New Guidelines for MD Nursing Homes
Maryland Governor Hogans imposes new emergency measures to improve conditions for staff and elderly at nursing homes.
Maryland Governor Hogans imposes new emergency measures to improve conditions for staff and elderly at nursing homes.
Daily meal pick-up moves to twice per week
Meal pick-up will occur twice a week going forward. Students can get meals for two days on Mondays and three days on Wednesdays. There will be no meal service on Monday, April 13 due to spring break. Service will resume Tuesday, April 14 with one meal; three meals will be available on Wednesday, April 15.

Breakfast, lunch and a snack are available at 43 sites. Parents may pick up meals for students who are unable to come to the site by showing a student ID or report card.
Meals are available from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Parents and guardians are not required to accompany students nor are students required to show ID.
The full list of sites is available below.
Andrew Jackson Academy, 3500 Regency Parkway, Forestville
Benjamin Tasker Middle School, 4901 Collington Road, Bowie
Bradbury Heights Elementary, 1401 Glacier Avenue, Capitol Heights
Brandywine Elementary, 14101 Brandywine Road, Brandywine
Buck Lodge Middle School, 2611 Buck Lodge Road, Adelphi
Calverton Elementary, 3400 Beltsville Road, Beltsville
Carmody Hills Elementary, 401 Jadeleaf Ave., Capitol Heights
Carrollton Elementary, 8300 Quintana Street, New Carrollton
Clinton Grove Elementary, 9420 Temple Hill Road, Clinton
District Heights Elementary, 2200 County Road, District Heights
Drew-Freeman Middle School, 2600 Brooks Drive, Suitland
Dwight D. Eisenhower Middle School, 13725 Briarwood Drive, Laurel
Gladys Noon Spellman Elementary, 3324 64th Ave., Cheverly
Glassmanor Elementary, 1011 Marcy Ave., Oxon Hill
Hillcrest Heights Elementary, 4305 22nd Place, Temple Hills
Hollywood Elementary, 9811 49th Ave., College Park
James McHenry Elementary, 8909 McHenry Lane, Lanham
John Bayne Elementary, 7010 Walker Mill Road, Capitol Heights
Judge Sylvania Woods Elementary, 3000 Church St., Glenarden
Kenmoor Middle School, 2500 Kenmoor Drive, Landover
Kettering Middle School, 65 Herrington Drive, Upper Marlboro
Langley Park-McCormick Elementary, 8201 15th Ave., Hyattsville
Laurel Elementary, 516 Montgomery St., Laurel
Lewisdale Elementary, 2400 Banning Place, Hyattsville
Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School, 4545 Ammendale Road, Beltsville
Nicholas Orem Middle School, 6100 Editors Park Drive, Hyattsville
Oxon Hill Middle School, 9570 Fort Foote Road, Fort Washington
Port Towns Elementary, 4351 58th Ave., Bladensburg
Ridgecrest Elementary, 6120 Riggs Road, Hyattsville
Riverdale Elementary, 5006 Riverdale Road, Riverdale
Robert Frost Elementary, 6419 85th Ave., New Carrollton
Samuel Chase Elementary, 5700 Fisher Road, Temple Hills
Springhill Lake Elementary, 6060 Springhill Drive, Greenbelt
Stephen Decatur Middle School, 8200 Pinewood Drive, Clinton
Suitland Elementary, 4650 Towne Park Road, Suitland
Templeton Elementary, 6001 Carters Lane, Riverdale
Thomas S. Stone Elementary, 4500 34th Street, Mount Rainier
Thurgood Marshall Middle School, 4909 Brinkley Road, Temple Hills
Waldon Woods Elementary, 10301 Thrift Road, Clinton
Walker Mill Middle School, 800 Karen Blvd., Capitol Heights
William Paca Elementary, 7801 Sheriff Road, Landover
William Wirt Middle School, 6200 Tuckerman St., Riverdale Park
Woodridge Elementary, 5001 Flintridge Drive, Hyattsville
Walking is a great way to lower blood pressure and control weight.
A study from the University of Warwick in Coventry, England, published in 2017 in the International Journal of Obesity confirms that those who walk more and sit less have lower BMIs, which is one indicator of obesity. In the study, those who took 15,000 or more steps per day tended to have BMIs in the normal, healthy range.

Additionally, The National Walkers’ Health study found that regular walking was linked to a 7 percent reduced risk of high blood pressure and high cholesterol.
Higher blood glucose levels are a risk factor for diabetes, and the National Walkers’ Health Study also found that walkers had a 12 percent lower risk of type 2 diabetes.
DC Wharf closed until April 24th until operators come up with a social distancing plan.
“The notice shall remain in effect until April 24 which is the last day of the public health emergency (subject to change). Since food is essential, the operators will be able to present a plan for social distancing to DCRA. If the plan allows for safe operations, the venue will be allowed to reopen, and DCRA and DC Health would continue to monitor compliance.”
Many Americans are feeling stressed and overwhelmed in the face of the coronvavirus pandemic. Here are a few tips to help you cope.
Visit the CDC website for more information. https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/daily-life-coping/managing-stress-anxiety.html
The District estimates that near 100-thousand residents will be infected by coronavirus.
A two-year-old boy was killed in the District. Officials are ruling the death a homicide.
Jesse Williams joins call for release of inmates in the face of coronavirus pandemic
Williams is calling on his fans to flood the offices of policy makers with phone calls in Miami, Detroit, Baton Rouge, and St. Louis, and demand people in jail are released.
“I wanna suggest one thing that we could be thinking about and that we could be doing… the impact of this COVID-19 pandemic on our almost 700,000 brothers and sisters around this country locked away in local jails who don’t have access to consistent running water, or soap, or certainly hand sanitizer, can’t social distance, and don’t have adequate health care … [in] jails where people are locked up for traffic tickets and unpaid fines and petty misdemeanors but they don’t have the money to pay for their bail,” said Williams in an Instagram video posted Wednesday night.
Williams is throwing his support behind a growing coalition of advocates, organizations, and social influencers calling for decarceration in jails, prisons, and detention centers amidst the ongoing novel coronavirus global pandemic.
Advancement Project National Office, in a press release, said people are jailed in cramped quarters, cannot practice social distancing and don’t have regular access to soap or adequate healthcare. “Once inside this perfect breeding ground, the virus will rapidly spread, leading to countless illnesses and deaths both in and out of the facility.”
Williams urged people to visit freeandsafenow.org, a website that provides a call to action and information on each jurisdiction where legal action is being explored. The #FreeAndSafe campaign also includes petitions for communities with large populations in detention.
“Lean On Me,” a paean to friendship, was performed at the inaugurations of both Barack Obama and Bill Clinton. “Ain’t No Sunshine” and “Lean on Me” are among Rolling Stone’s list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.
The three-time Grammy Award winner, who withdrew from making music in the mid-1980s, died on Monday in Los Angeles, the statement said. His death comes as the public has drawn inspiration from his music during the coronavirus pandemic, with health care workers, choirs, artists and more posting their own renditions on “Lean on Me” to help get through the difficult times.
“We are devastated by the loss of our beloved, devoted husband and father. A solitary man with a heart driven to connect to the world at large, with his poetry and music, he spoke honestly to people and connected them to each other,” the family statement read. “As private a life as he lived close to intimate family and friends, his music forever belongs to the world. In this difficult time, we pray his music offers comfort and entertainment as fans hold tight to loved ones.”
Withers’ songs during his brief career have become the soundtracks of countless engagements, weddings and backyard parties. They have powerful melodies and perfect grooves melded with a smooth voice that conveys honesty and complex emotions without vocal acrobatics.
“Lean On Me,” a paean to friendship, was performed at the inaugurations of both Barack Obama and Bill Clinton. “Ain’t No Sunshine” and “Lean on Me” are among Rolling Stone’s list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.
“He’s the last African-American Everyman,” musician and band leader Questlove told Rolling Stone in 2015. “Bill Withers is the closest thing black people have to a Bruce Springsteen.”
Withers, who overcame a childhood stutter, was born the last of six children in the coal mining town of Slab Fork, West Virginia. After his parents divorced when he was 3, Withers was raised by his mother’s family in nearby Beckley.
He joined the Navy at 17 and spent nine years in the service as an aircraft mechanic installing toilets. After his discharge, he moved to Los Angeles, worked at an aircraft parts factory, bought a guitar at a pawn shop and recorded demos of his tunes in hopes of landing a recording contract.
In 1971, signed to Sussex Records, he put out his first album, “Just As I Am,” with the legendary Booker T. Jones at the helm. It had the hits “Grandma’s Hands” and “Ain’t No Sunshine,” which was inspired by the Jack Lemmon film “Days of Wine and Roses.” He was photographed on the cover, smiling and holding his lunch pail.
“Ain’t No Sunshine” was originally released as the B-side of his debut single, “Harlem.” But radio DJs flipped the disc and the song climbed to No. 3 on the Billboard charts and spent a total of 16 weeks in the top 40.
Withers went on to generate more hits a year later with the inspirational “Lean On Me,” the menacing “Who Is He (and What Is He to You)” and the slinky “Use Me” on his second album, “Still Bill.”
Later would come the striking “ Lovely Day,” co-written with Skip Scarborough and featuring Withers holding the word “day” for almost 19 seconds, and “Just The Two Of Us,” co-written with Ralph MacDonald and William Salter. His “Live at Carnegie Hall” in 1973 made Rolling Stone’s 50 Greatest Live Albums of All Time.
“The hardest thing in songwriting is to be simple and yet profound. And Bill seemed to understand, intrinsically and instinctively, how to do that,” Sting said in “Still Bill,” a 2010 documentary of Withers.
But Withers’ career when Sussex Records went bankrupt and he was scooped up by Columbia Records. He no longer had complete control over his music and chaffed when it was suggested he do an Elvis cover. His new executives found Withers difficult.
None of his Columbia albums reached the Top 40 except for 1977’s “Menagerie,” which produced “Lovely Day.” (His hit duet with Grover Washington Jr. “Just the Two of Us” was on Washington’s label). Withers’ last album was 1985′s “Watching You Watching Me.”
Though his songs often dealt with relationships, Withers also wrote ones with social commentary, including “Better Off Dead” about an alcoholic’s suicide, and “I Can’t Write Left-Handed,” about an injured Vietnam War veteran.
He was awarded Grammys as a songwriter for “Ain’t No Sunshine” in 1971 and for “Just The Two Of Us” in 1981. In 1987, Bill received his ninth Grammy nomination and third Grammy as a songwriter for the re-recording of the 1972 hit “ Lean On Me” by Club Nouveau.
He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2015 by Stevie Wonder. Withers thanked his wife as well as the R&B pioneers who helped his career like Ray Jackson, Al Bell and Booker T. Jones. He also got in a few jabs at the record industry, saying A&R stood for “antagonistic and redundant.”
His music has been sampled and covered by such artists as BlackStreet’s “No Diggity,” Will Smith’s version of “ Just The Two Of Us, ” Black Eyed Peas’ “Bridging The Gap” and Twista’s “Sunshine.” The song “Lean on Me” was the title theme of a 1989 movie starring Morgan Freeman.
His songs are often used on the big screen, including “The Hangover,” “28 Days,” “American Beauty,” “Jerry Maguire,” “Crooklyn,” “Flight,” “Beauty Shop,” “The Secret Life of Pets” and “Flight.”
“I’m not a virtuoso, but I was able to write songs that people could identify with. I don’t think I’ve done bad for a guy from Slab Fork, West Virginia,” Withers told Rolling Stone in 2015.
He is survived by his wife, Marcia, and children, Todd and Kori.
The Trump administration to suggest Americans wear face coverings to protect against coronavirus.
President Trump says he has taken a second coronavirus test and that test was negative.
The number of people worldwide infected with the COVID-19 coronavirus is topping one million. Johns Hopkins researchers said the virus is now in 181 nations and regions around the world and has led to more than 51-thousand deaths. The numbers in the U.S. are also growing. More than 236-thousand people have been infected and over 56-hundred have died.
Metro has lost millions due to the coronavirus outbreak.
The Democratic National Convention has been moved to the week of August 17th in the face of the coronavirus crisis.
In a statement released today, the DNC announced the convention will be moved to the week of August 17th to give organizers more time to plan and determine the structure of the convention. “In our current climate of uncertainty, we believe the smartest approach is to take additional time to monitor how this situation unfolds so we can best position our party for a safe and successful convention. During this critical time, when the scope and scale of the pandemic and its impact remain unknown, we will continue to monitor the situation and follow the advice of health care professionals and emergency responders,” said Joe Solmonese, CEO of the Democratic National Convention Committee.
The DNC will still be held in Milwaukee and will now come just days before the Republican National Convention, which is set for the week of August 24th in Charlotte, North Carolina.
“The surgical mask supply went from being 90% U.S.-made to being 95% foreign-made in literally one year,” Mike Bowen,executive vice president of Texas-based Prestige Ameritech said to a major news outlet.
Disease control experts are urging the public to refrain from hoarding essential medical supplies because hospitals and medical professionals around the world are running low on supplies.
“The surgical mask supply went from being 90% U.S.-made to being 95% foreign-made in literally one year,” Mike Bowen,executive vice president of Texas-based Prestige Ameritech said to a major news outlet.
According to the CDC, cloth face coverings should—
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ha6xEjnXO34
Coronavirus pandemic pushes the millions more toward the unemployment line.
Computers are now available to students in Prince George’s County who need them while the county school system is using distance learning.
Two more people in the District have reportedly died in connection to the coronavirus.
Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks sets up financial funds to help businesses and residents stay afloat during COVID-19 crisis.
The county has set up what it calls a “COVID-19 Business Relief Fund, setting aside 15 million dollars in loans and grants for county small businesses and non-profits. Ten million of those dollars were approved yesterday by the county council. The application process is open from April 13th through May 15th and to apply businesses must also show they have sought assistance from the federal and state level. The application website is www.pgcedc.com.
The county is also throwing out a safety net for residents. “Right now in Prince George’s County we have exceeded 10,000 layoffs and have seen a 28% increase in unemployed residents, said Alsobrooks. Employ Prince George’s is launching the “Hourly Employee Assistance Fund.” The fund is available for hourly county workers who earn less than $19.00 an hour. Those workers can get a “cash card” for up to $200. Residents who need assistance or have any questions during the crisis can call 301-883-6627.
“We really have got to do this together. We got to ride this storm out. We’re going to make it through this. We’re gonna absolutely make it through the other side and it will be because we care for each other, added Alsobrooks.
Most people don’t need to do anything to get the money. But some — including senior citizens and low-income people who might not traditionally file tax returns — do need to take action. People behind on filing their taxes might also want to get caught up.
The payments are part of the $2.2 trillion rescue package signed into law last week by President Donald Trump aimed at combating the economic ravages of the coronavirus outbreak.
Most people don’t need to do anything to get the money. But some — including senior citizens and low-income people who might not traditionally file tax returns — do need to take action. People behind on filing their taxes might also want to get caught up.
The IRS and Treasury have provided more details on how to ensure you get paid. Here are the basics:
WHO IS ELIGIBLE FOR THE PAYMENTS?
Anyone earning up to $75,000 in adjusted gross income and who has a Social Security number will receive a $1,200 payment. That means married couples filing joint returns will receive the full payment — $2,400 — if their adjusted gross income, which what you report on your taxes, is under $150,000.
The payment steadily declines for those who make more. Those earning more than $99,000, or $198,000 for joint filers, are not eligible. The thresholds are slightly different for those who file as a head of household.
Parents will also receive $500 for each qualifying child.
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WHAT DO I HAVE TO DO TO GET THE CHECK?
For most people, nothing.
The money will be directly deposited in your bank account if the government has that information from your tax return. If you haven’t filed your 2019 taxes, the government will use information from your 2018 taxes to calculate your payment and determine where to send it. It can use your Social Security benefit statement as well.
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I DON’T USUALLY HAVE TO FILE TAXES. DO I STILL GET A PAYMENT?
Yes. People who are not required to file a tax return — such as low-income tax payers, some senior citizens, Social Security recipients, some veterans and people with disabilities — will need to file a very simplified tax return to receive the economic impact payment. It provides the government basic details including a person’s filing status, number of dependents and direct-deposit bank information.
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I HAVEN’T FILED MY 2018 OR 2019 TAXES. WILL I STILL GET A PAYMENT?
Yes, but the IRS urges anyone required to file a tax return and has not yet done so for those years to file as soon as possible in order to receive an economic impact payment. Taxpayers should include their direct-deposit banking information on the return if they want it deposited in their account.
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I DIDN’T USE DIRECT DEPOSIT ON MY TAXES, WHAT CAN I DO?
The government will default to sending you the check by mail if you did not use direct deposit.
However, IRS and Treasury say that they will develop an online portal in the coming weeks for individuals to provide their banking information so that they can receive the payments immediately instead of in the mail. It has not yet set a deadline for updating that information.
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WHERE DO I DO THIS?
The IRS and Treasury say the website irs.gov/coronavirus will soon provide information about the check, including how people can file a simple 2019 tax return.
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I NEED MORE TIME TO FILE MY TAX RETURNS. HOW LONG DO I HAVE TO GET THE PAYMENT?
The IRS says people concerned about visiting a tax professional or local community organization in person to get help with a tax return should not worry. The economic impact payments will be available throughout the rest of 2020.
“I don’t want her to grow up in a homeless shelter, having to sleep in a bunk bed with other people, asking why we have to stand in a long line to get a room to sleep in, why we have to stand in a long line to get food, why she can’t invite her friends over,” Brooks said. “It’s hard to explain that to an 8-year-old.”
Many of those renters are without jobs – nearly 3.3 million people in the U.S. filed for unemployment the week of March 16, about five times the previous high in 1982. Most state and local governments are putting evictions on pause as states prepare to pay unemployment and the federal government prepares to send stimulus checks. So for most, April’s knock won’t come with a notice to get out.
But a roof over the head is one of the most basic needs in life. Without money for rent, how can the other bills get paid? And while many will get a reprieve in April, eventually the rent comes due, whether or not the restaurant, plant or construction site reopens when the COVID-19 threat lessens.
Here are some of the stories of Americans trying to make the rent, this month and beyond.
At 21 years old, Jade Brooks pulls in her family’s only full-time salary, working at a hospital switchboard.
Brooks’ mother just lost her job at a health insurance company – a casualty of the plummeting economy. She’s found part-time work at the hospital, but between them, they make only $400 weekly after taxes and insurance, Brooks said. Their rent is $1,810.
During sleepless nights, Brooks worries most about her 8-year-old cousin, who lives with them.
“I don’t want her to grow up in a homeless shelter, having to sleep in a bunk bed with other people, asking why we have to stand in a long line to get a room to sleep in, why we have to stand in a long line to get food, why she can’t invite her friends over,” Brooks said. “It’s hard to explain that to an 8-year-old.”
– Michael Casey, Boston
Itza Sanchez knows she can’t make her $400 rent for April. She’s praying to Virgin of Guadalupe that she doesn’t get kicked out of her Richmond, Virginia, mobile-home park.
Sanchez made her money searching for and recycling scrap metal and selling tamales in a heavily Hispanic neighborhood. Fear of getting sick has stopped both income streams.
A single mother of two who immigrated from Honduras to the U.S. 14 years ago, Sanchez’s 7-year-old daughter and 11-year-old son have been eating lunches delivered to the neighborhood by schools and depending on churches for other meals.
“I’m basically penniless,” Sanchez, 39, said in Spanish.
She hasn’t heard from the landlord about what will happen if the rent isn’t paid. So she keeps praying.
“May she help us. May the virgin put her love over us and help us.”
– Regina Garcia Cano, Washington
Andrea Larson made $70,000 a year curating wine lists and suggesting pairings to customers at 5th & Taylor. But the popular Nashville restaurant closed its dining area, and working as a sommelier isn’t something Larson can do from home.
The first unemployment check was $275 for a week. Larson said she was humiliated but applied for food stamps.
“I’m screwed financially,” Larson said. “If I do pay my rent, it’s going to eat into my food money.”
Larson, 42, moved from a high-rise downtown apartment to a house in east Nashville four months ago. Rent was cheaper. She planned to pay off debt and start saving. Instead, she called credit-card companies and said she couldn’t pay the minimum.
Larson’s restaurant offered a few shifts answering phones for takeout, but she figures it’s not worth the risk of getting COVID-19.
“I do wine, and nobody wants to hear about wine right now,” she said. “They just want to chug it.”
– Travis Loller, Nashville
Roushaunda Williams was able to scrimp and use credit-card cash advances to pay the $1,850 rent for April for her two-bedroom Uptown Chicago apartment.
But the rent comes due again in 30 days. Can she afford a smaller apartment in her building if one’s available? Should she move in with friends if they’ll let her?
“April 1 isn’t even here yet, and I’m already working on what I’m going to do for May 1,” Williams, 52, said.
Before being laid off, she made drinks and chatted with people from around the world for 20 years as a bartender at the Palmer House Hilton Hotel in the heart of Chicago’s downtown Loop.
Income depended on tips — in the best times, she’d make $70,000 to $100,000 annually. Now, she’s on unemployment for the first time and searching for work.
– Kathleen Foody, Chicago
Tnia Morgan shares her Baltimore County, Maryland, townhouse with her 18-year-old pregnant daughter and 18-year-old nephew. And they all spend a lot more time together since Morgan was laid off March 6 from her job serving food at a hotel banquet hall.
Morgan’s landlord told her to take her time with the rent. But it isn’t the only bill piling up. She ticks them off — car payment, car insurance, cellphone, internet, water, gas and electricity. And she always has to buy food, so tough choices are ahead, especially until unemployment benefits kick in.
Morgan, 39, has checked on getting food stamps and looked for work at stores and warehouses with no luck.
She appreciates her landlord’s kindness this month. But she knows he needs her rent money to pay his bills.
“If I don’t pay the rent, it falls on him,” Morgan said. “We can’t be evicted right now, but eventually they’re going to want their money.”
– Michael Kunzelman, Silver Spring, Maryland
Bartender Luke Blaine was laid off when downtown Phoenix restaurant Fez closed, but he’s not too worried about rent — yet.
He shares his small adobe-style home and backyard garden of tomatoes, beets, squash, radish, lettuce and eggplants with his boyfriend, Kyle Schomer. Schomer still has his job in technology and works from home.
Blaine, 30, figures unemployment will kick in. His car is paid for, and he owes little beyond a small credit-card balance.
Blaine credits his thrifty nature to his family. And that’s whom he worries about most these days. His mother and sister are nurses in Illinois, not far from hard-hit Chicago.
“It definitely is nerve-racking having your family on the front line,” Blaine said.
– Anita Snow, Phoenix
Ruqayyah Bailey’s life had balance — so important with her autism — before coronavirus.
She was going to college and was a part-time cafe cashier. She couldn’t wait for the Special Olympics in March, to run and compete in long jump and shot put.
But the virus closed the cafe, canceled the meet and ended the community college’s personal instruction.
Bailey, 30, of St. Louis County, was dipping into savings for food and other necessities, so she’s moved back in with her mother. She hopes it’s temporary and she can get back to her apartment, with its $400 monthly rent.
“I had to suspend my internet and my cable,” Bailey said of her apartment. “It’s tough because I’m so used to being there in my own little space.”
– Jim Salter, St. Louis
Jason W. Still was let go from his job as a cook, and he’s found one small benefit: He hasn’t spent as much money since he’s inside most days.
Still and his wife — who works in packaging for a marijuana dispenser in Spokane, Washington — should be able to make April’s rent as they wait to see what he’ll get in unemployment and from the federal government.
Still, 30, worked at a high-end restaurant and just finished the last classes for his bachelor’s degree. Now he’s applying for graduate school to study environmental economics and public policy.
In unemployment, he has a lot of time on his hands: “I’ve seen corners of my house that I didn’t know existed.”
– Anita Snow, Phoenix
It’s a lousy choice, but an easy one for personal trainer and apparel designer Sakai Harrison — food in the refrigerator over April rent for his Brooklyn apartment.
Harrison, 27, moved from Atlanta to see whether he could succeed in the toughest place in the world. And he was on his way, with 20 clients training one-on-one.
Then, his gym shut down with the rest of the city. And the $1,595 rent is due.
“The way I see it, the whole world is on pause,” Harrison said. “I’d rather allocate my money towards my actual survival, which would be food.”
An acquaintance is letting Harrison use a basement as a makeshift gym. It has dumbbells, a bench and a punching bag left by a previous tenant. Harrison wears disposable gloves and keeps his distance. A few clients keep coming, but not as many as before.
“My clients are like my family, for the most part, especially in New York, because I’m here alone,” he said.
– Aaron Morrison, New York
Tinisha Dixon was struggling to make the rent before the coronavirus arrived.
After some time homeless, Dixon thought she was back on her feet. She said she was about to start a new job at the State Road and Tollway Authority. But the job was put on hold, thanks to the virus.
The rent bill of $1,115 is due whether she’s working or not. It covers the apartment near downtown Atlanta she shares with her partner and their five kids. Dixon, 26, said she’s trying to braid hair and find work as a security guard.
Dixon’s landlord had gone to court to evict the family before the coronavirus reprieve. Now she worries not making April’s payment will strengthen that case.
“Are we going to be out on the street when this is over?” she said. “Because this is what we’ve been fighting for this whole time, not being back out on the street.”
– Sudhin Thanawala, Atlanta
With help from friends and a nonprofit, Jas Wheeler can pay April’s rent. But Wheeler and their partner just bought a house down the road in Vergennes, Vermont, and the first mortgage payment is due in May.
“I am just really just trying to pray,” said Wheeler, who hopes to see unemployment checks soon but worries the system is overwhelmed with so many people out of work.
Wheeler was laid off from a bakery. The 30-year-old thought about a grocery-store job, but they don’t want to risk exposure to the coronavirus. So for now, they’ll wait to see whether the bakery reopens.
“I would rather just get an unemployment check and ride it out … I’m really thinking at the end of all this whenever that is, I’ll be happy to get any job that I can get.”
– Michael Casey, Boston
Neal Miller is refusing to pay April’s rent, to make a point.
Miller’s last stable job was as an adjunct professor at Loyola University in Chicago. He recently was working temporary jobs, until that dried up, thanks to the virus.
Miller, 38, shares a house on the west side of Chicago with four others and pays $400 of the $1,500 monthly rent.
Miller and his roommates decided to join leaders of Chicago activist groups calling for a rent strike amid the virus outbreak.
“We wrote a letter, sort of stated our situation,” Miller said. “We’re still waiting to hear back. We’re not sure if that’s a good sign or if that lack of response means we’ll be hearing from a lawyer.”
– Kathleen Foody, Chicago
Former President Obama calls for citizens to speak out on the Trump administration’s approach to fuel standards.
A dramatic increase in the number of coronavirus cases in Maryland and Virginia in the last 24 hours.
http://princegeorgescourts.org/
Concerns are growing over how the coronavirus pandemic may be increasing the incidents of domestic violence. Some who are shut-in by stay-at-home orders are survivors of domestic violence. But forced isolation puts many of them at risk of further physical and emotional abuse. What can be done to protect the vulnerable and reduce the possibility of attacks and emotional distress? Tonight, we focus on those issues and more in our Insight segment. Our guest: Dr. Denise McCain – Director, Prince George’s County Family Justice Center http://princegeorgescourts.org/ Dr. Audrey Chapman – Psychotherapist
AUDIO:
Cuomo’s older brother, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, has been one of the most visible political figures during the pandemic, and appeared on his brother’s show remotely on Monday.
NEW YORK (AP) — CNN prime-time host Chris Cuomo announced Tuesday that he has tested positive for the coronavirus but promised to continue doing his show from the basement of his home.
Cuomo, who did his 9 p.m. Eastern show remotely Monday, said he’s had fever, chills and shortness of breath.
“I just hope I didn’t give it to the kids and Cristina,” he tweeted, in a reference to his wife.
Cuomo’s older brother, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, has been one of the most visible political figures during the pandemic, and appeared on his brother’s show remotely on Monday.
The governor discussed his younger brother during his daily press briefing Tuesday morning.
“He’s a really, sweet beautiful guy, and he’s my best friend,” the governor said of his brother.
“What’s most important right now is the health and well-being of everyone across the globe and finding solutions for the many issues that have presented themselves as a result of this pandemic,” they added. “As we all find the part we are to play in this global shift and changing of habits, we are focusing this new chapter to understand how we can best contribute.”
LONDON (AP) — Prince Harry and his wife Meghan officially make the transition Tuesday from senior members of Britain’s royal family to — well, it’s unclear. International celebrities, charity patrons, global influencers?
The royal schism that the couple triggered in January by announcing that they would step down from official duties, give up public funding, seek financial independence and swap the U.K. for North America becomes official on March 31.
The move has been made more complicated and poignant by the global coronavirus pandemic, which finds the couple and their 10-month-old son Archie in California, far from Harry’s father Prince Charles — who is recovering after testing positive for COVID-19 — and Harry’s 93-year-old grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II.
“As we can all feel, the world at this moment seems extraordinarily fragile,” the couple said in a final post Monday on their now-mothballed SussexRoyal Instagram account.
“What’s most important right now is the health and well-being of everyone across the globe and finding solutions for the many issues that have presented themselves as a result of this pandemic,” they added. “As we all find the part we are to play in this global shift and changing of habits, we are focusing this new chapter to understand how we can best contribute.”
It is less than two years since ex-soldier Harry, who is sixth in line to the British throne, married American actress Meghan Markle at Windsor Castle in a lavish ceremony watched by millions around the world.
Soon the couple began to bristle at intense scrutiny by the British media — which they said tipped into harassment. They decided to break free, in what Harry called a “leap of faith” as he sought a more peaceful life, without the journalists who have filmed, photographed and written about him since the day he was born.
Harry has long had an uncomfortable relationship with the media, which he blames for the death of his mother, Princess Diana. She died in a car crash in Paris in 1997 while being pursued by paparazzi.
Harry’s unhappiness increased after he began dating Markle, then the star of TV legal drama “Suits.” In 2016 he accused the media of harassing his then-girlfriend, and criticized “racial undertones” in some coverage of the biracial Markle.
It’s clear that Meghan’s upbeat Californian style — embodied in the glossy images and life-affirming messages of the couple’s Instagram account — rankled with sections of Britain’s tabloid press, which is both insatiable for royal content and fiercely judgmental of the family members.
The couple — who are keeping their titles, Duke and Duchess of Sussex, but will no longer be called Their Royal Highnesses — had hoped to keep using the Sussex Royal brand in their new life. But last month they announced they wouldn’t seek to trademark the term because of U.K. rules governing use of the word “royal.”
The couple plans to launch a non-profit organization for their charitable activities in areas including youth empowerment, mental health, conservation, gender equality and education. Harry will also continue to oversee the Invictus Games, the Olympics-style competition he founded for wounded troops.
Meghan has been announced as the narrator of “Elephant,” a Disney nature documentary.
But for now, the couple’s office said they want the world to focus “on the global response to COVID-19.”
“The Duke and Duchess of Sussex will spend the next few months focusing on their family and continuing to do what they can, safely and privately, to support and work with their pre-existing charitable commitments while developing their future non-profit organization,” the couple’s office said in a statement.
The newly independent Harry and Meghan will also need to earn money to help pay for a multi-million dollar security bill.
As senior royals, they have had bodyguards funded by British taxpayers. Since late last year, Harry and Meghan have since been based on Canada’s Vancouver Island, where security was provided by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Canadian authorities warned last month that would end once the couple ceased to be working royals.
The duke and duchess recently moved to the Los Angeles area, where Meghan grew up and where her mother still lives. The news led President Donald Trump to tweet on Sunday: “the U.S. will not pay for their security protection. They must pay!”
Harry and Meghan’s office said they had “no plans to ask the U.S. government for security resources. Privately funded security arrangements have been made.”
Some royal historians warned that Harry and Meghan could struggle to find a fulfilling role. Comparisons have been drawn to King Edward VIII, who abdicated in 1936 to marry divorced American Wallis Simpson. The couple lived the rest of their lives in luxurious but lonely self-imposed exile from Britain.
Royal historian Penny Junor said U.K.-based royals were helping boost the nation’s morale during the coronavirus pandemic. The queen has issued a message to the nation, while Harry’s brother Prince William and his children joined in a public round of applause for health care workers.
“All of this is absolutely what the family is about, and those members of the royal family that are on a limb now are pretty irrelevant,” Junor said.
A Baltimore County officer tests positive for coronavirus; the second officer in the county to test positive for COVID-19.
Local leaders across the DMV tell residents to stay home or faces fines and possible jail time.
The move by the three local leaders comes as the Washington region is seeing a spike in the number of COVID-19 cases now approaching 3,000 infections. The stay-at-home order for DC goes in to effect April 1st. Virginia’s mandate immediately went into effect. Maryland’s order is effective at 8pm. The orders bar residents from being out except for essential business like grocery shopping, picking up medicine, or other medical needs.
It is now more efficient for first responders in the District to get tested for coronavirus.
Five members of the DC police department have tested positive with more than 16o in the department home because of the virus according to city officials. Fourteen DC Fire and EMS workers have been diagnosed with COVID-19 with near 180 in quarantine. In DC’s Department of Corrections, four people tested positive and 83 were in quarantine.
“He was so much of a blessing as a father, entrepreneur, an incredible artist and young mogul,” said Khaled, who took part in a poignant Grammy tribute to Hussle. “We learned a lot from him, and we’re still learning. His music spoke volumes. It touched people in different ways. I was blessed to work with him.”
Tuesday marks the first anniversary of Hussle’s death and his popularity and influence pushes forward as strong as ever. He won two posthumous Grammys in January, he remains a favorite of his hip-hop peers and his death has reshaped his hometown of Los Angeles in some unexpected ways.
Throughout the city, murals dedicated to Hussle have been painted, rival gangs have had peace talks and a group of men convene in a cross-country book club to discuss books recommended by the rapper.
“It shows you how powerful and great he is,” said DJ Khaled, who won a Grammy with Hussle and Legend for “Higher” for best rap/sung performance. Hussle’s song “Racks in the Middle” featuring Roddy Ricch and Hit-Boy took home an award for best rap performance.
“He was so much of a blessing as a father, entrepreneur, an incredible artist and young mogul,” said Khaled, who took part in a poignant Grammy tribute to Hussle. “We learned a lot from him, and we’re still learning. His music spoke volumes. It touched people in different ways. I was blessed to work with him.”
Hussle’s allure grew to new heights after he was killed outside of his South Los Angeles clothing store, The Marathon. The rapper’s alleged shooter, Eric Holder Jr., is in a Los Angeles County jail awaiting a trial that was expected to begin by late spring, but proceedings have been delayed because of a court shutdown over the coronavirus.
A grand jury indicted Holder for murder for Hussle’s killing and attempted murder after two men who were standing next to the rapper were wounded. Holder has pleaded not guilty. Testimony released last year provided a detailed accounting of what led up to the killing, i ncluding a conversation between Hussle and Holder that discussed snitching.
After Hussle’s death, an unexpected cease-fire developed between some rival gang members.
“It created an opportunity for conversations to happen, for communication to happen, for leadership to happen that maybe wouldn’t have happened otherwise in the memory and spirit of Nipsey Hussle,” Anne Tremblay, director of Gang Reduction and Youth Development program in Los Angeles, said earlier this year.
The 33-year-old rapper, whose real name was Ermias Asghedom, was an Eritrean-American father of two who was engaged to actress Lauren London. He was a beloved figure for his philanthropic work that went well beyond the usual celebrity “giving back” ethos. Following his death, political and community leaders were as effusive in their praise as his fellow hip-hop artists.
“The biggest thing that he left behind in his legacy is to go the extra mile for other people and be aware of your community,” singer Tinashe said in an interview last week. “That spirit is really important. It’s important to bring people together. I think that’s part of his message. It’s looking out for one another.”
The rapper was also a wildly popular figure among professional athletes, especially those based in LA, where he was a regular on the sidelines. Players admired him for his community building.
After years of selling his highly popular mixtapes out his car trunk, Hussle broke through in 2018 with “Victory Lap.” His critically-acclaimed, major-label debut album on Atlantic Records earned him his first Grammy nomination, though he lost out to Cardi B’s “Invasion of Privacy.”
Rapper Slim Thug called Hussle’s music “timeless.”
“You can go back and listen to his old music and find these gems just like you’re listening to on ‘Victory Lap,’’” said Thug, who recorded the song “Go Long” with Hussle and Z-Ro. “He’s got so much old music I listen to. It’s timeless, because he’s a storyteller. His music doesn’t get dated. I hate that he’s not here in the flesh and seeing the praise he certainly deserves. A lot of people didn’t even know about him until he passed. I hate to see that he had to pass to get his shine.”
Hussle purchased the strip mall where The Marathon is located and planned to redevelop it into a mixed-use commercial and residential complex. The plan was part of Hussle’s broader ambitions to remake the neighborhood where he grew up and attempt to break the cycle of gang life that lured him in when he was younger.
However, since Hussle’s death, his flagship store has been fenced off and closed for the “foreseeable future,” the business announced on social media last year. The online store still accepts orders, and Puma reissued Marathon clothing.
It’s unknown when Hussle’s family will release any new music. But his production company, Marathon Films, and filmmaker Ava DuVernay are in discussions with Netflix to produce about documentary about the rapper.
“Everything he embodied and encompassed is living on through him,” said Karen Civil, a former business partner and co-founder of the Marathon Agency, a marketing and branding firm. She played a pivotal role in planning his memorial service at the Staples Center, where she read an open letter from former President Barack Obama to Hussle.
“That’s the incredible part about him,” she said. “He not only created change in his community, but all around the globe.”
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Associated Press Writers Andrew Dalton, Gary Gerard Hamilton and Stefanie Dazio contributed to this report.
“This is a really terrifying decision — you don’t want any doctor or nurse to be alone with this decision,” said Nancy Berlinger of the Hastings Center, a bioethics research institute.
NEW YORK (AP) — A nurse with asthma, a grandfather with cancer and a homeless man with no known family are wracked with coronavirus-induced fevers. They are struggling to breathe, and a ventilator could save their lives. But who gets one when there aren’t enough to go around?
Health care workers are dreading the prospect of such dire scenarios as U.S. hospitals brace for a looming surge in patients who need breathing machines and other resources that could soon be in critically short supply.
That has meant dusting off playbooks they’ve never before had to implement on how to fairly ration limited resources during an emergency.
“I pray for their good judgment and their capacity as they make very difficult choices,” said Erik Curren, whose 77-year-old father died this month from respiratory complications related to the virus after becoming infected at an assisted living home in Florida.
Harrowing scenarios already are unfolding in country after country hard-hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, including Spain, where one nursing home official said sick residents are dying after being unable to get into overflowing hospitals.
Like much of the rest of the world, ventilators that help people breathe are in particular demand across the U.S., given the respiratory problems common among people severely ill with COVID-19.
As many as 900,000 coronavirus patients in the U.S. could need the machines during the outbreak, according to the Society for Critical Care Medicine. Yet the group estimates the country has only 200,000, many of which already are being used by other patients.
In New York, the U.S. epicenter of the outbreak, one city hospital has already logged 13 coronavirus deaths in a single day and officials are setting up hundreds of hospital beds in a sprawling convention center as cases climbed past 30,000 in the city.
In preparation, health officials across the country are reviewing guidelines from sources including state governments and medical groups on how to ration limited resources in emergencies.
The general principle spanning those plans: Bring the most benefit to the greatest number of people and prioritize those with the best chance of recovery. But exactly how that’s determined is fraught.
Automatically excluding certain groups from receiving ventilators, such as those with severe lung disease, invokes ethical issues, said Dr. Douglas White at the University of Pittsburgh. Many hospitals seeking guidance on COVID-19 in recent weeks have adopted a policy he devised without such exclusions, he said.
Guidelines previously developed by New York state’s health department exclude some seriously ill people from receiving limited ventilators in major emergencies, but note that making old age an automatic disqualifier would be discriminatory. The plans go on to add, however, that given the “strong societal preference for saving children,” age could be considered in a tie-breaker when a child’s life is at stake.
Recommendations published this week by German medical associations in response to COVID-19 also say age alone shouldn’t be a deciding factor. Among the situations where they said intensive care should not be provided if availability is in short supply: if the patient would need permanent intensive care to survive.
The crushing emotional burden of carrying out potentially life-and-death decisions is why the guidelines typically designate separate triage teams to make the call, rather than leaving it to the doctors and nurses providing bedside care.
“This is a really terrifying decision — you don’t want any doctor or nurse to be alone with this decision,” said Nancy Berlinger of the Hastings Center, a bioethics research institute.
Having separate teams make decisions also is intended to ensure patients get a fair shot at care regardless of their race, social status or other personal factors.
Berlinger noted that underlying social inequities can still persist — for example, poorer people tend to be sicker — but that those are deeper injustices that can’t be remedied in the throes of a pandemic.
Another grim calculation that experts say hospitals could make is how long a patient might need a hospital bed or ventilator and how many more lives the machine might otherwise save. That would help forestall an even more wrenching decision many doctors in the U.S. likely have never faced — whether to take a patient off a machine to free it up for others.
The norms don’t apply in the current crisis and taking precious resources away from one patient to save others in a pandemic “is not an act of killing and does not require the patient’s consent,” said a paper addressing the COVID-19 emergency published last week in the New England Journal of Medicine.
The authors noted that patients and their families should not be shielded from the realities and should be warned in advance of the possibility their loved one could be taken off a machine.
Hospitals should also prepare alternatives for those who don’t make it to the top of the list for limited resources, such as stocking up on morphine, said Philip Rosoff of Duke University’s Trent Center for bioethics.
It’s not yet known how dire the crisis in the U.S. will get. Last week, Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House coordinator for the coronavirus response, sought to calm fears, noting there’s no evidence yet that a hospital bed or ventilator won’t be available for Americans when they need it. Even in New York, she said, beds are still available in intensive care units and a significant number of ventilators aren’t being used.
But what’s happening overseas has health care workers around the world preparing for worst-case scenarios.
In France and Spain, hospital and nursing officials say nursing home residents who come down with symptoms of coronavirus are not necessarily admitted to intensive care.
In hard-hit regions, “they are hospitalized only when there is a chance to save them,” said Marc Bourquin of the French Hospital Federation.
Jesús Cubero, general secretary of AESTE, an association of nursing homes, said some residents end up dying after being unable to get into full hospitals.
In northern Italy, Dr. Luca Lorini at the Pope John XXIII hospital in hard-hit Bergamo, compared how patients are being triaged to people waiting for an organ transplant.
”One heart and 10 people who are waiting for a heart transplant. Who gets the heart? The one who has the greatest chance of living better and longer with that heart,” he said.
In the U.S., the rapidly multiplying cases is creating fear that hospitals could soon be overwhelmed.
“The fact that we’re in a situation that one day we may not have enough ventilators is terrible and unacceptable,” said Zachary Shemtob, whose husband has been sedated and on one of the machines at NYU Langone hospital since testing positive for the virus.
Curren, the Virginia man whose father died of COVID-19 last week, said he wouldn’t fault health-care workers for any of the agonizing decisions they may have to make in coming weeks — and trusts that they have the training to do so.
“These people are doing a fantastic job under war-time conditions,” he said.
Keys kicked off the Sunday’s event — which also honored health professionals and first responders — singing her song “Underdog” from a piano in her home. She thanked those “risking their lives to keep us safe.” Carey, one of the last performers, sang “Always Be My Baby” from her home studio in New York, then told the audience she was going to put on gloves.
NEW YORK (AP) — Mariah Carey, Alicia Keys, Dave Grohl and Billie Eilish opened their doors — literally — as the musicians performed from their homes for an hour-long benefit concert to raise money for those affected by the coronavirus crisis.
Keys kicked off the Sunday’s event — which also honored health professionals and first responders — singing her song “Underdog” from a piano in her home. She thanked those “risking their lives to keep us safe.” Carey, one of the last performers, sang “Always Be My Baby” from her home studio in New York, then told the audience she was going to put on gloves.

Elton John sang and also hosted the special that aired on Fox and iHeartMedia radio stations; he said he hoped “this entertainment will feed and fuel your soul.”
The homebound setting wasn’t a stretch for the home-schooled Eilish, who typically performs live alongside her brother-producer Finneas, who is either on guitar or piano. On Sunday, he strummed along as Eilish sang her No. 1 hit “Bad Guy” from their couch. The concert special came on the one-year anniversary of Eilish’s Grammy-winning debut album “When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?” — which Finneas and Eilish produced and recorded from their home in Los Angeles.
Eilish told viewers she was happy she and her brother could provide “some sort of comfort during the crazy, crazy time.”
The artists were filmed with cell phones, cameras and audio equipment in their homes. The event took place during the time slot that was to belong to the iHeartRadio Music Awards, which became part of a wave of public-event postponements and cancellations because of the pandemic.

Other performers included Tim McGraw, H.E.R. and Sam Smith, who sang “How Do You Sleep” in a cappella form. Dave Grohl sang “My Hero” from his studio in Hawaii, Green Day’s Billie Joe Armstrong strummed his guitar to “Boulevard of Broken Dreams,” while Camila Cabello sang “My Oh My” from Miami with a guitar assist from beau Shawn Mendes.
The five members of the Backstreet Boys performed from separate locations to sing their classic hit, “I Want It That Way.” And Demi Lovato sang her emotional song “Skyscraper” while playing piano.
Lady Gaga, Lizzo, Melissa McCarthy, Ryan Seacrest, Ken Jeong and others made special appearances, thanking first responders and telling viewers to practice safe habits like hand-washing and staying home.
“I see a lot of inspiring stories of kindness around the world that are helping to calm everyone’s nerves during this scary time. My heart goes out to people who have lost loved ones and also to people that are losing their jobs,” said Gaga, who postponed the April 10 release of her album “Chromatica,” saying it’s not the right time amid a global fight with the coronavirus. “I just wanted to check in and make sure that you’re finding the time to be kind to yourself and doing whatever you can to maintain your mental health.”

Like Gaga, other artists have changed release dates on projects because of the virus, and artists have had to cancel or postpone live shows because of social-distancing mandates.
For most people, the new coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia and death.
Viewers watching Sunday’s concert special were asked to support two of the charitable organizations aiding victims and first responders during the pandemic: Feeding America and First Responders Children’s Foundation.
Some police officers and health care professionals spoke in between performances, with one ICU nurse in tears as she told viewers about her emotional day treating victims carrying the virus.
“Looking at them through the window and not being able hug them, it’s just a dang killer,” she said.
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A few weeks ago, Debbie Cameron saw her grandsons most days, playing the piano, making after-school snacks or singing nursery rhymes with the baby in her Chandler, Arizona, home.
Then the coronavirus crisis hit and the boys were suddenly gone. Cameron is 68 and has asthma, making her one of the people most at risk of getting seriously ill or dying. Now she sees her grandchildren from behind the glass of a window or a phone screen.
“Looking at them through the window and not being able hug them, it’s just a dang killer,” she said.
For grandparents all over the world, being protected from the pandemic has meant a piercing distance from their loved ones. While children don’t seem to be getting seriously ill as often, they can be infected and spread the virus. It’s been a jolting change for many.
Cameron and her husband, both retired teachers, usually watch their older grandchildren, aged 8 and 11, after school and their 7-month-old baby grandson four times a week. One of their three daughters is due to have another child in July.
But as the effects of coronavirus spread, the family decided that caring for the boys was too risky. While most people who catch the disease suffer from symptoms like fever and cough and recover in a few weeks, some get severely ill with things like pneumonia. COVID-19 can be fatal, and older people who have underlying conditions like Cameron are the most vulnerable.
So instead of chasing after little boys, she’s doing puzzles, listening to old radio shows or watching the Hallmark channel, trying to fill the hours in her much-quieter house. “I just go day by day, and when the dark thoughts come in I try and do something to take them away,” she said. “I cry. Sometimes I cry.”
Still, she feels lucky doesn’t have to leave the house to work, and that she has close family ties. Sometimes she re-reads a letter her mother wrote her father while he was deployed to the Philippines during World War II, laying out her raw emotions about how much she missed him as she cared for their first child without him. “My mother is a really strong woman, and in this one she was struggling,” she said. “If my mom did that, I can do this.”
The sudden change has been challenging for kids’ parents too, many of whom are trying to work from home and balance childcare. Cameron’s daughter Julie Bufkin is at home with her 7-month old son Calvin, working from home as a project coordinator at Arizona State University while her husband goes into the office as an analytical chemist for Intel.
She’s been taking webcam calls and answering emails while breastfeeding the baby and trying to keep him entertained, even after coming down with a fever and headache, symptoms similar to the new coronavirus. In line with the advice of public-health officials, she stayed at home to recover and wasn’t tested for the virus, since she’s young and healthy and didn’t become seriously ill. She’s now on the mend, but it only deepened her mother’s feelings of helplessness.
“Imagine if your child is sick you can’t go help them,” Cameron said. “That’s the hardest part.”
But for her daughter, it further confirmed that staying physically separate for now is the right decision.
“We want my mom to survive this,” Bufkin said.
And the grandparents can still step in remotely — Bufkin sets up a phone or a tablet in Calvin’s playpen, where they can sing songs, show him around the yard, look at the cat or play piano over FaceTime.
“Anything we can, even five to 10 minutes to give her a little rest. That makes my day,” Cameron said.
They’re only 5 miles (eight kilometers) away in suburban Phoenix, and for a time Bufkin was dropping off food weekly, then touching hands or exchanging kisses through the window. More often, they’re sharing their lives through a phone or tablet screen.
The baby watches his grandparents on the screen, looking up from his own games to smile and laugh at his grandpa or focus on his grandmother playing the saxophone.
Other grandparents are also looking for moments of brightness. They’re replacing chats on the porch with friends with Facebook conversations, or connecting with church congregations through video-messaging apps like Marco Polo.
Others are turning the technological clock back. Margret Boes-Ingraham, 72, used to drive her 14-year-old granddaughter to choir practice a few times a week near Salt Lake City, then stay to listen to her sing. Without those rides spent listening to show tunes, she’s encouraging her granddaughter to keep a journal.
“I asked her if I could read, and she said no!” Boes-Ingraham said with a laugh.
For grandparents who live alone, hunkering down during the crisis can increase their isolation. Terry Catucci is a 69-year-old retired social worker and recovering alcoholic of 30 years in Maryland. She has seven grandchildren nearby in the Washington, D.C., area including a 5-year-old and a 1-year-old who she helps care for sometimes. She tries not to think about the little changes she’s missing during the years when children seem to grow every day.
“When you’re in a time of crisis, you want to be with people you love, and we can’t,” she said. “I’ve run the whole gamut of the five stages of grief at any given day.”
But she’s getting by, talking with her family and checking in daily with her Alcoholics Anonymous sponsor. Every night, neighbors in her retirement community set up lawn chairs at the end of driveways to chat with friends walking by at a safe distance.
“We’re all learning how to survive in this time,” she said, “to live a little bit the best we can.”
Prince George’s County Public Schools officials are expanding the number of sites where students can go to get free breakfast and lunch.
Breakfast, lunch and a snack will be available at 43 sites on weekdays, starting today. Under relaxed federal guidelines, parents may now pick up the “grab and go” meals. Parents must bring a student ID or report card with them if the student is unable to come to the site. “We are committed to supporting students and families during this time with the resources they need during this time,” said Dr. Monica Goldson, Chief Executive Officer. “By establishing more meal sites at neighborhood schools, we hope to serve even more students and families.”
There will be 10 new elementary school sites: Bradbury Heights, Brandywine, Carrollton, Glassmanor, Hollywood, James McHenry, Ridgecrest, Riverdale, Robert Frost and Woodridge. Three sites have been closed due to low participation: J. Frank Dent and Longfields Elementary Schools and Benjamin Stoddert Middle School.
As of Friday, March 27, the school system has served more than 34,000 meals since the sites opened Monday, March 16.
Meals are available from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Students may pick up the meals and snack in one visit. Parents and guardians are not required to accompany students nor are students required to show ID.
The full list of sites is available below and at www.pgcps.org/coronavirus.
Andrew Jackson Academy, 3500 Regency Parkway, Forestville
Benjamin Tasker Middle School, 4901 Collington Road, Bowie
Bradbury Heights Elementary, 1401 Glacier Avenue, Capitol Heights
Brandywine Elementary, 14101 Brandywine Road, Brandywine
Buck Lodge Middle School, 2611 Buck Lodge Road, Adelphi
Calverton Elementary, 3400 Beltsville Road, Beltsville
Carmody Hills Elementary, 401 Jadeleaf Ave., Capitol Heights
Carrollton Elementary, 8300 Quintana Street, New Carrollton
Clinton Grove Elementary, 9420 Temple Hill Road, Clinton
District Heights Elementary, 2200 County Road, District Heights
Drew-Freeman Middle School, 2600 Brooks Drive, Suitland
Dwight D. Eisenhower Middle School, 13725 Briarwood Drive, Laurel
Gladys Noon Spellman Elementary, 3324 64th Ave., Cheverly
Glassmanor Elementary, 1011 Marcy Ave., Oxon Hill
Hillcrest Heights Elementary, 4305 22nd Place, Temple Hills
Hollywood Elementary, 9811 49th Ave., College Park
James McHenry Elementary, 8909 McHenry Lane, Lanham
John Bayne Elementary, 7010 Walker Mill Road, Capitol Heights
Judge Sylvania Woods Elementary, 3000 Church St., Glenarden
Kenmoor Middle School, 2500 Kenmoor Drive, Landover
Kettering Middle School, 65 Herrington Drive, Upper Marlboro
Langley Park-McCormick Elementary, 8201 15th Ave., Hyattsville
Laurel Elementary, 516 Montgomery St., Laurel
Lewisdale Elementary, 2400 Banning Place, Hyattsville
Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School, 4545 Ammendale Road, Beltsville
Nicholas Orem Middle School, 6100 Editors Park Drive, Hyattsville
Oxon Hill Middle School, 9570 Fort Foote Road, Fort Washington
Port Towns Elementary, 4351 58th Ave., Bladensburg
Ridgecrest Elementary, 6120 Riggs Road, Hyattsville
Riverdale Elementary, 5006 Riverdale Road, Riverdale
Robert Frost Elementary, 6419 85th Ave., New Carrollton
Samuel Chase Elementary, 5700 Fisher Road, Temple Hills
Springhill Lake Elementary, 6060 Springhill Drive, Greenbelt
Stephen Decatur Middle School, 8200 Pinewood Drive, Clinton
Suitland Elementary, 4650 Towne Park Road, Suitland
Templeton Elementary, 6001 Carters Lane, Riverdale
Thomas S. Stone Elementary, 4500 34th Street, Mount Rainier
Thurgood Marshall Middle School, 4909 Brinkley Road, Temple Hills
Waldon Woods Elementary, 10301 Thrift Road, Clinton
Walker Mill Middle School, 800 Karen Blvd., Capitol Heights
William Paca Elementary, 7801 Sheriff Road, Landover
William Wirt Middle School, 6200 Tuckerman St., Riverdale Park
Woodridge Elementary, 5001 Flintridge Drive, Hyattsville
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Prince George’s County residents have a new place to go to get tested for the coronavirus
The screening site is designed to alleviate the pressure on primary care physicians, hospitals, and health care facilities that will likely increase in the coming weeks due to COVID-19. Those who normally go to hospitals or emergency rooms to receive primary health care, are highly encouraged to seek a telehealth appointment through the Prince George’s County Health Department if they believe they have been exposed and are exhibiting symptoms associated with this virus.
This site is accessible by appointment only, and the process is as follows:
Walk-ups exhibiting no symptoms will not be tested. Those with prescriptions from primary care physicians or other health care providers will still need to make an appointment through the Prince George’s Health Department’s COVID-19 Hotline and telehealth services by calling 301-883-6627.
The clinic will be primarily staffed by Prince George’s County Health Department officials with support from the Maryland Department of Health, the Maryland National Guard, the Maryland Medical Reserve Corps, and the University of Maryland Medical System.
Trump extending federal guidelines telling Americans to continue social distancing until April 30th.
Hours after the grim prediction, President Trump made an about face on his plan to have much of the country back open and running as normal by Easter. Instead, he announced extending his federal guidelines recommending people stay home for another 30 days until the end of April to prevent the virus from spreading any further.
As of Sunday evening, the US had more than 140,000 confirmed COVID-19 cases and some 2,400 deaths. New York remains the American epicenter of the virus with over 1,000 deaths. Trump spoke vividly about the death images he had seen recently on television this week of bodies being removed from a hospital in Queens. “Body bags all over, in hallways. I’ve seen things that I’ve never seen before,” said Trump.
Coronavirus cases across DMV jump to nearly 2500 with more than 40 deaths.
The emergency aid comes as the District’s number of coronavirus cases has hit 401 with 9 deaths. A similar declaration has also been declared for Maryland which now has 1,239 infections and 16 deaths. Virginia has 890 persons with COVID-19 and 22 deaths.
Top Items to Watch on Netflix
Now relax, kick off your shoes and find a comfy spot on your couch and enjoy some entertainment via Netflix.
Singer PJ Morton is celebrating his birthday today on 3/29 and the New Orleans native is throwing himself a big party for his fans. Get ready to check him out live on his IG @PJMORTON today at 6PM to hear some of you favorite songs from the soulful Mr. Morton.
Happy Bday, PJ!
https://www.instagram.com/p/B-SPmGrn8y0/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link
By Jacquie Gales Webb
The Clark Sisters: First Ladies of Gospel premieres on Lifetime April 11 at 8 pm ET. It recounts the complex story of five sisters struggling to juggle their religious beliefs, family obligations and personal desires on their journey to becoming the highest-selling female gospel group in history.
The film tells the story of the trailblazing mother of the Clark Sisters, Mattie Moss Clark played by Aunjanue Ellis. The five Clark sisters (Christina Bell as “Twinkie,” Kierra Sheard as “Karen,” Sheléa Frazier as “Dorinda,” Raven Goodwin as “Denise,” Angela Birchett as “Jacky”) overcame humble beginnings in Detroit, enduring abuse, loss, rejection, betrayal, and sibling rivalries to achieve international fame as icons of the Gospel music industry.
The Clark Sisters are credited with bringing Gospel music into the mainstream.
The impressive benefits of water and it’s role in keeping one healthy.
It potentially helps in the prevention of constipation, heartburn, headaches, gastritis, ulcers, cardiovascular disorders, rheumatoid arthritis, backaches, and osteoporosis.
It is required in increased amounts for pregnant women and nursing mothers. It also plays an important role in kidney function and skincare.
The Revered Joseph Lowery has passed on leaving a legacy steeped in equality.
His death marks the passing of a civil rights icon whose life was rooted in championing the rights of others dating back more than half-a-century. A close confidante to the late Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Lowery fought to end segregation, lived to see the election of President Barack Obama, and was one of the nation’s most fiery preachers.
Lowery was on the front lines of the battle for equality and had a knack for cutting to the core of the country’s conscience with commentary steeped in scripture and truth. Lowery refused to back or bow down to anyone whether a Jim crow racist or a U.S. president.
As a close aide to Dr. King, Lowery’s fiery Alabama preaching style often rivaled that of King. “We ask you to help us work for that day when black will not be asked to get in back; when brown can stick around; when yellow will be mellow; when the red man can get ahead; and when white will embrace what is right,” That was the prayer Lowery delivered at President Barack Obama’s 2009 inaugural benediction.
Conversation with DC Council Chairman Phil Mendelson about the fight against the coronavirus

Disney announced Thursday that the duchess, who is married to Britain’s Prince Harry, is lending her voice to “Elephant,” to be released April 3 on the Disney+ streaming service. It’s one of a series of animal- and nature-themed features released to mark Earth Month.
LONDON (AP) — Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, has her first post-royal job: narrating a Disney documentary about elephants.
Disney announced Thursday that the duchess, who is married to Britain’s Prince Harry, is lending her voice to “Elephant,” to be released April 3 on the Disney+ streaming service. It’s one of a series of animal- and nature-themed features released to mark Earth Month.
The film follows an elephant family on a 1,000-mile (1,600-kilometer) journey across the Kalahari Desert.
Harry and Meghan shocked the world in January by announcing that they were quitting as senior royals, relinquishing official duties and seeking financial independence. Since late last year they have been based on Vancouver Island, and will officially end royal duties on March 31.
The grandson of Queen Elizabeth II married the American actress Meghan Markle at Windsor Castle in May 2018, in a ceremony watched by millions around the world. The couple later said they found scrutiny by the British media — which they said tipped into harassment — intolerable.
Hoda Kotb’s emotions got the better of her on the “Today” show Friday as she concluded a segment with New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees, who is donating money to help with the outbreak of coronavirus there.
From finding ways to help others cope to sheltering in place to canceling events, here’s a look at some of the ways the entertainment industry is reacting to the spread of the coronavirus, which most people recover from but can cause severe illness in the elderly and those with preexisting medical conditions.
TODAY SHOW’S KOTB BREAKS DOWN AFTER SEGMENT
Hoda Kotb’s emotions got the better of her on the “Today” show Friday as she concluded a segment with New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees, who is donating money to help with the outbreak of coronavirus there.
“Drew, we love ya,” Kotb said. Then she dissolved in tears, and co-anchor Savannah Guthrie jumped in to take over.
Kotb was a news anchor and reporter at the CBS affiliate in New Orleans during the 1990s.
“Hoda, I’m so sorry, hon,” Guthrie said. “I know where your heart is.”
‘BABY SHARK’ CHALLENGE: WASH YOUR HANDS, DOO DOO
Sorry parents, ‘Baby Shark’ is making a comeback — for a good cause.
Pinkfong’s “Baby Shark” — that jingle earworm that every toddler seems to know — has been reworked to teach good hygiene to combat COVID-19.
The company has debuted the “Wash Your Hands With Baby Shark” video and started a dance challenge to encourage families to upload videos of their children washing hands to the song.
“Wash your hands/doo doo doo doo doo/Wash your hands,” go the new lyrics. “Grab some soap/doo doo doo doo doo/Grab some soap.” Videos are tagged with #BabySharkHandWashChallenge.
Pinkfong uploaded its original version of “Baby Shark” with an accompanying dance and colorful cartoon video to YouTube in June 2016. It has now been viewed over 4.6 billion times, making it one of YouTube’s top five watched videos of all time.
EMMY SEASON ADJUSTS TO VIRUS SCRAMBLE
The Television Academy has adjusted its calendar ahead of the Emmy Awards following disruption from the coronavirus.
According to the calendar, June 5 will be the new entry deadline, nominations will be voted on from July 2-13 and nominations will be announced July 28. Final voting will take place from Aug. 21-31.
There is also modification of the hanging episode rule for series and limited series.
But the academy stressed that there are no changes to the Sept. 20 Emmy telecast or the Sept. 12 and Sept. 13 Creative Arts Emmy ceremonies.
House passes $2.2T rescue package, rushes it to Trump

The House approved the sweeping measure by a voice vote, as strong majorities of both parties lined up behind the most colossal economic relief bill in the nation’s history. It will ship payments of up to $1,200 to millions of Americans, bolster unemployment benefits, and offer loans, grants and tax breaks to businesses large and small. It also will flush billions more to states, local governments and the nation’s all but overwhelmed health care system. Trump said he would sign it immediately.
George Valentine was the Deputy Director of the Mayor’s Office of Legal Counsel

According to his Linkedin page, he had been in that position for one year and one month. Prior to that, Valentine worked in the DC Office of The Attorney General for more than 16 years as a deputy attorney general. Mayor Bowser said Valentine was admitted to a hospital on Wednesday. Although his age was not immediately available, Mayor Bower said he had been an employee with DC for more than 20 years.
A member of DC Mayor Bowser’s staff dies from COVID-19.
The Mayor has been tasked with coming before reporters daily to give the latest number of infections and deaths in the city. DC’s number of infections now stands at 267 with 4 deaths. While much of the city, like the rest of the region, is on a virtual lock down, the numbers are steadily climbing. Officials expect the cases to continue to rise, especially as more testing sites go up.
Maryland now has 774 confirmed cases and Virginia 604 persons infected with COVID-19.
Washington area officials are calling for immediate funding to help slowdown the pandemic
Meantime, the urgency is increasing for the federal government to step up with money to help fight the pandemic in the Washington. DC, Maryland, and Virginia have all expanded testing sites across the region. But local leaders are all calling on the White House to free up dollars to purchase much needed supplies for healthcare workers and for testing.
The District has 267 confirmed cases. Maryland has 580 and Virginia has 460 persons who have tested positive for COVID-19.
“With the prospect of long periods at home either alone or with your partner, people are exploring new ways to make the best of the time available,” Womanizer spokeswoman Johanna Rief said.
“You are your safest sex partner,” the NYC government insists. This directive is basically a recommendation from the NYC Health Department to masturbate as much as your heart’s content, with a reminder to wash your hands and sex toys thoroughly after.
Folks are buying sex toys, lots of sex toys, and the industry is booming.

Mashable.com reports top sex toy site Adam & Eve has seen a sales spike of over 30% each day for the past week. And the spike isn’t just from singles either, their spokesperson claims. Couples have more time on their hands and are exploring new horizons, together.
Another leading sex toy company, Emojibator, saw a 225% increase in overall sales and a 345% increase in online store sales alone. Their distributors includes Amazon and other online stores.
“The demand for our products have skyrocketed this past week, in part due to everyone stocking up on their favorite stay-at-home activities with Coronamania,” Emojibator co-founder and CMO Kristin Fretz told Mashable.
“Many people and businesses are affected negatively by the virus and we saw it as a challenge for us as well,” sex toy brand Womanizer spokeswoman Johanna Rief said to CNN. “The numbers are therefore surprising.”
“With the prospect of long periods at home either alone or with your partner, people are exploring new ways to make the best of the time available,” she added.
Healthy eating while you’re at home during the COVID-19 shutdown

