Montgomery County's Ride On bus service is trying to get in front of a potential loss of ridership due to fears over the novel coronavirus. Three MoCo residents have tested positive for covid-19 so far; officials have not yet informed the public as to whether any of the three rode public transportation before their current quarantine status. Ride On says they are disinfecting all buses nightly for coronavirus, including fareboxes, poles and even the driver's steering wheel. The transit service says they are using a "concentrated, multi-purpose, hospital grade, germicidal detergent, antiviral solution."
On Saturday, the first cases of coronavirus in the District and Virginia were reported. Maryland and Montgomery County officials have yet to offer any further information on where the three MoCo patients may have traveled while infected with coronavirus after returning from their cruise in Egypt. Of course, while it will certainly help to clean the buses in any case, there will still be the issue of riding in close quarters on buses as the outbreak spreads. Coughs and sneezes are one of the leading ways the virus is spread.
Sunday, March 8, 2020
Saturday, March 7, 2020
Montgomery County coronavirus patients caught virus on cruise to Egypt
Rockville retirement community;
officials continue to withhold
details on patient movements
within MoCo
Maryland and Montgomery County officials continue to hide critical information about the possible spread of coronavirus in the jurisdiction from an increasingly-frustrated and worried public. Neither government will give even the general location of the supposedly-quarantined patients in the County, much less specific businesses or locations where they may have exposed others to covid-19 in recent weeks.
Gov. Larry Hogan did say that all three patients were on a cruise in Egypt, on a ship widely identified across worldwide media as the A Sara. A number of cases in Houston have been linked to the same cruise, where the ship's crew has reportedly been infected as well.
The information about other cases from the same cruise that is now surfacing is likely the only reason that detail has now been made public by the governor. Hogan also mentioned that one of the three patients exposed about 100 people at a February 28 event at the Village of Rockville retirement community. The Maryland Department of Health said the following:
"persons who attended this event should check their temperature twice a day and notify their health care provider and local health department if their temperature is greater than 100.4 or they develop a respiratory illness. They should remain at home until they receive instructions about next steps from their health care provider or local health department. Members of the public who have questions about this information are encouraged to call the Maryland Emergency Management Agency call center at 410-517-3720. The call center is available until midnight tonight and from 8 a.m. until 8 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday."
The lack of information at the state and county level is presenting a further danger to the public. People who were in contact with the coronavirus patients may be unwittingly exposing vulnerable members of the public, such as senior citizens or those with compromised immune or respiratory systems, to the virus rather than keeping social distance if not isolating themselves. Ironically, the identities of the patients are more likely to become public thanks to the coverup, as many amateur sleuths are now attempting to track down the information officials are withholding.
Nobody cares about the specific names and addresses of the patients; they simply want to know if they've been exposed, or what places they should avoid for the time being. Instead of protecting privacy, the unusual secrecy is only generating more wild speculation online.
Misinformation is dangerous in a potential pandemic. Those who are setting themselves up as trusted sources of reliable information undercut that position when they make false statements for political, rather than medical, reasons.
Federal experts telling people to stop buying masks because they "won't reduce your chances of catching the virus" immediately lost all credibility. Not only do properly-worn masks reduce your chance of catching coronavirus, but if they didn't, why would we need to save them for healthcare providers? Clearly, they help those healthcare providers avoid catching and spreading coronavirus, flu and other diseases. Don't blame the public trying to protect themselves and their families for government's failure to prepare for a pandemic.
Photo via U.S. Food & Drug Administration
Friday, March 6, 2020
Rockville bank gets new name
A Maryland-based bank has been acquired by a larger regional bank, and the local name is one of the casualties. Old Line Bank, based in Bowie, was acquired late last year by Wesbanco, a regional bank headquartered in Wheeling, West Virginia. The name change is only happening now, though, at branches in Rockville Town Center and on Rockville Pike.
Coronavirus cases in Montgomery County confirmed, MCPS preparing for potential school closures if needed
Hogan declares state of emergency
after 3 MoCo residents test
positive for COVID-19
Three people in Montgomery County have tested positive for coronavirus, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan (R) announced Thursday evening. Officials will not reveal the specific parts of Montgomery County where the three individuals live, where they traveled overseas, or what public places they have visited since returning from their travels. Hogan described them only as a married couple in their seventies, and an individual in his or her fifties.
At a press conference, Hogan said he had informed Vice-President Mike Pence of the three Maryland COVID-19 cases. Pence is leading the Trump administration's federal coronavirus response effort. Hogan also alerted Montgomery County officials, including Montgomery County Public Schools Superintendent Jack Smith. The state's Emergency Operations Center has been activated, Hogan said.
Shortly afterward, MCPS released its own statement, which emphasized in boldface that schools will not be closed for coronavirus Friday. The statement said that there is no evidence the three patients, who Hogan said are under quarantine, were in contact with MCPS students since returning from their overseas travel. However, MCPS did say they are preparing for the real possibility that schools will have to close for an undetermined period if the pandemic continues to worsen.
"This is exactly what our state has been actively and aggressively been preparing for," Hogan said. He said this will allow the state's emergency offices to increase cooperation and coordination with federal and local officials. "We encourage all Marylanders not to panic," the Maryland Emergency Management Agency tweeted. MEMA conducted a coronavirus preparedness conference call with emergency managers from local jurisdictions around the state Thursday.
County Executive Marc Elrich is scheduled to give an update on the coronavirus cases at 10:00 AM this morning. Hogan will hold his own press conference at the same time. How much more detail either will give regarding the current cases is unclear. There are increasing calls from the public to know which public establishments, and parts of the county, the three infected people may have spread the virus in over the many days between their return from overseas and yesterday's positive test results. No one expects the names and addresses of the individuals to be released, of course, but simply to know whether they may have been exposed to the virus.
Meanwhile, the EPA released an official list of disinfectants that kill coronavirus, or prevent its spread. Panic buying of such products, along with bottled water, paper goods and other necessities, continues. Can't find hand wipes or hand sanitizer at your nearby stores? Here is a recipe for how to make hand sanitizer disinfectant at home, using vodka or rubbing alcohol (although the latter is also hard to find in many stores, as well).
Thursday, March 5, 2020
Custom Ink opening Rockville location
Custom Ink plans to open its third Maryland location in Rockville this summer. The custom apparel and accessories store will be in Congressional Plaza on Rockville Pike, between Honeyfish Poke and Cartoon Cuts.
"From the softball teams at Dogwood Park to the medical programs at the NIH and the students at Montgomery College, Rockville is built around community,” Director of Store Operations Amanda Hanlon said in a statement Wednesday. “Custom Ink believes that every group can unite its members through the power of custom gear, and we’re delighted to open a local showroom in Rockville to help build that community bond.”
Photo courtesy Custom Ink
"From the softball teams at Dogwood Park to the medical programs at the NIH and the students at Montgomery College, Rockville is built around community,” Director of Store Operations Amanda Hanlon said in a statement Wednesday. “Custom Ink believes that every group can unite its members through the power of custom gear, and we’re delighted to open a local showroom in Rockville to help build that community bond.”
Photo courtesy Custom Ink
Wednesday, March 4, 2020
7-Eleven Montgomery Mall opening soon - here's a sneak peek (Video+Photos)
The new 7-Eleven store inside Westfield Montgomery Mall will be opening very soon. But a lot of the digital screens and equipment like the soda dispenser are already lit up and running inside. The signage is up on the exterior, as well. This store could have a big advantage over other 7-Eleven locations if the coronavirus gets out of control, as mall tenants do not have germ-laden doors you must handle to enter and exit, a good way to keep COVID-19 off your coffee cup.
Tuesday, March 3, 2020
Gordon Biersch closed at Rockville Town Square, Buffalo Wild Wings temporarily closed
Gordon Biersch has closed at Rockville Town Square, perhaps the deepest blow to the struggling property so far. And a temporary closure of the neighboring Buffalo Wild Wings was providing another unneeded jump scare for RTS patrons Monday night. It turns out the chicken wing chain has only closed this location through this Thursday, for "equipment upgrades and installation."
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Buffalo Wild Wings is temporarily closed at Rockville Town Square; it will reopen Friday |
Both restaurants have remained highly popular even as some of the center's longest-standing anchors have departed in recent years. The Rockville Gordon Biersch was dark Monday night. Large Home Depot packing boxes could be seen inside. A sign in the window thanked longtime customers, and directed GB fans to their not-so-convenient Annapolis location.
The closure is another body blow to the County's cratered nightlife scene, which collapsed in the wake of the Montgomery County Council's disastrous Nighttime Economy Task Force debacle, which saw eighteen nightspots shutter in downtown Bethesda alone. Gordon Biersch's demise is a rare one that isn't the direct result of County Council incompetence, however. The chain has closed many other locations, as well. Finnegan's Wake on Gibbs Street now finds itself the beneficiary of one fewer nightlife choice at RTS, as they gear up for their biggest day of the year, St. Patrick's Day.
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