Tuesday, January 12, 2021

Posted By on Tue, Jan 12, 2021 at 3:00 PM

click to enlarge COVID Testing Locations Reopen at Pima Community College
Courtesy PCHD

With the spring semester beginning, three drive-through COVID-19 testing sites are returning to Pima Community College. The sites facilitated by Arizona State University are at PCC's West, East and Desert Vista locations:

• Pima College West, 2202 W. Anklam Road, Mondays, 9 a.m. to noon

• Pima College Desert Vista, 5901 S. Calle Santa Cruz, Wednesdays, 9 a.m. to noon

• Pima College East, 8181 E. Irvington Road, Fridays, 9 a.m. to noon

Appointments are required and can be scheduled at pima.gov/covid19testing

Additionally, the Pima County Health Department announced that the Downtown COVID-19 testing location has moved from the parking garage at 400 W. Congress St. to Tucson Electric Power’s parking lot on the south side of the building on the northwest corner of South Sixth Avenue and East 12th Street. The lot is immediately south of 88 E. Broadway Blvd. The hours are 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday.

Posted By on Tue, Jan 12, 2021 at 2:12 PM

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click to enlarge With Support from Dems in AZ Delegation, House of Representatives Moving Closer to Second Impeachment of Trump
Courtesy photo
Rep. Tom O'Halleran: “With American blood on his hands, Donald Trump should not remain in the highest seat of power in the free world.”

Following the Trump-incited riots last week in Washington, House Democrats are pushing to impeach the president for a second time. Politico reports today:

The House will take its first formal step toward removing President Donald Trump Tuesday, with Democrats warning he presents a grave and immediate threat to the nation despite having just a week left in office.

Democrats’ push to force Trump out — first with a vote later Tuesday calling on Vice President Mike Pence to take unilateral action and then an impeachment vote Wednesday — is barreling to the floor at unprecedented speed.

“This is a solemn day,” House Rules Chair Jim McGovern said as his panel moved quickly to tee up the resolution intended to pressure Pence. The Massachusetts Democrat, who was steps away from the doors as rioters attempted to pound their way into the chamber last Wednesday, rebuked Trump for urging his supporters to march on the Capitol where their insurrection temporarily halted certification of President-elect Joe Biden’s win.

“He called together an angry mob, he filled them with falsehoods and false hope. And then he sent them to the U.S. Capitol,” McGovern said. “It is past time for the vice president to do the right thing here.”

Over the weekend, U.S. Rep. Tom O'Halleran joined the four other Democrats in the House delegation—Reps. Raul Grijalva, Ann Kirkpatrick, Greg Stanton and Ruben Gallego—in announcing he would support impeachment proceedings if Vice President Mike Pence and the president's cabinet did not take action to remove Trump via the 25th Amendment.

“Today, it’s clear to me that the Vice President and President Trump’s Cabinet have no intention of taking action," O'Halleran said over the weekend. "Moreover, we’ve seen just how quickly things can escalate; with American blood on his hands, Donald Trump should not remain in the highest seat of power in the free world for even the next 11 days. I am joining my colleagues on a resolution to draw up Articles of Impeachment to remove Donald Trump from office, preventing him from becoming a further threat to our national security."

O'Halleran cited his past career as a cop in announcing his decision.

"As a former law enforcement officer and criminal investigator, I spent my career gathering facts and evidence to pursue truth and justice," O'Halleran said in a prepared statement. "Today, I am using the facts at hand to inform my decision to act to remove a threat to our nation: Donald Trump refused to concede in a free and fair election and incited insurrection by domestic terrorists who scaled walls and strode armed through our Capitol, threatening lives and desecrating the building that represents our very democracy. In our democracy, we hold elected officials accountable when they break the public trust and put their own interests before the good of our country.”

Posted By on Tue, Jan 12, 2021 at 1:29 PM

After initially canceling the winter sports season last week, the Arizona Interscholastic Association voted 5-4 vote reverse course and reinstate the Arizona high school winter sports season at a special executive board meeting on Tuesday, Jan. 12.

The high school winter sports season will start Monday, Jan. 18, with a mask mandate for all coaches, student-athletes and officials during competitive play. Masks must be a cloth mask that covers the mouth and the nose, said David Hines, AIA executive director.

“Athletics is a choice and if a student makes the choice to play with their AIA school team, a mask will be required. No exceptions,” he said. “This is consistent with 16 states across the country that have the same protocols or modifications in place.”

The executive board also voted to not allow fans at winter season high school sports events, and teams will have to complete an AIA-issued COVID-19 monitoring form and give it to the opposing team prior to the competition or contest.

However, the board voted to allow up to two parents or guardians per home-team athlete to attend if state and local guidelines and the hosting facility’s occupancy under social distancing guidelines permit attendance.



Posted By on Tue, Jan 12, 2021 at 1:00 PM

Posted By on Tue, Jan 12, 2021 at 1:00 PM

Posted By on Tue, Jan 12, 2021 at 9:37 AM

With more than 8,500 new cases reported today, the number of Arizona’s confirmed novel coronavirus cases topped 636,000 as of Tuesday, Jan 12, according to the Arizona Department of Health Services.

Pima County, which reported 1,040 new cases today, has seen 84,426 of the state’s 636,100 confirmed cases.

A total of 10,482 Arizonans have died after contracting COVID-19, including 1,311 deaths in Pima County, according to the Jan. 12 report.

The number of hospitalized COVID cases statewide continues to soar as the virus has begun to spread more rapidly, putting stress on Arizona’s hospitals and surpassing July peaks. ADHS reported that as of Jan. 11, 5,082 COVID patients were hospitalized in the state, breaking the 5,000 threshold for the first time. The summer peak of 3,517 hospitalized COVID patients was set on July 13; that number hit a subsequent low of 468 on Sept. 27, or less than a tenth of the current count.

 

click to enlarge Southern AZ COVID-19 AM Roundup for Tuesday, Jan. 12: Death Tolls Rises by 335; =AZ Totals Jump Past 636K; More Than 5K COVID Patients in Hospitals; Ducey Says New Restrictions Would Hurt People, Calls for Schools to Fully Reopen; Test Sites Open
ADHS
Record number of COVID patients in hospitals, again.

A total of 1,872 people visited emergency rooms on Jan. 11 with COVID symptoms, down from the record high of 2,341 set on Tuesday, Dec. 29. That number had previously peaked at 2,008 on July 7; it hit a subsequent low of 653 on Sept. 28.

A record number of 1,183 COVID-19 patients were in intensive care unit beds on Jan. 11. The summer’s record number of patients in ICU beds was 970, set on July 13. The subsequent low was 114 on Sept. 22.

A website that tracks COVID infections across the globe reports that Arizona continues to have a COVID transmission rate far above the United States as a whole.

The website 91-divoc.com, which uses data from Johns Hopkins University, reports that Arizona is seeing a record 122 infections per 100,000 people on a seven-day average, compared to 74.2 infections per 100,000 for the United States as a whole.

Pressure on Pima County hospitals continues to rise. As of Monday, Jan. 11, a record number of 243 COVID patients were in ICU beds, accounting for 68% of ICU beds. Only 20 ICU beds were available in the county, according to the Pima County Health Department.

The death toll among COVID continued to rise with 46 deaths over the weekend, bringing the total since Jan. 1 to 172.

UA professor: Virus “is mowing through Arizona like a sharpened scythe”

The latest COVID-19 report from a University of Arizona professor shows an increase in already alarming coronavirus numbers as the state continues to set records for weekly case counts. Those numbers are likely even higher in reality because of a backlog in reporting.

Dr. Joe Gerald, who creates weekly coronavirus epidemiology reports based on Arizona Department of Health Services data, had little good news to share in this week’s report.

“The [coronavirus] is mowing through Arizona like a sharpened scythe,” Gerald wrote in the report. “Fatalities are stacking up like cordwood in advance of a long winter. Barring intervention, daily cases and fatalities will double or perhaps quadruple before the outbreak collapses under the weight of natural, not vaccine-induced, immunity later this spring.”

The week ending Jan. 3 saw 56,108 new COVID-19 cases statewide, a 35% increase from the week prior.

Posted By on Tue, Jan 12, 2021 at 1:00 AM

Monday, January 11, 2021

Posted By on Mon, Jan 11, 2021 at 4:30 PM

click to enlarge UA Researcher Selected to Lead New NASA Mission
Courtesy NASA
The partnership between the University of Arizona and NASA is growing even stronger with the space agency selecting Carlos Vargas, a postdoctoral researcher in UA's Steward Observatory, to lead a new space telescope mission.

The Aspera mission will study the evolution of galaxies by sending a small telescope—or SmallSat—into space to examine the gas between galaxies in ultraviolet light. Costing $20 million, the mission is planned to launch in late 2024. The telescope is expected to be roughly the size of a mini fridge.
click to enlarge UA Researcher Selected to Lead New NASA Mission (2)
Carlos Vargas

"As telescopes have become more sensitive and have allowed us to discover more exotic types of gases, we now realize there is tons of stuff in between galaxies that connects them," Vargas said in a press release. "Galaxies are undergoing this beautiful dance in which inflowing and outflowing gases balance each other."

According to UA, the Aspera mission's goal is to provide the first-ever direct observations of a certain portion of “circumgalactic medium”—the low-density gas that permeates and surrounds galaxies, and in some cases even connects them.

Aspera is one of four missions in NASA’s new Pioneers Program, which is intended to conduct “compelling astrophysics science at a lower cost using smaller hardware than missions in the Explorers Program.” Principal investigators of the other three missions hail from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Marshall Space Flight Center, and the University of Chicago.

NASA describes the Pioneer missions as an experiment, as the agency has never solicited proposals for these kinds of astrophysics studies at such low cost and with such tight constraints.

“The principal investigators of these concept studies bring innovative, out-of-the-box thinking to the problem of how to do high-impact astrophysics experiments on a small budget,” said Thomas H. Zurbuchen, associate administrator of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. “Each of the proposed experiments would do something no other NASA telescope or mission can do, filling important gaps in our understanding of the universe as a whole.”

Posted By on Mon, Jan 11, 2021 at 3:50 PM

Gov. Doug Ducey delivered his 2021 State of the State address Monday afternoon with a message of maintaining resilience against COVID-19, returning students to classrooms and advocating for lower income taxes.

The governor began his address calling the Capitol riots on Jan. 6 a “sickening day in Washington D.C. that no American will ever forget.”

Ducey, who campaigned alongside Trump this year, condemned the siege of the capitol building that was incited by the president himself.

“In the United States of America, violence and vandalism have no place in the people's house. Perpetrators should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law,” Ducey said. “Let us condemn it and resolve that it never happens again.”

Ducey refuses statewide "lockdowns" to prevent COVID-19 spread

The governor acknowledged the significant strain on healthcare workers to care for a growing number of COVID-19 patients but adamantly rejected instituting lockdowns in a state currently experiencing the second-highest rate of the virus’ transmission in the nation.

“Why not ban all gatherings and just lock everything down? It's a question that only makes sense if you forget about everything else, all the other troubles that lockdowns set in motion,” he said. “The rest of life doesn't stop in a pandemic. Least of all our basic responsibilities. People still have bills to pay, children in need of schooling, businesses to run and employees who depend on them.”

Ducey made clear he won’t grant authority to local jurisdictions to impose their own pandemic mitigation policies. Pima County has implemented its own curfew, which is being legally challenged by a group of Tucson bar owners.

“I've been entrusted by the people of Arizona with this responsibility. I'm not going to hand over the keys to a small group of mayors who have expressed every intention of locking down their cities,” Ducey said.

An end to remote learning

After mentioning he’s working to ensure teachers “receive the vaccine as quickly as possible,” Ducey advocated for an end to remote learning models for students to attend school from home.

Posted By on Mon, Jan 11, 2021 at 1:38 PM

click to enlarge Virus 'Mowing Through Arizona Like a Sharpened Scythe': State Continues to Break COVID-19 Records; Experts Estimate 700+ Deaths a Week
BigStock
The virus is widespread.

The latest COVID-19 report from a University of Arizona professor shows an increase in already alarming coronavirus numbers as the state continues to set records for weekly case counts. Those numbers are likely even higher in reality because of a backlog in reporting.

Dr. Joe Gerald, who creates weekly coronavirus epidemiology reports based on Arizona Department of Health Services data, had little good news to share in this week’s report.

“The [coronavirus] is mowing through Arizona like a sharpened scythe,” Gerald wrote in the report. “Fatalities are stacking up like cordwood in advance of a long winter. Barring intervention, daily cases and fatalities will double or perhaps quadruple before the outbreak collapses under the weight of natural, not vaccine-induced, immunity later this spring.”

The week ending Jan. 3 saw 56,108 new COVID-19 cases statewide, a 35% increase from the week prior.

Coronavirus testing positivity reached 35% that week, setting a new record for the state.

Arizona has also surpassed its deadliest week from the summer surge in cases, and the week ending Dec. 20 now holds the highest number of COVID-19 deaths at 709. Gerald predicts weekly death counts will exceed 700 in the coming weeks.

Gerald said testing capacity and uptake remains lower than levels observed on Dec. 20, indicating the reported numbers are likely higher in reality.

“The test positivity rate for traditional . . . PCR testing set another record this week at 35% positivity,” he wrote. “This indicates a substantial mismatch between testing capacity and demand and supports the notion that viral transmission is growing faster than case counts alone would suggest, that our viral control measures are wholly inadequate, and our testing capacity compared to other regions is poor.”