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Roland99

Roland99's Journal
Roland99's Journal
March 13, 2020

Jared Kushner reportedly looked to a Facebook group to crowdsource ideas to stop the coronavirus

https://www.businessinsider.com/coronavirus-jared-kushner-facebook-group-crowdsource-2020-3
As the White House clamors to combat the spread of COVID-19, the illness caused by the new coronavirus, Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump's son-in-law and senior aide, has reportedly turned to a nontraditional resource: advice crowdsourced from Facebook.

Kurt Kloss, a doctor and the father-in-law of Jared Kushner's brother, Josh, on Wednesday posted in a Facebook group for physicians called EM Docs, asking for its nearly 22,000 members to brainstorm measures to stop the coronavirus outbreak, The Spectator first reported on Thursday. Politico later independently published a report on Kloss' posts.

"I have direct channel to person now in charge at White House," Kloss reportedly wrote, adding: "If you were in charge of Federal response to the Pandemic what would your recommendation be. Please only serious responses."

...

Kloss reportedly wrote that he sent 12 recommendations to Kushner on Thursday morning.

"Jared is reading now," he said.



O M F G !!

Policy via internet comment section!!


We've surpassed Idiocracy!
March 13, 2020

Dems vow Friday vote on coronavirus stimulus

https://thehill.com/homenews/house/487422-dems-vow-friday-vote-on-coronavirus-stimulus
House Democratic leaders are pushing forward with a plan to vote Friday on sweeping legislation to provide financial help to victims of the fast-moving coronavirus.

Emerging from a leadership meeting in the office of Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), Democrats said they haven't yet clinched a deal with GOP leaders, but the outstanding disagreements are so few that they're promising a vote on the package later in the day.

"It is largely done," said House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.). "We intend to move ahead today."


Pelosi has been leading the talks for the Democrats, negotiating furiously with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin for much of the week in search of a bipartisan compromise that can clear both chambers and be signed into law.

The pair spoke most recently Friday morning by phone, according to aides and lawmakers, and Pelosi said the sides are "close" to an agreement.
March 13, 2020

About the STAFFORD ACT (since twitler will apparently decare a national emergency over Covid-19)

https://disasterphilanthropy.org/issue-insight/the-stafford-act/

Overview
The Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act of 1988 (Stafford Act) governs how the United States government responds to disasters. While the Stafford Act provides an important and necessary foundation for coordinated national response to disasters, a number of shortcomings and deficiencies have been identified over the years. By understanding the Act’s pitfalls and gaps, donors can make strategic decisions in allocating private dollars toward disaster preparedness, response and recovery.

Broken into seven titles, the Stafford Act establishes a federal process for declaring disasters, determining the appropriate level of response and dividing up the costs among federal, state and local governments. In addition to providing federal assistance programs to deal with economic losses resulting from disasters, the Act articulates the need for state and local governments to create comprehensive disaster preparedness plans and mechanisms to prepare for intergovernmental coordination during times of crisis.

Hurricane Katrina exposed organizational deficiencies of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and, as a result, the agency was widely criticized for a slow and inadequate response. Understanding the Act’s limitations is key to improvements for future disasters. As the Louisiana Family Recovery Corps stated in the wake of Katrina, “the rigidity of the Act and its voluminous amendments has certainly served to handcuff those federal agents, officers and agencies working under its oversight.”

A more recent criticism after Hurricane Harvey in 2017 was that the Act only allows FEMA to provide “temporary housing,” which elevates short-term fixes instead of long-term solutions.

The Disaster Recovery Reform Act (DRRA) aims to improve the Stafford Act and reduce disaster risk including amending the Act to create a pre-disaster mitigation program that would not be subject to annual appropriations from Congress.

Another DRRA proposal would allow temporary FEMA personnel to become permanent employees after serving continuously for three years. This would allow the agency to grow the pool of qualified potential employees.

Other DRRA plans would alter how FEMA interacts with state and local governments. One such change would allow the agency, in coordination with the U.S. Department of Transportation, to produce guidance for state and local governments to identify evacuation routes. Another amendment would allow state and local governments to administer temporary and permanent housing construction, with those who implement cost-effective solutions eligible for reimbursement.

The DRRA also calls for expanding the eligibility of grant funding for things like wildfire activities, water resources development projects and assistance for building code and floodplain management, among others.

Key Facts
There are two types of incident levels: emergencies and major disasters. Emergencies are usually smaller events in which a limited federal role is sufficient, while major disasters are usually larger scale events, such as a powerful hurricane or earthquake. Only the president can declare an event an emergency or a major disaster.

The governor of the state in which a major event has occurred determines whether or not the state has the resources to handle the disaster. If that governor decides the state does not have the ability to handle the response, he or she must then ask the president for help and inform the president of the resources the state is able to commit. The president then decides whether to declare a major disaster and directs the assistance. A similar process takes place for emergencies. This top-down approach often does not include the perspective of people living in the disaster-affected area.

In the wake of a federally-declared disaster, the federal government provides assistance to state and local governments. Assistance includes food, shelter, financial assistance and the repair of physical damage resulting from a disaster. For major disasters, long-term recovery loans to individual small businesses are capped at $2 million. FEMA will pay up to 90 percent to state and local governments for debris removal, emergency protective measures, roads and bridges, water control facilities, buildings and equipment and utilities.

The president instructs federal agencies to provide states disaster preparedness and mitigation assistance. Federal agencies provide technical assistance to states to help them prepare for disasters and administer grants for the purpose of creating or updating emergency plans. However, state and local governments often lack the capacity and planning resources necessary for effective mitigation.

How You Can Help
The Stafford Act does not adequately address long-term recovery needs following a disaster. This is where private dollars become critically important. Donors can employ the following strategies to complement existing federal assistance programs:

Support recovery. In order to increase the effectiveness of long-term recovery, the shortcomings of the Stafford Act must be addressed. Philanthropists can use their convening power to organize donor consortiums to advocate for legislative reform of the Stafford Act and to ensure FEMA delivers a long-term recovery framework.

Help affected individuals and households receive case management and mental health services. Current federal funding for case management programs is insufficient and does not meet the needs of disaster victims. Donors can fill this gap and support long-term recovery by funding humanitarian organizations providing case management and mental health services to disaster survivors and workers.

Provide small businesses with expedited loans and grants. Small businesses are critical in a community’s recovery process. The current $2 million cap on loans for recovery is not enough and provision of loans is often too slow. In order to rapidly and effectively stimulate recovery, donors can provide recovery grants and microloans to offset immediate costs for small businesses.

Advocate for Stafford Act reform. In the years to come, the U.S. will certainly confront the devastation of additional natural disasters and may well have to respond to man-made catastrophes like the 9/11 attacks. The donor community can play a vital role in disaster response not only by filling funding gaps, but also by advocating for Stafford Act reform which will put in place the remedies and safeguards required to confront the disasters of the future.


We welcome republication of our content. Please credit the Center for Disaster Philanthropy.





What is the Stafford Act; the National Emergencies Act?
https://www.wsoctv.com/news/trending/what-is-stafford-act-national-emergencies-act/O6UCTZL6ZJAG5OV7BASPQWQQ54/
March 13, 2020

FDA shakeup in team that manages distributing tests

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/13/world/coronavirus-news.html
The F.D.A. also made drastic changes to the team overseeing the distribution of tests, installing an assistant secretary, Adm. Brett P. Giroir, to oversee the efforts. The move was another indication of tension among top health officials.

On Thursday, under persistent questioning about exactly who was in charge of seeing that people who needed tests got them, top health officials were unable to provide a name. One of them, Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, finally responded: “The system does not, is not really geared to what we need right now, what you are asking for. That is a failing. It is a failing, let’s admit it.”

“The idea of anybody getting it, easily, the way people in other countries are doing it, we are not set up for that,” Dr. Fauci added. “Do I think we should be? Yes. But we are not.”
March 13, 2020

BREAKING: Miami Mayor Francis Suarez has tested positive for the coronavirus

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2020/03/13/coronavirus-latest-news/
BREAKING: Miami Mayor Francis Suarez has tested positive for the coronavirus, he told the Miami Herald on Friday, days after attending an event with a top Brazilian government aide who also has the novel coronavirus. Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro’s communications secretary appeared in a photograph with President Trump and Vice President Mike Pence at Mar-a Lago. Bolsonaro announced on Facebook that he tested negative.
March 13, 2020

Btw, there WAS media frenzy in 2009 during the swine flu epidemic

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/swine-flu-is-bad-but-panic-is-dangerous/#

A deadly virus is quietly killing about 3,500 Americans a month, and there's nothing that modern medicine can do about it.

That virus appears every year during the influenza season and causes more than 200,000 hospitalizations in the United States and about 41,000 deaths.

By comparison, swine flu has caused one confirmed death in the United States - in the case of a toddler visiting from Mexico, and seven confirmed deaths south of the border. Mexican Health Secretary Jose Cordova says he believes the situation is stabilizing, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports the need for hospitalization in the U.S. is rare.

Yet Web sites selling N95 respirator masks crashed on Monday due to a deluge of orders, Purell hand sanitizer is out of stock at Drugstore.com, and Amazon.com. Cable TV hosts - in a flurry of alarmism ably captured by Jon Stewart on the Daily Show - have pressed the panic button. Repeatedly.
March 13, 2020

Wait. What?? Officials: US airstrikes underway against Iran-backed militia group that hit Iraq base

https://www.wftv.com/news/breaking-news/officials-us-airstrikes-underway-against-iran-backed-militia-group-that-hit-iraq-base/6Y7L3EYA6RFLPDEFQTLKLSTVLM/

Updated: March 12, 2020 - 6:46 PM
WASHINGTON — American officials said the U.S. has launched airstrikes in Iraq targeting the Iranian-backed Shia militia members believed responsible for the rocket attack that killed and wounded American and British troops at a base north of Baghdad.

One U.S. official said multiple strikes targeted Kataib Hezbollah weapons facilities inside Iraq.


The strikes were a joint operation with the British, that official says. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because operations were still going on.
March 13, 2020

Florida announces 17 new cases since Thursday evening

https://www.wftv.com/news/florida/live-updates-17-new-cases-coronavirus-confirmed-florida-health-officials-say/UM5EPVLY3BAQ3L6GNG7UDZJFJY/


4:16 a.m. updates:
The Florida Department of Health announced that 17 individuals with ties to Florida tested positive for coronavirus. The latest case involves a 42-year-old man with ties to Miami-Dade County. Officials said that his is a travel related case.


http://www.floridahealth.gov/diseases-and-conditions/COVID-19/

Positive Cases of COVID-19
41 – Florida Residents
5 – Florida Cases Repatriated*
3 – Non-Florida Residents


Deaths
2 – Florida Residents


Number of Negative Test Results
301


Number of Pending Test Results
147


Number of People Under Public Health Monitoring
476 – currently being monitored
1230 – people monitored to date

.

March 13, 2020

US stock futures point to healthy opening

DJIA F
815 3.89%

S&P F
97.50 3.97%

NASDAQ F
331.00 4.60%


Europe off to a good start


FTSE 100 4.66%
DAX 3.66%
CAC 40 4.49%
FTSE MIB 8.94%
IBEX 35 6.52%
Stoxx 600 4.34%



Meanwhile in Asia...


Asia Dow -1.10%
Nikkei 225 -6.08%
Hang Seng -1.14%
Shanghai -1.23%
Sensex 4.04%
Singapore -1.67%

March 13, 2020

President Petulant Man-Child

And as the petulant man-child winds his day down, after the worst market performance in 33 years, US Covid cases having doubled over the last two days, the entire country virtually shutting down, Covid test kits still woefully lacking, a pathetically ineffective travel ban in place, a plan for an idiotic tax cut that will only hurt programs that need it now more than ever, what’s he do?

He tweets 3rd-grade insults and vainly boasts about some approval rating from some unnamed poll about his handling of this situation.

He’s all about the optics. He’s all about the stroking of his immensely fragile ego

I’ve never seen nor have any knowledge of anyone lacking more in empathy than the narcissistic asshat taking up residence in the White House.

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Gender: Male
Hometown: Louisville, KY
Current location: Central FL
Member since: Thu Sep 16, 2004, 02:03 PM
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