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Coronavirus updates: California now has the most cases in US

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narvikk/iStockBy JON HAWORTH and EMILY SHAPIRO, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — The novel coronavirus pandemic has now killed more than 617,000 people worldwide.

Over 14.9 million people across the globe have been diagnosed with COVID-19, the disease caused by the new respiratory virus, according to data compiled by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering at Johns Hopkins University. The actual numbers are believed to be much higher due to testing shortages, many unreported cases and suspicions that some governments are hiding or downplaying the scope of their nations’ outbreaks.

The United States has become the worst-affected country, with more than 3.9 million diagnosed cases and at least 142,350 deaths.

Here is how the news is developing today. All times Eastern. Check back for updates.

1:25 p.m.: WHO warns vaccines are never ‘100% effective’

“Vaccines are never 100% effective,” World Health Organization (WHO) emergencies chief Dr. Mike Ryan said on Wednesday.

“So the idea that we’re going to have a (COVID-19) vaccine in 2-3 months, and then all of a sudden this virus is going to go away … I would love to be here saying that to you, but that’s just not realistic,” he said.

As of Tuesday, there are 24 vaccine candidates in clinical evaluation, the WHO said.

Ryan said developing a COVID-19 vaccine will take time and that every precaution will be made to ensure that it is safe and effective.

But he warns that it’ll take time to see how effective the vaccine will be, and how long protection will last.

Vaccines generate immunity in “most” people, Ryan said, pointing to the measles vaccine as an example of a “highly effective” vaccine the provides immunity to approximately 95% of people.

“We don’t know where we are with this,” he said of a potential COVID-19 vaccine.

Ryan added, “There is so much we can do now, and it will be so much easier to get rid of this virus using a vaccine if we’ve already suppressed it,” he said, citing wearing masks, washing hands and social distancing.

“It’s easier to beat your opponent, when you have exhausted your opponent,” Ryan said. “Work as hard as we can now, and work as hard as we can on the vaccine, and put the two together.”

12:45 p.m.: Masks now mandatory in DC

Masks are now mandatory in Washington, D.C. as the district sees a rise in cases, Mayor Muriel Bowser said Wednesday.

Bowser said exceptions will include actively eating and drinking, vigorous exercise that respects social distancing, or being alone in an enclosed office. Children under 3 years old are exempt.

Bowser also said that she will extend a state of emergency order in the District that was set to expire by the end of July. 

12:05 p.m.: Miami Beach to issue fines for not wearing a mask

As COVID-19 surges in Florida, those not wearing face coverings in public spots of Miami Beach will be fined $50 beginning on Thursday, officials said.

“We all need to be serious about flattening the curve and putting this deadly virus behind us,” Mayor Dan Gelber said in a statement Wednesday. “Please do your part and wear a mask.”

11:30 a.m.: Florida has 4 counties with no ICU beds

In hard-hit Florida, just 15% of the state’s adult ICU beds were available Wednesday morning, according to the state’s Agency for Healthcare Administration.

Four counties — Monroe, Nassau, Okaloosa and Putnam — had no available ICU beds, the agency said.

These numbers are expected to fluctuate throughout the day as hospitals and medical centers provide updates.

Florida’s positivity rate was 10.55% as of Wednesday morning.

The state now has 379,619 total cases and 5,458 fatalities.

10:35 a.m.: California is now the state with the most coronavirus cases

California has surpassed New York’s number of coronavirus cases, according to Johns Hopkins data.

As of Wednesday morning, California had over 409,000 cases, while New York had over 408,000.

California’s positivity rate and hospitalization rates are trending upward in the two-week average, according to the state.

Meanwhile, New York’s positivity rate was just 1.29% Tuesday, according to Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

Thirty-one states — including California — are on New York’s travel advisory list. Those traveling from the 31 high-case states must quarantine for two weeks when arriving in New York.

9:35 a.m.: Coronavirus cases rising in kids

Coronavirus cases in children is steadily rising and nearing the level of patients 65 or older, according to internal FEMA memos obtained by ABC News. Children ages 12 to 17 appear to become infected at a higher rate than younger kids.

The memos also outlined coronavirus problems that specific states are facing.

In South Carolina, the test-positivity rate is above 15% and rising, the memos said.

Charleston, Horry and Greenville counties reported the highest number of new cases over the last three weeks, representing 38.4% of new cases in the state, the memo said.

Charleston County has the most significant rate increase in the state.

In the Las Vegas, Nevada, area, fatalities are on the rise, particularly among residents older than 65 with underlying health conditions, the memos said.

Out of 38 acute-care hospitals, six reported experiencing critical staffing shortages, while another six hospitals anticipate critical staffing shortages in the next week, the memos said.

Louisiana is experiencing “broad community spread” across the state. East Baton Rouge, Calcasieu and Jefferson parishes had the highest number of new cases over the last three weeks and represent 26.5% of new cases, the memos said.

Lafayette and Lake Charles are reporting a significant lack of testing supplies, the memos said.

8:25 a.m.: Masks could have ‘very significant impact’ on outbreak within months, CDC director says

Dr. Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), called masks the “most powerful tool” against the coronavirus.

“This is the greatest public health crisis that our nation has faced in more than a century,” Redfield told ABC News’ Good Morning America on Wednesday. “If all Americans would embrace that [masks] as part of their personal responsibility to confront this outbreak, we could actually have a very significant impact on the outbreak that we’re seeing across the country in the next four, six, eight, 10, 12 weeks.”

But when it comes to the idea of a national mask mandate, Redfield said, “the issue is how to motivate all Americans to do that.”

“Some governors have done it, obviously with mandates. Other governors have done it through example. I think our key is just to let the American public know how important this is,” he said.

As the new school year nears, Redfield said he would “absolutely” be comfortable with his grandchildren heading back to their classrooms. Redfield added he only may have “some reservation” about his grandson with cystic fibrosis, “depending on how he could be accommodated in the school.”

“I think it’s really important to get our schools open,” he said. “It’s not public health versus opening the schools or the economy — it’s public health versus public health. I think there really are a number of negative public health consequences that have happened to our K-12 [students] by having schools closed.”

“So it’s so important now to work together with school districts to figure out how they can take our guidelines and operationalize them in a practical way and to do it in a way that is safe,” he continued.

5:11 a.m.: France says it has 208 active clusters of COVID-19 across the country

France has 208 currently active coronavirus outbreaks as of Tuesday, according to the General Directorate of Health, which notes that “the circulation of the virus is increasing.”

Since May 9, 547 grouped cases — or clusters — have been detected but 339 have been closed, said the Directorate General of Health.

Currently, 6,482 people are hospitalized for COVID-19 and 455 patients with a severe form of COVID-19 are currently hospitalized in intensive care.

Just four regions in the country — Ile de France, Grand-Est, Hauts-de-France and Guyana — account for 70% of patients being hospitalized in intensive care.

Elsewhere, in overseas territories owned by France, there are a total of 202 hospitalizations, including 34 in intensive care.

Since the start of the pandemic, 106,296 people have been hospitalized in the country and 79,734 people have returned home.

A total of 30,165 people have died so far in France, including 19,649 people in hospitals and 10,516 in nursing and care homes.

4:50 a.m.: Prime minister hopes Russian coronavirus vaccine will be available in fall

The Russian authorities are hoping to receive a reliable domestic coronavirus vaccine in the fall, Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin said.

“I do hope that we will receive our own Russian reliable vaccine against coronavirus in the fall,” Mishustin said in the State Duma on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, the number of reported new infections in the country remained below 6,000 for the third day in a row.

Russia confirmed 5,862 new coronavirus infections on Wednesday, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 789,190.

Over the past 24 hours 165 people have died, making the total death toll in the country 12,745.

A total of 9,669 people recovered over the last 24 hours, which brought the overall number of recoveries to 572,053.

2:10 a.m.: RNC attendees in Jacksonville to take ‘in-home’ tests before event, no commitment to requiring masks

Almost a month before Republicans are set to gather in Jacksonville, Florida, for President Donald Trump’s second nomination, in a state seeing a record-breaking surge in coronavirus cases, the Republican National Committee outlined in more detail the safety procedures that will be in place for the nominating event in a memo obtained by ABC News.

Convention-goers heading to Jacksonville for the Republicans celebration are expected to take an “in-home COVID-19 test” before the gatherings in either Charlotte or Jacksonville, paid for by the Republican National Committee.

The Jacksonville-based event will be spread across indoor and outdoor venues, the memo says, with planners set to use “Daily’s Place Flex Field, TIAA Bank Field, Daily’s Place Amphitheater, and others” in a multi-block radius of Jacksonville. The party is also preparing for a smaller-scale gathering, with organizers cutting back the number of attendees by limiting the attendance of alternate delegates and guests of delegates in Jacksonville.

On the night of Trump’s anticipated speech, which is slated for Thursday, guests of alternative delegates won’t be permitted inside the convention venue.

Among those who plan to participate in-person for the event, planners indicated that attendees will be tested more than once, writing in the memo “a variety of COVID testing available before and during the convention activities.” Attendees will be asked to provide consent to allow the testing company to share their results with the RNC.

On-site in Jacksonville, various health and safety precautions will be in-place and will “include, but are not limited to, on-site temperature checks, available PPE, and aggressive sanitizing protocols, and available COVID-19 testing,” according to the memo.

But still, Republicans did not commit to requiring masks at the convention and there was no mention of social distancing throughout the nine-page memo.

“We will follow the local and state health guidelines in place at the time of the convention,” the memo reads.

12:26 a.m.: 59 NFL players test positive for COVID-19

The NFL announced on Tuesday that 59 players have so far tested positive for the novel coronavirus.

Meanwhile, the NFL and the NFLPA announced Monday that they had agreed on COVID-19 testing protocols. Players and team personnel will be tested every day for the first two weeks of training camp, then every other day, as long as their team’s positive test rate is and remains under 5%.

New symptom-based testing guidelines from the league were updated on July 17.

If and when NFL training camps open next week, as currently scheduled, teams’ rosters will include a maximum of 80 players, as opposed to the usual 90, in an effort to help enforce social distancing measures in team facilities. This is according to sources who were on an NFLPA players call Tuesday night discussing details of the league’s latest proposal on coronavirus protocols.

Sources also said the NFL and the union officially agreed Tuesday to the league’s plan to drop all preseason games for the 2020 season. The agreement came a day after the league offered to the union to play no preseason games this summer because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Thus, with Tuesday’s developments, the league and the players’ union are inching closer to an agreement on rules that will govern training camp and the season under these difficult circumstances. Weeks of negotiations seem to be coming to a head, as sources who were on the players’ call Tuesday night said there has been agreement on several issues but work remains to be done on others.

A major issue reportedly concerning players right now is the procedure under which they can opt out of the 2020 season if they are in a high-risk category or they’re simply not comfortable playing amid the pandemic.

One source said the league has offered to give stipends — $250,000 for active roster and $100,000 for practice squad — to players who opt out because they’re in high-risk categories but nothing for players who opt out voluntarily.

The source said the league’s proposal would be that players who opt out would have their contracts “toll” — meaning just slide back a year and pick up next year where they are now — but that the teams would in the meantime retain whatever rights they had to release or trade those players under their current contracts.

The players are seeking better protections due to the unprecedented circumstances.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Tropical Storm Gonzalo forms, becoming earliest 7th named storm on record

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This satellite image shows Tropical Storm Gonzalo, July 22, 2020. – (NOAA)By MAX GOLEMBO and MELISSA GRIFFIN, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — Tropical Storm Gonzalo formed in the Atlantic Ocean on Wednesday morning, making it the earliest seventh named storm on record.

Gonzalo is expected to travel over the island of Grenada and just south of Barbados this weekend, bringing gusty winds and heavy rain.

The tropical storm is forecast to become a hurricane as it moves closer to the southern Caribbean islands.

Gonzalo will head into the central Caribbean by early next week, potentially somewhere south of Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic.

Meanwhile, a tropical wave is in the Gulf of Mexico on Wednesday morning.

The National Hurricane Center is giving this system about a 50% chance to develop into a tropical depression or a tropical storm. Should it become one, it would be named Hanna.

Regardless of the storm’s development, several inches of heavy rain is possible for eastern Texas by the end of the week and into the weekend.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Fifteen people shot outside Chicago funeral: Police

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WLS-TVBy WILLIAM MANSELL and IVAN PEREIRA, ABC News

(CHICAGO) — At least 15 people were shot outside a Chicago funeral home in a drive-by shootout during a ceremony for a man who was killed in an earlier drive-by shooting, according to the Chicago Police Department.

The city’s mayor and police officials are urging the public to come forward with information to help end the cycle of violence.

An unknown number of people inside a vehicle shot at a crowd attending a funeral on West 79th Street in the Auburn Gresham neighborhood around 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, police said. The individuals on the street then exchanged gunfire with the people in the vehicle, according to authorities.

Police said the suspects crashed the car which was stolen, and fled the scene.

“As the people were coming out of the funeral home, the shots rang out like they were literally raining on them,” witness Jenneth Hughes told ABC Chicago station WLS.

Police said 15 people, 10 women and five men, whose ages range from 21 to 65, were taken to five different hospitals with gunshot wounds. Three women and three men were listed in serious condition while the remaining victims were listed in good condition, according to police.

There were 60 shell casings found at the scene, according to David Brown, the superintendent of the Chicago Police Department. One person was being questioned, and the investigation is ongoing, police said.

Brown told reporters during a news conference Monday that the funeral was for a man who was recently killed during a drive-by shooting in the Englewood neighborhood. Two police cars were deployed to the funeral home and a tactical team was in the area as a precaution once the police got word of the ceremony, according to Brown.

“Every funeral with any evidence of any type of gang affiliation is treated the same way,” he said.

Brown said none of the officers who were in the area were hurt during the drive-by.

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot condemned the shooters for allegedly taking advantage of the service to enact revenge.

“To the cowards behind this shooting … we have to ask you to find your humanity,” she told reporters.

Tuesday’s shooting is the latest in a recent trend of increased violent incidents in the city, according to Chicago police data. The number of shootings this year as of July 19 is 1,637. That is 537 more shootings, or a 47% jump, compared to the same period last year, according to the CPD.

There have been 414 recorded murders in Chicago this year as of July 19, an increase of 139 from the same period in 2019, a roughly 51% jump, police statistics show.

Brown noted several times during the news conference there are over 117,000 gang members in the city and they are divided up into thousands of sub-factions.

He and Lightfoot urged anyone with information related to the shootings to come forward and help with the investigation by contacting the police’s tip line.

Brown also urged anyone who is thinking about retaliation for this incident or committing any violence as part of a dispute to “put your guns down.”

“The response too often is picking up a gun to seek vengeance,” he said. “A bullet for a bullet is killing these families, these neighborhoods.”

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

NAACP sues Betsy DeVos over COVID-19 aid rule, claiming

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Official White House Photo by Tia DufourBy BILL HUTCHINSON, ABC News

(WASHINGTON) — The NAACP is joining a coast-to-coast legal fight to prevent United States Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos from siphoning away Congressionally approved emergency COVID-19 relief funds from economically disadvantaged public schools, and giving the money to private ones.

The country’s largest civil rights group filed a lawsuit Wednesday in federal court in Washington, D.C., accusing DeVos of illegally changing the rules for allocating $13.2 billion in Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES) money to benefit wealthy private K-12 schools.

“You literally accelerate robbing from the poor to benefit the rich,” Derrick Johnson, NAACP national president and CEO, told ABC News of DeVos’ plan.

The lawsuit contends that the CARES Act, which was signed by President Donald Trump on March 27, specifically says local school departments are to distribute the fund based on the number of Title I, or low-wealth students, in a particular school. Recognizing that some students from low-income families attend private schools, Congress allowed CARES money to go to those institutions that largely depend on tuition and donations.

The lawsuit claims the share going to private schools was supposed to be based on the number of Title I students attending those schools. DeVos, however, had a different interpretation of how local school districts should distribute the money, and in her “interim final rule” said the money should be shared equally with private schools based on the total number of students in those schools, regardless of how many are Title I students.

“The pandemic has harmed all our Nation’s students by disrupting their education. Nothing in the CARES Act suggests Congress intended to differentiate between students based upon the public or non-public nature of their school with respect to eligibility for relief,” reads a guidance document issued by the Department of Education on April 30.

The lawsuit claims the consequences of DeVos’ guidance document would be that hundreds of millions of dollars in CARES Act funds instantly would be diverted from public schools to wealthy, private schools.

“The Rule is as immoral as it is illegal,” the lawsuit states.

Addressing reporters after the policy was contested by public school officials following its announcement last month, DeVos said the funding is separate from other federal aid and was meant to support all students.

The NAACP filed the lawsuit on behalf of a group of parents and their children, who are enrolled in economically disadvantaged public schools. The Pasadena, California, Unified School District and the Stamford, Connecticut, School District joined the NAACP in the lawsuit asking for an injunction to prevent DeVos from immediately instituting her change to the rule.

“In this moment of crushing need for America’s public schools, the Rule directs public school districts to divert desperately needed CARES Act 1 funds to affluent students in private schools or face unlawful limitations on the way that those funds can be spent — both in direct contravention of the Act,” the lawsuit reads. “The Rule harms American children and subverts the will of Congress; it cannot stand.”

Johnson said that if allowed to proceed, the DeVos’ rule change will change public schools, including some where “80, 90 and 99%” of the students are from low-income families.

“She’s trying to increase allocation disproportionately for private schools over public schools in the midst of the debate over whether or not schools should reopen. It’s horrific what she’s doing,” Johnson told ABC News. “What will happen is you further take money away from children who are financially in need to benefit high-wealth children.”

The latest legal action follows a similar lawsuit filed against the Department of Education by California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, which was joined by his counterparts in Michigan, Maine, New Mexico and Washington, D.C. The New York City Department of Education, the Chicago Board of Education, the Cleveland Municipal School District Board of Education and the San Francisco Unified School District have also joined a growing coalition asking the federal court for a preliminary injunction against DeVos’ plan.

The lawsuit was filed a day after DeVos tweeted in support of South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster’s announcement that his state would be allocating $32 million of CARES Act money to fund grants for low-income students to attend private schools.

 

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In a press release that accompanied the announcement by McMaster, a Republican, the governor’s office said, “These one-time, needs-based grants of up to $6,500 will help or subsidize the 2020-21 tuition for eligible students at participating private, parochial or independent schools in South Carolina. Approximately 5,000 grants will be funded.”

DeVos triggered backlash last week by saying she was “very seriously” considering withholding federal funds from schools that fail to fully reopen in the fall despite the coronavirus still sickening Americans in record numbers. In an interview on “Fox News Sunday,” Trump echoed DeVos’ threat.

“Young people have to go to school, and there’s problems when you don’t go to school, too,” Trump said. “And there’s going to be a funding problem because we’re not going to fund when they don’t open their schools. We’re not going to fund them. We’re not going to give them money if they’re not going to school, if they don’t open.”

DeVos’ rule outlines how local education departments must calculate the emergency funds to give an equitable share to students and teachers in private schools.

“There is nothing in the law Congress passed that would allow districts to discriminate against children and teachers based on private school attendance and employment,” DeVos said in a statement issued with her decision.

DeVos said the new rule recognizes that CARES Act money was not exclusively meant to benefit Title I public schools, or schools with large concentrations of low-income students.

She noted that most private schools are under financial strain due to COVID-19 because they’re typically dependent on tuition from families and donations from their communities. She said more than 100 private schools across the country have announced they will not be able to reopen following the pandemic because of shrinking revenue sources.

But Johnson said private schools, including charter schools, have received tens of millions of dollars in emergency COVID-relief funds, including money through the federal Paycheck Protection Program forgivable loan program.

The NAACP lawsuit references a May 5 letter to DeVos from Carissa Moffat Miller, executive director of the Council of Chief State School Officers, objecting to the rule on distributing the CARES Act money, saying the move “could significantly harm the vulnerable students who were intended to benefit the most from the critical federal COVID-19 education relief funds.”

Miller said under DeVos’ rule, for instance, private schools in Louisiana would receive at least 267% more funding under the Department of Education distribution formula.

Chicago Public Schools, which joined a lawsuit filed by the Michigan attorney general, said in a statement that they will lose about $10 million of an estimated $205 million they expected to receive under the CARES Act if DeVos’ allocation plan stands.

“The devastation of the COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately impacted low-income students of color and the Trump Administration is turning its back on these students in favor of wealthy private institutions by siphoning public funds away from the students who Congress intended to support,” the Chicago Public Schools said in a written statement.

Johnson said the move by DeVos is consistent with her “mission to starve public education and resources to benefit private educational settings.”

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Russell Dickerson and wife Kailey enjoy socially distanced baby shower

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ABC/Image Group LARussell Dickerson and his wife Kailey recently celebrated a socially distances baby shower thrown by some of the couple’s friends in the country music community.

In a series of photos shared with PeopleKelsea BalleriniCarly Pearce and Thomas Rhett and Tyler Hubbard‘s wives Lauren Akins and Hayley Hubbard, respectively, were in attendance, the latter two hosting the event alongside Kailey’s other close friend, Ali Ryan

The photos show a beautiful outdoor soiree during which each guest wore a mask and was seated on a blanket in the grass spaced six feet apart, under a stunning sunset with twinkle lights strung overhead.  

Russell also made an appearance at the shindig, evidenced by a glowing photo of him and his wife, his hand resting on her baby bump. 

“I know so many people haven’t been able to have baby showers, so it meant the world that our friends took the precautions we needed to be safe and celebrate our little guy on the way,” Kailey remarks. 

“While it is such a challenging time in so many ways, this time off of the road has been a sweet and unexpected gift,” adds Russell. “We get to give this baby our full attention and it is something we wouldn’t trade for the world.” 

The couple is expecting their first child, a boy, in the fall.

By Cillea Houghton
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