared
for
that
they're
supported
and
that
there
is
that
outreach
I
want
to
talk
about
three
things
here
quickly.
D
First,
the
new
weekly
data
that
came
out
to
all
the
press
just
just
today,
testing
expansion
and
talk
a
little
bit
about
that
and
then
some
surge
planning
information
follow
up
on
our
last
talk
last
Friday.
So
first
of
all,
you
know
we're
the
first,
you
hope
is
the
first
health
system
and
health
care
entities
to
release
data.
This
has
taken
some
time
for
us,
as
you
can
imagine
to
be
sure
that
the
data
is
accurate,
reliable
and
that
we're
pulling
it
from
all
the
sources.
D
This
will
be
a
system
number,
not
a
regional
number,
because
we
move
those
around
throughout
our
system,
so
those
numbers
that
region
or
location
change
daily,
a
number
of
IU
Health
Team
members
who
have
tested
positive
as
well
as
a
number
who
have
returned
to
work,
which
is
always
good.
So
let's
talk
a
little
bit
about
that.
D
The
sheet
that
was
handed
out
virtual
screenings
to
date
or
over
24,000
virtual
screening
visits,
have
been
completed
here
in
the
state
of
Indiana
through
I
you,
health,
we've
done
over
5600
tests
for
based
on
screening
criteria
to
different
patients,
and
then
our
patients
in
IU,
Health,
hospitals
in
the
south-central
region,
26
confirmed
16,
are
still
waiting
results
and
those
results
turnaround
within
24
to
36
hours
and
44
total
of
42
patients.
As
of
yesterday.
D
So
that's
not
just
those
who
are
testing
positive.
Those
are
those
who
we
until
we
can
get
a
test
and
figure
out
if
they
have
it
or
not,
getting
them
isolated
away
from
their
families
potentially
or
way,
of
course,
away
from
the
workplace
and
of
those
376
232
of
return
to
work.
And,
of
course,
that
number
is
not
static
either
that,
as
a
continuously
changing
number
so
about
62
percent
of
our
workforce
is
returning
back
every
time.
We
so
that
that's
that's
a
good
thing
as
far
as
our
supplies
masked
PP
equipment,
testing
media.
D
All
of
that
we're
in
very
good
shape.
Our
health
has
been
able
to
secure
some
great
suppliers
and
we've
been
able
to
put
some
real
good
conservation
policies
and
procedures
in
place
around
CDC
guidelines
and
the
best
evidence,
and
so
we're
doing
well.
There
48%
of
our
ventilators
are
being
utilized
across
the
state
and
IU
Health
hospitals
that
just
includes
ventilators.
That
does
not
include
additional
machines
like
anesthesia
machines
and
others
that
can
be
converted
to
ventilation.
D
That's
just
those
ventilators
that
we've
got
in
our
care
areas,
ICUs
and
units
that
we've
converted
for
Kovac
and
then
our
ICU
bed
utilization
is
fifty
nine
percent.
So
you
can
see,
we've
got
a
great
deal
of
capacity
as
we
plan
for
a
surge
if
the
surge
is
still
to
come.
We're
ready
for
that.
So
I
just
want
to
review
that
data.
That
data
will
continue
to
come
out.
As
I
said
every
Monday.
Currently
for
our
south-central
region.
We
have
seen
66
patients
that
have
been
admitted
to
our
hospitals
in
the
south-central
region.
D
D
Aiyoo
health
was
one
of
the
very
first
in
the
state
of
Indiana
to
get
that
up
and
running
as
other
than
the
Indiana
State
Department
of
Health,
and
so
we
started
the
phase
one,
which
was
our
health
care
workers,
making
sure
that
they
were
getting
tested
in
our
patients.
Of
course,
and
now
this
now
we've
expanded
that
to
four
responders,
and
last
week
we
tested
several
first
responders
in
our
communities
and
other
health
care
workers
of
other
facilities
in
our
community.
And
now
we
have
expanded
that
to
outpatient
testing.
D
So
we
have
opened
what
we're
calling
a
sick
clinic
so
with
you
are
affiliated
with
an
IU
health
physician
or
you
go
to
one
of
our
walk-in
clinics
and
you
display
the
symptoms
that
meet
criteria
for
testing
the
physician.
It
has
to
be
with
a
physician's
order,
but
the
physician
now
places
the
order
and
we
do
the
Kovach
test
and
mayor
your
wife
does
well
and
and
sounds
like
she
will
and
and
you
as
well,
but
that
was
part
of
that.
That
process
worked
for
for
her.
D
She
was
able
to
see
her
doctor
with
symptoms
and
get
the
testing
done,
and
that
was
expanded
this
week
for
all
outpatients
who
see
their
doctor
or
call
in
to
that
thought
that
nurse
line
and
and
get
screened,
and
then
we
test
them.
So
those
are
the
three
things
I
want
to
cover
surge
planning.
I
didn't
want
to
speak
a
little
bit
about
search
planning.
D
You
know
the
question
is:
what
happens
when
this
is
over
and
that's
the
question.
A
lot
of
people
are
asking
and
we
use
as
Allison
can
speak
better
to
it
than
I
the
healthcare
incident
command
process.
That's
a
national
process
out
of
nine
911
and
that
process
helped
us
ramp
down
by
priority.
Our
different
procedures
are
different.
A
A
E
Good
afternoon,
thanks
Chuck,
we
are
still
under
a
local
emergency
declaration.
We
will
remain
under
that
local
declaration
following
given
the
governor's
orders,
we
will
stay
under
our
current
declaration.
We
continue
to
work
with
the
Indiana
Department
of
Homeland
Security
for
PPE
requests,
as
you
know,
and
as
many
of
you
know,
there's
a
shortage
of
supplies
and
they
are
very
hard
to
get.
We
are
continuing
to
fight
from
Monroe
County
and
the
supplies
that
we
are
in
dire
need
of.
E
The
CDC,
as
well
as
Monroe
County,
made
a
recommendation
earlier
this
week
to
wear
masks
when
you
are
out
within
the
public.
So
we're
asking
that
you
have
face
covers
when
you
are
in
the
public.
That
should
not
mean
that
you
still
have
to
follow
social
distancing.
Even
when
you
have
those
masks
are
we
encouraging
people
to
wear
face
covers
and
continue
that
social
distancing,
but
because
of
that
we
are
in
dire
need
of
masks.
E
So
if
you
are
a
mask
maker,
I
know
I
repeat
this
every
week
on
this
press
conference,
but
more
and
more
people
are
watching
this
and
we
want
to
continue
to
get
the
word
out
of
where
those
are
being
collected.
We
currently
have
many
sites
throughout
the
county
in
order
to
collect
those.
Those
sites
are
located
on
our
County
website,
which
is
co,
dot,
Monroe,
dot,
I
n
dot,
us
there's
a
direct
link.
E
It's
a
green
colored
link
where
you
can
click
on,
and
it
gives
the
addresses
of
the
places
where
you
can
in
fact
drop
those
masks
off.
We
encourage
you
to
drop
those
masks
off
while
you
are
in
a
going
to
an
essential,
an
essential
need
or
dropping
them
back
off
when
you
are
on
your
way
back
home
from
an
essential
need.
E
But
again,
since
we
are
in
such
dire
need,
we
also
encourage
you
to
go
drop
those
masks
off
and
then
go
back
home,
and
it
can
of
course
continue
that
social
distancing,
while
doing
so,
we
are
collaborating
with
all
of
our
partners
on
surge
plans
in
the
event
of
a
medical
surge.
As
Brian
spoke
about
we're
very
fortunate
here
that
our
hospital
has
wonderful
incident
command
plans
and
procedures
already
in
place.
They've
worked
very
well
in
collaboration
with
our
office
way
before
any
pandemic
ever
hit.
E
E
F
F
Now
you
think,
suck
and
like
everyone
there
give
our
best
to
you
and
gone
for
a
full
and
speedy
recovery.
What's
going
on
Indiana
University
right
now,
but
right
now,
our
our
residential
program
services
and
the
emergency
operation
centers
are
working
on
Brisco,
getting
it
ready
for
a
respite
care
for
IU
Health.
That
process
is
taking
place
on
Bloomington
campus.
We're
also
doing
that
I
mean
appleÃs
campus
working
with
IU,
Health
and
housing
facilities.
Folks
are
packing
up
students,
belongings,
storing
them
even
those
facilities
ready.
Those
are
major
undertaking
the
imagine.
F
A
lot
of
students
left
their
stuff
on
a
spree
braid
and
then
we'll
be
asking
the
staff
in
permanent
residents
and
notified
those
jeans.
You
have
movers
and
we're
carefully
going
through
that
process,
and
you
know
the
door
is
ready
and
then
working
with
our
house
on
those
procedures.
Right
now,
so
I
appreciate
the
internal
effort
that
that's
taken
from
our
tunes.
F
On
the
keeping
in
front
like
others,
we
continue
to
look
at
our
supply
and
stock.
Our
student
health
centers
have
adequate
supplies
right
now.
Our
focus
has
been
to
assist
a
mutual
aid
request
where
we
can.
How
do
we
teach
continue
to
do
that
and
we're
continuing
to
work
with
our
purchasing
partners?
Define
additional
supplies.
Quite
imagine
that
hard
to
get
on
the
95
to
gown
is
to
the
quality
values.
We're
also
working
with
this
game
to
be
an
elusive
quest
as
well
teamed
up
with
them
into
some
fire
lines
in
terms
of
looking
at.
F
E
F
Right
wait:
our
partnership
with
you
can
lead
to
T's
to
be
great
amongst
the
two
things
departments:
EIU
police
department.
According
to
the
city
police
department,
I
think
the
message
has
gotten
out
to
students
that
have
stayed
in
Bloomington
off-campus
residence
I
know,
at
least
from
the
IU
Police
Department.
F
Throughout
the
scheme
are
essential
employees
they're
working
hard,
they're,
obviously
practicing
those
that
will
see
to
be
measured,
whether
its
facilities
more
tourism,
whether
it's
our
key
as
you
still
have
some
students
on
campus
is
there,
but
you
go
home
to
their
countries
or
have
situations
here
in
the
United.
States
and
I
mean
yeah
no,
it
required
to
live
on
campus.
So
you
have
very
very
few
students,
but
we
obviously
still
having
on
a
city
employee
service
to
meet
a
while
on
campus.
A
E
If
you
check,
we
are
trying
to
do
our
best
at
this
is
a
holiday
for
government,
and
so
we
were
trying
to
work,
even
though
we're
essential
from
home
today,
and
sometimes
that
provides
some
additional
technology
difficulties.
And
so,
though,
we've
been
working
fearlessly,
we
have
been
trying
to
do
that
from
home,
and
so,
unfortunately,
that
didn't
work
so
well
from
his
coddle
and
her
Wi-Fi.
She
has
three
updates,
though,
and
they
are
this
morning
the
Indiana
State
Department
of
Health
released
information
that
dr.
E
box
would,
like
all
negative
tests,
results
to
go
to
the
state.
So
in
the
past
those
results
did
not
have
to
be
recorded,
and
now
they
do
so
that
could
in
fact
increase
or
will
in
fact
increase
the
number
shown
of
tests
that
are
being
provided.
That
did
not
have
to
be
required
before
the
governor
released
him
expanded
guidance
on
worship
for
faith
banks
in
regards
to
it
being
Easter
weekend.
E
So
we
encourage
those
faith-based
organizations
to
check
out
the
CDs
are
the
the
state's
website
in
regards
to
those
governor
orders
and
then
lastly,
Chuck
there
were
two
Flyers
that
penny
had
had
for
you.
I
know
you
had
spoke
of
those
earlier
on
this
press
conference.
She
has
two
IU
students
that
have
worked
on
these.
These
different
Flyers
they're
both
regarding
face
coverings
and
she
would
like
for
those
to
be
shown
and
then,
of
course
shared
with
this,
for
others
to
be
able
to
utilize
proper
face
covering
protocols
that
they
created
I.
A
A
E
A
G
Hey
sorry
so
I
apologized,
so
much
thanks,
Allison
for
for
sharing
that
we
are
really
happy
to
be
able
to
with
the
IU
students
who,
with
school-leaving
and
you
know,
being
virtual
and
internships
kind
of
being
upheaval.
Dwee
had
we
took
on
some
extra
students
to
work
off-site
to
just
finish
up
there,
they're
ours
and
helped
us
out,
so
we're
really
happy
they've
been
working
on
a
lot
of
different
messaging
for
us,
and
these
are
just
two
of
the
latest
things
that
they
came
out.
We
wanted
to
share
those
and
say
thank
you
for
that.
A
Well,
thank
you,
penny
appreciate
it
so
now
we
will
go
ahead
and
open
this
up
to
questions
and
start
with
Ethan
Burke's
from
wtiu
wfiu
news
for
mayor
Hamilton.
Could
you
please
take
us
through
the
timeline
of
your
wife,
Dawn's
diagnosis?
When
did
she
first
start
experiencing
symptoms?
What
kind
of
processes
your
family
gone
through
and
notifying
people
you've
come
into
contact
with,
and
how
is
she
doing
and
everyone
here
at
the
station
wishes
very
healthy
recovery,
says
well.
B
Thank
you
very
much.
I
appreciate
it
dawn
has
been
actually
very
careful
and
isolated
for
quite
some
time
before
she
had
any
symptoms
and
she
had
symptoms
just
a
few
days
back
and
got
tested
this
week
and
confirmed
on
Thursday,
so
she's
not
been
in
touch
with
anybody.
I
appreciate
your
good
thoughts.
B
She
is
at
home
and
you
know
I
don't
really
want
to
dig
into
all
the
details,
but
we
appreciate
the
good
thoughts
and
she's
resting
and
we're
following
those
protocols
as
she
is
and
I
am
we
have
a
son
at
home
as
well
and
appreciate
again
your
your
good
thoughts
and
everybody's
doing.
Okay,
so
far,
keeping
our
fingers
crossed.
A
Thank
You
mayor
from
Emily
Ernst
Berger
from
The
Herald
Times
for
Bryan
Shaak
knee
she
writes
Maria
Dodi
sent
out
data
on
beds
testing
an
ICU
this
morning.
The
ventilator
number
is
48
percent
use.
But
out
of
how
many
and
the
same
question
for
the
59%
ICU
beds
and
to
clarify?
Are
these
numbers
for
IU
Health
hospitals
across
the
state
or
just
in
the
south
central
Indiana
region?.
D
So
the
48
percent
and
the
59
percent
our
statewide.
The
reason
those
are
statewide
is
because
we're
continuously
moving
supplies
throughout
I
you,
health
and
its
many
facilities
across
the
state,
as
we've
seen,
the
west
side
of
Indianapolis
downtown
Indianapolis
and
the
Carmel
area
really
took
the
surge
quicker
than
the
rest
of
the
state,
and
so
we
had
to
shift
our
supplies,
and
even
some
of
our
nursing
personnel
for
around
the
state
have
gone
to
help
and
support
them
as
well
and
and
other
types
of
technical
personnel.
D
So
that
number
is
a
number
that's
continuously
changing,
but
it's
overall,
the
number,
the
percentage
of
ventilators
across
the
state
of
Indiana
that
are
being
utilized,
so
some
facilities
will
be
a
much
higher
percentage
than
others
and
then
from
the
ICU
beds,
a
59
percent.
That's
those
beds
that
we
currently
classify
as
ICU
and
why
there's
not
a
total
there.
As
that
number
changes,
this
state
of
Indiana
and
ESA
Department
of
Health
has
been
very
working.
D
Very
hard
has
been
in
almost
all
of
our
facilities
in
the
last
few
days
to
certify
new
rooms
that
are
being
qualified.
They
were
medical
surgical
rooms
before,
but
they
had
the
equipment
in
the
walls
and
that
kind
of
thing
for
an
ICU
we've
converted
those
through
negative
pressure
additional
equipment,
those
kind
of
things
to
turn
those
into
ICU
beds
to
prepare
for
a
surge,
and
so
those
number
of
ICU
beds
continues
to
change.
It
continues
to
increase
in
number.
A
Okay,
a
question
from
Abby
here,
so
what
housing
options
are
there
for
homeless
to
isolate
them
before
they
get
the
virus,
since
it
seems
that
Shalom
and
other
places
are
full
to
capacity,
and
it
is
not
a
good
option
to
cram
people
together
in
shelters
with
beds
close
together.
I
know
that
Shalom
certainly
doesn't
have
the
capacity
to
deal
with
an
influx.
A
B
A
Okay,
let's
move
on
to
another
question
here
and
which
just
lost
it:
okay,
for
from
David
Haskins,
we
beat
on
Beacon,
first
of
all,
a
system
mayor,
Hamilton,
all
the
best
had
gone
and
then
do
you
know
if
any
applications
have
already
come
in
for
the
rapid
response
funding
and
he
asks
further.
Is
it
in
single
digits
or
dozens
and
dozens
I.
B
B
I
believe
I
saw
that
it's
single
digits
that
have
actually
completed
the
full
application,
which
includes
financial
information
and
other
things,
I
think
it's
under
10
as
of
mid-morning,
but
dozens
and
dozens
somewhere
around
50
I
think
that
have
begun
filling
out
the
application
process
and
I
get
I
guess
we
can
see
which
parts
they
filled
out
as
it
as
it
goes
and
encourage
everybody
to
go
to
the
city
website.
You
can
find
that
and
see
what
you
can
see
with
Molly.
A
A
Are
indeed
going
on,
so
let
me
see
if
we
have
another
question
here
by
the
way
to
our
media,
who
are
watching.
All
of
you
are
watching
here.
It's
not.
This
is
not
currently
streaming
live
on
Facebook
for
our
some
technical
issues
of
Facebook
change,
but
the
replay
will
be
up
there
afterwards,
as
is
what
we're
working
on
now
a
question
about.
How
do
we
encourage
our
co-workers
to
wear
masks,
especially
those
of
us
perform
residential
delivery
like
home
delivery
of
the
HT?
A
E
You
know
at
this
time
it's
it's
just
a
recommendation,
but
so
you
could
just
encourage
your
co-workers
that
this
is
the
CDC
and
Monroe
County's
recommendation
in
and
push
that
encouragement
of
that
recommendation
on
to
them.
Unfortunately,
it's
not
something
that
obviously
could
be
forced,
so
Chuck.
D
I'd
like
to
weigh
in
you
know
from
a
what
we
did
here
is
my
my
wife
says
so
her
and
she's
one
of
those
that's
made
a
couple
hundred
masks
already
and
I
brought
them
in
to
work
and
handed
him
out
and
said.
You
know.
Here's
an
opportunity
to
CDC
says
this
is
a
good
idea,
and
so,
when
you
we're
not
going
in
each
other's
offices
at
all
and
our
mailboxes
are
outside
our
doors.
D
But
when
you
walk
down
the
hallway
and
you
go
to
the
bathroom
or
you
go
to
the
kit
to
kitchenette
and
get
coffee
or
whatever
you
know,
I'd
really
like
for
you
to
wear
this
mask
Star
Wars
mask
all
kinds
of
things
that
have
been
made
so
be
creative.
You
know,
and
I
would
handkerchiefs
can
work
as
well
lots
of
stuff
out
there
on
YouTube,
but
I
would
encourage
you.
It
doesn't
cost
much
money.
You
might
be
able
to
pick
some
up
at
our
Miller
Drive
office.
D
A
D
When
we
were
doing
public
the
same
criteria
now
that
we've
got
a
gun
into
Phase
three,
the
same
criteria,
we
are
required.
You
have
to
have
certain
symptoms
if
you've
been
exposed,
certain
exposure
requirements,
and
so
the
nurses
have
an
algorithm
that
they
use
across
the
state,
and
they
just
ask
you
certain
questions
regarding:
where
do
you
work?
Who
have
you
come
in
contact
with?
Have
you
been
in
contact
with
someone
who
has
been
positively
diagnosed?
D
What
symptoms
do
you
have
currently
and
then
for
the
our
public
health
workers
and
the
health
care
workers?
Where
do
you
work
and
who
do
you
come
in
contact
with
as
you
work
and
then
those
criteria
all
put
together,
and
then
your
your
physician
or
the
nurse
that
you're
calling
in
to
makes
that
call
as
to
if
it's
a
good
idea
for
you
to
get
tested
at
that
time?
We
find
that
some
may
just
you
know,
beginning
of
I
have
allergies,
so
you
know
I've
had
to
restart
my
allergy.
D
Medicine
I
could
have
called
him
and
said
you
know.
I
feel
like
I
have
asthma
as
well.
So
you
know
I'm
getting
tighten
the
chest.
Well,
that's
the
tree.
That's
blooming
outside
my
office,
I
could
have
called
in
and
they
would
have
said
no
we're
not
going
to
test
you.
You
have
asthma,
allergies.
You've
just
got.
You
know.
You
told
tighten
the
chest,
that's
kind
of
normal
this
time
of
year.
B
B
It's
also
probably
worth
noting
and
Ryan
knows
this
better
than
I
and
others
that
the
health
that
the
the
testing
protocols
are
surely
and
continue
to
evolve
quite
substantially,
I
mean,
as
you
watch
the
national
news
and
state
news
and
different
things.
We're
going
to
be
looking
at
very
different
testing
regimes,
as
the
weeks
and
months
go
forward,
whether
we
move
from
quicker
and
more
easily
accessible
tests
to
even
even
surveillance,
testing
and
other
things
like
that.
A
Okay,
I
think
we
are
just
about
out
of
time
here
but
again,
thank
you,
everybody
for
being
here.
We
will
again
do
this
next
week
and
we
will
hopefully
be
streaming
on
Facebook
again
at
that
time,
but
we'll
be
here
on
zoom'
and
answer.
Questions
and
advisory
will
go
out
as
per
usual
next
week
as
well.
So
thanks
to
everybody
for
joining
thanks.