Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Posted By on Wed, Apr 21, 2021 at 8:36 AM

With 649 new cases reported today, the total number of Arizona’s confirmed novel coronavirus cases closed in on 856,000 as of Wednesday, April 21, according to the Arizona Department of Health Services.

Pima County, which reported 93 new cases today, has seen 114,438 of the state’s 855,804 confirmed cases.

With six new deaths reported this morning, a total of 17,199 Arizonans have died after contracting COVID-19, including 2,388 deaths in Pima County, according to the April 21 report.

A total of 584 coronavirus patients were in the hospital as of April 20. That’s roughly 11.5% of the number hospitalized at the peak of the winter surge, which reached 5,082 on Jan. 12. The summer peak was 3,517, which was set on July 13, 2020. The subsequent lowest number of hospitalized COVID patients was 468, set on Sept. 27, 2020.

A total of 1,015 people visited emergency rooms with COVID-like symptoms on April 20. That number represents 43% of the record high of 2,341 set on Tuesday, Dec. 29, 2020. That number had peaked during the summer wave at 2,008 on July 7, 2020; it hit a subsequent low of 653 on Sept. 28, 2020.

A total of 169 COVID-19 patients were in intensive care unit beds on April 20, which roughly 14% of the record 1,183 ICU patients set on Jan. 11. The summer’s record number of patients in ICU beds was 970, set on July 13, 2020. The subsequent low was 114 on Sept. 22, 2020.

New appointments available daily; Pima County transitioning to indoor vaccination sites, closing Banner South drive-thru clinic next month

The state of Arizona expects new first-dose appointments to open daily this week at the University of Arizona vaccination site, so they urged those 16 and older who are interested in an appointment to regularly check podvaccine.azdhs.gov.



Posted By on Wed, Apr 21, 2021 at 6:53 AM

click to enlarge Potential jaguar habitat at U.S.-Mexico border identified by University of Arizona researchers
Ganesh Marin/University of Arizona
This young male jaguar, El Bonito, was spotted near the border between Mexico and Arizona, suggesting that the felines could eventually migrate north.

TUCSON – Although jaguars are widely assumed to live exclusively in Mexico, Central and South America, they once prowled Arizona, New Mexico and Texas before colonizers and poachers in the 19th century drove most of these beautifully spotted big cats out of the U.S.

So when Ganesh Marin was studying ecosystems along the border U.S.-Mexico this year, the University of Arizona Ph.D. student wasn’t expecting to see a young jaguar sauntering in his video feed in mid-March.

The far-ranging jaguar has been on the endangered species list for nearly 20 years because of deforestation, ranching, farming and poaching, and experts estimate only 15,000 are left in the wild globally. But there now is a glimmer of hope that Panthera onca – the largest cat in the Americas and a creature venerated in many Indigenous cultures – might one day return to its range in the U.S. Southwest.

“The goal of my research was not originally to find any jaguars,” Marin told Cronkite News. “I was working with my graduate adviser to observe the ecosystems that lived along the border and see how the diversity of those systems changed.”

Marin’s observations were meant to identify the ecosystem’s key players, and the young jaguar, despite being an unexpected variable, showed a potentially much bigger picture.



Posted By on Wed, Apr 21, 2021 at 1:00 AM

Tuesday, April 20, 2021

Posted on Tue, Apr 20, 2021 at 11:24 AM

Tucson Local Media announced today that the newspaper group was being acquired by Times Media Group of Phoenix. Terms were not disclosed.

Tucson Local Media, which has been owned by 13th Street Communications, will continue to publish its six Pima County newspapers: Tucson Weekly, Explorer, Marana News, Foothills News, Desert Times and Inside Tucson Business.

Times Media Group President and Publisher Steve Strickbine said he was excited by the opportunity to enter the Tucson market and “continue to provide community news.”

Strickbine first entered the newspaper business when he launched the Scottsdale Times in 1998 and has grown his company to include more than a dozen weekly newspapers in the Phoenix and Southern California markets.

Strickbine said he did not foresee big changes with the newspapers.

“I’d like to see the papers continue to do what they are doing and doing well,” Strickbine said. “I’m very excited about the future and the future of us together. I think we’re definitely stronger together.”

Times Media Group will assume ownership as of April 30.

Posted By on Tue, Apr 20, 2021 at 10:00 AM

click to enlarge The Daily Saguaro, Tuesday 4/20/21
Carl Hanni
Skin #2

Posted By on Tue, Apr 20, 2021 at 8:35 AM

With 702 new cases reported today, the total number of Arizona’s confirmed novel coronavirus cases rose past 855,000 as of Tuesday, April 20, according to the Arizona Department of Health Services.

Pima County, which reported 51 new cases today, has seen 114,345 of the state’s 855,155 confirmed cases.

With 40 new deaths reported this morning, a total of 17,193 Arizonans have died after contracting COVID-19, including 2,386 deaths in Pima County, according to the April 20 report.

A total of 562 coronavirus patients were in the hospital as of April 19. That’s roughly 11% of the number hospitalized at the peak of the winter surge, which reached 5,082 on Jan. 12. The summer peak was 3,517, which was set on July 13, 2020. The subsequent lowest number of hospitalized COVID patients was 468, set on Sept. 27, 2020.

A total of 969 people visited emergency rooms with COVID-like symptoms on April 19. That number represents 41% of the record high of 2,341 set on Tuesday, Dec. 29, 2020. That number had peaked during the summer wave at 2,008 on July 7, 2020; it hit a subsequent low of 653 on Sept. 28, 2020.

A total of 155 COVID-19 patients were in intensive care unit beds on April 19, which roughly 13% of the record 1,183 ICU patients set on Jan. 11. The summer’s record number of patients in ICU beds was 970, set on July 13, 2020. The subsequent low was 114 on Sept. 22, 2020.

Ducey nixes ‘vaccine passports’

Gov. Doug Ducey yesterday banned state and local governments and some businesses from requiring vaccination status.



Posted By on Tue, Apr 20, 2021 at 1:00 AM

Monday, April 19, 2021

Posted By on Mon, Apr 19, 2021 at 6:08 PM

click to enlarge Thousands of UA POD Appointments Available This Week
NIAID/Creative Commons

The University of Arizona POD has 539 unfilled appointments for Monday, according to university officials.


Last Friday, the UA POD opened 7,000 appointments for the following week, and has about 4,600 appointments still open for Tuesday through Sunday as of Monday afternoon, according to the Arizona Department of Health Services.


ADHS reported they have nearly 30,000 unfilled appointments for Tuesday through Sunday across all state sites. Throughout the week, they will make some additional appointments available due to cancellations and no-shows.


To register for an appointment visit podvaccine.azdhs.gov or call 1-844-542-8201. Hours of operation for the call center are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m, seven days a week.

Posted By on Mon, Apr 19, 2021 at 4:34 PM

click to enlarge Ducey Bans Officials from Requiring Vaccine Passports
Photo by Jeff Gardner
The vaccination effort continues at the University of Arizona.


Gov. Doug Ducey today banned state and local governments and some businesses from requiring vaccination status in his executive order released Monday.


“The residents of our state should not be required by the government to share their private medical information,” said Governor Ducey. “While we strongly recommend all Arizonans get the COVID-19 vaccine, it’s not mandated in our state—and it never will be. Vaccination is up to each individual, not the government.”


The executive order would prohibit state or local governments from requiring individuals to release their vaccination status in order to enter any building or receive a service, permit, license or work authorization.


Businesses receiving public funds from the state and under a state contract cannot require documentation to provide a service.


However, the order does not limit health institutions, state or local health departments, or even child care centers, schools or universities from requiring vaccination status. Long-term care, health care institutions and other entities that collect vaccination documents can still do so under the current state law. It also does not limit an individual from requesting the release of their own vaccination records.

While news of vaccination passports came from places across the globe, namely Israel, no city official had implemented or advocated for them.

"This executive order represents more divisive, political grandstanding from Governor Ducey against Arizona cities and is purely symbolic in nature," said Tucson Mayor Regina Romero. "The City of Tucson did not have any plans to implement any of the actions that the executive order purports to pre-empt. Had the governor asked, we would have happily shared this information with him."

The University of Arizona has not yet mandated vaccination passports or required students to provide documentation in order to attend, but President Robert C. Robbins continued to advocate for vaccine passports on campus before and after learning of the order during the Monday briefing.

“My hope is that at the universities and public schools will be able to not only trust that people have been vaccinated but verify,” said Robbins.


Posted By on Mon, Apr 19, 2021 at 1:00 PM