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Pandemic in Hawaii's rearview mirror, but COVID ‘still with us'

Pandemic in Hawaii's rearview mirror, but COVID ‘still with us'

Yahoo25-03-2025
JAMM AQUINO / 2020 Dozens of city workers line up to be tested for COVID-19 at Honolulu Hale. Then-Mayor Kirk Caldwell announced a cluster of cases and mass testing, along with the prompt closure at Honolulu Hale, as health officials reported 140 new corona ­virus cases—most of them on Oahu.
1 /2 JAMM AQUINO / 2020 Dozens of city workers line up to be tested for COVID-19 at Honolulu Hale. Then-Mayor Kirk Caldwell announced a cluster of cases and mass testing, along with the prompt closure at Honolulu Hale, as health officials reported 140 new corona ­virus cases—most of them on Oahu.
JAMM AQUINO / 2020 Medical workers with Premiere Medical Group administer COVID-19 testing to city employees at Honolulu Hale.
2 /2 JAMM AQUINO / 2020 Medical workers with Premiere Medical Group administer COVID-19 testing to city employees at Honolulu Hale.
JAMM AQUINO / 2020 Dozens of city workers line up to be tested for COVID-19 at Honolulu Hale. Then-Mayor Kirk Caldwell announced a cluster of cases and mass testing, along with the prompt closure at Honolulu Hale, as health officials reported 140 new corona ­virus cases—most of them on Oahu.
JAMM AQUINO / 2020 Medical workers with Premiere Medical Group administer COVID-19 testing to city employees at Honolulu Hale.
More than five years since COVID-19 was declared a pandemic, throwing Hawaii and the world into chaos, memories of the traumatic events for many have become a blur in the rearview mirror.
There were sick COVID-19 patients, isolated in a hospital room, who could only communicate with loved ones via an iPad. There were emergency stay-at-home orders and extended lockdowns, resulting in empty streets and shuttered businesses.
There was fear and uncertainty of a new disease and how long it would all go on—with initial expectations of just a few weeks to a few months or so.
The World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a pandemic on March 11, 2020, and declared an end to the pandemic emergency on May 5, 2023. The U.S. ended the emergency earlier, in April 2023.
Tim Brown, an infectious disease expert following developments closely, recalls being asked how long the pandemic would last and saying it could be up to five years. Now, five years out, he said 'it's still with us ' and is here to stay.
But Hawaii is in a very different place now from five years ago, with many of the greatest concerns about COVID-19 having subsided.
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The state Department of Health has recorded consistently low average case counts since Thanksgiving, with no significant spikes since the omicron wave in the summer of 2022.
The average positivity rate—or number of tests that are positive—on March 20 was at 2.2 % statewide.
The most recent number of COVID-19 patients in Hawaii hospitals has been consistently low, at an average of just six per day, and just one in the ICU. So far this year there have been fewer than 10 COVID-19-related deaths.
'I think the reality is now, virtually everyone in the world has either been exposed to COVID—in many cases multiple times—or been vaccinated multiple times, ' said Brown, an adjunct senior fellow with the East-West Center in Manoa. 'So now our immune systems are primed to deal with COVID. Most people are not going to get severely ill or die from COVID infections today.'
Though the virus continues to evolve, no significant, new variants have driven another spike.
Even if there was another evolutionary jump, Brown said he would not expect another large death wave due to long-term T-cell immunity most people now have against COVID-19.
Virus not harmless Still, Brown said he thinks it is important to stress that COVID-19 is not harmless.
'A lot of people—the elderly, the immunocompromised, those with heart disease, high blood pressure and obesity—they're still at severe risk from COVID, ' he said. 'I would still strongly recommend that people get vaccinated, especially if you're in one of the higher ­risk categories.'
Nationally, more than 1.2 million Americans have died from COVID-19, according to CDC.
And there are still people, an estimated 3.5 %, who develop, which endures for months to years after an infection, said Brown. Some have recovered but others never have, resulting in permanent disability.
'It's not just a respiratory virus, ' said Brown. 'It's a systemic infection. It affects not just the neurological system, but the gastrointestinal and cardiovascular system. It affects your blood vessels.'
Studies have shown the risks of heart attack and stroke, for instance, are elevated for three years after a COVID-19 infection.
But COVID-19 is in the rearview mirror for most Americans.
According to a recent Pew Research Center survey, most Americans have moved on, with only 1 in 5 considering COVID-19 a major threat to the health of the U.S. population. Most, 56 %, think it's no longer something we need to worry about.
Just 4 % regularly wear a mask, and fewer than half of U.S. adults planned to get an updated COVID-19 vaccine last fall.
Today only 12.6 % of Hawaii's population has gotten the 2024-25 COVID-19 vaccines, in stark contrast to the days when people lined up at large-scale events to get the initial rollout of the vaccines.
Front-line workers Memories are still vivid for those worked on the front lines of the pandemic.
Daniel Ross, a nurse at The Queen's Medical Center, remembers the fear of working with this unknown virus and the inadequate personal protective equipment that staff was initially provided. Nurses were putting their masks in a paper bag for a few days, then reusing them.
And yet, nurses and health care workers showed up to work, he said.
Ross, who was president of the Hawaii Nurses' Association during the peak COVID-19 time, also recalls having to advocate for ICU nurses dealing with three patients at a time, which the union considered unsafe. He also counseled many nurses who went through the trauma of caring for COVID-19 patients at their worst and away from their loved ones.
Many got burned out and left the profession, or sought positions away from bedside nursing. Yet others, including a colleague who suffered a COVID-19 stroke, tried to return to work but were unable.
Today there are fewer COVID-19 patients overall, he said, having cared for just one the prior week. Their illnesses are not as severe as previous years, and many were admitted with other ailments and then tested positive for COVID-19.
But hospitals are still overflowing, Ross said, with patients sick from other ailments. Those in emergency rooms sometimes are waiting for up to 48 hours for hospital beds to open. These patients are sometimes placed in hallways, with no additional nurses added for the extra load.
The high volume of patients to staff continues to drive HNA to advocate for safer working ratios today at every contract negotiation.
HNA President Rosalee Agas-Yuu said the pandemic took a toll on nurses who worked overtime on those front lines. She said that they went to work with the fear and risk of bringing the virus home to their own families, with many keeping a change of clothes in the car.
Agas-Yuu said nurses were stretched thin during the pandemic emergency and that normalcy still has not returned. She said nurses continue to struggle with staffing shortages and patient overload.
During HNA's various strikes over the year, one of the signs that striking nurses held said, 'First we were heroes, now we are zeroes.'
Collective amnesia Were lessons learned during the pandemic ?
Unfortunately, said Brown, there seems to be a collective amnesia that only resulted in more division among Americans than in lessons learned.
'When people face traumatic events, they develop an amnesia around it, and they kind of push it out of their minds, ' said Brown. 'People have forgotten what that period was like. They forgot that our health care system nearly collapsed. They forgot that doctors and nurses felt like they were on a battlefield and were exhausted with dealing with a level of death they've never dealt with before.'
Brown said it's important to remember Hawaii hospitals were over capacity during first the delta and then the omicron surges.
Hawaii fared better than most of the U.S., which recorded more than 1.2 million American deaths due to COVID-19. In Hawaii the death toll as of Wednesday stood at 2, 276—2, 217 Hawaii residents and 59 visitors.
According to the Pew survey, most Americans say the pandemic drove the country apart, which continues to play out in politics today.
CDC and WHO were blindsided, according to Brown, and gave inconsistent advice on the virus.
Would masking help ? The answer should have been yes, he said, and Asian countries were already masking, but the U.S. hesitated to advise it due to a mask shortage.
Was it airborne ? Yes. Could it spread from people without symptoms ? Brown said experts at the time responded that it was rare, but the answer was yes.
Today there is a distrust of government agencies such as CDC, and a growing backlash against science as well as vaccines that seem to have spilled over to other vaccines, including longtime childhood vaccines.
The U.S. experienced record-high levels of flu cases and hospitalizations this year amidst declining vaccination rates. Measles is also having a comeback, with a recent outbreak in Texas resulting in the death of a child—the first in a decade.
All eyes are on the highly pathogenic avian influenza, more commonly known as bird flu, as the virus continues to evolve and infect a growing number of dairy herds.
Brown fears that in the next potential pandemic, the U.S. will be much less equipped to respond quickly. As for COVID-19, it's here to stay, and needs our attention because people still could get long COVID, get ill and suffer health effects such as increased risk of heart attacks, and some still die.
'It's not going anywhere, ' he said, 'and we ignore it at our peril.'
COVID trends —
2.2 %
Average positivity (number of tests that were positive )
6 per day COVID-19 patients hospitalized (7-day average )
2, 276 Total COVID-19-related deaths (2, 217 residents, 59 visitors )
12.6 %
Vaccination rate (2024-25 COVID-19 vaccine )
65 +
Residents age group with highest impacts Source : State Department of Health — Statistics are as of March 20
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Curtis Sliwa's quality-of-life crackdown makes sense. But he still won't be the next mayor of New York City
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New York Post

time15 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Curtis Sliwa's quality-of-life crackdown makes sense. But he still won't be the next mayor of New York City

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Trump's federal law-enforcement crackdown ripples through D.C. neighborhoods
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Los Angeles Times

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  • Los Angeles Times

Trump's federal law-enforcement crackdown ripples through D.C. neighborhoods

WASHINGTON — The main drag in Washington's Columbia Heights neighborhood is typically crammed with people peddling pupusas, fresh fruit, souvenirs and clothing. On Tuesday, though, things felt different: The white tents that bulge with food and merchandise were scarcer than usual. 'Everything has stopped over the last week,' said Yassin Yahyaoui, who sells jewelry and glass figurines. Most of his customers and fellow vendors, he said, have 'just disappeared' — particularly if they speak Spanish. The abnormally quiet street was further proof of how President Trump's decision to flood the nation's capital with federal law enforcement and immigration agents has rippled through the city. Although troop deployments and foot patrols in downtown areas and around the National Mall have garnered the most attention, life in historically diverse neighborhoods such as Columbia Heights is being reshaped as well. The White House has credited Trump's crackdown with hundreds of arrests, while local officials have criticized the aggressive intervention in the city's affairs. The confrontation escalated Tuesday as the top federal prosecutor in the District of Columbia opened an investigation into whether police officials have falsified crime data, according to a person familiar with the situation who wasn't authorized to comment publicly. The inquiry could be used to bolster Trump's claims that the city is suffering from a 'crime emergency' despite statistics showing improvements. The mayor's office and the Police Department declined to comment. Blocks away from where Yahyaoui had set up shop, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and local police stopped a moped driver delivering pizza. The agents drove unmarked cars and wore tactical vests; one covered his face with a green balaclava. They questioned the driver and required him to present documentation relating to his employment and legal residency status. No arrest was made. The White House said there have been 465 arrests since Aug. 7, when the federal operation began, including 206 people who were in the country illegally. The Trump administration has ramped up immigration enforcement and the president signed an executive order on Aug. 11 to put the Police Department under federal control for 30 days; extending that would require congressional approval. Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said Trump was 'unapologetically standing up for the safety of law-abiding American citizens.' Glorida Gomez, who has been working a fruit stand in Columbia Heights for more than a decade, said business is worse now than during the COVID-19 pandemic. She said many vendors stopped coming because they were afraid of encountering federal agents. Customers seem less willing to spend money too. 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Sam Liccardo (D-San José) introduced a bill that would require a report outlining the cost of any National Guard deployment unrelated to a natural disaster, as well as its legal basis. It would also require reporting on any Guard interactions with civilians and other aspects of the operation. Forty-four Democrats have signed on in support, including Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton, Washington's nonvoting delegate in the House of Representatives. Although the measure stands little chance of passing while Republicans control the chamber, it's a sign of a wider Democratic response to Trump's unprecedented moves in Washington. 'Are L.A. and D.C. a test run for a broader authoritarian takeover of local communities?' Liccardo asked. He added that the country's founders were suspicious of 'executive control of standing armies.' Abigail Jackson, a White House spokeswoman, said that 'Democrats continue to side with criminals over law-abiding Americans.' It's unclear what kind of help the National Guard will be able to provide when it comes to crime. 'The fact of the matter is that the National Guard are not law-enforcement trained, and they're not going into places where they would be engaged in law enforcement activity,' said Jeff Asher, a crime analyst and consultant at AH Datalytics. 'So I don't know that it's fair to expect much of it.' Trump declared in a social media post that his initiative has transformed Washington from 'the most unsafe 'city' in the United States' to 'perhaps the safest, and getting better every single hour!' The number of crimes reported in D.C. did drop by about 8% this week as compared with the week before, according to Metropolitan Police data. There was some variation within that data, with crimes such as robberies and car thefts declining while burglaries increased a bit and homicides remained steady. Still, a week is a small sample size — far from enough time for data to show meaningful shifts, Asher said. Referring to the monthlong period that D.C.'s home rule law allows the president to exert control over the Police Department, he said: 'I think 30 days is too short of a period to really say anything.' Brown, Whitehurst and Megerian write for the Associated Press. AP writers Michael Kunzelman, Alanna Durkin Richer, Jacquelyn Martin and Ashraf Khalil contributed to this report.

Former California mayor indicted in PPP loan fraud, faces 30-year sentence
Former California mayor indicted in PPP loan fraud, faces 30-year sentence

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Former California mayor indicted in PPP loan fraud, faces 30-year sentence

A former California mayor with a history of scandals, including pleading guilty to providing alcohol to minors and embezzlement, faces new federal fraud charges that could send him to prison for three decades. Anthony Silva, once the mayor of Stockton, is facing federal charges of bank fraud and aggravated identity theft. Prosecutors allege Silva lied to obtain and later forgive a pandemic-era $17,000 Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loan for his now-defunct business, Indoor Adventures LLC. According to the indictment filed in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California, Silva used another person's name to hide his majority ownership in the business—an apparent attempt to bypass federal rules that bar applicants with recent felony convictions. The loan was approved in April 2020 and later forgiven, wiping out the debt. The alleged scheme ran through September 2021. If convicted, Silva could face up to 30 years in prison, a $1 million fine for bank fraud, a mandatory two-year sentence, and a $250,000 fine for identity theft. Silva's attorney, Kresta Daly, could not immediately be reached for comment. Here's what to know about Silva and the controversies he's faced over the years. What was the PPP loan scandal, and what is Silva accused of doing? The PPP loan program, created under the 2020 CARES Act, was designed to help small businesses retain employees during the COVID-19 pandemic. The U.S. Small Business Administration fully guaranteed loans and could be forgiven if spent on payroll, rent, or other eligible expenses Silva's application reportedly misrepresented ownership and business operations to qualify for the loan, and by using another person's identity and submitting fraudulent documentation, he circumvented rules that would have disqualified him due to his prior felony conviction, prosecutors allege. Once the loan was approved, Silva applied for forgiveness under the SBA's Form 3508 process, which allowed borrowers to eliminate their debt if they met specific spending criteria. The Department of Justice has since launched a nationwide crackdown on COVID-19 relief fraud, forming a task force in 2021 that has brought thousands of cases against business owners, public officials, and organized rings. A history of scandal: Strip poker, embezzlement, and alcohol to minors Silva's legal troubles are not new. His single term as Stockton mayor from 2013 to 2017 was controversial. In 2016, he was accused of hosting a strip poker game involving underage participants at a summer camp he ran. That same year, he faced allegations of providing alcohol to minors and embezzling funds from the Stockton Kids Club, a youth organization under his leadership. He eventually pleaded no contest to giving alcohol to a minor and was ordered to perform 40 hours of community service. In 2019, Silva pleaded no contest to a felony conflict-of-interest charge stemming from financial misconduct during his time in office. The case centered on Silva's alleged misuse of public funds and his involvement in redirecting money from a city-supported nonprofit, the Stockton Kids Club, which he oversaw. Prosecutors accused Silva of re-directing $5,000 in public funds to benefit the organization while simultaneously serving as its CEO—violating California's conflict-of-interest laws. The conviction was later reduced to a misdemeanor and expunged in 2022. Failed comebacks and continued political aspirations Despite his checkered past, Silva has repeatedly tried to re-enter public office. Most recently, he ran for Stockton City Council District 2 in 2024 but failed to advance past the March primary, losing to Mariela Ponce and Waqar Rizvi. Just days before the latest charges were filed, Silva appeared at a city council meeting to support Mayor Christina Fugazi and former Interim City Manager Steve Colangelo's reappointment. His presence raised eyebrows, given his legal and ethical controversies' history. This article originally appeared on Palm Springs Desert Sun: Anthony Silva indicted in PPP loan fraud, faces 30-year sentence Solve the daily Crossword

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