HomeMy WebLinkAboutMemo - Mail Packet - 7/14/2020 - Information From Darin Atteberry Re: Article From Lee Feldman Re: Covid Parties In AlabamaPage 1 of 5
From: Feldman, Lee R <FeldmanLR@cityofgainesville.org>
Sent: Thursday, July 02, 2020 11:25 AM
To: Fountaine, Tom <TFountaine@statecollegepa.us>; Darin Atteberry
<DATTEBERRY@fcgov.com>
Subject: [EXTERNAL] COVID Parties
FYI
https://abcnews.go.com/US/alabama-students-throwing-covid-parties-infected-
officials/story?id=71552514
Lee
Lee R. Feldman, ICMA-CM | City Manager
City of Gainesville, Florida
desk 352.393.8601 | cell 352.339.8967
ICMA Past President 2016-2017
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Alabama students throwing 'COVID
parties' to see who gets infected:
Officials
Rising infections prompt Gov. Kay Ivy to extend 'Safer at Home' orders.
By
Bill Hutchinson
July 1, 2020, 2:43 PM
8 min read
Tuscaloosa Fire Chief Randy Smith speaks to the Tuscaloosa city council on June 30, 2020.
July 9, 2020
TO: Mayor & Council
FROM: Darin Atteberry
FYI /sek
Page 2 of 5
00:2602:29
2:28
College ‘COVID parties’ under investigation Alabama state officials confirm that a group of
college students took bets on, then intentionally spread COVID-19 and at least 8 cases are linked to a house
party in a New York City suburb.
Students in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, who have been diagnosed with COVID-
19 have been attending parties in the city and surrounding area as part of what
is being described as a disturbing contest to see who can catch the virus first, a
city council member told ABC News on Wednesday.
Tuscaloosa City Councilor Sonya McKinstry said students have been
organizing "COVID parties" as a game to intentionally infect each other
with the contagion that has killed more than 127,000 people in the United
States. She said she recently learned of the behavior and informed the city
council of the parties occurring in the city.
She said the organizers of the parties are purposely inviting guests who have
COVID-19.
"They put money in a pot and they try to get COVID. Whoever gets COVID
first gets the pot. It makes no sense," McKinstry said. "They're intentionally
doing it."
Tuscaloosa Fire Chief Randy Smith told the City Council on Tuesday that he
has confirmed the students' careless behavior.
In a briefing to the City Council, Smith expressed concern that in recent weeks
there have been parties held throughout the city and surrounding Tuscaloosa
County, "where students, or kids, would come in with known positive,"
according to a video recording of the meeting obtained by ABC affiliate station
WBMA in Birmingham.
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"We thought that was kind of a rumor at first," Smith told the council
members. "We did some research. Not only do the doctors' offices confirm it
but the state confirmed they also had the same information."
In his presentation, Smith, who wore a face mask, did not say what is being
done to curb the behavior or what schools the students were from. Tuscaloosa
is the seventh-largest city in Alabama and home to The University of Alabama
and several other colleges.
Just hours after Smith's briefing, the City Council unanimously passed an
ordinance requiring people to wear face coverings when out in public.
They put money in a pot and they try to get COVID. Whoever
gets COVID first gets the pot.
On Wednesday, Holly Whigham, a spokesperson for the fire department, told
ABC News, "We are not releasing any statements about what was said last
night."
It was unclear if the COVID-positive students infected anyone at the parties
they attended.
Richard Rush, a city spokesman, said in a statement to ABC News that the city
"is currently working with local agencies and organizations to ensure that we
do everything in our power to fight this pandemic."
McKinstry said she fears that some people will attend the parties not knowing
their intent and be exposed to infected guests.
"We're trying to break up any parties that we know of," McKinstry told ABC
News, adding the infected students are obviously disregarding guidelines from
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the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to self-quarantine for two
weeks.
MORE: Coronavirus map: Tracking the spread in the US and around the world
"It's nonsense," McKinstry added. "But I think when you're dealing with the
mind frame of people who are intentionally doing stuff like that and they're
spreading it intentionally, how can you truly fight something that people are
constantly trying to promote?"
Arrol Sheehan, spokesperson for the Alabama Department of Public Health,
said the state's "Safer at Home Order" explicitly states that people who test
positive "shall be quarantined to their place of residence for a period of 14
days."
Sheehan stressed that violation of the heath order is a misdemeanor and fines
for each violation can be up to $500.
"Suspected violations of the home quarantine order should be reported to law
enforcement and the local health department," she said in a statement to ABC
News.
As of Wednesday, Alabama had recorded 38,422 COVID-19 cases, an increase
of 10,696 in the last 14 days, according to data provided by the state
Department of Public Health. At least 947 people have died in Alabama from
the virus.
MORE: How air purifiers and cleaners may help keep you safer indoors from COVID-19
In Tuscaloosa County, 2,049 people had contracted the contagion and 38
deaths had occurred in the county, according to the Department of Public
Health.
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Word of the COVID parties came on the same day Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey
announced she is extending the "Safer at Home" orders through July 31
because coronavirus infections continue to rise.
MORE: Scientists test which face covering style best protects against the coronavirus
Under the extended orders, gyms, entertainment venues, child care facilities
and barbershops are required to follow sanitation and social distancing rules.
Retail stores are allowed to open with a 50% occupancy rate.
"Personal responsibility means it is everyone's responsibility," Ivy said at a
news conference. "If we continue going in the wrong direction, and our
hospitals are not able to handle the capacity of patients, then we're going to
reserve the right to come back in and reverse course."
Alabama State Health Officer Dr. Scott Harris, who joined Ivy at the news
conference, urged people to wear face coverings although they are not
required statewide.
"We know face coverings aren't perfect and they don't stop everything," Harris
said. "But they do limit transmission."