2nd Doses Are Trending At JCPenney Vaccination Site In Dutchess County

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The Moderna and Pfizer COVID-19 vaccinations need 2 doses for maximum effectiveness. However, some Beaconites have questioned getting their 2nd dose, after getting pelted by any anti-vaxing friends in social media or text. That and, the semi-vaccinated might want to skip out on the expected symptoms. While India is begging for vaccines, and the world is pressuring the United States and the UK to release the vaccine patents so that the vaccine can be made more widely for greater accessibility, it seems silly to skip the 2nd dose of the vaccine.

How are we doing in Dutchess County? As of today 5/6/2021, 48.17% of Dutchess County has gotten at least one dose of any vaccine, according to the Dutchess County Tracker. If you’re one of those anti-vaxing people who is thinking “All you people are getting vaccinated, so I don’t need to,” then you can know that less than half of the population is not vaccinated, and that is not great for you. So check with your doctor on the best course for you, get a plan, and maybe get vaccinated!

Here is a snapshot view of people returning to the JCPenney vaccination location for their 2nd shot, as supplied to ALBB by Colleen T. Pillus, Communications Director, Dutchess County Executive Office. This is a snapshot of 2 vaccination events: one on February 11, 2021, and one on March 30, 2021.

February 11th at our JCPenney Fixed POD:
290 Moderna vaccine 1st doses were administered.
274 Moderna 2nd doses were administered at the corresponding 2nd dose clinic on March 11th.

March 30th at our JCPenney Fixed POD:
1294 Moderna vaccine 1st doses were administered.
1263 Moderna 2nd doses were administered at the corresponding 2nd dose clinic on April 27th.

That’s a pretty good 2nd dose rate. It’s not 100% as there is room to improve with increased accessibility, transportation and trust. Visit Dutchess County’s Vaccination website to book a pop-up or main location.

At each and every other event, the 2nd dose appointment is made when you are at your 1st appointment. There is no online booking and clamoring for a spot for the 2nd dose. You’re already in. Though it may involve a QR code. However, if you or your loved one has not the technology, there are volunteers on site who can make an appointment for you the old fashioned way - by typing it into a computer.

Pop-Ups Become Cool For Vaccine Appointments As Links Go Public

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VACCINE BOOKING FAQ

  • You’ll book your 2nd dose while at your 1st appointment. You don’t need to do this online.

  • Vaccines are free right now. Even if you don’t have health insurance.

  • Governor Cuomo signed legislation requiring NY Employers grant 4 paid hours to employees to get the vaccine. More info here.

  • If you think that not getting vaccinated is a good idea, your theory is playing out horrifically in India, Brazil and other areas with low vaccination rates. Countries are begging for vaccinations. Use yours.

Dutchess County has recently made their signup links for vaccine appointments public, meaning, people no longer need to wait to be emailed by the county for a slot to open up. People can visit Dutchess County’s Vaccination page for upcoming appointment opportunities. Some of the events are being called Pop-Up events, which are popular in shopping and retail, and now in getting vaccinated for COVID-19. Additionally, the brand of vaccine is indicated with the date, so you can pursue the brand you want if that is important to you.

This is a major shift in the process from where Dutchess County made appointments available for anyone eligible to sign up to (when there were higher age restrictions), and pivoted to an email list after signups disappeared within 5 minutes. Demand for the vaccine has waned in New York State, and Dutchess County has since made the appointment links open again, which is easier for people to access.

After publishing the article, “Governor Cuomo Continues To Skip Dutchess County As A NY State Partner Vaccination Site - Why That Matters,” a friend sent what was then an underground appointment link to a direct online signup website for Dutchess County’s JCPenney location at the New York State booking website. This was confusing, as Dutchess County was sending press releases to inform the media that Governor Cuomo would not add Dutchess County as a Partner Site, which he did not, but the booking software did reside on the New York State website.

To confirm how the direct link existed, ALBB reached out to Colleen T. Pillus, Communications Director for Dutchess County Executive Office to find out how a public link was possible, when Dutchess County still kept them behind a registration email. She confirmed that the county was balancing stress from the public, and keeping signups within the county.

“People from much further away would have booked. People found it exceptionally stressful and disconcerting,” Colleen said. “They asked us to be put on lists. We did the list. We send it out. We randomly pull, if we have 500 doses, we pull at least 500 names. People now are wonderfully getting vaccinated from other places, and we send out an email to let one know that the person is eligible and to use a link that you can book an appointment.”

The vaccination event that the underground link was connected to had filled slower than other events, Colleen told ALBB. “We will probably start transitioning to having links on the County website. We just don't know when we keep getting doses.”

One month later, and one vaccination pause and release later, Dutchess County has put direct links to vaccination event signups on their website. These include dates for Dutchess County’s mass vaccination sites, JCPenney store at the Poughkeepsie Galleria and at the former CVS, 3081 Route 22, Dover. According to Rep. Sean Patarick Maloney, vaccination enthusiasm has declined in New York State. ALBB has emailed his office for his source, and has not yet received the source of the data. Though his office has responded to ALBB’s requests for pictures of the event at JCPenney where he mentioned this stat. If you have this information, please submit.

The Dutchess County vaccination website also includes links to Community Pop-Up events in Beacon, Millerton, Beekman, and others. Some events offer walk-in availability. Still, other pop-up events that the Beacon School District learn about in Kingston or other locations have been shared by Beacon’s Superintendent.

An email from CareMount Medical, allowing existing patients to sign up for a vaccination, sent on 4/29/2021. However, the link is private and cannot be forwarded.

An email from CareMount Medical, allowing existing patients to sign up for a vaccination, sent on 4/29/2021. However, the link is private and cannot be forwarded.

Private locations still offer their own signup links, like Sun River Health Systems on Henry Street in Beacon (being a patient is not required). CareMount Medical is offering vaccinations, but to current patients only and continue to use “Do Not Forward” type links.

Technology exists to connect all of this, so that there can be one central page at the New York State level for everyone to click and book. Why centralizing this signup process has not happened is not clear.

I Got The Vaccination - How That Went (For COVID-19)

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Friends who are considering the vaccination have asked me to write about my experience. Some feel severe push-back from their anti-vaccination friends, and they have their own questions. Therefore, I will write about my experience, if it helps anyone make a decision.

For the writing of this vaccination testimonial, which will be fully in the first person, I am playing Dolly Parton’s “Jolene” on repeat, as she was an investor in the Moderna vaccine, which was the one I happened to take.

I was hoping for the Pfiezer/BioNTech one, when I learned that two of its driving forces in development were a married Muslim couple who were Turkish living in Germany (reading about them from different media sources is fascinating, like the New York Times article who doesn’t mention they are Muslim until the end of the article by way of mentioning that they won the Mustafa Prize, or this one from the MuslimMirror who refers to them as “The 55-year old physician and his 53-year old wife” when the “wife,” Özlem Türeci, M.D., is a is a physician, immunologist, and cancer researcher.

Some Stats

To give you an idea on what kind of testimonial you are reading, here are my stats as they pertain to COVID-19 and vaccinations:

  • I have never taken the flu shot (based on no science, just my thoughts), though I did take the H1N1 vaccine because I was pregnant at the time and my doctor begged me to take it because of the complications from H1N1 to pregnant women and their fetuses. I had not given my children the flu shot until last year, after my son kept getting the flu so badly. The February 2020 version was the worst (I suspect it was COVID-19). They now will get the flu shot each year.

  • I get all other vaccinations.

  • I got COVID-19 in December 2020. It was a home-bound transmission.

  • I got antibodies! Test revealed that they were there.

  • I have asthma.

Social Pressures

My family was pretty concerned that I would not take COVID-19 jab, as they call it at the BBC, based on my flu shot tendency. My brother lovingly told me that my antibodies weren’t good enough. With a laugh, I told him I resented that statement, as I worked hard for those antibodies!

My sister and brother told me of a trend of women who were tending to not want to get vaccinated, perhaps due to gender-based medicine development that does not always look at how the female body will react. This was not a trend I wanted to be part of. I was fine with the COVID-19 vaccination. One stat that keeps me on board with it is the flu vs COVID-19 death rate, which pandemic-deniers held on to in the beginning of this pandemic, thinking COVID-19 not that bad.

Now that the data has been posted by the CDC, for the week of April 18, 2020, USA deaths involving the flu were 265. The number of COVID-19 deaths was 17,125. The week of April 3, 2021, USA deaths involving flu was 8. USA deaths involving COVID-19 was 2,350.

As for vaccine development in the same year as the virus it is trying to crush, I look at polio, and that rocky vaccine rollout, but remember that today, people generally don’t get polio because they are vaccinated. It used to be an every summer kind of thing, and kids had a good chance of getting paralyzed or dying. My grandmother got polio, and had bad arthritis ever since. I’ll be part of the group that tries for the vaccine.

My circle of friends are mostly ardent mask-wearers and waited with baited breath for the vaccination. They tend to do a lot of research of science (versus living through meme education - as much as I love memes).

I knew I was going to get the vaccination. It was just a matter of when.

Qualifications Of Who Can Take The Vaccination And When

Qualifications of who can get the vaccine when added to the social divide that the pandemic has also revealed. A friend who is Puerto Rican was getting their vaccination during the time of 50+ age group, which gave them the green light to get vaxxed. At the vaccination event, an elderly gentleman in line questioned my friend, stating: “You don’t look old enough to be here.”

It was not said in a positive way, as volunteers managing the vaccination event quickly approached the elderly man, stating an excuse for him that he is a Veteran and had been giving others trouble as well. Both the Puerto Rican friend, and another couple who was African American who he had also offended, had moved away from the gentleman, who was privileged enough to be able to stay where he was, while those around him did not want to be party to escalation.

Conspiracy Theories Scaring People About The Vaccination

I don’t understand the theories, especially the Bill Gates ones. That guy - and all of the tech giants - have had our data for quite some time. When the school lockdown happened, some parents were very afraid of Bill Gates taking over at that point. So far, no Bill Gates is in our Remote Learning, and we are still in Google Classrooms and Meets and on Google Chrome Books (Google is not owned by Bill Gates, and he’s probably always been jealous of Google and Apple). It’s Zoom safety I worry about! Which is totally different. I stick with GoToWebinar.

I can cook up a few good conspiracy theories, too. And do have some regarding the start of this entire pandemic, but none that influence the benefits of a world-wide vaccination. I’m in for the vaccination.

I think of India who lost control of the pandemic due in part to low vaccination rates, and other countries who are begging for vaccinations from other nations.

When To Get The Vaccination

While I am in the media, technically, I could have gotten it a little sooner. But I wasn’t comfortable doing so, with all of the emphasis on the vulnerable populations. This gave me time (an excuse) to wait. Wait to see how it was playing out in others. Which is a selfish position, being that we are all in this together, uncertain. It’s not like pandemics happen all of the time. Every one hundred years or so.

A friend who teaches part time at a college suddenly got an alert that they could get a shot. “Shall we make your appointment?” they asked. My friend froze - now confronted with the choice. This friend also was banking on more time to wait as they made up their mind, and as the qualifications blocked so many from getting vaccinated.

I had another reason (excuse) to wait - the daunting task of getting an appointment. Thanks to Vaccine Angles, ALBB readers got the directions on how to do book appointments using OCD! But I wasn’t about to start. Until…

Finding The Appointment - Underground Link Passed Via Text

My friend passed me a direct link to sign up with Dutchess County’s vaccine booker that my friend got from a friend, who got it from a friend, who got it from a friend. I never signed up with Dutchess County (had intended to, just hadn’t yet). When my friend passed me the link. This gave me no excuse but to sign up (I also pursued Dutchess County to ask why this easy link wasn’t made public, and that is a entirely different article). There were 118 slots left. I signed up myself and my husband, who is over 50. That day, people over 30 became “qualified.” I also qualified because of asthma and being in the media. I passed the link to another friend, but I don’t know if they pursued.

The Buddy System - Texting Buddies During Symptoms

During my actual COVID-19 episode, I was so grateful to be able to text close friends my symptoms as they happened. Friends and family would reach out, which made me feel safe. The friend who passed me the underground vaccination link had also signed up for the same event, so we were vaccinated on the same day. We stayed in text touch throughout, stating the different symptoms we were feeling.

My friend fully expected to be wiped out and got ready for bed, but was up all night. I ended up sleeping that night, but was jumpy the next day, and literally ran up and down my driveway to get my wiggles out. On the second vaccination shot, my friend was thoroughly wiped out, and took to the bed covers on the beautiful spring day we had this week to sleep away the fever.

Anti-Vax Buddies Who Do Not Support

Reports from 2 friends stated their their anti-vaccination friends went on the aggressive to convince them to not vaccinate. One friend stated that they were afraid to tell their anti-vax friend (this friend also would not get tested in order to travel out of state, back when the state-border lockdown was happening). After my friend confessed that she was getting her 2nd shot - which was her first confession of getting vaccinated at all - the anti-vaxx friend took to social media posting all of their own thoughts not based on science.

That friend has since calmed down, and the two of them went on a friend-date with a third friend. The third friend was vaccinated, and those “I’m vaccinated” statements went around before masks came down. The anti-vaxx friend stated that they had COVID-19 in the past and were all good. Which was a bold-face lie, as they had never even been tested, and refused tests. SMH.

My other friend was all signed up for an appointment, and told her friend the good news. That’s when this friend discovered that the other friend was an anti-vaxxer: “My friend turns out to have become an anti-vaxxer, and they sort of went nuts on me, and now I feel totally stressed out about it. Sorry to throw that at you, but I don’t know many people who are able to get the vaccine our age group yet, so I have to ask the people who already had it.” This was prior to the qualification dropping to 16+.

Symptoms During And After The 1st Vaccination Shot

My first shot wasn’t bad. My arm was completely stiff, and it just made me mindful of arthritis, that I needed to keep moving like I would in physical therapy if I needed mobility in the shoulder. It worked. Little movement to the shoulder throughout the day was all it needed.

Days prior to the first shot, my asthma was active for spring. During jogging sessions, I wanted my inhaler. After my shot, I had ghost feelings of my chest tightening, like I did during my real COVID-19 episode. After the vaccination got through my body, however, all of that went away. And my chest was actually more clear for a few weeks! I would go jogging and not need my inhaler.

My husband also got the shot when I did. He also had COVID-19 when I did. For the first vaccination, he had almost no reaction. Weeks later, however, a cyst that has been on his back for 20+ years got infected for the first time in decades. Coincidentally, he had a regularly scheduled appointment with his dermatologist, who declared that she had seen infections before with other people who had been vaccinated. She treated it with an antibiotic, and told him that she was still glad people were getting vaccinated. All is well with it.

Symptoms During And After The 2nd Vaccination Shot

I did pretty well, but I also had client meetings, so was up and prepared to be functioning. My body was sweating even if I was sitting still, so I wanted to move. I ended up running in the afternoon, to encourage the sweating (I love saunas and running in dry, hot weather!), and wow was I glad I was able to do that. Felt much better. But I was wiped out after. Ready for bed.

Even during the real COVID-19, my body craved outside fresh air. And stretching. Lots of stretching. After my run, however, my cramps kicked in, even though my cycle finished days prior. Perhaps that estrogen doing its good thing!

My texting-buddy friend fared worse. My friend was in bed with a 100 fever, saying “My whole body is one big cramp.” Lots of sleep later, and the symptoms were gone.

My husband also fared worse this round. He was super sweaty and had a fever of 100+ with Tylenol. I treated him with cold wash cloths while I fed the kids.

Public Health Messaging To Prepare For Expected Symptoms Of Vaccination

What has helped me take the COVID-19 vaccination was the amount of symptoms I was told to expect, both by public health professionals and friends via social media. Usually, people say with the flu: “I took the flu shot but I still got the flu.” Well, maybe you got symptoms of the flu to get it less. I will be taking the flu shot in the future.

As for known symptoms of COVID-19 that also appear in the vaccination - like blood clotting - these are important factors to talk to you doctor about and develop a plan. Research may still be coming as to what people with known conditions should do with regard to the vaccination. Multiple talks with your doctor would be wise.

Any Time I Doubt Precautions Like The Vaccination, I Think Of India, Brazil, Italy, New York in March-May

Fortunately, loved ones immediately around me are in good condition during this pandemic. Neighbors do not all have this situation. Beacon Councilperson Air Nonken Rhodes speaks frequently and frankly and with concern about the risks, mentioning when their neighbors are sick with COVDI-19, and how two of them in Beacon have died so far.

The news in India, with the crematoriums that are themselves melting from overuse, is just too heavy to bear. Why anyone would ignore these conditions happening around the world is beyond me. For those who want to leave everything to eating good and local food - how do you explain India? How do you explain Brazil? How do you explain New York in the beginning of the pandemic, when funeral homes in New York City were overwhelmed and crowded with coffins?

When I mention the high death rate in New York to some locals in Beacon, they rebut by saying that New York changed the cause of death. But the reality of overcrowded funeral homes and crematoriums is the ending fact. How do you rebut that?

In Beacon, our local funeral homes were crowded. One funeral director reached out to A Little Beacon Blog to confirm that they were very crowded.

Managing Your Symptoms During Your Vaccination

If you get vaccinated, here are some tips on how to feel as best as possible. Talk to your doctor, first of all. Second of all, everybody’s body is different.

  • Drink the water. Hydration is key. As your body fights, it uses water. Dehydration can deplete your energy and cause other problems.

  • Move your body. If you feel up to it. Ask your doctor, and if you’re too dizzy, don’t do it. But moving my body in a safe space helped me during COVID-19 and the vaccination. The blood flow from doing push-ups, for example, was really useful to bringing me to a place of feeling better for a bit. If I slumped back down, I’d do another set of Downward Facing Dog stretch, and pushups. A few leg lifts, and I was back to semi-normal.

  • Sleep. Do let yourself sleep.

  • Take the day off from work or school. Allow yourself to rest and your body to process.

Everyone is different. You may experience symptoms weeks after the vaccination. Or, if you are a long-hauler of COVID-19, months long symptoms may be lifting.

Whatever the result, here is hoping for the best for your health, and that of your family.

NY State Drops 18% In Vaccination Rate From Previous Week, Says Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney At JC Penney Vaccination Event

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Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney came to the former JC Penney store in the Poughkeepsie Mall Galleria, which serves as one of Dutchess County’s mass-vaccination sites, in order to encourage Dutchess County residents to get vaccinated.

During his kickoff speech, Rep. Maloney stated: “New York State has seen an 18% drop from the previous week," referring to the vaccination, after the rollout to the most vulnerable has happened, and qualifications to get the vaccine have opened up to anyone over 16 years old. President Biden has directed all states to open vaccinations to people over the age of 16 by May 1, 2021.

Rep. Maloney says that before they declare the decline a problem, they want to get the word out to encourage people to ask their questions to their doctors and faith leaders, to hopefully reach the conclusion that the vaccination is right for them. ALBB has emailed his office for his source, and has not yet received the source of the 18% statistic. Though his office has responded to ALBB’s requests for pictures of the event at JCPenney where he mentioned this stat. If you have this information, please submit.

This comes on the day when the CDC issued guidance that people who are fully vaccinated could be outside walking around, jogging, biking, maybe hiking, and being with others without their masks on - if they are fully vaccinated. Events such as Farmers Markets and other close quarters would still require face masks.

Below is the press release sent today (Tuesday, April 27, 2021) by Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney’s office. You can watch Re. Maloney’s full speech, along with Dutchess County Executive Molinaro here:

“Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney (NY-18) will join Dutchess County Executive Marcus Molinaro at the Poughkeepsie Galleria Vaccination Site to urge residents to sign up to get a vaccine. This visit is part of Congressman Maloney’s ongoing effort to combat vaccine hesitancy.”

“As of April 22, 45.1% of Dutchess County residents (132,644 of 294,218) had received at least one dose and 29.8% (87,609) were fully vaccinated. The Poughkeepsie Galleria vaccination site has been vaccinating residents since mid-January.”

“Biden administration officials are anticipating the supply of coronavirus vaccine to outstrip U.S. demand by mid-May if not sooner. A slowdown in vaccinations could delay the arrival of herd immunity. The longer that takes, the more time there is for dangerous variants to arise and possibly evade vaccines.”

“To combat hesitancy, the Congressman is redoubling his outreach efforts with community organizations and local leaders.”

For those who are hesitant:

Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 Vaccine To Resume For Dutchess County Clinics

According to a press release issued by Dutchess County today, Monday, April 26, 2021, the county will resume use of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine, following guidance from the CDC and FDA.

The full press release is below:

“Dutchess County Commissioner of Behavioral & Community Health, Dr. Anil Vaidian has announced Dutchess County will resume vaccinations using Johnson & Johnson’s Janssen (J&J) COVID-19 vaccine following the Center for Disease Control (CDC) and U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) recommendation to resume use of the J&J following a thorough safety review.”

“In accordance with CDC and FDA guidance, Dutchess County will resume administration of J&J vaccine,” said Dr. Vaidian. “This one-dose vaccine is an important option in our efforts to vaccinate and protect our community against COVID-19.”

“The FDA’s review of available data shows the known and potential benefits of the J&J vaccine outweigh the rare adverse risks. The FDA and CDC expressed confidence the J&J vaccine is safe and effective in preventing COVID-19.”

Women 50 Years and Younger Should Be Aware Risk Of Thrombosis

“Women younger than 50 years old should be aware of the very rare risk of adverse event called thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome (TTS), which involves blood clots with low platelets occurring at a rate of about 7 per 1 million vaccinated women between 18 and 49 years old. Other COVID-19 vaccine options are available for which this risk has not been seen.”

“Anyone who received the J&J vaccine and developed severe headache, abdominal pain, leg pain, or shortness of breath within three weeks after vaccination, should immediately contact their health care provider.”

“Dutchess County will resume use of J&J vaccine this week and will utilize J&J vaccine at various “Community Pop-Up Clinics” at locations throughout Dutchess County. More information about where J&J vaccine will be available will be posted on the County’s website as clinics are scheduled.”

Back To School For Beacon Schools - In April! Increase To 4 Day Week In-Person For Those Who Are Comfortable

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The “new normal” of this pandemic is to constantly shift. The Beacon City School District has been prepping the community with how they intend to expand their reopening from 2 days/week in-person to 4 days/week in-person for each school, including a full Remote option for those who wish to stay at home, and 1 day (usually Wednesday) of Remote Learning to accommodate Remote Learners and special programming, according to the Reopening Presentation by Beacon’s Superintendent, Dr. Landahl on March 5, 2021.

Remote free breakfast/lunch service delivered by bus will remain available to students studying at home in the Remote plan as well. Elementary Schools and the Middle School opened for 4 days on April 6, 2021. The High School will open 4 days on April 19th, 2021.

Reaction to the reopening has been mixed, as Dr. Landahl acknowledged that change creates anxiety, stating in an email to parents on February 26, 2021: “I understand that this has been a difficult year for everyone and that the idea of potential change brings anxiety and lots of questions. I will do my best to be thorough in our explanations of plans next week and as transparent as possible.”

While many parents want their children in school for socialization and learning styles, a routine has been established. One district parent explained to ALBB: “We are in a routine now with 2 days, and upgrading now feels like the first day of school, since my child has not been with the other half of the class in person all year.”
UPDATE: We checked in with this parent at the end of the first 4 day back to school, and this parent was very happy to have their child in school, stating: “I haven’t been able to get anything done in ages! I’ve changed my tune!”

While the back-to-school jitters are in full swing in April, other parents expressed relief at starting the in-person schedule, shifting the weighted responsibility of learning and stimulation back to the teachers, instead of worrying all day that not enough stimulation was happening. Some parents stated that they may: “Take a nap. Take a shower. Take a meeting. Go to work. Take a walk. Clean my kids rooms. Buy my child’s teacher a really great Teacher Appreciation Gift Card this year, or any day, maybe once per week.”

For parents who are teachers, the shift back to the classroom may have made their work day easier with familiarity, as splitting for remote has involved a learning curve of new skills and tasks.

How The 4 Day In Person Will Work For Beacon’s 4 Elementary Schools

Start time remains at 9:30am. Parents who wish to change from in-person to Remote or vice versa can do so. Dr. Landahl stressed the thought process behind opening now, and addressed safety guidelines as well as mental health: “We have not seen spread of the virus in our in-person schooling the entire year. We have seen an increase of mental health concerns among our students. Families are struggling under the current model.”

At the end of this first day, 4 new cases of COVID-19 had been found in 4 students, but the students had been studying at home, so the schools could remain open. Generally, this has been the pattern to COVID-19 cases in the district. This may change with increased in-person days, but safety measures have been put into place.

All Remote kids will stay with their current teacher, and an additional full-time teacher has been hired at each of the 4 elementary schools to help with Remote learners. Some kids who are returning may be with a different teacher in order to accommodate class sizes. Said Dr. Landahl: “All-remote students will have a morning session with their teacher every day, and then 2-3 additional instructional sessions with either their homeroom teacher or the remote support teacher. Some instructional sessions will be direct [screen] instruction and some will be live-streamed. We are not expecting students to be in front of a screen all day.”

Safety Measures Being Taken

The Beacon City School District says it is taking direction from American Association of Pediatrics, Dutchess County Health, as well as medical experts quoted in the media. Areas of focus include air quality, ventilation, outdoor learning, voluntary surveillance (ie voluntary rapid testing available at school), social distancing and use of barriers.

Ventilation Measures

Dr. Landahl said that MERV-13 filters were installed in unit ventilators in September 2020 and are replaced on schedule. He also said that portable HEPA filters will be added to each elementary classroom and ultimately every classroom. The elementary school buildings are quite old, so open windows are encouraged, as well as universal masking and outdoor tents and spaces. Some parents are in favor of children to experience learning in an outdoor environment anyway, pandemic or not.

Plastic Barriers At Desks

Classrooms that cannot achieve social distancing will have plastic barriers installed between students where they are learning, according to Dr. Landahl’s presentation. Some tables will be replaced with desks, and class size will range from 11-17 students. Plans for each classroom are made once the districts knows how many children will be in classrooms.

Services For Special Education

Since the pandemic, students with special needs have been studying at school in person 4 days per week, and have small class sizes in their own rooms. Students with special needs who attend school remotely do sign in with their school-issued Chromebook at designated times to in order to meet with their teacher and to receive the work that is posted. Students with Disabilities who attend school Remote Only receive related services remotely, and are accommodated in-person to the extent possible, according to documentation posted at the Beacon City School District’s website.

English Language Learners (ELL)

According to the Beacon City School District’s Equity Report Card, the number of children in the Hispanic/Latino community who attend Beacon schools has been steadily growing, and is second largest to the white community.

According to Dr. Landahl: “The Beacon City School District is committed to comprehensive high-quality, and culturally responsive instruction for ENL students. We will provide the required instructional Units of Study to all ELL’s based on their most recently measured English Language Proficiency Level during in-person or virtual instruction. We will complete the ELL identification process within 30 school days of the start of the school year for all students that enrolled during the COVID-19 school closure period as well as all students that enroll during the summer of 2020 and during the first 20 days of the 2020 -2021 school year.

“After the 20-day flexibility period, identification of ELL’s will resume for all students within the required 10 school days of initial enrollment as required by Commissioner’s Regulation Part 154. Our ENL Teachers will be responsible for providing services to our ENL students. Schedules will be set and students that are enrolled in the Remote Learning schedule will receive their services on-line according to the required minutes of instruction.”

Sign up here to opt children into rapid testing for COVID-19 on Wednesdays.

Governor Cuomo Continues To Skip Dutchess County As A NY State Partner Vaccination Site - Why That Matters

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Dutchess County entered 2021 by opening 3 county-run vaccination centers dubbed as PODs, which is in addition to any privately run locations at pharmacies or grocery stores. The locations are at the former JC Penney at the Poughkeepsie Galleria Mall, the former CVS, 3081 Route 22, Dover, and at Dutchess County Behavioral and Community Health - Mental Health Campus.

Why JC Penney? The retailer had filed for bankruptcy at the end of 2020 due in part to the pandemic shutdown, and has since emerged with new owners, possibly saving 60,000 jobs of the 85,000 jobs lost. The space inside of the mall with plenty of parking and public transportation drop-offs was available.

The only way to know about these locations in order to make an appointment at them is to follow Dutchess County announcements and local news. Why? Because the Dutchess County locations are not included in New York State’s Vaccine Hotline or Website to book an appointment. Only sites that Governor Cuomo designates as “Partner” sites are included in that very popular, state-wide website.

Beaconites like Joe Robitaille, owner of Homespun was eligible in late February for his vaccination, and used New York State’s website to book the only appointment he could. “The staff and I were sitting here looking at the website, clicking Refresh and appointments were just going, going, going right before our eyes. Finally we just clicked on anything, and I got Plattsburgh, NY.” That location is in the northern most part of New York State, near Vermont and Canada.

In early March, a location in Binghamton opened, and he switched appointments. “I'm off to Binghamton today to get my first vaccine shot! Got my appointment switched. So excited,” he told ALBB. Joe used the New York State website, and said he wasn’t aware of JC Penney location operated by Dutchess County.

Another local Beaconite was helping her dad, age 70, book his appointment back in February. “He called the New York State hotline. He didn’t use internet—at 70, I think the phone was less stressful than Internet. He got the appointment for April in Binghamton.” But the family wasn’t satisfied. They wanted an appointment sooner, and possibly closer. “We decided he should just call every day,” the resident continued to ALBB. “One day he called and they said they couldn’t really tell him details but they’d heard that Tops in New Paltz had appointments, and he called them, and got an appointment for 3 days later! He gets his second shot this Friday!”

When ALBB asked if her dad knew about the JC Penney location, the resident answered: “I don’t think it was an option he was given.”

Dutchess County’s Vaccination Plea To New York State To Add As A State Location

The entrance to the JC Penney COVID-19 Vaccination Site, run by Dutchess County. Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

The entrance to the JC Penney COVID-19 Vaccination Site, run by Dutchess County.
Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

On February 19, 2021, Dutchess County Executive Marcus Molinaro wrote to Governor Cuomo, the letter of which was shared with media, which requested that the JC Penney vaccination POD site be added as an official New York State Partner vaccination site.

County Executive Molinaro stated in the letter: “I respectfully request New York State partner with Dutchess County Government to create a joint vaccination site at this current Poughkeepsie location. Due to the lack of supply given to our county, local residents must travel more than an hour to the nearest State-operated mass vaccination site, located at the Westchester County Center or SUNY Albany, and most cannot obtain an appointment in the next several months at either of those sites.”

Individuals can still get vaccinations at the JC Penney location - and any county-run location - but the option to book an appointment are not listed in the New York State website, which is what Governor Cuomo refers to daily when encouraging people to sign up for their vaccinations. Other locations are available in this region, including at pharmacies, but those are not included in the NY State appointment website.

New York State’s Incomplete Vaccination Appointment Website

Should all vaccination sites be located in a central website for New York State? Dutchess County Executive Marcus Molinaro and the CDC believe that they should. Says Colleen Pillus, Communication Director for the County Executive Office told ALBB: “The County Executive has been openly advocating for a clear picture of where all vaccine is allocated and a centralized place to schedule appointments at any vaccine provider.”

With Governor Cuomo’s consistent display of data aggregation across multiple web pages in New York State’s COVID section of the website, as he tracks patterns of the virus to display to the public, it is not clear why the vaccine locations across the state are not included in that portal. From a website build standpoint, that build-out is not difficult using Google Map tool at the very least. Local design firms nation-wide have already built some for their communities (including my own website design firm for a company producing an antibody test to display various locations in CVS drug stores).

Additionally, when the COVID-19 tests rolled out across multiple private locations, Dutchess County was not designated as an official testing center by New York State. The omission of Dutchess County from New York State’s test center location finder website added time and confusion to the testing process.

When a person called the New York State testing hotline, as Governor Cuomo told people to do daily when he was marketing how easy it was to get tested, the closest location Dutchess County residents was the parking lot at the Bear Mountain Bridge. Despite multiple Dutchess County run testing centers in operation, like the one at Dutchess Stadium just up the road for Beaconites. ALBB reported on the confusion of testing locations and insurance early on.

“Vaccination Czar,” Impeachment Issue, and County Access To Doses

This location-with-benefits logic is now repeating itself for vaccination locations. And is part of why County Executives were so shaken up when New York State’s “Vaccination Czar,” Larry Schwartz, called County Executives across the state asking them for the support of Governor Cuomo during his current impeachment consideration, which is based in part on megalomaniac tendencies and political bullying.

Dutchess County Marcus Molinaro, who is president of the New York State County Executives Association, told NPR in a report on the multiple phonecalls: “[Molinaro] says in the eyes of these local officials, Schwartz's calls were troubling and that after receiving the calls, 3 to 4 executives contacted him or his staff to express their concern and disgust. Here is Molinaro. ’That these calls would be made at all was troubling. That they were made by the individual responsible for, really, with a great deal of discretion, distribution of vaccines was extremely disturbing to them.’”

Dutchess County Executive’s Response To Omission Of Dutchess County Vaccination Locations In NY State Website

The empty parking lot at JC Penney, the location of a Dutchess County run vaccination site that New York State continues to not grant partnership benefits to. Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

The empty parking lot at JC Penney, the location of a Dutchess County run vaccination site that New York State continues to not grant partnership benefits to.
Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

Despite Dutchess County Executive Marcus Molinaro’s repeated request to have the JC Penney POD be a “Partner” location by New York State, Governor Cuomo has not granted this designation. Though he has been adding partner locations regularly, and announced 2 in the Hudson Valley recently: one in Ulster County and in New Palz, which Governor Cuomo says, are not ready for the public yet. Dutchess County’s however, is already open and operational.

Despite New York State officials visiting Dutchess County’s JC Penney vaccination location prior to it opening and declaring it ready for scale, Governor Cuomo won’t make the partnership. "County Executive Molinaro has been advocating for the JCPenney location to be a mass vaccination site for several months,” said Colleen to ALBB. “In fact,” she continued, “as noted in his letter [to Governor Cuomo on 2/19/2021], officials from the Governor’s Office were on site at JCPenney when we first opened in January and noted how the capacity was certainly there to be expanded."

County Executive Molinaro pointed out in his 2/19/2021 letter to Governor Cuomo: “Though Dutchess County’s current 185,000-square-foot site in Poughkeepsie, inside the former JCPenney store at the Poughkeepsie Galleria, currently vaccinates fewer than 1,000 essential workers and seniors each week, due the limited number of doses we receive from New York State, our DBCH staff has the capability and space at the site to inoculate five times that number.”

Governor Cuomo Relevance To Dutchess County Executive Molinaro

Dutchess County Executive Marcus Molinaro ran against Governor Cuomo in the last election for governor, and was defeated. Actress Cynthia Nixon from Sex and the City was also running. Governor Cuomo refers to County Executive Molinaro as “some county executive who ran against me” in a press conference delivered on February 19, 2021, the same day the letter was sent, after Governor Cuomo encouraged people to check with their counties for individual sign-up locations, emphasizing that New York State was opening state-run sites in “socially vulnerable communities.”

Governor Cuomo has been pressured by Republicans and a growing number of New York State politicians about the nursing home issue, which questions how the Governor designated nursing home deaths (if the person died at the hospital, but was a resident in a nursing home, then it did not count as a nursing home death in figures released by New York State). That questioning has erupted into a broader discussion of how Governor Cuomo works with - or doesn’t - other politicians running different parts or departments of the state, including his staff. The question of bullying and megalomaniac power tenancies have been questioned.

Governor Cuomo’s dismissive statement was made while the Governor was being questioned by the media about the nursing home issue, as he attempted to discredit critical voices. You can read the full transcript of the February 19th, 2021 press conference here. The Governor has since denied taking questions from the media during a later press conference, as the investigation into him begins, and impeachment is discussed.

“Socially Vulnerable" Communities In Poughkeepsie, Beacon and the Hudson Valley

In terms of “socially vulnerable” communities being the reason for the lack of New York State partnership with Dutchess County, there are plenty of people in Dutchess County who have lost jobs, were already in a lower income bracket, or don’t have a car.

Said County Executive Molinaro in his letter to Governor Cuomo: “[The people who book an appointment] are the lucky ones – residents who have personal transportation and can travel at a moment’s notice, should a much-coveted appointment open up for them. Residents in our underserved communities, who rely on public transportation to take them to appointments to receive this life-saving vaccination, cannot readily travel an hour or more to the State’s sites; they can, however, travel to our Poughkeepsie site, which is easily accessible by Dutchess County Public Transit.”

Public transportation from Beacon regularly circulates to the Poughkeepsie Galleria Mall, including the G-Line, which is the pretty blue bus line introduced as a partnership with Beacon, Poughkeepsie and Dutchess County last year.

How To Add Yourself To Dutchess County’s More Convenient Vaccination Location List

Dutchess County has a web page that shows what their allocation was of vaccinations for the week, as well as a signup form to sign up once, and wait to be called for an appointment at a Dutchess County location. Other locations, such as pharmacies, are listed there as well for convenience.

As for the number of allocation doses since the County Executive’s letter, Communication Director for Dutchess County Colleen Pillus confirmed to ALBB on 3/17/2021: “Vaccine doses have increased statewide (and decreased) over the past several weeks as more vaccine become available from the federal level. Overall, vaccine allotment is up from what we been receiving in Jan/Feb, but last week’s allocation was lower than the previous week’s allocation.”

Dutchess County makes weekly updates to many vaccination sites on their vaccination web page, including pharmacies and hospital facilities. Do check this page weekly if you are in pursuit of a vaccination shot for yourself or a family member, as you may find a dose at a nearby location to you in Beacon, Fishkill, or other communities.

Volunteers who are pursuing and booking vaccination appoints on behalf of those who are too challenged in technology or physical condition to do it themselves have been making a big difference to connect people with doses. Read ALBB’s interview with a Vaccination Appointment Whisperer, Heidi Harrison, to learn her tips and tricks.



A Mayor In Ohio's Community Message Recognizing The 500,000 Lives Lost to COVID-19 In The U.S.

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Every now and then, my mom passes to me and my extended family email messages about the pandemic, as they are happening in Ohio, which is where I grew up. As mentioned in other articles about Ohio, weather from Ohio tends to travel to New York, so I often use that state as a predictor for what will happen in Beacon.

During this week of the lives lost from COVID-19 reaching 500,000 in this country alone, she forwarded to her children an email from the Mayor of Pepper Pike, OH, which is where my grandfather lives. My grandfather is in his 90s, and lives with the support of his children and caregivers who go to his home to make sure he has his needs met. My mom subscribes to Pepper Pike’s emails to keep tabs on the temperature of his community, and how the pandemic is viewed there.

I appreciated the memorial this Mayor Richard Bain wrote to this community. As we receive what news headlines and articles of the improving case count, lower hospitalization rates, continued struggle to get the vaccine, etc, which can cause conflicting feelings, I thought you might appreciate his words too. They are below.

From my mom (in case you need just a little more Chicken Soup for the Soul):

I know you’ve appreciated other missives that Pepper Pike Mayor Bain has sent to Grampa’s email.

Here’s one more, with perspective on where we are in this long pandemic. And what we still have to do. Even after getting our two shots.

Science rules. Miss you all.


From Mayor Richard Bain
Pepper Pike, Ohio
In Cuyahoga County, Northeast, OH, east of Cleveland, in the suburbs
February 22, 2021

Dear Friends and Neighbors,

Tonight, and for the next five days in Pepper Pike, and around the nation, we commemorate and honor the over 500,000 lives lost to the plague of Covid-19, the disease which has torn through our country, destroying lives and the families who loved them. It continues as a scourge across our land and the world and many more will die. The flags at City Hall and Morgan Park have been struck to fly at half-staff as a reminder of those who have been lost.

In comparison and to provide perspective, 405,000 members of the “Greatest Generation” were killed in 4 years of World War II. The enormous Arlington National Cemetery has 400,000 graves. The entire population of the City of Cleveland is now just over 380,000. In the future, more permanent memorials to the lives lost will certainly be erected in our nation, but for now, we pause in the midst of the battle to remember those souls who are abruptly gone, literally just months after this all began.

It was less than a year ago, March, 9, 2020, that I first wrote to alert you that the first 3 cases of Covid-19 had been identified in Cuyahoga County. Since that time, Cuyahoga County has recorded 94,021 cases and 1,695 deaths. Ohio has recorded 955,378 cases and 16,874 deaths. COVID-19 became a leading cause of death in the U.S. in 2020, particularly for people over age 35. That remains the case in 2021.

Although the vaccine has arrived, it is scarce for the great proportion of the country, including here. In Ohio, the vaccine distribution, for the time being, is limited to the “1B” population, 65 years and older. The next group of people who will be given access to the vaccine are those 60 years and older, which will be followed by those 55 years and older and then those 50 years and older.

Until the day arrives when we all have access to the vaccine, hopefully in the next months ahead, when the disease has finally been beaten back, we must remain vigilant in protecting those around us from the infection which still stalks us. I thank and congratulate you all who have joined the fight and intelligently battled during the last year. Now, with but some months ahead, we must finish strong!

COVID -19 has not quit or finished and neither must we. The disease mutates and seeks to start afresh as it infects new hosts as the disease continues to spread and exact its awful toll. Stay vigilant and we shall reach the end of this awful challenge. We have no choice but to forge ahead and together reach the end. Take a pause to reflect on what has happened, to think about the lives well lived, but lost nonetheless. They deserve that. This defining time in all our lives deserves no less. Please continue to stay safe and be well!

Sincerely,

Richard Bain

Party! Restaurants/Bars Can Stay Open 'Till 11pm; Amusement Parks 33% Capacity; Indoor Family Entertainment Centers 25%

Caution-first of course, but this week, Governor Cuomo has signed an Executive Order “extending closing times for bars, restaurants, gyms and fitness centers, casinos, billiards halls, as well as other State Liquor Authority-licensed establishments, from 10 p.m. to 11 p.m. statewide, effective immediately,” according to the Dutchess Business Notification Network.

Family Entertainment Centers

Beginning March 26, 2021, New York State announced that indoor family entertainment centers can reopen at 25% capacity.

Living indoors with young kids and teenagers with nowhere to go has been very difficult. More difficult, however, is hearing about a family who got COVID-19 and had family members go to the hospital. While these centers may open, businesses will need to show how safe they are being, and not exceed capacity.

Amusement Parks Can Open This Spring

Outdoor amusement parks are allowed to open on April 9, 2021 at the limited capacity of 33%.

Sports Venues Can Open At 10% Capacity

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo announced on 2/10/2021 that sports and entertainment events in major stadiums and arenas with a capacity of 10,000 or more people can re-open with limited spectators beginning February 23. “Following the model established as part of the successful Buffalo Bills pilot program, venues and events must follow similar guidelines, including Department of Health approval for venues and events, capacity limitations, testing requirements, mandatory face coverings, temperature checks, and assigned, socially distanced seating.”

Venues will have to institute a 10% capacity limit in arenas and stadiums, as well as ensure all staff and spectators receive a negative COVID-19 PCR test within 72 hours of the event.

According to the Dutchess Business Notification Network: “New York State and Empire State Development are looking to help vendors set up low-cost rapid COVID-19 testing sites for asymptomatic individuals with the idea being this will allow the state to begin the process of opening large gatherings/events. As such, the focus is on spaces near city centers/areas that will attract crowds.”

Location details include: “No or low cost 6-month lease immediately available; Street level store fronts with walk in access; About 750-1500 square feet (no additional charge for larger space). They are, on average, using 1200 sq. ft.” Email Deanna Robertson at drobertson@hvedc.com with questions.

Summer Day Camps Looking Probable To Open

The Dutchess Business Notification Network reports that “the New York Department of Health will release reopening guidance for day and overnight summer camps in the coming weeks. It is recommended that camps begin to develop their procedures and safety plan.”

Safety Measures

According to the Dutchess Business Notification Network: “All facilities must submit their plans to reopen, including the health protocols the facility will implement, to the local health department. Face coverings and social distancing will be required for all customers and staff, and customers will be required to have a health screening with temperature checks prior to entry.”

Additionally, the following guidelines must be followed:

  • Contact information must be collected from each party to inform contact tracing, if needed;

  • High-touch areas, attractions, and rides must be cleaned and disinfected frequently throughout the day;

  • Attractions must close if they cannot ensure distancing and be frequently cleaned/disinfected;

  • Sufficient staff must be deployed to enforce compliance with rules, including capacity, distancing, and face coverings;

  • Tickets should be sold in advance, and entry/exit and waiting times should be staggered to avoid congestion;

  • Indoor areas must meet enhanced air filtration, ventilation, and purification standards; and

  • Retail, food services, and recreational activities must abide by all State-issued guidance.

Beacon's Mayor Kyriacou Robo-Calls Community With Vaccine Information

Today (Tuesday, 2/9/2021), Beacon’s Mayor Lee Kyriacou sent a health message via Beacon’s robo-call system, to tell people how to get a COVID-19 vaccination near Beacon, NY. His message is below:

 

This is Beacon Mayor Lee Kyriacou with an update on COVID-19 vaccines.

Eligibility: Those who are currently eligible for a vaccine are: people 65 and older, frontline workers including first responders, public safety and transit workerse, educators, front-facing grocery store workers, certain funeral workers, and those working or living in homeless shelters

Everyone who is currently eligible for a vaccine will be able to get one within three to four months.

There are several vaccine distribution locations in our area. All require an appointment. Please be patient, but persistent. I will list them starting with those in Beacon.

  • Sun River Health on Main Street. Visit sunriver.org or call 845 288 0850. Available wit appointment only. No walk-ins.

  • Local pharmacies are vaccinating those 65 years and older. Check RiteAid.com and BeaconWellnessPharmacy.com later this month for more information. Please do not call to schedule.

  • The former JC Penney in the mall and Dover High School. Visit dutchessny.gov/covidvaccine.

  • The Institute for Family Health in Hyde Park, Ellenville and New Paltz. Visit institute.org

  • Westchester County Center and SUNY Albany. Visit am-i-eligibile.covid19vaccine.health.ny/gov or call 1 833 697 4829

  • Castle Point, for Veterans who are either 65 or older or are essential workers, call 845 838 7668.

To sign up for these robo-calls from te City, click here to get an introduction and to get started.

 

For Weather, Beacon City School District Goes Remote Wednesday On A Tuesday - A Glimpse Into How That Works

The Beacon City School District was “the largest district in Dutchess County to open for in-person instruction for our students with our Hybrid model,” according to Beacon’s Superintendent Landahl to District families on Tuesday afternoon (2/9/2021), after a Snow Day Switcheroonie to avoid an actual Snow Day with no class meets at all.

Dr. Landahl continued: “We have safely maintained our Hybrid and Remote models through many challenges the past many months without a long term closure of any of our schools.”

Part of why this has been possible has been the District’s nimble and flexible Remote Learning Model that has been a work in progress since the first weeks that schools closed in 2020 for COVID-19. Normally correspondence like this is kept to District parents, who sludge through the day with their kids, nose to the grindstone.

This type of Snow Day Change is being shared it here in order to bring awareness to other districts who are researching how to swing in and out of in-person instruction as needed, as well as to employers so that they can see what life is like for their working parent employees who need to accommodate their children at the drop of a snowflake.

As background, since COVID-19, students are divided into two groups who go to school on different days: Blue Group and Gold Group. On Wednesdays, everyone stays home and does more Google Meets with their teachers (usually…this may depend on the teacher). On an actual Snow-Day-Not-A-Snow-Day, kids may also do “Specials” at home, like Gym, Music, Art, etc. This means that the house may sound like a stampede during remote “Gym” class, and crayons will suddenly be needed during “Art” class. Yay. All for this action versus no plan and staring at the wall or YouTube on a TV on the wall.

This time ‘round, we had a Snow-Day-Wednesday on a Tuesday. Plus, in order to help the Blue Group kids be in school as much as possible, who it sounds like have had Snow Days be on their schedule the most, they were granted permission to come in on a Wednesday.

It sounds head-spinning, and it is. But the Beacon community has been all-in to do our best to stay safe and healthy, and to use opportunities to learn in-person for those who are comfortable doing so.

The email from Dr. Landahl announcing the Tuesday schedule is as follows:

 

Due to expected winter weather tomorrow, the Beacon City School District will be shifting its schedule this week. Tomorrow, Tuesday, February 9th, the district will operate on a Remote Wednesday schedule with buildings closed and district and school offices operating remotely as well. There will be no out of district transportation tomorrow.

Wednesday, February 10th, the district will operate on a Blue Hybrid In-Person Schedule. Meal delivery and the COVID-19 Surveillance testing will still take place on Wednesday as well.

We would not normally make a weather call this early but we wanted to let people know about this schedule change as early as possible and we were concerned about our Blue Hybrid students missing so much in-person time lately.

 

What Businesses Need To Do To Stay Open If People Are Afraid To Come Inside During A Pandemic

Do you own a business, have made investments to adhere to COVID-19 safety guidelines, but people aren’t coming in yet? There are a few easy things you could do to turn this around.

A Little Beacon Blog has two sister companies: Tin Shingle and Katie James Inc. Both specialize in digital marketing. From a business perspective, with the right education, people can stay safe during a pandemic, and still shop and see people. Businesses and institutions can stay open - as long as their practices are safe - and their messaging is safe.

This article is written with our marketing hats on, from both Tin Shingle and Katie James Inc. Methods that we have used for years and years, that can work - if you are actively engaging in safe measures and acknowledging the pandemic.

Share How Your Business Is Being Safe By Providing Social Distancing

If your business has been closed since forever, and now it’s open, YAY. Now you need to share how it is being safe. If you don’t do this regularly, you may be missing out on a lot of business.

GOOGLING:
When people Google your business, they are getting a few options: Phone to call, and Website to click. They are going to call first. If you don’t feel like answering the phone, or if you have a a voicemail answer for you with directions on what numbers to press to get to a person, then include this entire message of safety on that voicemail. If you don’t, customers who are watching that Dashboard of active COVID-19 cases might not come. Because you didn’t make them feel safe. This is your responsibility in these times.

VOICEMAILS:
When a customer calls your place of business, your voicemail or auto-answering service needs to tell them how your business is being safe. Don’t assume people know what regulations you needed to follow. People like to hear the reassurances.

Are your doors open for ventilation? Did you invest in air-purifiers? Do you use fans? Does your staff wear masks? Do your customers need to wear masks? Do you have reduced % capacity? If so, state what that is. Do you have a waiting policy? Do your customers need to wait in the parking lot for when their turn is ready? Do you have a deep-clean system? Great! State all of this. Yes, it’s a huge pain for you as a business to do this. But your customers do want to hear it. They will feel reassured, and most likely will come to your place of business.

WEBSITE:
All of your COVID-19 safety measures need to be stated on your website in a special section called COVID-19. Not sure it this is required by an Executive Order of any kind, but for regular people searching to feel good and safe, this is required if you want them to walk through your doors. Sure, you may think: “My customers feel safe no matter what.” Well, there are plenty of other customers who are not coming in because they don’t know your drill. If you have a drill. You have a drill, right? : )

SOCIAL MEDIA:
Fill your social feed on Instagram, Facebook and/or TikTok with pictures of your safety moves. Make them fun! Safety is sexy! If you don’t have time to do this, hire someone to do it for you. Visit A Little Beacon Blog’s Business Directory in the Branding or Social Media sections. Or hire Katie James, Inc. to do it for you! We are great ghost writers and visionaries with photos. We can write in your brand’s style and personality.

NEWSLETTERS:
The most feared marketing tool that a small business has, and the most effective. Sending your customers newsletters - as well as random people who signed up for your newsletters - is so important. The personal inbox has always been, and remains to be, a sacred space. Use it. Your people want to hear from you.

THE MEDIA:
Yes, the media is looking for COVID-19 stories. Did you make a big investment in equipment to make your business more safe? Did you make a big pivot move? Did you save your staff? Did you not take PPP money because you told your staff to stay on unemployment to get the extra Pandemic Insurance? Did you close for the winter, with hopes of opening back up in the spring?

Any special thing you are doing because of the pandemic - pitch it to the media. Tin Shingle educates business owners on how to pitch the media (ahem…publicists…you should follow along as well, because we see lots of pitches from publicists that are not on the mark…you must get creative, timely and very on target!).

You got this, businesses! We got you. We want to buy from you. Keep going. Put the messaging of safety and what you need out there.

Latest Active Case COVID-19 Numbers 1/18/2021 For Beacon, Fishkill, Wappingers, and Poughkeepsie

Dutchess County has been busy with their website of dashboards, to keep people informed about the different numbers available from New York State, Dutchess County, and drilling down into our own communities/municipalities. There are currently several types of dashboards identified on the Dutchess County Department Of Community and Behavioral Health web page dedicated for all things coronavirus (COVID-19).

This weekend, locals on the street were exchanging numbers: “Did you know there are 100 active cases in Beacon?” one man said to another. So we thought we’d take a look. Here at A Little Beacon Blog, we don’t refresh the numbers every day. That said, the numbers have taken quite a jump over time. Surrounding communities have been posted below.

Today (Sunday), the Beacon City School District robo-called called district families with 2 new cases in the district that do require the impacted school buildings to go Remote tomorrow (Tuesday) after today’s MLK Day holiday. South Avenue Elementary School and Rombout Middle School have a new case each, and this time, will require a switch to Remote. A move which has been rare among the 6 district school buildings, as most new cases at different school buildings have included a student or staff member who had already been isolating at home, or were in the 100% Remote program already.

COVID-19 Active Case Numbers By Neighboring Communities

The Dutchess County Department of Behavioral and Community Health web page for COVID-19 has evolved, and now has more items organized, like Executive Orders, Vaccine Information, etc. The Dashboard of current cases by community is currently (1/18/2021) at the bottom of their webs page.

Active COVID-19 Cases around our region as of 1/18/2021 are as follows:
To give perspective, in April 28 2020, these were numbers were this. Beacon was at least 100 active cases then, and continued even until May. In the summer, Beacon’s numbers lowered into the two digits, hitting 47 or into the 20s.

Now we are back up into the 100s. Could be that more people are getting themselves tested. Whatever the reason, people’s personal stories exist, of the near-play-date encounter of a family who all of a sudden got it, and a grandparent died. Or of COVID Long Haulers. For those looking at numbers, the numbers we also consider at ALBB are the hospital bed numbers across the country, as we work to keep local hospital numbers down. Poor L.A. County in CA. Heartbreaking over there.

Beacon: 105
East Fishkill: 313
Fishkill: 200
Fishkill Village: 24
LaGrange: 121
Pleasant Valley: 64
Poughkeepsie: 400
Poughkeepsie City: 329
Rhinebeck: 97
Rhinebeck Village: 27
Wappingers: 232
Wappingers Falls Village: 57

Mayor Kyriacou on 1/11/2021 at the beginning of a Workshop meeting, said this about Beacon’s confirmed cases: “Cases are up of COVID. I know it’s getting hard for everyone because the numbers are up. Our New York numbers are up bove where they were in March in terms of confirmed cases. The silver lining in that is that we have learned a lot. The hospitalizations and death rates are significantly lower given those numbers. And that’s exaactly what I think the Governor and the CDC and others were hoping for. That we could whether this without totally shutting down our economy. By getting enough prevention for those that are most at risk. I think we’ve managed that. I know the numbers are scary. I will point out that the Beacon numbers are consistently better than the County. I think that means that you all in the community are doing our part, and we need to keep doing that. We are exposed more than than other parts of the County for those who need to commute to the city (NYC).”

Beacon City School District Presents Plans On How It Will Stay Open After A Successful First Half

The Administration Building of the Beacon City School District. Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

The Administration Building of the Beacon City School District.
Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

Superintendent Matthew Landahl addressed families in the district Wednesday evening via webinar call about how the district would be moving forward in the second half of the 2020/2021 school year. Beacon has been one of the only districts in the region to begin and remain on a Hybrid model, which means that kids can chose to either be Hybrid (attending school 2 days per week on a Monday/Tuesday or Thursday/Friday rotation), or be 100% Remote. Students with Special Needs are in school 4 days per week. All students are home on Wednesdays for Remote Learning.

The part-time in-person model for Hybrid was decided upon in order to comply with social distancing requirements set by the state. With the school’s population, as compared with other smaller, sometimes private schools, this needed to be done, Dr. Landahl has said consistently throughout the school year.

Dr. Landahl discussed the latest on staff vaccinations; Dutchess County guidance on changes in what is required to quarantine should a student or staff member test positive for COVID-19; decisions on when schools go remote temporarily; and the introduction of the voluntarily testing program intended to get a read on positivity rate in the district for asymptomatic students or staff.

Teacher & Staff Vaccinations

Dr. Landahl said that unlike another vaccination situation he worked through as the Principal of Greer Elementary School in Charlottesville, VA during the H1N1 period, vaccination are selective and not made possible through school roll-outs.

He told A Little Beacon Blog: “They did mass vaccinations by school at the time. The current vaccine is not set up for children. The vaccine right now is definitely being distributed on a very individual basis for 1B people, meaning every individual has to set up their own appointments. I dont have the ability to organize a vaccination event in the district for district staff and faculty. Vaccinations will be administered to staff in medical facilities when staff makes an appointment at such a facility.”

Governor Cuomo announced on Monday (1-11-2021) that teachers (along with other group types of people) are able to be vaccinated now, in accordance with Governor Cuomo’s prioritized roll-out he designed. However, according to the Governor, due to federal supply levels, New York State does not have that many vaccine doses, so the opportunity to get vaccinated may be slow. All people are instructed to call their health care provider to get their vaccine, or select pharmacies who offer it, like CVS, and appointments are required.

When A Required Quarantine Is Needed If Exposure To Student or Staff

When a student or staff tests positive, the district communicates directly with the person to find out if they were already isolating, or if they were in a school building. Dr. Landahl said that based on feedback from these contact tracing learnings, most students were already isolating at home, or were already 100% Remote. If the parents or caregivers were aware of someone else in the house who tested positive, families for a large part kept their children home.

Dr. Landahl indicated that based on feedback from families throughout the results of contact tracing the last half of the year, settings such as being in a gym class together, or other wide space, might be too broad and should not trigger a quarantine for people near the positive person. Dutchess County, it seems, has relaxed its guidance, which Dr. Landahl included during his presentation:

“Dutchess County Department of Behavioral and Community Health (DBCH) will work with schools to determine the specific exposures within the classroom and school settings by identifying only those individuals who must be considered ‘close contacts’ as subject to the mandatory precautionary quarantine. The definition of close contact includes spending 10 minutes or more with a confirmed COVID-19 case while standing within 6 feet of the individual. Wearing cloth masks does not impact exposure.”

Dr. Landahl clarified that simply wearing a mask while standing within 6 feet of someone did not excuse a person from needing to quarantine if they were within 6 feet of the individual for 10 minutes or more.

Dutchess County guidance continued: “DBCH may consider other factors including virus strain, as part of the case investigation to determine the risk of exposure on the particular circumstances of the exposure. DBCH and/or New York State Department Of Health (NYSDOH) reserve right to issue and enforce mandatory quarantine orders for classroom-based exposure incidents when necessary.”

BSCD’s Goal Is To Stay Open - Uses These Factors To Decide On Going Temporarily Remote

Feedback from parents and caregivers during the meeting via the chat session in Zoom was mixed between wanting the district to close and go Remote only; fearing that the district would close and go Remote only; liking and approving of the current system; and wanting the district to open for more days during the week.

Dr. Landahl emphasized that in New York State, the decision to close temporarily or full is up to each district. There is no formula for closure. While Governor Cuomo had been using color codes before, Dr. Landahl said, the Governor had not been referring to them lately. Dr. Landahl said that the state and the county do look at hospitalization rates to indicate a direction, and that Dutchess County may have other information that may trigger guidance to a particular district. Otherwise, there is no formula or requirement for closure.

From the presentation, factors that impact the decision to go remote include:

  • Time needed to conduct contact tracing. If the knowledge of a positive case happens late and night, and there is indication that exposed people are involved, a temporary closure could happen, simply to give time the next day to reach out to individuals, and reduce risk of further unknown/known exposure.

  • Number of people quarantining. If a large number of staff is quarantining, for instance, it would be impossible to keep a building open to function.

  • "Most of the confirmed cases we get now, the individual has been out of school for a number of days,” Dr. Landahl stated in his (these) bullet points.

  • Department of Health. If the county issues guidance based on information they have.

  • State guidance or regulations. If New York State issues guidance.

Voluntary Testing

The Beacon City School District has voluntarily signed up to participate in the ability for staff and students to get tested for free at a location at one of the buildings, the first may be at the Beacon High School. This is a voluntary offering and not required by students to undergo. Parents will be able to be with their children during the test. The first students to be offered it will be Hybrid students, who go into school buildings, and then depending on usage of the tests, may be expanded to Remote, Dr. Landahl said.

The purpose of the testing is to get a better picture of if there is an asymptomatic positive cases in the buildings. These tests will be the “rapid” tests, which have been talked about as not being as accurate as the PCR lab tests. Dr. Landahl said that from his reading, the rapid tests are more prone to give false negatives, and that if it delivers a positive response, he said, the result will be taken into consideration.

This may start the week of January 25, 2021, targeting the days of Mondays and Wednesdays as testing opportunities, which would be open to all ages from the Hybrid in-person group. A testing center may be set up at Beacon High School, either inside or outside. A Virtual Consent form will be sent out next week, and FAQs and a video as well, said Dr. Landahl, to help people understand the offering.

Dr. Landahl mentioned how long the line was at Pulse MD when he got tested one day, which has been consistent with A Little Beacon Blog’s findings as well, since before Thanksgiving, which is when lines at several urgent cares filled up with people who wanted to merge households over the holidays. The closet location to get a free test for Beaconites is Bear Mountain, despite the marketing that that Governor Cuomo does that indicates getting a free test is easy.

A Little Beacon Blog doesn’t usually make recommendations, but in our experience, PM Pediatrics continues to be the best choice for testing kids (adults who accompany them can also get tested; walk-ins accepted), Caremount for adult testing, and patients of Sun River Health System (previously HRH Health Care on Henry Street in Beacon) offers testing to their patients only (no walk-ins, and appointments are needed).

Local District Response To Closures - Up To Districts, Not To State Standardized

Chatter amoung some parents in social media has been that the school will be forced to close for some reason. Dr. Landahl answered that as of now, and as of the whole time during the pandemic after the schools opened for the new 2020/2021 year, the decision to close has been at each district level, which indicates that local communities can know how things are working, and make safe decisions. He stated that he appreciated that local decision ability.

Most Cases Are Coming From Home, Not School

A question from a participant on the call was if the students were safer doing 100% Remote Only. Dr. Landahl stated that he believes the opposite to be true, that children are safer in the schools where social distancing is enforced, from their classroom to the cafeteria to gym to recess. At home, parents and caregivers can get lax.

This writer can attest - as a person who got COVID-19 - it walked through my front door at home - not from the school, but from us not recognizing the symptoms of an achy back - where it could have been picked up from a number of places (office building, gas station, who knows).

Fortunately. My husband is tested regularly for free by his job, and that is how we knew we had positive cases in the house. When we learned of his positive result, I kept my children home and out of school, even before they got tested. Once they got tested and one positive result came back for 1 of my 3 children, they had already been isolating, and our case did not warrant a closure of the school. It did trigger a robo-call from Dr. Landahl, however :) (no one’s names are ever mentioned, but we knew it was us - we made the robo-call!).

The school nurse called to check on us regularly, and did the math on our quarantine release date, if our symptoms had stopped, which they did.

Free Breakfast And Lunch Meals Continue For Rest Of School Year

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Today, the Beacon City School District, by way of Food Services Director Karen Pagano, announced that breakfast and lunch meals will continue to be free for the rest of the school year. The first time this happened was made possible from funding from the USDA.

For Remote families (both Hybrid and 100% Remote), there are 2 ways to get the meals: Delivery and Pickup. Both require signup, but if families are already signed up, they do not need to re-enroll. There have been benefits to being signed, including partnerships with outside organizations, like Fareground, who use the bus delivery and pickup service to get programming materials such as Meal Kits to students.

Parents and caregivers who work from home are encouraged to sign up for Delivery or Pickup. If they think they can pickup, but in reality missed pickups due to work, parents should signup for Delivery. Many parents have reported having work meetings scheduled during their official pickup times, making it difficult to get the food. The bus system has worked well, and requires advance coordination and a person at home to receive the meals. Sign up for Delivery or Pickup here at the Beacon City School’s website.