Event Cancellations: Howland Chamber Music Circle, Jazz At Atlas, and Atlas Studios Postpone Events Through March

Published Date: Thursday, March 12, 2020

In light of the current global coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, the following cancellations have been announced for this weekend and the near future.

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Howland Chamber Music Circle Concert Series

According to their release: “The Board of the Howland Chamber Music Circle has made the very difficult, but prudent, decision to cancel the following concerts:"

  • WindSync “Classics for Kids” on Sunday, March 15, 12 noon

  • WindSync concert on Sunday, March 15 at 4 pm

  • Inbal Segev / Juho Pohjonen on Sunday, April 5 at 4 pm

You can no longer purchase tickets for any of these events. “Those who purchased tickets to these three concerts can receive a refund of their ticket price (minus any discounts for subscriptions),” as stated in the release.

A donation opportunity exists. “If anyone would like to donate the value of their tickets to the Board, instead of taking the refund. This will help cover some of the costs already incurred in producing these concerts. Those wishing to make such a donation should please send a quick email to info@howlandmusic.org stating such. Please include your name as it appeared on the order. As a 501(c)(3) organization your donation is tax deductible to the extent allowed by law. If you have any questions at all, please send us email, or call and leave a message (845-765-3012).”

Also cancelled at the Howland Cultural Center are the following:

  • Blind Tiger Improv March Comedy Showcase, Saturday, March 14, 2020

  • Faculty Concert Series with 4X4 Music Off Road, Sunday, March 22, 2020

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Jazz At Atlas Concert Series

Across the river in Newburgh, the popular Jazz at Atlas concert series has been canceled until further notice.

In a statement issued by James Keepnews from Jazz at Atlas, “It is with a heavy heart that we must inform you that Atlas Studios has decided, given the pandemic we’re all facing, to cancel all scheduled events.” This includes this weekend’s performance by Fay Victor’s Barn Songs Trio.

A Little Beacon Blog reached out to Atlas Studios, and confirmed that they have canceled all events for March.

Please note that this also impacts the concert by Bobby Previte’s Music from the Dune Shacks quartet at Atlas on Saturday, April 18. There is hope to reschedule these artists for the fall. Follow Jazz At Atlas on Facebook for further updates, or visit www.atlasnewburgh.com.

Beacon's Parade Of Green Postponed To A Later Date

Published Date: Thursday, March 12, 2020

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The official word has come in from the Mayor’s Office of the City Of Beacon via City Administrator Anthony J. Ruggiero:

 

“It is with an abundance of caution and care for our community in the midst of this health crisis, that the difficult decision to postpone the 5th Annual Beacon’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade of Green on March 14th to a date to be determined.

“The City of Beacon and the Parade Organizers take this decision seriously and the number one commitment is to the safety of both our marchers and our spectators.

“The City and Parade Organizers look forward to celebrating this great parade in the near future. This was an extremely difficult decision for the parade committee and the City, and we ask that you look forward to the future date and stay safe and well.”

 

A Little Beacon Blog was in contact with the City of Beacon last night (Wednesday) and a parade organizer to get official word, which we were told would come Thursday morning (today), which it did. We urge all people to wait for official word on city events, as there is a way to release information in times like this, when word spreads like a brush fire.

Says Richie from Max’s on Main, who is one of the parade organizers: “We are just going to need to worry about the weather on another weekend.”

The St. Patrick’s Day Parade in New York City has also been postponed.

It is important to remember, that people who are testing positive for COVID-19 are at times not showing symptoms. So even if you feel good, you still might be a carrier. People with respiratory issues - or heart conditions - are at the highest risk for the virus to get worse in their bodies, versus others who will recover.

The American Hospital Association has requested additional funding from Congress to increase supplies at hospitals for items like respirators and personal protective equipment, if there are a large number of people at once who need care. The MD and Editor-in-Chief at MedPage Today explains his concerns based on what is developing in Italy with regards to the preparedness of their health care system.

As for New York City’s parade, Governor Cuomo made this statement (as reported by Gothamist):

 

"Following those conversations [with organizers prior to making the decision], I recommended, and the parade's leadership agreed, to postpone this year's parade due to the high density and the large volume of marchers and spectators who attend. While I know the parade organizers did not make this decision lightly, public health experts agree that one of the most effective ways to contain the spread of the virus is to limit large gatherings and close contacts, and I applaud the parade's leadership for working cooperatively with us."

He added that, "While the risk to New Yorkers remains low and we want to avoid social and economic disruptions, we have an obligation to take action to contain the spread of this virus."

Parade Committee Chair Sean Lane said, "We look forward to celebrating the 259th St. Patrick's Day Parade with the entire city of New York at a later date."

 

Parade Of Green in Beacon on Saturday: Canceled Or Not?

UPDATE 3/12/2020: The parade has been postponed. Details here.

Regarding the Parade of Green on Saturday: A Little Beacon Blog has inquired with the City of Beacon and has received the answer from Anthony J. Ruggiero, M.P.A., City Administrator for the City of Beacon, that a decision will be made in the morning.

We are awaiting official confirmation from that office (versus social media comments) or the Parade of Green Facebook page before posting anything.

How To Disinfect An iPhone - A Beaconite Tech Guru Provides The Answer

Published Date: Tuesday, March 10, 2020

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This new coronavirus is either going to make us all into germaphobes, or leave us with cleaner homes and accessories. Community leaders, magazines, TV segments, teachers - they are all thinking outside the box for ways to kill germs around us. Case in point: Councilperson Air Rhodes provided some hygiene guidance a few City Council meetings ago. The suggestion was to wipe down and clean your smart phone.

But how? How does one clean the phone without wrecking the screen, as this blogger has done on more than one occasion to computer devices with screens? (Semi-pro tip: Don’t spray Mrs. Meyers on them, and don’t use nail polish remover on any shiny surface - duh and doh!!).

How To Disinfect An iPhone

We checked in with one of Beacon’s favorite IT gurus, Matt Clifton. (There are a few amazing tech gurus in Beacon… Consider listing yourself in A Little Beacon Blog’s Business Directory so that we know about you!)

To find this information, Matt went right to the source: Apple. Here’s what Apple recommends when disinfecting your phone:

“Is it OK to use a disinfectant on my Apple product?”

Using a 70 percent isopropyl alcohol wipe or Clorox Disinfecting Wipes, you may gently wipe the hard, nonporous surfaces of your Apple product, such as the display, keyboard, or other exterior surfaces. Don't use bleach. Avoid getting moisture in any opening, and don’t submerge your Apple product in any cleaning agents. Don’t use on fabric or leather surfaces.

Source: https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT204172?mod=article_inline

Fire On Breakneck Ridge - Cars and Brush Fire - 9D Closed Between Beacon and Cold Spring

UPDATE 3/10/2020: Route 9D is open; the fire has been contained but may still be burning.

The text came in from a train commuter at 8:29 pm: “The fires by Cold Spring were crazy today. There were at least 9 cars totally burned up.” This blogger had just left the City Council Workshop meeting in order to switch gears into another work assignment, and then drove to a high point in Beacon in order to see the orange glow at Breakneck still blazing at 9:30 pm. The Highlands Current reported that Route 9D had closed between Beacon and Cold Spring.

The Fishkill Police Department confirmed that the cars were destroyed, as first reported by WRRV and the department’s own Facebook page. We do know some information from other reports coming online this evening: The Dutchess Junction Fire Department was dispatched to a brush fire at 8 Hartsook Lane, according to an article at Mid Hudson News. The Rombout and Glenham Fire Departments were called to assist in fighting that fire. Fire departments from Eastern Orange County were called out to help battle the Breakneck Ridge brush fire, according to the article. The Fishkill Police Department was one of several agencies to respond and make updates. The Fishkill Police department reported that all hikers came down safely from the mountain.

The City of Beacon’s Fire Department was not called to assist in these fires, as they were fighting two other small fires near the train tracks in Beacon at the same time, according to Beacon’s Fire Chief, Gary Van Voorhis. We may have more information about those fires on Tuesday, so refresh this article if you’re looking for updates.

According to the Mid Hudson News article, several other brush fires have ignited during the day. This could be for a range of reasons, but know this: A burn ban is going into effect for the State of New York, which prohibits some open burning of trash, painted wood, leaves, and other items. Read all about it here.

Beacon City School District Superintendent Matthew Landahl Updates Community After Governor Cuomo's Message

Governor Cuomo spoke on Monday morning about New York State and the coronavirus, COVID-19, after declaring a state of emergency over the weekend. Several schools in New York City have closed, including places where someone who tested positive for COVID-19 either attended, or worked at, or is a spouse of someone who was regularly in the building.

Scarsdale, in Westchester County, announced Sunday evening that it would close the district until March 18 (just under a two-week period), and that they would explore e-learning options for students. A teacher at Scarsdale’s middle school tested positive for the virus and was experiencing “mild illness” according to Scarsdale’s message to parents.

This gets parents worried, of course for the safety of all persons, but also for the disruption to normal life. Work culture doesn’t usually allow for such duration of sick days. Plus, Beacon schools’ spring break is right around the corner (April 6-13), and there would be big disruption to the curriculum and activities that teachers have planned for children, which sometimes include grant-funded field trips and opportunities.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio agrees, and said in a news conference on Monday: “We would only consider closing any particular school for very specific reas‎ons, and for as brief a period of time as possible,” as reported in The New York Times. “I think parents want to see the schools keep going so long as it’s safe, want to see their kids getting educated.” Mayor de Blasio also said that evidence indicated that coronavirus presented “minimal risk” to healthy children, and said “the schools are not the place we’d be looking first” to mitigate the virus. Read why Mayor de Blasio says that closing schools is a last resort.

Governor Cuomo issued guidance on school closures, stating that “if a student in New York tested positive for the virus, their school would be closed for an initial 24 hours while health officials assessed the situation,” according to the New York Times article.

Beacon Superintendent Matthew Landahl issued a letter to parents, which is posted to the district’s website here in English and here in Spanish. In it, Landahl stated: “If we have a positive test for COVID-19 with one of our students or employees, I will notify the school community after getting the information from the health department. Per Governor Cuomo today, schools will be closed for a 24-hour period if a student or employee tests positive, to clean and make further decisions. I will determine next actions in consultation with health and government officials.”

He also let the community know that day and evening custodians are working extra time during the week to make sure all high-touch surfaces get wiped down and disinfected. “They will be working Saturdays for the foreseeable future to help keep school buildings clean. The transportation department is disinfecting buses on a regular basis as well,” he stated.

Elementary schools have had small adjustments made by principals to the kids’ schedule “to allow students more time to wash their hands properly before lunch and at other times of the day.” At the secondary level, students are being educated and encouraged to wash their hands as often as possible.

What To Do With This Information

If you are a parent of young children, the Scarsdale closure might have had you panicking. This direction from Beacon Superintendent Matthew Landahl, Governor Cuomo and Mayor de Blasio might have you reassured. But you’ll still want to prepare mentally and physically:

Mental Prep

We’re going to lighten this mood by taking you back to 1978 in Columbus, Ohio. This blogger’s hubby was just a young lad then, in 7th grade. He experienced a two-week school closure after a blizzard dumped a lot of snow on already existing mounds of snow. Learn more details and see pictures in this article. His teachers taught their students by broadcasting on the TV. Days of broadcast! He remembers thinking his teachers were celebrities.

Blizzards make your physical life out of control. But they also can make acceptance of being snowed in a little easier. Translate this into voluntary closures and self-quarantining.

Headlines: Read the full article. Don’t just read a headline and keep going. The media (and yes, ALBB is part of the media and we try to headline responsibly) is using grabby headlines in some cases, which create anxiety. So read the full article before forming your opinion.

Lists: Make lists of things you need to do, and stick very closely to them. Working with small kids around you is distracting, but if you have your list, it’s easier to hunker down lightning-fast when you have moments when your kids are safely engaged in something. In those short bursts, you may actually have a more productive work day/week then you’ve ever had.

What To Do With Young Kids

Start making a list of what you would do with your young children while at home (if it were for two weeks… but so far we might be looking at 24 hours). Ideas include taking a walk. Learning to roller-skate. Enjoying the sunshine. You may not need to resort to this daily schedule, but having ideas helps.

Benefits Of This Possible Snow Day Series

Remember… We are thinking of it like snow days - which are out of our control. If home-schooling starts for the Beacon School District, this means:

  • Recess could increase from 20 minutes in your backyard or nearby park to 40 minutes (or more!)

  • You don’t have to shovel snow.

  • You could relax on your front porch or stoop and work or read.

Most important, is to take breaks from pressing the Refresh button on your coronavirus Google search. Step away from the computer. Step outside. Enjoy life. People are working on tests and vaccinations and best practices. You do you. Do your clean things. Don’t expect stores to give you wipes (supplies are out for everyone, so just wash up when you get home!). Stay informed but continue on.

Love Shouldn't Hurt - Grace Smith House Bringing Awareness to Teen Dating Violence

Student members of the Grace Smith House United Peer Council at the sixth annual “Love Shouldn’t Hurt” conference on March 11, 2019.

Student members of the Grace Smith House United Peer Council at the sixth annual “Love Shouldn’t Hurt” conference on March 11, 2019.

High school students from 10 different Dutchess County school districts recently attended Grace Smith House’s seventh annual “Love Shouldn’t Hurt” conference on Monday, March 9, 2020. The daylong event brought students together at Dutchess Community College for interactive workshops and discussions on breaking the cycle of teen dating violence.

“The Love Shouldn’t Hurt conference gives students and staff a space to learn and gain knowledge about dating violence and resources available to young adults in the community,” said Grace Smith House Community Educator Megan Bajana. 

School staff participate in a discussion about teen dating violence at Grace Smith House’s sixth annual “Love Shouldn’t Hurt” conference on March 11, 2019.

School staff participate in a discussion about teen dating violence at Grace Smith House’s sixth annual “Love Shouldn’t Hurt” conference on March 11, 2019.

Across the nation, 1 in 3 teens will experience emotional, physical, verbal or sexual violence while in a relationship. Teenagers who experience dating violence are at greater risk of experiencing domestic violence in adulthood.

About 170 students and staff from the Arlington, Beacon, Dover, Hyde Park, Pine Plains, Poughkeepsie, Red Hook, Rhinebeck, Wappingers and Webutuck districts, along with Dutchess BOCES, attended this year’s conference.

The conference is generously funded through a Henry Nias Foundation grant. Speakers included Dutchess County Executive Marc Molinaro and Senator Sue Serino.

The nonprofit Grace Smith House provides residential and nonresidential services to victims of domestic violence and their children in Dutchess County. For more information, to seek help or advice, visit www.gracesmithhouse.org or call the 24-hour hotline at (845) 471-3033.

Dutchess County States How Initial COVID-19 Testing Works (

PUBLISHED: March 5, 2020

UPDATE: Testing is a rapidly evolving situation. Visit this New York State COVID-19 Page for the most up-to-date information.

Testing for Coronavirus (as of 3/21/2020)
- Get the up to date information here at the New York York State COVID-19 Website.
The experience of getting testing changes. As it changes, New York State updates their COVID-19 website.
According to the New York Sate Website:
- (As of 3/21/2010) “Testing is free to all eligible New Yorkers as ordered by a health care provider or by calling the NYS COVID-19 hotline at 1-888-364-3065.”

New York State and Dutchess County urge you to not go to your doctor or an Urgent Care without calling them first. The medical professionals need to prepare to see you. If you have it, it exposes their office and other patients.

Your doctor may use a tela-session with you also. Governor Cuomo has waved all co-pays for tela-health visits (3/14/2020). Several insurance companies have waived testing and other costs associated to testing.


OLD AND ORIGINAL INFORMATION (3/5/2020):

Please Note: We’re only keeping this here because it is a documentation of how everything started rolling out.

A Little Beacon Blog reached out the Dutchess County Department of Behavioral and Community Health to discover how testing for the new coronavirus works, if you were to experience symptoms and want to get tested.

Christopher Formisano, a communications specialist with the department, responded:

 

“If you believe you have contracted COVID-19, call ahead to your primary care doctor or urgent care so that they can take necessary precautions prior to arrival. Do NOT go directly to the hospital unless you are in distress.

”Currently, testing for COVID-19 is not readily available to medical providers. Doctors, following guidance from NYS Department of Health and CDC**, determine if testing is warranted and then make necessary arrangements.

”**From CDC: ‘Clinicians should use their judgment to determine if a patient has signs and symptoms compatible with COVID-19 and whether the patient should be tested.’ https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-nCoV/hcp/clinical-criteria.html

”Testing still goes through a centralized process with testing being done at Wadsworth Lab in Albany and the NYC Public Health Lab. Once testing is available commercially, anyone will be able to go to their primary care doctor or an urgent care and get tested.”

 

Christopher went on to state that are currently no known cases in Dutchess County, and provided advice:

  • “COVID-19 (or Coronavirus) is a droplet-spread disease, much like the flu or the common cold. Person-to-person spread occurs mainly via respiratory droplets produced when an infected person coughs or sneezes. Symptoms are very similar to the flu, ie fever, cough, shortness of breath.”

  • “We are encouraging residents to monitor and get up-to-date guidance from trusted sources - including our County webpage on coronavirus www.dutchessny.gov/coronavirus and take basic prevention efforts including:

    • Wash your hands often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds. Use alcohol-based hand sanitizer if soap and water are not available.

    • Avoid close contact with people who are sick.

    • Avoid touching your eyes, nose, and mouth.

    • Stay home when you are sick. Rest and recover.

    • Clean and disinfect frequently touched objects and surfaces. Most household sprays and wipes will work.

    • Cough or sneeze into your sleeve or a tissue (not your hands), then throw the tissue in the trash."

Local Resources And Tips For Coronavirus (COVID-19) For Beacon In The Hudson Valley Of New York

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PUBLISHED: March 4, 2020

If you have more than one child, you have most likely been self-quarantined for weeks as a sickness passed through your home as you care for children, and/or yourself. There have been hardly any snow days this season, but personal sick days, yes. Consider this a wake-up call to wash our hands and homes a lot more, and stay home when sick!

WHO (World Health Organization) expert (pictured right), answering a COVID-19 Q+A on a LinkedIn live-stream on 3/4/2020.

WHO (World Health Organization) expert (pictured right), answering a COVID-19 Q+A on a LinkedIn live-stream on 3/4/2020.

According to a leading COVID-19 expert at the World Health Organization (WHO) who spoke today on LinkedIn via live-stream (ALBB is working to verify her name spelling, which was not typed on the live-stream) for a Q+A interview on the difference between flu and COVID-19 - the new strain of the coronavirus that is showing to be more harmful to older people and people with underlying conditions and immune deficiencies - people dismiss the flu as part of everyday life. She said: “Because people get used to seasonal flu epidemic, they think it's not harmful. If they don't get good treatment, they die from it.” She went on to answer several questions from viewers, including symptoms to watch for, and prevention tips. Find those later in this article.

A reader wrote in to A Little Beacon Blog to ask if there were any upcoming events in Beacon about the coronavirus. While there hasn’t been an in-person or live-stream event planned of yet, we wanted to provide some local resources to tap into. No doubt you are reading every tweet and headline that crosses your inbox. Here’s a collection of the information we’ve found most useful:

Guidance From Beacon’s City Council

At the Monday, March 2, 2020, City Council meeting, Councilperson Air Rhodes, who represents Ward 2, read aloud a press release from Governor Cuomo that stressed that people wash their hands, and provided the number to the New York State Coronavirus Hotline: (888) 364-3065. You can call that number with questions and concerns. You can also visit New York State’s Coronavirus web page, which has what it claims to be the latest updates for numbers of people testing positive, negative, and pending results.

Air reminded everyone that cell phones are often germ factories, and to disinfect them.

Also at that meeting, Beacon’s City Administrator Anthony Ruggiero let the community know that Beacon would be participating in the coronavirus conference call that was initiated by Dutchess County Executive Marcus Molinaro on Tuesday, March 3, 2020.

Guidance From Dutchess County

Dutchess County has created a great and very in-depth Coronavirus (COVID-19) web page that is updated in an ongoing way, and includes the history of the family of coronavirus, and this new (novel) strain. News 12 reported that the coronavirus would be addressed at upcoming State of the County Town Halls. No specifics were mentioned, but you can get a listing of dates and locations of County Town Hall meetings here.

Dutchess County has stated that to date, no one in the county has tested positive with coronavirus. This could change as testing gets under way.

Testing Of The New Coronavirus, COVID-19, In Dutchess County

UPDATE 3/5/2020: Dutchess County Department of Behavioral and Community Health responded to our inquiry about testing. A lot of information about the development of the testing can be found at Dutchess County’s website. Christopher Formisano, a communications specialist with the department, made the following statement with regards to testing:

 

“If you believe you have contracted COVID-19, call ahead to your primary care doctor or urgent care so that they can take necessary precautions prior to arrival. Do NOT go directly to the hospital unless you are in distress.

”Currently, testing for COVID-19 is not readily available to medical providers. Doctors, following guidance from NYS Department of Health and CDC**, determine if testing is warranted and then make necessary arrangements.

”**From CDC: ‘Clinicians should use their judgment to determine if a patient has signs and symptoms compatible with COVID-19 and whether the patient should be tested.’ https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-nCoV/hcp/clinical-criteria.html

”Testing still goes through a centralized process with testing being done at Wadsworth Lab in Albany and the NYC Public Health Lab. Once testing is available commercially, anyone will be able to go to their primary care doctor or an urgent care and get tested.”

 

The coronavirus expert with WHO in Geneva on the LinkedIn live stream did stress that COVID-19 is a new strand (hence the number 19, for when the virus emerged in 2019, according to Dutchess County’s website), so everything is new. Testing, vaccinations, figuring out symptoms, etc.

The 50-year-old man in New Rochelle in Westchester County who tested positive this week is in serious condition in the hospital for respiratory issues. His wife also tested positive, but she was asymptomatic, according to New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, as reported by CBSN New York.

The expert at WHO during the live-stream stated: “More than 80 percent of the cases are mild. 96 percent or more of the people in China will recover from the disease.”

She also stated about those who would be most seriously impacted: “People in their 50s … above 40s to very old, up to 80 years old.” She said that children are less affected. Children, however, could also be asymptomatic, as indicated by the CDC. “The people who will have a more severe form of the disease that require hospitalization are people with older age, or people with underlying conditions such as hypertension, cardiovascular disease, cancer, or any other immune deficiency.”

Guidance From Beacon City School District

Superintendent Matthew Landahl, who has young children in the district, issued a letter to families which was also published on the District’s website. In it, he listed what the Beacon City School District is doing to prevent the spread of this new strain of coronavirus:

  • Open Line Of Communication With Dutchess County Behavioral and Community Health: The District has in-person meetings, webinars, and phone calls with the County. If people test positive, the County and the District will work together on next steps.

  • Custodial Coverage Increased: The janitorial teams at the schools have been focusing on cleaning all high-touch surfaces using special equipment and products during the flu season. Recently, they increased custodial coverage in all buildings to assist in this.

  • Hand-Washing Lessons: School nurses and other educators have been providing hand-washing lessons. Wash for 20 seconds, or sing the “Happy Birthday” song twice.

A Little Beacon Blog checked in with South Avenue Elementary’s Principal Laura Cahill, who shed light on how they are following protocol in their elementary school: “We have specific times scheduled between lunch and recess to wash hands. This does not impact the 20 minutes for lunch and 20 minutes for recess. Mrs. White, our RN, has been meeting with each class to show proper hand-washing, and we have been using videos to augment the message.”

Guidance From The CDC

According to the CDC, data for symptoms described generally comes from people who are already hospitalized patients, often with pneumonia.

From the CDC’s Interim Clinical Guidance for Management of Patients with Confirmed Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) page:

Frequently reported signs and symptoms include (according to the CDC):

  • fever (83–98%)

  • cough (46%–82%)

  • myalgia (muscle pain or soreness) or fatigue (11–44%)

  • shortness of breath (31%) at illness onset

  • “Sore throat has also been reported in some patients early in the clinical course.“

  • “Less commonly reported symptoms include sputum production (thick mucus), headache, hemoptysis (coughing up of blood or blood-stained mucus from the bronchi, larynx, trachea, or lungs), and diarrhea.”

  • “Some patients have experienced gastrointestinal symptoms such as diarrhea and nausea prior to developing fever and lower respiratory tract signs and symptoms.”

  • “The fever course among patients with COVID-19 is not fully understood; it may be prolonged and intermittent. Asymptomatic infection has been described in one child with confirmed COVID-19 and chest computed tomography (CT) abnormalities.”

  • Source: CDC

Guidance From WHO (World Health Organization)

If you can watch the live-stream on LinkedIn, do. The expert, whose name we cannot verify spelling on at this time, is quite calm and informative. Some highlights from the Q+A:

Who has been dangerously impacted?

She answered that from the data they got from the first affected countries, the most dangerously affected population was “people in their 50s … above 40s to very old, up to 80 years old.” She said that children are less affected. Children, however, have also been asymptomatic. “The people who will have more severe form of the disease that require hospitalization are people with older age, or people with underlying conditions such as hypertension, cardiovascular disease, cancer, or any other immune deficiency.”

Is Coronavirus a cold-weather virus?

She answered: “We don’t know. We are still in winter. Some studies have been done in a laboratory. In the summer, people tend to go more outside. Houses tend to be more ventilated because it's hot. This tends to reduce the spread of viruses. COVID-19 is a new virus we are still learning about.”

How does coronavirus spread?

The expert answered that the virus travels in “small droplets in humidity. It goes to the other person. Droplets cannot travel very far, and need to be very close to people. Droplets can drop on surfaces. If someone touches the surface, then this person touches the surface with the hands, and the hand is contaminated, and touches the face or nose or mouth, then the person can get infected.”

The germ can live on clothing, rugs, fabric for a certain time period.

Should you self-quarantine?

The expert’s answer was that movement is part of life, and that sick people should stay home. “If you stop movement, our life will be very different,” and could “impact people more than the virus itself.” She suggested looking at how to maintain the balance, such as maybe not shaking hands, but developing a new way of greeting someone. “Some people are carrying the disease, but don’t show symptoms. Very hard to stop the virus in those conditions.”

COVID-19 Symptoms she is seeing?

The expert answered: “Depends on the people.” People who show symptoms: “Fever. Sometimes the fever comes after the cough, and it’s a dry cough. Shortness of breath. Shows that your lungs are infected. Some people are vomiting, and have diarrhea. But these are uncommon symptoms in this virus. Fatigue. But fatigue is common in many virus situations.”

Should everyone wear masks?

The WHO expert encouraged a person who is sick to wear a mask. “But really, stay home. Or stay away from others at least one meter,” she said. However, she stressed why people who don’t think they’re already sick should not wear masks, which matches what WHO is saying on their website, which addresses shortages. She said:

  1. “Reserve for people who really need it: health care workers. All people working closely with patients.” WHO says there is a shortage because of panic purchasing.

  2. “If you wear it for many hours, is uncomfortable. Instead of being more cautious, you tend to forget that what is more important is to wash your hands. You can still touch your eyes, and get the virus through your eyes.”

Common Sense Home Hygiene Tips

Keeping your home free of germs is a big job. The byproduct of this new coronavirus could be that you have a really clean home for a while. Quick tips:

  • Bleach: Use cleaning products with bleach. Dilute bleach in water and wipe things down that way.

  • Rags or Paper Towels: Use generously. Don’t get stingy and use every square inch and then some. It could keep spreading germs. Just get a new rag and put the dirty rag into the laundry machine.

  • Laundry: Run the laundry machine all of the time with detergent.

  • Clothing: If you sneeze or cough on yourself, or if someone does so near you, change your clothes when you get home. Put the clothes directly into the laundry machine and start it.

  • Vacuum: Vacuum often or when a potentially sick person is in your home. Empty the vacuum dirt right away.

  • Empty Trash: Maybe your trash cans around the home fill up and stay there. Empty them every day. Spray the can with Lysol or another germ-killing product.

  • Clean Toilets: Up your game with cleaning that toilet bowl! The Mr. Clean wands are really easy. Using a brush carries germs, so use something disposable (sorry, Environment).

  • Clean Behind Toilets: The best advice from a home-cleaner is to wipe behind and next to the toilets on the floor. Lots of germs back there.

  • Change Your Towels: The hand towels in the bathrooms and the ones you shower with. Just keep rotating them. Especially if multiple people are in the house who could be carrying a germ during cold and flu season.

  • Wash Your Dishes: Some people prefer Dish Pileup in the sink. Like this couple on this Marketplace podcast “Thi$ Is Uncomfortable.” Bite the bullet and just wash ‘em and put ‘em in the dishwasher if you have one. Then wipe your clean sink with soap or bleach. Every day.

  • Wash Your Hands and Nails: The recommended way to wash hands is to do it for 20 seconds, to wash both the front and back of your hands, and to get the soap under your nails. If your hands start to get dry, get Wonder Salve from a former Beaconite now based in Vermont.

  • Open The Windows: Like the expert from WHO said, summer helps reduce the spread of viruses because homes tend to be open to the outdoors. if it’s not too cold, open those windows and doors to let the breeze in.

Common Sense Feel-Better Tips

If you feel sick, call the doctor. PM Pediatrics is great as a pediatric urgent care. If you are suffering through cold or flu or coronavirus symptoms, call the doctor, and then if told to self-care, consider the following:

  • Hydrate: Your body needs those electrolytes, so have Gatorade with sugar on hand (skip the fake-sugar G stuff).

  • Sleep: Your body needs to sleep. It wants to sleep. Let it.

  • Breathing Problems: Especially if you are not used to breathing problems, go to the doctor. They can progress very quickly if not treated. If you are prescribed an inhaler, take it and use it. Don’t think that your breathing needs to be worse before you take a puff or nebulizer treatment.

  • Gatorade Upstairs and Downstairs: If you experience nausea, keep Gatorade upstairs and downstairs. If you’re in bed upstairs, getting downstairs could be difficult. Especially if you are alone. Keep crackers and water with you, too.

  • Call A Friend or 911 If You Can’t Care For Yourself: If you’re alone, and you can’t care for yourself to feed yourself or get what you need, don’t be shy to call a neighbor, friend, or 911 for help. Calling a friend might infect them, so consider 911 if your regular doctor’s office can’t advise you and you’re in an emergency.

  • Get All Your Questions Answered By Your Doctor: Sometimes a well-meaning doctor will answer your question by saying: “You can Google it.” This has happened to this blogger more than once. Or, you might hear this answer: “Just do common sense practices,” and won’t give you ideas or reminders. Feel free to press your doctor for a better answer, reminding them that you are in the office right now, speaking to them in person, and would like to hear their full answer to your question, and not Google’s.

  • Call Your Mom: Or if yours isn’t available, try any mom. A mom might remind you of some home medical trick that you long forgot about. Just call your mom if you’re feeling under the weather and see what she says. Or your dad of course, if your dad did a lot of doctoring in the home.

2nd Forum Held By Mayor For Community To Learn Beacon Development

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The second of two community forums held by Beacon’s Mayor Lee Kyriacou happens today, Saturday, February 29, 2020 at 10 am in the Memorial Building at 413 Main Street (same location as Beacon Farmers Market in the winter). Mayor Lee and the City Council surrounding him ran on campaigns to alter and steer the course of development in Beacon, which is currently booming as a result of approvals made years ago for new commercial and residential buildings.

For the past several years, residents of Beacon who have attended City Council meetings as members of the public have called for easier ways of understanding how development works in Beacon, and at large. People have wished for glossaries to explain acronyms that are used during development presentations by City Council members, the City Planner, the City Attorney, or any person presenting on a piece of land and how it will be used.

Over the course of those years during the previous administration under Mayor Randy Casale, the City Council made a number of changes to alter how development is done in Beacon, from changing legislation, to acquiring control over certain areas of the broad process that developers must go through in order to get various approvals on small and large decisions.

The easiest way to keep up with these changes has been to watch City Council meetings on the city’s public access channel, or the Vimeo account where they are posted. It feels a like a lot of homework at first, but homework is how acronyms are learned, and how the inner workings of the process are conducted. This forum is one way that the administration has created to connect directly with the community to teach the background of Beacon and how it came to be in this moment.

As you’ll see when you start listening to these presentations, major shifts can happen within a simple year of each other. If you wonder why one building looks one way, and another looks completely different, it is usually because rules changed somewhere in between the years of them being built or renovated.

A Little Beacon Blog does republish City Council meeting videos in our City Government section, to make it easy for you to get meeting agendas and the videos in one place. In-person events like this can help you follow along in the reporting of major decisions that are made, and how they impact the landscape or the ability to do something.

If you missed this event, A Little Beacon Blog will be publishing notes that the City Planner has been presenting to the council (they are fascinating!) or watch the video below.

Trustee Positions Available On Howland Public Library's Board of Trustees, Elections In April 2020

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If you have been wanting to make a bigger difference at Beacon’s Howland Public Library, this may be your chance. The Howland Public Library Board of Trustees Elections are coming up on Thursday, April 30, 2020, and there are five trustee positions available (three people are up for re-election, and two seats are completely open). There are nine members total on the library’s Board of Trustees. Terms served will vary from one to five years.

“Our goal is to reach a broad demographic of the Beacon Community,” said Arabella Droullard, a current trustee and current secretary of the board, via press release. To qualify, candidates must meet the following criteria:

  • Be 18 years or older.

  • Be a U.S. citizen.

  • Resident of the State of New York and the Beacon City School District for 30 days preceding the election.

  • Pick up a petition packet at the library at 313 Main St., Beacon, NY, during normal business hours.

  • Get the required 25 signatures. Get a few more, recommends Arabella, “just in case of illegible signatures or disqualified signatures.”

  • Have the petition notarized and return to the library election clerk by Monday, March 30, 2020 at 5 pm, as specified in the legal notice.

Current trustees include:

Jan Dolan
Tom Rigney
Kathleen Furfey
Diane Landau-Flayter
Karen Twohig
Darlene Resling
Arabella Champaq Droullard

Darlene Resling, Karen Twohig, and Tom Rigney are up for re-election this spring. This list includes seven people, not the full slate of nine, because one person relocated and another needed to resign for personal family reasons.

Beacon Farmer's Market To Host Soup4Greens 2020 This Sunday!

This Sunday, February 23, from 10 am to 2 pm, the Beacon Farmers Market is hosting Soup4Greens, where 100% of the proceeds goes toward their Greens4Greens initiative. 

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Come purchase bowls of soup donated by local restaurants or perhaps made by your neighbor during one of their Community Cooking Sessions! Bonus points if you get your soup in one of the gorgeous handmade bowls crafted by local artisans.

It will be a day celebrating fun, food, and community! If you are on Facebook, you can RSVP to their event here. The Beacon Farmers Market is located at Veterans Place on Main Street in Beacon, NY.

What Is Greens4Greens?

Greens4Greens is a unique food access program jointly run by Common Ground Farm and the Green Teen Program of Cornell Cooperative Extension, Dutchess County. Greens4Greens is a food benefit incentive program that creates greater food access for shoppers at the Beacon Farmers’ Market, the Newburgh Farmers’ Market, and the Common Greens Mobile Market.

Since 2016, eligible state-funded food benefits are matched dollar for dollar through $4 Greens4Greens coupons, making fresh fruits and vegetables more accessible to a wider base of consumers. For every EBT/SNAP purchase, and/or $4 that a family spends using federal assistance programs, such as the Farmers’ Market Nutrition Program, they receive a Greens4Greens coupon for $4 that can be used to purchase more fruits and vegetables, doubling their buying power! 

Reader Question: Where To Park In City Parking Lots During Snow Plowing

A reader wrote in via Comment in A Little Beacon Blog’s Free Parking Guide to inquire where to park cars that would normally be parked on the street during a snowfall, while the City of Beacon trucks are plowing.

According to the City of Beacon, when the City is plowing and salting the streets, residents can park in the free lots if there is a spot. But the 24-hour rule still applies, and you must move your car when time is up. Which also means digging it out. There is otherwise no designated overflow lot for cars avoiding street snow removal.

Stories From The P.O. Box in Beacon, NY - Got Any?

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When I posted my first picture of the Beacon P.O. Boxes, while checking in on my new post office box, the reception from readers was really good. An unexpected story came in, and this prompted us to want to hear more. My reflection was that I am so happy to be part of a new community of P.O. Box checkers, as I begin to see some of the same faces across the counter, and other regulars walking in and out of the post office doors.

One reader from @hhacademytoddlers (Hudson Hills Academy) shared her story: “My favorite thing about Beacon when we first moved here was that my kids knew Pete Seeger just as ‘the man at the post office’ because of our mail getting overlapped. The post office brings everyone together!”

Another reader, @gildedtwig (art conservator Deborah Bigelow), shared her feeling: “I really like your photo of the boxes. I used to have one and enjoyed going to the PO, too.”

Do you have a story to share about your experience with your P.O. Box? A pen pal? A love note? Letters crossed, intended for a different P.O. that resulted in something good? A new venture? Please share it with us here in the Comments section of this article.