Hawaii Daily COVID-19 Update: Tuesday, April 7, 2020

Governor’s Office:

Honolulu Repurposes ‘Ohana Zone Funds for Additional Help for People Experiencing Homelessness

Utilizing State ‘Ohana Zone funds, the City and County of Honolulu today announced the rapid deployment of its HONU (Homeless Outreach and Navigation for the Unsheltered) program, which provides short-term shelter and triage services to people experiencing homelessness. Due to the impacts of COVID-19 both the State and the City have recognized the need for more immediate shelter options that implement physical distancing measures. HONU resources are being directed to the City’s new Provisional Outdoor Screening and Triage (POST) facility at

Ke‘ehi Lagoon. POST will provide meals, hygiene and security. The Honolulu Police Dept. offered the concept of the POST facility which will serve as a resource for homeless individuals needing temporary shelter and access to hygiene and other basic needs. The city repurposed a portion of its $6 million ‘Ohana Zone contract with the State to meet the immediate crisis needs of the homeless during the COVID-19 pandemic. Services provided by the POST facilitiy are consistent with the intent of ‘Ohana Zone funds to offer flexible and low-barrier services to people experiencing homelessness.

Lt. Governor’s Office:

Many people were tested on Moloka‘i today at a COVID-19 drive-through testing site thanks to the efforts of Lt. Governor Josh Green, Dr. Scott Miscovich and the County of Maui. The event followed the diagnosis of two positive cases of the virus on the island over the past week. 500 tests kits were provided for the drive-through testing. Maui Mayor Michael Victorino said, “I want to deeply thank Lt. Gov. Green and Dr. Miscovich for stepping up to provide these test kits. We appreciate their quick response to the needs of our Moloka‘i residents as we face this pandemic together.”

https://www.mauicounty.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?AID=9981

Department of Health:

Reported Hawaii COVID-19 Cases Exceeds 400

With the addition of 23 positive cases, Hawaii now has a total of 410 reported cases of COVID-19 as of February 28, 2020. Of today’s cases, all are adults. DOH reports a decrease of traveler-associated cases, but investigators are looking at community-associated cases, primarily on Oahu and Maui. Three (3) of the most recent cases are travel-related, none are community-related and 20 are unknown. This is why the continued practice of physical distancing is so critical in flattening the curve of infection in the state. No new deaths have been reported and the total stands at five (5); two women and three men.

LABORATORY TESTING DATA

Total Number of Individuals Tested

by Clinical and State Laboratories

Positive Negative
14,981 408 14,560

18 test results were inconclusive

HAWAII COVID-19 COUNTS AS OF 12 NOON, APRIL 7, 2020

County of Diagnosis New Cases Reported since

2/28/2020

(including new cases)

Total Released from Isolation
Honolulu 20 312 83
Hawaii 0 23 9
Maui++ 4 48 14
Kauai 1 18 7
Residents Diagnosed outside HI 0 2  
Unknown** -2 7
Total 23 410 113
     
Deaths 0 5  

++Includes two positive case on Molokai. 

*“Refers to positive cases that have an unknown county of diagnosis at the time of this report. As more information becomes available for these cases, they are assigned to the proper County of Diagnosis. A negative number indicates the number of previously unknown cases that have now been assigned to a county.

Hawaiicovid19@gmail

New Website for Mental Health and Homeless Service Providers

The Behavioral Health and Homelessness Statewide Unified Response Group (BHHSURG) has launched a website to ensure the continuity of coverage of essential health and homelessness services during the COVID-19 pandemic. The website features resources for providers who work with mental health and homeless populations, including provider Q&A webinars, weekly newsletters, updates from partners, and guidance on using telehealth and personal protective equipment. The site also contains information for clients and consumers, such as guidance on everyday prevention and how to access services. The goal is to enable providers and the people they serve to find answers to common questions and to provide them with updates to behavioral health homelessness and other social services during this challenging crisis.

To view the website or to subscribe to the BHHSURG newsletter, visit bhhsurg.hawaii.gov.

Hawaii Tourism Authority:

Fewer Flights, Fewer Arrivals at State Airports

On Monday, 583 people arrived in Hawaii, slightly fewer than the day before. This includes 133 visitors and 182 residents. Mandatory 14-day, self-quarantine is required for all passengers arriving from out of state and also covers interisland travelers. This table shows the number of people who arrived by air from out of state yesterday. Interisland travel table is below.

HAWAII PASSENGER ARRIVALS BY AIR FROM OUTSIDE THE STATE, APRIL 6, 2020

  Kona Maui Oahu Līhue

 

Total
Crew 2 3 120 2 127
Intended New Resident 3   46   49
Resident 8 6 163 5 182
Transit     22   22
Visitor 7 2 111 13 133
Grand Total 20 11 462 20 513
Flights 1 2 12 2 17

https://www.hawaiitourismauthority.org/media/4420/040620-passenger-count-press-release.pdf

Department of Business, Economic Development & Tourism:

Interisland Air Travel Stats

Latest numbers from DBEDT for arrivals April 4, 2020.


Arriving airport
 
Departing airport HNL KOA ITO OGG LIH MKK LNY LUP JHM TOTAL Departing
HNL 34 59 21 18 9 11 152
KOA
ITO
OGG 1 1
LIH 1 1
MKK
LNY 2
LUP
JHM
TOTAL Arriving 1 34 59 21 18 9 11 1 154

dbedt.hawaii.gov/economic/covid19

Department of Defense:

National Guard Helps Kauai Police at Checkpoints

Today, members of the Hawaii National Guard (HING) assisted officers from the Kauai Police Dept. (KPD) at two monitoring/compliance checkpoints. The operation was to help check to see if people are abiding by both state and county emergency orders in place to mitigate the spread of COVID-19. The collaboration is under the unified command of the COVID-19 incident management team of the Kauai Emergency Management Agency. People who have essential work or activities are encouraged to consider additional travel time in anticipation of lengthy traffic delays as more routine checkpoints are planned. HING soldiers are not armed and all enforcement actions will be taken by KPD officers. A recent checkpoint on Kaumaualii Highway near Halfway Bridge saw nearly 4,000 vehicles pass through, with the majority of drivers saying their travel was essential. To review essential travel exemptions: http://kauai.gov/COVID-19

Hawaii State Senate:

Special Senate Committee on COVID-19 Meets Wednesday

The special committee will convene on Wednesday, April 8, to assess and advise the Senate regarding the State of Hawaii’s COVID-19 plans and procedures.

  1. Confirm the development of the state departmental plans and procedures;
  2. Review and assess current state departmental plans and procedures;
  3. Review and assess whether state departmental plans and procedures are properly and timely implemented to safeguard public health and safety; and
  4. To communicate and disseminate information obtained therefrom.

The special committee will be meeting with Lt. Governor Josh Green, DOH Director Dr. Bruce Anderson, HI-EMA Incident Commander Kenneth Hara, and Ryker Wada, DHRD Director.

Watch via: `Ōlelo Channel 49

YouTube livestream: https://youtu.be/whQc_hol4QA

Hawaii House of Representatives:

House Select Committee Receives Reports on Economic Recovery

The House Select Committee on COVID-19 Economic and Financial Preparedness reviewed economic and financial preparedness for Hawaii following the pandemic, during its third informational briefing yesterday. The committee first heard a report from the Economic Research Organization at the University of Hawaii (UHERO), on its new report: How to Control Hawaii’s Coronavirus Epidemic and Bring back the Economy: The Next Steps. The report spells out in detail how increased testing, comprehensive historical contact tracing, and isolation of exposed and infected individuals can lead to a rapid reduction in new infections and hospitalizations. According to economist Carl Bonham, once this system has been put in place and has operated successfully for several weeks, we may begin to approach several measurable targets — number of new infections, number of new hospitalizations, and the capacity of the health care system to treat newly infected or exposed individuals. This would enable Governor Ige to gradually relax stay-at-home orders and for individuals to gradually relax some physical distancing restrictions. Bonham said after the disease has been eliminated, the local economy will need to be reopened first, followed by the tourism economy. He said the worst-case scenario would be for the economy to reopen following the development of a vaccine in 12 to 18 months. A more optimistic forecast would be for the disease to be brought under control in about 45 days on the mainland. Bonham said that when Hawaii is perceived as a safe place to visit, it could become the premier destination for U.S. travelers over then next year, but that Hawaii residents must be reassured that any tourists are coronavirus free.

Read the full news release on the hearing: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1QdlvHZX4_3U_o7_eAucc0K9Z97u4gvlb

Related posts