The goal of the interim steps is to provide economic relief to Delaware citizens and businesses who are struggling financially – while maintaining strict adherence to health and safety guidelines.
The steps also will help as Delawareans and Delaware businesses adapt to new ways of operating once Phase 1 begins.
Also on Tuesday, Governor Carney and the Delaware Division of Public Health (DPH) announced a plan to test all residents and staff of Delaware long-term care facilities for COVID-19. DPH will provide facilities with tests, testing supplies, training, and support for the universal testing program to protect the most vulnerable Delawareans. Expanding COVID-19 testing capacity for vulnerable populations is a requirement of federal guidance for economic reopening.
Public health experts at the Division of Public Health (DPH) will support clinicians at long-term care facilities with the new testing program. DPH will provide guidance on testing of symptomatic and asymptomatic persons and the interpretation of results. DPH will also provide recommendations to protect residents and staff based on results, including transmission-based precautions, isolation, and patient and staff management strategies.
“I understand how hard this has been for Delawareans across our state. We’ve tried to find ways to ease the pain without compromising public health,” said Governor Carney. “But even these limited steps allowing businesses to offer additional services will require strict compliance with safety standards, especially social distancing. We cannot afford to go backwards and see new cases and hospitalizations spike. Getting used to a new normal won’t be easy, but this is the first step to being able to reopen our economy.”
“Residents of long-term care facilities are extremely vulnerable to complications from the virus that causes COVID-19 due to chronic health conditions,” said Dr. Karyl Rattay, Director of the Delaware Division of Public Health. “We are incredibly pleased to be able to support this testing strategy which will enable us to help the facilities better identify outbreaks among both staff and residents and contain the spread of the disease through a variety of interventions. It is an important component in our rapidly expanding testing strategy.”
Below are the interim steps the Governor announced are effective at 8:00 a.m. on Friday, May 8:
- Small business retailers will be allowed to do business using curbside pickup as long as social distancing can be maintained. These retailers include:
- Clothing stores
- Shoe stores
- Sporting goods, hobby, musical instruments
- Book, periodical, music stores
- Department stores
- Tobacco and Vape
- Other general merchandise
- Office supply, stationery, and gift stores
- Used merchandise stores
- Consumer goods rental
- Jewelry stores may do business by appointment only, and the Governor has instructed the Division of Small Business to consider additional changes like this for other similar retailers.
- Cosmetology: Haircare services only are permitted to be offered, and only to workers at essential businesses. Guidelines include:
- No more than two appointments at a time per location (and never more than the number of available staff, so just one for a sole proprietor). Need to leave 15 minutes between appointments for proper cleaning.
- Employees and customers must wear cloth face masks at all times, and customers must cancel appointments if they have any reason to believe they may be ill or may have come into contact with the virus.
- Staff must wear disposable gloves when providing services and must throw away gloves between customers and wash hands.
- Employer must require employees to report their temperature daily — above 99.5 means they are ineligible to work.
- Customer stations must be sanitized between use, along with any equipment used for the customer. In addition, any item a customer handles (like a magazine) must leave with the customer.
- Entrance door must remain locked to outside to prevent walk-ins.
- Other
- Golf carts allowed at courses for 1 rider at a time with proper cleaning between customers
- Drive thru movies are permitted, but patrons must remain inside vehicles and social distancing must be maintained at all times.
Employees required to report to work as a result of these changes will now be permitted to utilize child care services, provided neither parent works from home and they do not have alternate care.
10 comments:
Wake up people. We are all in lockdown over FAKE covid numbers.
Great idea. We have really gotten a handle on this and the fact is there is very little risk anymore to almost all of the public. The risk was pretty much limited to those in congregate living facilities and those who come in contact with them such as visiting family members. Many of the cases (and deaths) were in areas where multigeneratons tend to live together and people not related. Most of the deaths in the US occurred in sub standard hospitals such as many in NYC. In the Delmarva area the risk is now pretty much limited to those who work in the poultry processing plants and those who come in CLOSE contact with them. Close as in living together and not casual contact in a grocery store and especially not outdoors such as on a beach or a boardwalk.
Wow
Between this and Ocean City, we are going to be doomed. Mark my words, let's see where we are May 30th. This might be fine for other parts of the country, but Covid is still growing in Sussex & Eastern Shore.
dittos 5:09
Come on Guvner!
"Anonymous said...
Between this and Ocean City, we are going to be doomed. Mark my words, let's see where we are May 30th. This might be fine for other parts of the country, but Covid is still growing in Sussex & Eastern Shore.
May 5, 2020 at 6:50 PM"
It is only growing because the poultry processing plant workers and those who come into close contact with them are being tested ****finally**** in larger numbers. If that group had been tested a month ago you would have most likely seen much larger numbers a month ago then we see now because many were sick but have recovered without any medical intervention or even testing. While it smart to be reasonable and cautious the worst is behind us.
“We”?
Who has a handle on COVID-19?
Did you mean to type: The CDC and US Military have the bioweapon under control?
See you in our Emergency Department soon...
"Anonymous said...
“We”?
Who has a handle on COVID-19?
Did you mean to type: The CDC and US Military have the bioweapon under control?
May 6, 2020 at 6:34 AM"
Yes "we" since it doesn't take rocket science to look at the data. In NJ for instance over 50 percent of the deaths were from nursing homes/long term care facilities. You can then conclude those associated with those facilities had infections they spread. Same in NY where at least 30 percent were nursing home patient deaths. That number will get higher since they keep on "finding" new numbers. Also in NY many of the deaths were in inner city public hospitals that have performed miserably for years. Yes there are some anomalies but overall this appears to be confined to "sub groups." On Delmarva it's the poultry processing plant workers and those they come into close contact with. In other states meat processing plants are making up a large majority of the cases in the whole state.
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