Update, 10 a.m., May 27: Gov. Ralph Northam has turned down Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney’s request to reopen while maintaining restrictions on houses of worship, barber shops and grooming businesses, in a letter released Tuesday night. All of Virginia’s localities are expected to be in Phase One by Friday.
Earlier:
Northern Virginia and Accomack County are expected to move out of “Phase Zero” by the end of the week, while Richmond’s mayor is asking for a slower reopening plan that would keep houses of worship and barber shops closed for the time being.
In a letter released Sunday, the five directors of health departments in Alexandria and Arlington, Fairfax, Loudoun and Prince William counties wrote that the region has met four out of six metrics required to enter Phase One of Gov. Ralph Northam’s “Forward Virginia” reopening plan. They include: percentage of positive tests declining over 14 days; hospitalizations declining; increased testing; enough hospital and ICU beds.
Asked at his Tuesday coronavirus news conference if Northern Virginia has the green light to reopen Friday, Northam said, “Yes, that’s our plan.” Accomack County supervisors also have indicated that the county, which has performed extensive testing after COVID-19 outbreaks at two poultry plants, as well as community testing, will also be ready to enter Phase One as well. Northern Virginia has not met the other two metrics: enough personal protective equipment (PPE) and increased contact tracing capacity.
“PPE for outpatient facilities,” such as doctors’ offices and nursing homes, “continues to be a challenge. Although there is increased supply for these entities, there is not a sustainable supply through non-government sources,” the health officials wrote. As for contact tracing, “infrastructure is currently being put into place.” The state is hiring more than 1,000 contact tracers, who speak with COVID-19 patients about who they came into contact with before falling ill.
Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney wrote Northam a letter Monday asking that Richmond enter into a “modified Phase One” that would maintain restrictions on indoor gatherings at houses of worship and on personal care and grooming services.
“In recent conversations with leaders in Richmond’s business and faith communities,” Stoney wrote, “they have made it clear that their top priority is to keep their employees, their congregations and their patrons safe.” Northam said Tuesday the decision on Richmond is still under discussion but that he plans to provide details Wednesday.
Although most of Virginia has been in Phase One of the reopening plan since May 15, Northern Virginia, the city of Richmond and Accomack County received two-week delays from Northam. All seven localities had higher than average rates of COVID-19 infections in mid-May.
The two-week delay of Phase One is set to expire Thursday at midnight.
Virginia saw an increase of 1,615 COVID-19 cases over the past 24 hours, the Virginia Department of Health reported Tuesday; there are 39,342 confirmed and probable cases across the state, up from 37,727 cases reported Monday.
VDH also reported 1,236 deaths related to the coronavirus, up from 1,208 Monday. The Virginia Hospital & Healthcare Association reported 1,403 people with confirmed or pending test results are hospitalized in the state in its Tuesday update.
Virginia saw an increase of more than 4,000 coronavirus cases since Friday, although the statewide positivity rate continues to decline; 14.1% of PCR tests reported May 22 were positive, down from an all-time high of 22.1% April 20.
Gov. Ralph Northam is expected to announce a statewide mask mandate at his news conference this afternoon. According to news reports, regional health officials say that Northern Virginia has met four of the state’s six metrics for entering Phase One of Northam’s “Forward Virginia” plan.
These are the Virginia localities that have reported 400 or more cases, as of May 26:
Fairfax County: 9,839
Prince William County: 4,992
Loudoun County: 2,186
Arlington County: 1,935
Alexandria: 1,785
Henrico County: 1,546
Chesterfield County: 1,213
Richmond: 1,089
Manassas: 849
Accomack County: 731
Harrisonburg: 727
Virginia Beach: 638
Culpeper County: 614
Stafford County: 599
Rockingham County: 478
Chesapeake: 459
Norfolk: 450
Buckingham County: 445
Globally, there are 5.51 million reported COVID-19 cases and 346,836 confirmed deaths as of May 26. In the United States, which has the most confirmed cases and deaths worldwide, there are 1.66 million confirmed cases and 98,222 deaths attributed to the coronavirus.
As of Monday, May 25, Virginia has 37,727 confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19, the Virginia Department of Health reported, an increase of 2,777 cases since Friday. There are 1,208 deaths and 1,376 people currently hospitalized with either confirmed or pending test results.
The statewide percentage of positive tests, compared with total PCR tests given, is at 14.3% and continues to fall, although the percentage has risen slightly in some localities. In Chesterfield County, the percentage of positive tests went from 13.8% to 16.2% from May 19 to 21, and the city of Richmond has seen an increase from 17.4% on May 10 to 25% on May 21. In most other localities, the percentage is declining or staying relatively flat.
These are the Virginia localities that have reported 400 or more cases, as of May 25:
Fairfax County: 8,734
Prince William County: 4,702
Loudoun County: 2,047
Arlington County: 1,897
Alexandria: 1,754
Henrico County: 1,492
Chesterfield County: 1,200
Richmond: 1,040
Manassas: 849
Accomack County: 731
Harrisonburg: 727
Virginia Beach: 618
Culpeper County: 614
Stafford County: 599
Rockingham County: 467
Chesapeake: 449
Buckingham County: 443
Norfolk: 432
Globally, there are 5.46 million reported COVID-19 cases and 344,731 confirmed deaths as of May 25. In the United States, which has the most confirmed cases and deaths worldwide, there are 1.65 million confirmed cases and 98,034 deaths attributed to the coronavirus.
We’ve all gotten used to dog, kid and even outdoor bird interruptions of Zoom conferences, and some of us are not quite ready to start wearing pants with zippers and belt loops every day. Still others miss having doughnuts in the breakroom with work mates.
Telework is the way many Virginians with office jobs work now. So, what have we learned over the past two months?
Virginia Business spoke with three teleworkers this month, addressing what has worked well, what needed to be tweaked and how remote work may become part of life for many office workers post-pandemic.
Sonu Singh is CEO of 1901 Group, the Reston-based information technology services federal contractor that also has presences in Blacksburg and Abingdon.
Robyn Sidersky is a reporter at the Virginian-Pilot newspaper, which recently vacated its longtime building in downtown Norfolk after its owner, Tribune Publishing, sold the office to developers earlier this year. Matt Pinsker is a Henrico County criminal defense attorney and manager of a small law office.
Singh’s workforce ordinarily collaborates remotely, although certainly not to this extent. Sidersky, by contrast, won’t have an office to return to when things are back to normal. Both left their usual work environments behind during the second week of March.
“In some regard,” Singh says, “productivity is up.” 1901 Group employees don’t have to commute anymore, and as a result, many work an hour or two more during the day, he says. “I’d say I’m probably at 90% productivity.”
Some parts of Singh’s job, and that of the other executives at 1901, are sometimes “best figured out face-to-face,” he says.
Sidersky, too, has adapted well to working from home. Her job, as part of the Virginian-Pilot’s digital news team, starts at 6 a.m. weekdays.
“I can sleep a little bit longer,” she says, a welcome development since Sidersky is expecting her first baby in July. Her routine is to set up a daily COVID-19 story on the website, updating it throughout the morning and afternoon, as well as covering any other breaking news.
Both say there are pluses and minuses to teleworking. Sidersky misses the simplicity of walking over to someone’s desk, and her longtime editor left the paper in mid-March, so she’s working with a new editor now without the benefit of being in the same place.
“It feels a little disconnected,” Sidersky says, but she stays in contact with coworkers via Zoom, Slack, texting and email. She’s also having a virtual baby shower this month.
One thing that has helped a lot is setting up a desk at home with a good chair, an extra monitor and a power cord, Sidersky adds. She even bought Starburst and Jolly Ranchers candy for her desk to remind herself of her former office.
Sonu Singh, CEO of IT federal contractor 1901 Group, works from his Fairfax County home.
Singh says that 40% of his staff “loves” teleworking, and 40% are positive and negative about the experience. “I’d say probably 20% want to be back in the office,” he adds, because they miss the camaraderie.
Technologically speaking, everything has worked relatively smoothly for 1901, although workers who live in Southwest Virginia sometimes need powerful hotspot devices to boost internet access and speed.
Many 1901 Group workers have either borrowed monitors from work or purchased them with funding from the company; the average number of monitors per employee is four, Singh says. “They’re working and looking at customer environments, running code, manifests,” he explains, and many use 3-foot curved monitors. Singh, however, is an outlier: “I always work with my laptop. I’ve never had a monitor or a mouse.”
The company manages workflow with GoodDay and Microsoft Project programs and an automated ticket system, plus other internal software to measure productivity.
Singh’s company also has hired 30 people over the past two months, plus conducted hundreds of job interviews virtually. They use WebEx for job interviews, and the entire onboarding process is done remotely.
“It’s certainly not as warm a welcome as meeting someone face to face,” Singh says, noting that 1901’s pre-pandemic procedure was to pair a new employee with another worker who checks in with them regularly during the first 60 days of employment. Usually they go to lunch together during the first week.
Some companies nationwide, especially in the tech industry — including Facebook — are already considering having more workers work from home.
Pinsker says his office of five already worked remotely a lot before the pandemic. During quarantine, his workload has declined dramatically because the courts in Virginia have continued thousands of cases, except for those involving emergencies. Pinsker is able to read legal opinions “in my house or in my backyard,” and his employees all use DropBox for assignments.
The main thing managers should strive to do is maintain separation between home and work, Pinsker adds. “Try not to call employees at 9 p.m., say.” He moved his law class at Virginia Commonwealth University online, relying on his experience of teaching virtual courses in earlier semesters.
By April, he and some of his staff were coming into the office on staggered days and times, allowing for social distancing. Although Pinsker is a self-identified introvert, seeing his colleagues even at a distance is “very nice. It was too much isolation, and there’s no substitute for in-person.”
As for Sidersky, she and the Pilot no longer have a true home base.
The former Virginian-Pilot headquarters on Brambleton Avenue, which was handed over to its purchasers in early May, was sold for $9.5 million to Richmond-based developer The Monument Cos. in January, which plans to turn the building into residential and retail space. Sidersky will have the option to work at the Virginia Beach printing plant, where newsroom staff will have a dedicated area, and some staffers will move to sister publication Daily Press’ offices in Newport News.
But, she says, “Most of the Pilot’s newsroom will be at home. You don’t have a permanent desk [in Virginia Beach].” Also, she’ll have 12 weeks of maternity leave from July through October.
Sidersky says she’s learned a lot about herself and her work habits during the quarantine. “When I was in high school or college, I couldn’t study at home. I like working in coffee shops,” she says. “I’m adapting better than I thought I would. Creating a space helps with that.”
Singh, whose company is putting finishing touches on a new 45,000-square-foot office in Blacksburg designed for its specific needs, says his staff will gradually come back to work, probably in July or August. Hiring continues in Abingdon and 1901’s new office at the Virginia Highlands Small Building Incubator is still being prepped for in-person work this summer.
“Obviously we’re going to follow the public health guidelines,” he says. “We’re not backing away from our plans at all. We know we’re going to need that space. It may mean that we don’t need space for a while, but we’re building a growing business with a radically different business model for the federal government.
“I could be kicking myself down the road,” Singh says of the decision to build more office space, “but I don’t think so.”
Gov. Ralph Northam said he is considering a statewide mask mandate in public spaces and businesses, and will make an announcement Tuesday.
“We are working through the policy. Obviously it’s an equity issue,” Northam said at his Friday news conference, adding that all Virginia residents would need access to face coverings and that he is examining how to enforce such a policy. Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney sent a letter to Northam on Friday encouraging him to require that Virginians wear masks in public spaces and businesses.
Northam said he spoke with Stoney on Friday morning, and he will announce any changes in masking policy at Tuesday’s news conference. Starting next week, Northam will switch from three updates a week to two, on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons.
“The Market at 25th, a grocery store in the East End of Richmond, noticed a dramatic decrease in customers wearing masks upon last Friday’s overall implementation of Phase One, despite our city delaying this phase,” Stoney wrote. “Additionally, citizens have reached out to my office to express concern of shoppers and businesses in surrounding counties that are not wearing masks at all and simply refusing to do so, causing a disconnect with what we all should be responsibly doing.”
Meanwhile, most of the state is entering its second weekend in Phase One of Northam’s “Forward Virginia” reopening plan. Northam said that although more people are expected to be out and about during the Memorial Day weekend, they still need to maintain social distancing and other precautions.
The state plans to hold 44 community testing events in the next week in the following locations: Richmond, Fairfax, Alexandria, Arlington, Henrico County, Harrisonburg and Woodbridge.
Accomack County, Richmond and Northern Virginia are still in “Phase Zero,” with a two-week extension of the governor’s restrictions on “nonessential” businesses, including hair salons, massage therapy parlors and restaurants. The extension is set to end May 29, but Northam has said he could extend it further if needed.
Masks are required under Phase One for employees and customers of barbers, massage therapists, nail techs and other close-contact businesses. So far, Northam has only recommended that people wear masks when near other people in public spaces or inside confined spaces like grocery stores.
Parts of 38 states — including Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Kentucky — have requirements that residents wear masks while in essential businesses and on public transportation.
However, as Northam noted earlier in the week, there have been news stories and videos posted online showing people reacting violently when told to wear masks, although most of these incidents appear to have taken place in other states.
“Over two-third[s] of Americans think that wearing a mask in public is simply respectful and not in any way weak, but only half of Richmonders are wearing some form of face coverings,” Stoney wrote in his letter to Northam, referring to a HuffPost/YouGov poll released this week indicating that 69% of people surveyed felt “it is a sign of respectfulness to others to wear a face mask when in public and near other people.”
In a Richmond Times-Dispatch article, reporters said about half of shoppers in the area’s grocery stores are not wearing masks, despite recommendations by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and state health officials.
Virginia has 34,950 confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19, an increase of 813 cases in the past 24 hours, according to the Virginia Department of Health’s Friday update. The number of deaths is now at 1,136, up 37 from Thursday.
According to the Virginia Hospital & Healthcare Association’s Friday update, 1,459 people with confirmed cases and test results pending are hospitalized across the state, while 4,963 have been discharged since the outbreak.
The current seven-day positivity rate — of PCR tests conducted across the state — is 14.7%, although the most recent date is May 18, according to VDH’s website.
These are the Virginia localities that have reported 400 or more cases, as of May 22:
Fairfax County: 8,734
Prince William County: 4,315
Loudoun County: 1,807
Arlington County: 1,795
Alexandria: 1,657
Henrico County: 1,375
Chesterfield County: 1,152
Richmond: 934
Manassas: 764
Accomack County: 711
Harrisonburg: 704
Virginia Beach: 591
Culpeper County: 555
Stafford County: 552
Rockingham County: 444
Buckingham County: 439
Chesapeake: 419
Globally, there are 5.12 million reported COVID-19 cases and 333,489 confirmed deaths as of May 22. In the United States, which has the most confirmed cases and deaths worldwide, there are 1.57 million confirmed cases and 94,729 deaths attributed to the coronavirus.
Gov. Ralph Northam signed the amended 2021-22 state budget Thursday, which paused $2 billion in new spending initiatives to instead respond to the COVID-19 pandemic and the state’s economic crisis.
Although spending on early childhood education, environmental protection and workforce training was curtailed, the $135 billion biennial budget includes a coronavirus relief fund to assist Virginians with housing insecurity and small business loans, as well as funding nursing homes, where COVID-19 has struck particularly hard. Tax revenue from so-called “gray machines,” slot-like games that were set to be banned this year in Virginia, will go to the relief fund. Northam said in April he will sign a ban on the machines no later than 2021.
On April 22, the House of Delegates met under a large tent on the Virginia State Capitol grounds, donning masks and keeping six feet of distance from fellow lawmakers and staff members, while the state Senate gathered in a large room at the Science Museum of Virginia.
The reconfigured budget, which takes effect July 1, delayed the statewide increase of the hourly minimum wage to $9.50 from Jan. 1, 2021 to May 1, as a concession to struggling small businesses. Ultimately, the wage is expected to rise to $12 an hour by 2023.
Northam signed the following legislation Thursday:
Senate Bill 2 and House Bill 972, which decriminalize simple marijuana possession;
Senate Bill 215, requiring the state Board of Corrections to publish an annual report of reviews of deaths that occur in jails;
Senate Bill 251, which establishes licensure and other requirements for pharmacy benefits managers;
Senate Bill 891, which regulates pet shops.
Northam vetoed identical Senate and House bills that established association health plans and a Senate bill that created a multiple-employer health plan, which the governor’s administration argued could increase insurance costs for sicker Virginians despite lowering costs for others. Northam said this week that he will appoint a work group to develop legislation for the 2021 General Assembly session addressing the health care marketplace costs.
Earlier this year, Northam signed legislation made possible by the Democratic Party’s control of both houses for the first time in three decades, including gun control, criminal justice reform and reproductive rights measures, as well as legalizing casino gambling in the commonwealth, which has bipartisan support. Four out of the five cities where casinos are legally permitted are expected to have referendums on local ballots this November.
Colonial Williamsburg is remaining mostly closed the rest of May, but portions of the historic area and art museums will reopen in early June as Virginia moves into Phase Two of Gov. Ralph Northam’s “Forward Virginia” plan.
The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, in a news release Thursday, announced that Chowning’s Tavern will open its outdoor seating area on weekends starting Saturday, May 23. The Williamsburg Craft House in Merchants Square opened May 15, when most of the state entered Phase One of Northam’s reopening plan.
Additional furloughs are not expected, the foundation said in the news release. In March and April, more than 700 employees were placed on paid administrative leave and then furloughed as closures continued into May to curb the spread of COVID-19. Colonial Williamsburg will call back furloughed workers and those on leave as they’re needed during the phased reopening, and will continue to pay for health insurance coverage for covered employees, the foundation said in its news release.
Hotels and other facilities will expand operations as needed to fulfill demand, and Merchants Square retail stores and restaurants are expected to reopen by June 1, the foundation said. Before reopening, Colonial Williamsburg workers will go through safety training, and the foundation will release more details soon about its reopening timeline and procedures for public programming.
“We wish we could open all of our doors and welcome everyone to a full Colonial Williamsburg experience, but doing so safely requires that we follow a carefully considered plan that includes collaboration with local and regional governments and other key organizations,” Colonial Williamsburg President and CEO Cliff Fleet said in a statement. “Over the next month, we plan to take further steps toward reopening our museums and more of our hospitality facilities.”
John L. Nau III, president and CEO of Silver Eagle Distributors LP, the largest Anheuser-Busch beer distributor in the country, has donated $27.5 million to the University of Virginia‘s new Democracy Initiative at the College and Graduate School of Arts & Sciences, the university announced Wednesday.
The Nau Foundation’s gift will be combined with more than $17 million in matching funds from the Bicentennial Professors Fund, bringing its impact to $44 million, according to a U.Va. news release. Nau is a 1968 U.Va. graduate who majored in history and is a former Board of Visitors member.
The Democracy Initiative was started in 2018 in cooperation with the Miller Center of Public Affairs, supporting research, teaching and public engagement on democracy. Nau’s gift will primarily support the initiative’s Core Lab, creating 10 endowed faculty positions in history, politics, classics and philosophy, as well as up to four visiting positions.
Nau’s donation also supports the college’s Program on Constitutionalism and Democracy, and he designated $2 million as an unrestricted gift for use by the dean of Arts & Sciences in light of financial constraints caused by the coronavirus pandemic.
“I am deeply grateful to John for his vision and compassion,” U.Va. President Jim Ryan said in a statement. “John has always understood the importance of studying democracy and preparing a new generation of citizen-leaders, and his generous gift will help us do just that.”
In 2015, Nau gave the university $13 million to start the John L. Nau III Center for Civil War History and, earlier, $11 million for the construction of Nau Hall, where the Corcoran Department of History is housed.
He is based in Houston and serves on multiple boards, including as vice chairman of the National Park Foundation Board of Directors and vice chairman for U.Va.’s Capital Campaign.
The state has 32,908 cases of COVID-19, the Virginia Department of Health reported Wednesday, an increase of 753 confirmed and probable cases since Tuesday. The number of deaths is now 1,074, up 33 in the past 24 hours, and 3,979 people are hospitalized with the virus statewide, VDH said.
In Wednesday’s data, 210,965 PCR (also known as molecular) tests have been performed across the state, and the percentage of positive tests continued to fall statewide to 14.5% on May 18, the most recent data available.
However, localities that have not yet entered Phase One of the governor’s reopening plan — including Richmond, Fairfax, Arlington, Loudoun, Alexandria and Prince William — continue to have positive percentages above 20%. The Eastern Shore health district, which includes Accomack County, has a positive percentage of 25.6%. The seven localities have delayed reopening “nonessential” businesses until May 29, two weeks after the rest of the state.
These are the Virginia localities that have reported 400 or more cases, as of May 20:
Fairfax County: 8,163
Prince William County: 4,054
Arlington County: 1,728
Alexandria: 1,577
Loudoun County: 1,579
Henrico County: 1,321
Chesterfield County: 1,100
Richmond: 835
Accomack County: 701
Manassas: 699
Harrisonburg: 675
Virginia Beach: 564
Stafford County: 514
Culpeper County: 494
Buckingham County: 419
Rockingham County: 414
Chesapeake: 401
Globally, there are 4.92 million reported COVID-19 cases and 323,855 confirmed deaths as of May 20. In the United States, which has the most confirmed cases and deaths worldwide, there are 1.5 million confirmed cases and 91,938 deaths attributed to the coronavirus.
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