WESTCHESTER IN BETTER POSITION STARTING SCHOOL AS SPREAD RATE OF COVID DROPS, BUT MONKEYPOX A WORRY. SCHOOL BEHAVIORS WILL DETERMINE SUCCESS OF SCHOOL REOPENING WITH THREAT OF COVID AND MONKEYPOX EFFICIENT MONITORING

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WESTCHESTER HAS 6,325 CASES OF COVID PRIOR TO START OF SCHOOLS THIS YEAR COMPARED TO 5,704 A YEAR AGO.

WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. August 29, 2022 UPDATED 5:15 P.M. WITH COUNTY EXECUTIVE GEORGE LATIMER STATE OF COVID-MONKEY POX TODAY “ACTUALITY”

Westchester County has 621 more cases of covid as of the end of August this year than the county did at the end of August last year, when covid was slightly rose  through August into Labor Day, averaging 1,301 a week going into the start of schools last September.

This afternoon, County Executive George Latimer continued his cautious approach to covid an had this good news about Monkeypox spread in this video clip below:

George Latimer confirmed the continued diminution of covid cases and a slowing of monkeypox in the county today. (To see and hear his comments click the white > arrow to the left of the clip screen above.)

As of August 27 this year, Westchester has lowered the rate of new cases by 39% from July numbers to 6,325 or 1,581 new infections a week, despite having 10,298 new covid cases in July. This, whatever the cause, vaccine coverage, low testing quantities, or careful social behavior, Westchester delivered an improved ratio of how infected persons spread the disease, a rate of spread equaling 1 infection only infecting .61 of another person (10,298-July divided by 6,335 August new cases). That is a spread rate that contains and limits spread of the disease.

The Labor Day Weekend last September ushered in a new spread of the disease in September that delivered an average 1,067 new cases a week over the next month. In October that 1,067 produced 2,560 new covid cases 1 infecting every 2 persons, with remote learning and partial attendance and social distancing in effect through most of the county school districts, as well as masking and social gathering restrictions.

Those 2,560 October infections in 2021 last fall produced 4,068 new cases in November during the Veterans Day and Thanksgiving weekends, a spread rate (with many social restrictions and school restricted attendance and distancing precautions in effect) of 1 person to 6 persons  (4,068 divided by 2,560 October covid cases), which in turn lead to an explosion of new covid infections in the December holidays followed by 36,000 infections in January stymied by the vaccines by April.

So we are in what appears to be a greatly improved position the disease did not spread excessively in the last 28 days of August. Infections went down from the excessive 10,298 covid infections in July.

The Mid-Hudson region reported 386 new cases last week, an infection rate of 7%. The entire region including Nassau and Suffolk reported cases equaling 66% as many cases as New York City five boroughs.

In two weeks the number of cases went down across the Mid-Hudson region, despite the continued leading spread rate of Nassau and Suffolk Counties

In two weeks the hot spots of Covid infections in the towns and cities declined significantly. Only 8 reported over 100 cases on August 24 , Log page on left, and 5 had cases in the 90s. Daily infections went down, too.

The number of active cases in the leading locations across the county went down as the comparison shows with infections averaging 7% of those tested (and verified by lab testing).

A good week in Covid management.

This may be the effects of the long ballyhooed “Herd Immunity” and vaccinations taking effect.

However the vaccinations in the school population across the state released by the state health department last week show 97% of pre K children have not had any vaccinations. Completed Vaccinations of 5 to 11 year olds in the elementaries of New York are only at 54.6% meaning almost half of 5 to 11s are not fully vaccinated. In another grouping: those elementaries with at least one dose that is even less. The Middle school to high school is also very at risk from not full vaccination coverage.  The potential for infections being spread in school particularly with absence of testing protocols has potential for regenerating last year’s spread.

That is the situation the state faces as schools start.

The situation is aggravated by the tidal wave of monkeypox infections in New York City that is ahead of covid infections.

School districts should be aware of theses potentials for infections and perhaps have some backup plans if the CDC relaxation of standards should appear to be premature considering the vaccination gaps in the elementary middle school and high school populations in New York State.

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WPCNR MONDAY DAILY DATELINE: REPORTER’S COMMANDMENT # 46
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WESTCHESTER AUGUST COVID INFECTIONS DECLINE 39% FROM JULY’S 10,298: TOTAL NEW COVID CASES FOR MONTH THROUGH AUG 27: 6,325.

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WPCNR CORONAVIRUS SURVEILLANCE. From the NY COVID TRACKER. Observation & Analysis by John F. Bailey. August 28, 2022:

Each person catching covid in Westchester in July and 10,298 did, infected just 1/2 a person, below the 1.1 (one person infects one other person) infection rate that signals the decline of an epidemic according to the Center for Disease Control standards.

Saturday infections of covid in the county were reported as 186, completing the week of August 21 through 27 with 1,300 new cases, just 1 person above last week’s total of 1,299. Technically this snaps the 7 consecutive weeks cases have declineed but only by 1 persons, but the dwindling number of new reported infections continued virtually even for the week.

WPCNR COVID LOGBOOK FOR AUGUST THROUGH THE 27TH OF THE MONTH. OF 10,298 CASES IN JUNE EACH OF THEM PASSED THE DISEASE TO JUST .6 (POINT 6 OR HALF A PERSON). AN INFECTION RATE OR SPREAD RATE OF 1 to .6 . (Below the 1 infecting 1 standard needed to be met consistently to stop the spread of the disease.
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WPCNR WEEKEND DAILY DATELINE: REPORTER’S COMMANDMENT # 46
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WESTCHESTER CLOSE TO GOING UNDER 1,000 NEW COVID CASES FOR WEEK IF FRIDAY SAT NEW CASES DIP BELOW 330, WOULD BE 8TH STRAIGHT WEEK OF DECLINING COVID POSITIVES. NEW YORK CITY MONKEYPOX CASES CONTINUE TO OUTNUMBER COVID THROUGH THURSDAY.

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WPCNR DOUBLEDEMIC surveillance. From NYS COVID TRACKER & NEW YORK DOH NYC MONKEYPOX TRACKER. Observation & Analysis by John F. Bailey August 27, 2022:

Through Thursday Westchester is on a pace which may bring Westchester’s weekly new covid cases below 1,000 new cases since the last week in March. Through Thursday,

Meanwhile, in New York City Monkeypox new infections numbered 2,807 Thursday,, 597 more infections than new covid infections (2,210) Thursday. This is a cause for concern as schools begin in New York in a week.

Total Cases by Demographic Group

This table shows the number of NYC residents who tested positive for orthopoxvirus/monkeypox, by borough, age, gender, race/ethnicity and sexual orientation.

The below data will be updated every Thursday

https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/oDJWC/1/

Westchester new cases of covid so far since last Saturday through Thursday August 25 were 953, an average of 191 new infections a day. If Friday and Saturday infections dip to 330, from the 381 last Thursday and Friday, Westchester would have under 1,000 new cases for the first time in five months.

THE WPCNR COVID LOG FOR AUGUST: NOTE THE BIG RISE IN MIDWEEK INFECTION SURGES HAS DISAPPEARED.

In Westchester County, the is still averaging 7% positive for the week on all PCR (LAB TESTS). All 7 Mid-Hudson counties total 552 new cases positive of 7,496 tests, an average of 1,499 Lab verified tests a day, very low but the infections are at a 7% rate. This could mean the real persons getting positive with covid may be 7% of the population across the 2.3 million population of the 7-County Region, as many as 160,500 minus the 552 reported from the lab tests.

The 9 counties including all 7 from the Mid-Hudson region and Nassau and Suffolk County account for 1,281 new cases of covid compared to 2,210 new covid cases reported in New York City.

More concerning is the rapid rise in New York City Monkeypox cases which were 2,807 through August 25 compared to 2,221 new covid cases.

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WHITE PLAINS WEEK ELECTION REPORT TONIGHT AT 7: THE AUGUST 26 TELECAST ON FIOS CH 45 COUNTYWIDE, IN WHITE PLAINS OPTIMUM CH 76 AND WORLDWIDE ON www.wpcommunitymedia.org

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JOHN BAILEY
AND THE NEWS

THIS WEEK EVERY WEEK ON

WHITE PLAINS WEEK TONIGHT:

THE ELECTIONS FOR DISTRICTS 16 AND 17

JAMAALL BOWMAN WALKS WHITE PLAINS ON ELECTION DAY

LOW VACCINATIONS OF PRE SCHOOLERS, ELEMENTARY SCHOOLERS, MIDDLE AND HIGH SCHOOLS A WORRY FOR SCHOOL DISTRICTS THROUGHOUT WESTCHESTER COUNTY

GEORGE LATIMER ON STATE OF COVID AND MONKEYPOXLOOKING FOR 8TH STRAIGHT WEEK OF DECLINE IN NEW CASES

KEN JENKINS, DEPUTY COUNTY EXECUTIVE ON NEED TO VACCINATE PRE-SCHOOLERS

GOVERNOR HOCHUL ON STATE POSITION ON COVID AS SCHOOLS OPEN
HERROES PROGRAM A SUCCESS IN RECRUITING VOLUNTEERS TO COUNTY FIRE DEPARTMENTS

ATTORNEY GENERAL JAMES WINS $2 MILLION SETTLEMENT FROM POLLUTING OIL COMPANY THAT INFECTED DRINKING WATER OF STEUBEN AND CATTARAUGUS COUNTIES–IS IT ENOUGH? NO!

THE PLANET SATURN PAYS A VISIT AWESOME!
MORE AWESOME LORI KING SWIMS 24 MILES IN 8-1/2 HOURS FROM BLOCK ISLAND TO MONTAUK. HOW ABOUT THAT!

ON EDGE: STILL WAITING FOR A NEW FIXED RATE FROM SUSTAINABLE WESTCHESTER AND DREADING THE AUGUST CON ED BILL

OLD TIMES AT THE PLANNING BOARD
Acrocanthosaurus RETURNS FROM 113 MILLION YEARS AGO — THE TRACKS OF THE PAST
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New York Leads Country in Monkey Pox Cases with 3,117. California 2nd, Florida 3rd,Texas 4th, Georgia 5th as of Wednesday. 16,926 Nationwide in About 3 Months According Center for Disease Control New Newsletter.

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16,926Total confirmed monkeypox/orthopoxvirus cases

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Data Table

LocationSort by location in no orderCasesSort by cases in no order
Alabama53
Alaska3
Arizona271
Arkansas24
California3,068
Colorado189
Connecticut87
Delaware20
District Of Columbia414
Florida1,713
Georgia1,240
Hawaii15
Idaho9
Illinois999
Indiana141
Iowa16
Kansas5
Kentucky26
Louisiana157
Maine5
Maryland453
Massachusetts280
Michigan157
Minnesota106
Mississippi25
Missouri41
Montana2
Nebraska23
Nevada126
New Hampshire18
New Jersey471
New Mexico23
New York3,117
North Carolina265
North Dakota4
Ohio148
Oklahoma22
Oregon141
Pennsylvania465
Puerto Rico90
Rhode Island41
South Carolina95
South Dakota2
Tennessee152
Texas1,432
Utah90
Vermont2
Virginia284
Washington332
West Virginia4
Wisconsin56
Wyoming1

Download Data (CSV)

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MEDICINE OF TOMORROW ON “PEOPLE TO BE HEARD” PART 2 OF OUR SPECIAL: “HOW MEDICINE IS CHANGING FROM THE DOCTOR’S PERSPECTIVE” WITH DR. MARK KESTNER CHIEF INNOVATION OFFICER OF MEDIGURU, NATIONAL CONSULTING FIRM ON MEDICAL SERVICES, WASHINGTON, D.C. ON FIOS CH. 45 COUNTYWIDE, WP OPTIMUM CH 76 AND AROUND THE WORLD ON www.wpcommunitymedia.org ON AT 7 ON SATURDAY.

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DR. MARK KESTNER

CONCEIVES EFFICIENCY, SERVICE DELIVERY UPGRADES FOR HOSPITALS ACROSS THE NATION. JOHN BAILEY INTERVIEWS HIM ON HOW PATIENTS, DOCTORS, HOSPITALS ARE GEARING UP FOR MONEY-SAVING, PATIENT TIME SAVING, AND EFFICIENT EFFECTIVE DELIVERY OF SERVICES AND HOW YOUR HEALTH CARE IS CHANGING OVER THE NEXT DECADE

JOHN BAILEY INTERVIEWS HIM ON

HOW COVID HAS CHANGED THE HEALTH CARE SYSTEM THE LAST 3 YEARS

THE COMING DOCTOR SHORTAGE AND SOLUTIONS.

BURNOUT REPLACEMENT

HOW MEDICAL SCHOOLS ARE CHANGING

THE NEED TO CUT COSTS OF INSURANCE, SERVICES TO PREVENT COSTS SOARING OUT OF CONTROL

THE SEARCH FOR THE SOLUTIONS FOR BETTER CARE, LESS COSTLY CARE.

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NY OIL COMPANY HEAD & AFFILIATES FINED $2 MILLION FOR POLLUTING STEUBEN COUNTY AND CATTARAUGUS COUNTY WATER SUPPLY. MAGNATE SAYS HE CAN’T PAY. D.E.C. WILL GO AFTER COMPANY ASSETS. FAILED TO “PLUG” OVER 400 unlawfully operated WELLS.

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GOVERNOR HOCHUL AND ATTORNEY GENERAL JAMES ANNOUNCE $2 MILLION PENALTY AGAINST COMPANY THAT UNLAWFULLY OPERATED OIL WELLS

James Lee Ordered to Plug Hundreds of Oil Wells That Jeopardized Drinking Water in Steuben and Cattaraugus Counties 

Decision Includes Largest-Ever Financial Penalty Imposed for Well-Plugging Violations 

Governor Kathy Hochul and New York Attorney General Letitia James today announced a $2 million judgment in a lawsuit against James R. Lee and his corporate affiliates for flagrant violations of the state’s oil and gas well regulations and endangering communities in Steuben and Cattaraugus counties.

Lee and his companies were ordered by a State Supreme Court judge to pay the penalty – the largest financial penalty imposed in an oil and gas well case – and to bring his oil wells into full compliance with state laws.

For years, Lee and his companies did not properly plug the wells they operated, which posed a significant danger to drinking water supplies and of releasing methane in the areas surrounding the wells.  

“My administration is laser focused on taking decisive action in order to protect drinking water in communities across the state, and the record financial penalty announced today is a major victory for New York,” Governor Hochul said. “We remain steadfast in our efforts to hold accountable anyone who jeopardizes the health and safety of New Yorkers. I thank Attorney General Letitia James for her partnership in taking action to protect the public health and environment in Steuben and Cattaraugus counties.”  

Attorney General Letitia James said, “This is a crucial win for our efforts to protect New York’s air and water. These unlawfully operated oil wells threatened drinking water for countless families in the Southern Tier and Western New York and posed significant harms to the environment. This case should make it clear that New York will stand up to anyone that threatens the health of our communities or our natural resources. I am grateful to Governor Hochul, Commissioner Seggos and our partners at DEC for their partnership in stopping polluters and protecting the people.” 

Department of Environmental Conservation Commissioner Basil Seggos said, “This judgment is a significant day of reckoning for Lee and his companies after years of blatant disregard for New York State’s stringent requirements at hundreds of oil well sites in Steuben and Cattaraugus counties. I thank Attorney General James and her team and my staff for their tireless work to bring this persistent violator to justice. This precedent-setting case demonstrates that New York State will leave no stone unturned in aggressively pursuing polluters and holding them accountable for the damage they wreak on our environment and communities.” 

For many years, Lee and his shell corporate affiliates – Lee Oil Company, Inc., Whitesville Producing Corporation, Whitesville Production Corp., Allegro Oil & Gas Inc., and Allegro Investments Corporation – owned or operated hundreds of oil wells in Steuben and Cattaraugus counties.

These unlawful operations were the subject of numerous enforcement actions brought by the Office of the Attorney General (OAG) and DEC.

After failing to follow environmental laws and properly plug more than 400 of the wells, OAG and DEC filed a lawsuit against Lee and his companies to force them to comply including properly plugging their wells, as well as to pay penalties for their longstanding and flagrant violations. 

The Court ruled in favor of OAG and DEC in their case against Lee, and determined that: 

  1. Defendants failed to plug more than 400 oil wells; 
  2. Defendants failed to submit over 10 years of required annual reports for the wells; 
  3. Defendants failed to file required DEC Organizational Reports for the well operators; 
  4. Defendants failed to provide adequate financial security intended to ensure the wells’ plugging; 
  5. James Lee is personally liable for the penalty and for bringing the wells into compliance and is not shielded by his defunct corporate affiliates; and 
  6. Responsibility to plug the wells can pass on to successor owners of the affected mineral property. 

The $2 million penalty was imposed on Lee and his corporate affiliates, based in part, on the fact that the state proved Lee benefitted financially – by at least $1 million – by failing to comply with the state’s environmental law and remitting judgments against them. In its decision, the court found that Mr. Lee and his companies have violated these laws for years and have ignored the state’s repeated attempts to bring Mr. Lee and his companies into compliance.  

Unplugged oil and gas wells pose serious threats to drinking water supplies and the overall environment. Several of Lee’s wells have already discharged oil to surrounding waters and pose ongoing public health threats. Additionally, these wells can emit methane, a potent greenhouse gas that greatly contributes to climate change.  

The court said its decision needed to carry a strong message to discourage other well operators from considering abandoning their own obligations at oil and gas wells around New York state and leaving taxpayers to pay for their plugging. The decision also establishes important real property law precedent that may be used to require owners of properties with unplugged wells to fully comply with the state’s well plugging requirements. 

DEC will continue to provide rigorous oversight of Lee’s wells and work to ensure the court’s order is followed by bringing all wells into compliance. Mr. Lee has claimed an inability to pay for the plugging, but DEC will seek to recover assets he has that may be used to fulfill the obligations imposed by the judgment. 

The matter was handled by Assistant Attorneys General Meredith Lee-Clark and Brian Lusignan, supervised by Senior Counsel for Enforcement Andrew Gershon and Bureau Chief Lem Srolovic of the OAG Environmental Protection Bureau. For DEC, the matter was handled by Office of General Counsel Attorney David Keehn, with support from Division of Mineral Resources Section Chief Ted Loukides, supervised by Lisa Wilkinson and Scott Crisafulli, with DEC’s Deputy Commissioner and General Counsel Thomas S. Berkman. 

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