Latest coronavirus news: July 3, 2020 live blog

Here’s what we learned today about how COVID-19 is impacting Chicago and Illinois. Follow here for live updates.

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The Latest

As car insurers touted COVID-19 refunds, 1 company’s filings show ‘coronavirus windfall’

Chicago Attractions Remain Shut Down As Tourism Remains At A Standstill

Traffic plummeted nationwide beginning in mid-March, when many states ordered schools and businesses to close. In the Chicago area, traffic fell about 37% from normal levels in March, 43% in April, 22% in May and 12% in June, according to data and analytics firm INRIX.

Scott Olson/Getty Images

This spring, when COVID-19 began spreading and the country largely shut down, many auto insurers boasted about the money they were giving back to consumers.

The refunds to those who insured with them typically were about 15% to 20% of a monthly premium and were for two months.

In TV commercials, car insurance companies said it was the right thing to do during a difficult time.

But how much of a sacrifice were they really making? Consumer advocates don’t think it was enough, given that people weren’t driving as much, so accidents — and accident claims that had to be paid out — were sharply down.

Insurers don’t want to talk about how much they’ve still profited during the coronavirus pandemic. But government filings made by one of them, Progressive, indicate they might still have come out ahead despite the givebacks thanks to the steep plunge in traffic that began in mid-March.

In a filing with the Michigan Department of Insurance — which was one of three states that ordered insurers to make refunds — Progressive reported a 28.7% drop in accident claims in March compared to a year earlier. It also said claims were down 31.9% this year in March compared to February.

Progressive didn’t supply data for April — the month that most automobile insurance companies saw their biggest drop in claims.

After expenses, the company’s own actuary indicated that a 22.8% refund was warranted.

But Progressive instead chose to refund consumers 20% for April and May, calling it “our best estimate of all associated effects.”

Read the full report from Stephanie Zimmermann here.


News

4:37 p.m. 31 MLB players, 7 staff test positive for COVID-19

NEW YORK — Thirty-one Major League Baseball players and seven staff members tested positive for COVID-19 during intake for the resumption of training, a rate of 1.2%.

MLB and the players’ association announced the results Friday as teams resumed workouts for the first time since the coronavirus interrupted spring training on March 12, two weeks before the season was to start. Opening Day has been reset for July 23, the latest in baseball history.

Read the full report here.

3:55 p.m. Miami Heat closes training facility after 2nd player tests positive for coronavirus

A person with knowledge of the situation says that the Miami Heat have closed their training facility after a second player tested positive for coronavirus.

The Heat will have players at the arena over the coming days to satisfy their NBA-mandated testing requirements but will not reopen the gym for individual workouts before leaving for the Disney complex near Orlando on Wednesday, said the person who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because no details were announced.

The second player’s identity was not released by the team. Heat guard Derrick Jones Jr. tested positive for coronavirus last week and has been working through the NBA protocols on a return-to-play plan.

— Associatd Press

1:40 p.m. MLB officially cancels All-Star Game for 1st time since 1945

LOS ANGELES — Dodger Stadium’s 40-year wait to host the All-Star Game is going to last even longer.

The game scheduled for July 14 was canceled Friday because of the coronavirus pandemic, and Dodger Stadium was awarded the 2022 Midsummer Classic. The 2021 game is set for Atlanta’s Truist Park, home to the Braves since 2017.

Because of the pandemic, Opening Day had already been delayed from March 26 to July 23 or 24.

“Once it became clear we were unable to hold this year’s All-Star festivities, we wanted to award the Dodgers with the next available All-Star Game, which is 2022,” baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred said in a statement.

This will be the first time since 1945 that no game will be held

Read the full report here.

11:17 a.m. July Fourth weekend will test Americans’ discipline

The U.S. headed into the Fourth of July weekend with many parades and fireworks displays canceled, beaches and bars closed, and health authorities warning that this will be a crucial test of Americans’ self-control that could determine the trajectory of the surging coronavirus outbreak.

With confirmed cases climbing in 40 states, governors have ordered the wearing of masks in public, and families were urged to celebrate their independence at home. Even then, they were told to keep their backyard cookouts small.

Health experts agree this will be a pivotal moment in determining whether the nation slides into a deeper mess. The fear is that a weekend of crowded pool parties, picnics and parades will fuel the surge.

“We’re not going to be arresting people for having gatherings, but we’re certainly going to discourage it,” said Dr. Jeff Duchin, public health director for Seattle and King County.

Those who decide they must gather with a small group of family members need to be careful, he said: “Don’t share utensils, don’t share objects, don’t pass them back and forth, because you’re passing that virus around as well.”

The warnings were sounded after a Memorial Day weekend that saw many people emerge from stay-at-home orders to go to the beach, restaurants and family gatherings. Since then, confirmed infections per day in the U.S. have rocketed to an all-time high, more than doubling.

Read the full report here.

10:10 a.m. Taylor Street businesses say thanks, but no thanks, to street closures aimed at helping restaurants

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Paul Rinaldi, left, and Carole Rinaldi, owners of Chiarugi Hardwear store on 1421 West Taylor Street, in the University Village neighborhood. The Rinaldi’s have owned and operated their store in the neighborhood for about 50 years.

Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Last Friday, Paul and Carole Rinaldi hoped business at their hardware store in Little Italy would finally begin picking back up after months of a state-ordered shutdown and limits on capacities had a harsh financial impact.

When the husband and wife duo arrived around 9 a.m. to open the doors at Chiarugi Hardware at 1412 W. Taylor St., they saw the street was blocked off from Loomis Street to Ashland Avenue. Carole, who has a walking disability, was barely able to make the trek to their storefront.

The hardware store, which has been in business for 65 years, ended up earning just $50 after being open for nine hours that day — and pulled in similar amounts the next two days. That is significantly less than normal, the couple says.

The street blockage is part of a pilot program Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced at the end of May designed to increase foot traffic to restaurant corridors across the city. The idea is to grant eateries the ability to use streets for outdoor dining to help struggling businesses bring in more customers while safely practicing social distancing.

But Chiarugi and some other Taylor Street businesses — including restaurants — say though they realize the street closures were done with good intentions, they are unintentionally having a negative impact.

“We are a hardware store and rely on people coming here with their cars,” Paul Rinaldi said. “We can’t expect for someone to walk a half-mile carrying a bag of concrete, can we?”

Read the full story from Manny Ramos here.

9:23 a.m. City orders quarantine for anyone arriving in Chicago next week from states with COVID-19 surges

Starting next week, anyone arriving in Chicago from a state seeing a surge in new coronavirus cases — whether they’re out-of-state visitors or returning city residents — must quarantine for two weeks under a new public health order issued by Mayor Lori Lightfoot ahead of the Fourth of July holiday weekend.

The order takes effect Monday and applies to any traveler to Chicago from one of 15 states spanning the South and West that have been beset by massive outbreaks in recent weeks, including Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, California, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Nevada, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Utah.

The city says it’ll update that list weekly starting July 14, with states added to the quarantine list if they have an infection rate greater than 15 new COVID-19 cases per 100,000 residents on a weekly rolling average. States will be removed from the list if their rate drops below that threshold.

Read the full report from Mitchell Armentrout and Tom Schuba.


New cases


Analysis & Commentary

2:20 p.m. Wild West competition for face masks has eased; Illinois stockpiling PPE for a second wave

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The need for PPE supplies remains. But the urgency has eased, according to Arnold Park, whose Alicia International Inc. used its Chinese relationships to make the switch.

Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-Times

If Illinois experiences a resurgence of COVID-19 later this year, as many expect, state officials say they should be much better prepared from the standpoint of having the necessary medical supplies this time around.

Deputy Gov. Christian Mitchell said the state has stockpiled tens of millions of face masks and other personal protective equipment — gowns, gloves and shields — in anticipation of a possible second wave.

“I feel we are pretty well-positioned at this point,” said Mitchell, who found himself in the eye of the storm in early spring as the governor’s point man on PPE procurement.

Back then — just three months ago, though Mitchell said it feels like three years — I told you about the Wild West world of emergency PPE procurement in which governments competed for equipment to respond to the pandemic.

Not only were states and cities vying with each other, they also were up against our federal government and foreign nations to locate and purchase face masks and other supplies.

Officials ended up bidding up prices as they fought over scarce inventory, much of it located in China, which posed its own complications because of the Trump administration’s antagonistic relationship with the Chinese. Special flights had to be arranged to bring in materials.

It got so crazy at one point that an Illinois state comptroller’s employee drove a $3.5 million check from Springfield to a McDonald’s restaurant in Dwight to hand it off to a Chicago area moving company owner to beat a deadline to close the deal on an order of face masks from China.

“The dust has settled,” said Arnold Park, a Chicago lawyer who shifted his family’s beauty-supply business into medical supplies during the early days of COVID-19 and later landed two state contracts for PPE.

The need for supplies remains. But the urgency has eased, according to Park, whose Alicia International Inc. used its Chinese relationships to make the switch.

Read Mark Brown’s full column here.

12:24 p.m. Let public health data guide path forward on COVID-19

Illinois was hit hard by the initial outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, but we’ve been steadily flattening the curve ever since. New cases and hospitalizations have declined far enough for every region to reach phase four of the five-step “Restore Illinois” plan. We should feel proud of our response so far, and proceed into this next phase carefully, to protect the hard-won and easily reversible progress we have made.

Now that shelter-in-place orders have been lifted nationwide, it’s clear the hasty model of reopening has failed to keep people safe. New outbreaks are emerging across the country, with cases rising in over half the states. Even in Illinois, where the trends over the past two months have been positive, new infections and the rate of positive test results have both begun to slightly trend upward again.

That’s why it’s critical that we let public health data and caution continue to guide our path forward. While Illinois has clearly made great progress, the risks remain high for many, including medical and other essential workers, older adults, residents of long-term care facilities, the immunocompromised and communities of color facing disproportionately high infection rates.

Several steps help manage the increase in risk that comes with reopening.

Read the full column from Abraham Scarr here.

9:30 a.m. As a dad in the age of coronavirus, I’m angry at people who won’t wear a mask to protect my kids

I’m angry. Really angry.

For almost four months, we’ve been stuck inside, like prisoners on house arrest. I wash my hands so often that I wonder if I might not have developed a lifelong neurosis. I trek to the grocery store twice a week, face covered, groping among the produce because I can’t stop my glasses from fogging up. We’ve skipped doctor’s appointments for my older boy Lucca — and my own, too — because we just don’t think it’s worth the risk.

Why do we do these things? Our governor and mayor have asked us to stay home.

But also because we know that, despite the deep frustration, staying at home and washing hands frequently actually works.

How can I be so sure? A month or so before the lockdown, I was at the emergency room with Matteo, our 2-year-old. It was his second or third trip there in as many months. Matteo has asthma. His medicine mostly keeps his breathing under control.

Read the full column from Stefano Esposito here.

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