Positive COVID-19 cases increase to 261 in Kansas

A map showed the spread of positive COVID-19 cases in Kansas. (KDHE map)

The number of positive COVID-19 cases in Kansas increased to 261 on Saturday morning, and in Wyandotte County, to 53, according to figures from the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.

The numbers include five deaths in the state of Kansas, three of which were in Wyandotte County. Two deaths have been reported in Johnson County, which had 80 COVID-19 cases on Saturday, according to the KDHE website.

On Friday, KDHE reported 202 positive cases, showing an increase of 59 cases in one day. Fifty of the positive COVID-19 patients have been hospitalized since the start of this pandemic. The age range statewide is 7 to 95, with a median age of 53.

The Wyandotte County COVID-19 website is reporting 47 positive cases on Saturday, with an additional 38 possible self-reported cases. Twenty-three Wyandotte County patients are hospitalized with COVID-19, according to the website report.

Gov. Laura Kelly earlier on Saturday announced a statewide “stay-at-home” order starting Monday and continuing through April 19. It will be similar to a “stay-at-home” order that started Tuesday in Wyandotte County and continues through April 23.

Private labs have tested 183 of the positive cases in Kansas, while the state’s Kansas Health and Environmental Lab has tested 78 of the cases. Total negative cases for Kansas are at 3,671. It is a positive test rate of 6.6 percent, which is higher than the earlier 4.5 percent test rate.

Other counties with five or more cases include Coffey, 5; Douglas (Lawrence area), 23; Franklin, 6; Leavenworth, 15; Reno, 5; Sedgwick (Wichita area), 33; and Shawnee (Topeka area), 7.

Also on Saturday, the KDHE added two states, Louisiana and Colorado, to the travel quarantine list. Anyone who has traveled there and is returning today, March 27, will need to quarantine for 14 days, according to KDHE. Previously only some counties in Colorado were included.

The quarantine list that was previously announced included anyone who traveled to California, Florida, New York and Washington state on or after March 15; anyone who traveled to Illinois or New Jersey on or after March 23; anyone who traveled on a cruise ship or river cruise on or after March 15; and anyone who traveled internationally on or after March 15.

Those who had close contact with a positive COVID-19 case have been quarantined for 14 days.

The quarantines do not apply to public health, hospital and clinic workers and those who are in “critical infrastructure sectors.”

The Kansas COVID-19 website is at
https://govstatus.egov.com/coronavirus.


The UG’s COVID-19 response website is at
https://alpha.wycokck.org/Coronavirus-COVID-19-Information.


COVID-19 information from the CDC is at https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-nCoV/index.html.

The KDHE list of positive COVID-19 cases in Kansas counties. (KDHE chart)
A graph on the Unified Government COVID-19 website showed the increase of positive cases here. (UG COVID-19 website)

Extend your garden season

Cloches can help you plant earlier and harvest later, extending the growing season.
(Photo courtesy of Gardener’s Supply Company)

by Melinda Myers

No matter where you garden there never seems to be enough time to grow all the fresh vegetables desired.

Planting earlier or just providing plants with some added warmth on chilly days and nights can reduce the time from planting to harvest. Southern gardeners will enjoy the additional time for harvesting heat-sensitive plants before the stifling heat moves in and plants begin to decline.

Prepare the soil as soon as it can be worked. Cover the prepared soil with clear plastic, row covers or high tunnels for several weeks when planting earlier than normal. This warms the soil for planting and helps germinate many of the weed seeds. Lightly cultivate to remove the young weed seedlings without bringing more weed seeds to the surface. You’ll be pulling fewer weeds throughout the growing season.

Once the garden is planted, enlist some season-extending helpers (https://www.gardeners.com/buy/gardening/season-extending/). Homemade and commercial cloches, cold frames and row covers can help you plant earlier and harvest later in the season.

Row covers made of spun fabrics let air, light, and water through while keeping the plants warm. Anchor the fabric with landscape pins, stones, boards, or other heavy items. Leave enough slack in the fabrics for the plants to grow. Lighter weight garden fabrics also protect plants from insect pests like cabbage worms and bean beetles.

Garden covers take this method one step further. These structures fit over plantings in the garden, raised beds or elevated planters. Look for those with durable greenhouse fabric covers that let water in and keep excess heat out. These types of structures protect plants from cold and wind, speeding up your harvest by as much as 25%.

Raise the roof on these structures with high tunnels and plant protection tents. These are perfect for growing tall plants like tomatoes. As temperatures rise, the tops can be ventilated or in some cases replaced with a mesh that keeps out insects and critters, while providing plants enough room to reach full size.

Or maybe you just can’t wait for that first red ripe tomato and only want to jump start a row of greens. Garden cloches have long been used for this purpose. They capture the sun’s warmth to protect plants from frosty weather. Gardener’s Supply Company’s Early Season Row Cloche Set allows you to expand your protection to the desired size. These clear PVC plant protectors have water wells to capture rainwater and gently disperse it to the plants below and vents for managing the temperature.

Further boost your tomato harvest with red plastic mulch, red tomato teepees and tomato boosters. University researchers found using red plastic mulch increased the individual fruit size and weight and overall tomato harvest by as much as 20 percent. They found the red plastic mulch reflected certain growth-enhancing wavelengths of light back onto the plants.

With a bit of extra effort and investment you’ll be harvesting fresh vegetables long before your friends and neighbors. Then be sure to keep these season-extending devices handy to use again in fall. Protecting plants from those first few fall frosts can keep you eating garden-fresh tomatoes, peppers and greens well into winter.

Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening books, including Small Space Gardening. She hosts The Great Courses “How to Grow Anything” DVD series and the Melinda’s Garden Moment TV and radio segments. Myers is a columnist and contributing editor for Birds & Blooms magazine and was commissioned by Gardeners Supply for her expertise to write this article. Her web site is www.MelindaMyers.com.

Gov. Kelly issues statewide ‘stay-at-home’ order until April 19 for Kansas to limit spread of COVID-19

Gov. Laura Kelly announced on Saturday that a temporary stay-at-home order would be implemented for the entire state of Kansas beginning at 12:01 a.m. Monday, March 30, and lasting until at least April 19 because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

In an announcement in Topeka, and carried on the governor’s Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/GovLauraKelly/, the governor announced a “stay-at-home” order similar to the one already in place for Wyandotte, Johnson, Douglas, Leavenworth and Sedgwick counties. Twenty-two other states also have issued temporary “stay-at-home” orders.

Wyandotte County has 47 positive COVID-19 cases and three deaths related to COVID-19 as of Friday, according to information from the Unified Government Health Department. The state of Kansas reported 202 positive COVID-19 cases on Friday morning.

“I know this is hard, and I can’t tell you how much I wish it weren’t necessary,” Gov. Kelly said. “But we have a small window to ensure that Kansas does not suffer the same terrible fate of other hard-hit states like New York and Missouri. We’ve all got to do our part to help stop the spread of the disease. Stay home. Stay Safe.”

More than half the state’s population already is under “stay-at-home” orders, she said.

Under this state order, residents will stay home unless going to work at an essential job, or performing an essential task such as obtaining food, medication or other household necessities. Residents may go out to seek medical care, caring for children, pets and family members. Exercising outside is allowed, six feet apart, but the maximum limit of any group is 10.

There are provisions for businesses and their operation in the new order announced today, that are similar, with some differences in the details, from earlier orders in Wyandotte County. While there are essential businesses and functions specifically mentioned in the order, people in nonessential businesses can continue to work at home if they can.

The state order will supersede all local orders, according to the language in the document, meaning that the Wyandotte County “stay-at-home” orders will no longer be in effect on March 30, but are replaced by the state “stay-at-home” orders. The local orders will still be in effect Saturday and Sunday. When the state order ends April 19, the local orders will resume again if there is still time left on them, such as Wyandotte County’s order, which ends April 23.

State health officials on Friday morning reported that positive COVID-19 cases had climbed to 202 in Kansas, and they projected cases to reach about 900 by March 31 in the state, Gov. Kelly noted.

The Wyandotte County order has been in effect since Tuesday, March 24, with an end date of April 23. The local order will continue after the state order is lifted April 19.

The governor said the state’s first position will be to let Kansans monitor themselves with the “stay-at-home” order, but local law enforcement can act concerning those not staying at home.

About 24,000 people have filed for unemployment in Kansas just in the past week, a rate that is about 12 times higher than the past unemployment numbers, Gov. Kelly said. She commended efforts in the federal stimulus and relief legislation passed Friday to help alleviate the needs of those who are unemployed. Also, action has been taken to extend the number of weeks people are eligible for unemployment benefits.

Gov. Kelly said the state will scale up its COVID-19 testing capacity as quickly as possible. She said there are indications that there are positive cases everywhere, not just in Wyandotte, Johnson and Sedgwick counties.

The state is expected to re-evaluate the order around April 19 to see if it should be extended.

Vulnerable hospitals, including rural hospitals, need more time to prepare, and this order is expected to protect those hospitals and their workers by giving them more time, she said, as well as protecting residents from COVID-19.

Kansas has not received as much personal protective equipment from the federal government as it wants, and the state will continue to press the federal government for more equipment, she said.

At the same time, Kansas is working with private companies in the state to produce more protective equipment, she said.

According to the order, no one will need to carry papers or documents saying they are allowed to perform a function or activity. Law enforcement officers are asked to use their discretion and consider the totality of the circumstances as they determine appropriate enforcement action, according to the state order released today.

Also, prior approval is not required for those listed as performing essential functions in the order. “Those who are uncertain whether they perform functions exempted from the prohibitions of the order may email [email protected] to determine whether their functions are deemed essential,” the order stated. The order specifically lists the functions that are “essential.”

Gov. Kelly’s “stay-at-home” order, Executive Order No. 20-16, is online at https://governor.kansas.gov/executive-order-no-20-16/.

To see the video of Gov. Kelly’s “stay-at-home” announcement, visit Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/GovLauraKelly/.

To see a news release about the governor’s “stay-at-home” order, visit https://governor.kansas.gov/governor-kelly-issues-temporary-statewide-stay-home-order-in-ongoing-effort-to-combat-covid-19/.

More information is on the website of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment at https://govstatus.egov.com/coronavirus.