COVID-19 cases increase; Wyandotte County plans to reopen to ‘red zone’ on Monday

Wyandotte County reported 1,038 total COVID-19 cases on Saturday, including 38 new cases. The number of deaths and hospitalizations was the same. (UG COVID-19 webpage)
Kansas reported 6,751 positive cases on Saturday, an increase of 250 cases since Friday. (KDHE map)

Wyandotte County reported 1,038 total positive COVID-19 cases on Saturday, an increase of about 38 cases since Friday.

There were no increases in hospitalizations or deaths, according to the Unified Government Health Department’s COVID-19 webpage.

Kansas reported 6,751 positive cases on Saturday, an increase of 250 cases. There were 157 total deaths, an increase of five since Friday, according to the Kansas Department of Health and Environment figures.

The UG Health Department has a guide to reopening in Wyandotte County. For more information, visit https://wyandotte-county-covid-19-hub-unifiedgov.hub.arcgis.com/pages/restartwyco.

Reopening ‘red zone’ begins Monday

Dr. Allen Greiner, chief medical officer for the Unified Government, has loosened stay-at-home restrictions effective at 11:59 p.m. May 10 in Wyandotte County.

The loosening of restrictions means that Wyandotte County residents and businesses will now enter the red zone of the ReStart WyCo Road to Recovery plan released on May 1.

The red zone phase of the plan becomes effective at midnight after Sunday night, and it will last from May 11 until at least May 25.

Each phase, or zone, of the ReStart WyCo plan will be in place for at least 14 days because the incubation period for COVID-19 is 14 days, according to the UG Health Department. This allows the UG Health Department to monitor the population for further outbreaks of the virus, for the duration of one incubation period.

What is the red zone?

The red zone is a phase listed in the Road to Recovery guidance document prepared by the ReStart WyCo committee formed by Mayor David Alvey. The ReStart WyCo committee is made up of health professionals and business representatives from throughout Wyandotte County.

The Road to Recovery document provides guidance on a four-phased approach to reopening various public-facing businesses and organizational sectors of the community in a way that ensures a high degree of safety is maintained for everyone, according to the health department.

The ReStart WyCo Road to Recovery document includes sector-specific guidance for a range of businesses, including offices, retail, restaurants, and much more. The intent of the guidance is to provide practical steps that businesses can take to protect employees and customers while re-opening in a safe and controlled manner.

Each phase provides a different level of guidance to help save lives and reduce transmission of the COVID-19 virus. To view or download the Road to Recovery document, visit the ReStart WyCo Hub at wycokck.org/COVID-19.

“As we enter the red zone, actions like social distancing and excellent personal hygiene will continue to be effective tools to help keep everyone safe. It’s important to understand that just as we can move toward fewer restrictions in our day-to-day activities, if the data shows it’s needed, we may have to return to more restrictions for limited periods of time. Our goal is to re-open our community step-by-step, while not compromising the health of any of our residents,” Dr. Allen Greiner, chief medical officer, said.

The red zone relaxes stay-at-home requirements but recommends the highest level of caution for vulnerable community members while providing guidance on how some businesses may open safely with certain restrictions.

Examples of loosened restrictions for some sectors:

• General population
o Outdoor activities in groups of up to 10 are allowed with social distancing
• Retail
o In-store pickup is allowed with social distancing, but delivery and curbside pickup are encouraged when possible
o Common areas should be adjusted to maintain 6 feet of distance between workers
• Offices
o Employees should be allowed to work from home where possible
o Office space should be adjusted to maintain 6 feet of distance between workers
• Construction
o All construction where workers can easily maintain 6-foot social distancing is allowed
• Mass sporting events
o May be held without fans physically attending

Detailed information and categories concerning bars, exercise venues, places of worship, manufacturing, and more is available in the ReStart WyCo Road to Recovery document. To view or download the Road to Recovery document, visit the ReStart WyCo Hub at wycokck.org/COVID-19.

Reducing exposure remains the best defense

If businesses can continue to operate remotely, they are strongly encouraged to do so. COVID-19 remains a threat and minimizing exposure by working remotely continues to be a recommended strategy for limiting the spread of the virus, the health department stated.

The ReStart WyCo guidance retains more restrictive recommendations throughout the reopening phases for vulnerable populations, including people over 60 years old, immune-compromised, or with underlying medical conditions.

How to know when it is time to change zones?

Mayor Alvey and Dr. Greiner have been clear from the beginning that COVID-19 data will dictate when it is safe for the community to advance from zone to zone, the health department stated. Moving from one zone to the next will involve carefully considering:

• The number of hospitalizations and deaths in Wyandotte County and surrounding area hospitals over a 14-day period, and
• the percentage of positive tests over a 14-day period.

If, after 14 days, there is a reduction in deaths, hospitalizations, and positive tests, the county will be able to further relax guidance by moving on to the next zone, according to the health department. The recommendation on whether or not to move to the next zone will be provided by Dr. Greiner before May 25. If there is not a reduction in deaths, hospitalizations and positive tests, or if these numbers have increased, Dr. Greiner may recommend staying at the current zone for a period of time, or possibly recommend that we return to an earlier zone.

What are the four zones of the Road to Recovery document?

Unfortunately, COVID-19 continues to spread in Wyandotte County, health officials stated. To protect against the spread of COVID-19 and ensure the safety of everyone in the community, the ReStart WyCo Committee formed by Mayor David Alvey developed sector-specific reopening guidance outlined in the Road to Recovery document.


Stay at Home orders are quite stringent and ask that only essential businesses remain open. There is still a chance we may need to Stay at Home again in the future. The Red Zone is slightly relaxed compared to Stay at Home but is far from “business as usual.” Red Zone still recommends the highest level of caution for vulnerable community members, while also offering guidance on how some businesses may open safely. During Yellow Zone restrictions, more businesses may open, but caution is still required. Green Zone is the least stringent phase and offers few staffing restrictions while still urging some cautions.

  1. Stay at home
    a. This is the zone Wyandotte County has been in since March 24. The stay-at-home period in Wyandotte County will end at 11:59 p.m. May 10. Stay at home requires that only essential businesses remain open.
  2. Red zone
    a. This zone relaxes the stay-at-home requirements but recommends the highest level of caution for vulnerable community members while providing guidance on how some businesses may open safely, but with certain restrictions. Wyandotte County will enter the red zone at midnight after Sunday night and remain in the red zone until at least May 25.
  3. Yellow zone
    a. This zone relaxes stay at home requirements even further while allowing more businesses to open under caution.
  4. Green zone
    a. This is the least stringent zone, though it retains some restrictions on staffing levels, event attendance, in-person dining, and group gatherings

“The last several months have been difficult for Wyandotte County, with many affected by business closures, financial insecurity, or even the loss of friends or family,” Mayor David Alvey said. “While our focus on public health and prevention will continue, we are now also looking to the future, and this shift to the Red Zone on May 11th is a first step in that direction. By continuing to work together, we will restore and reopen our community at the appropriate time and in the right way, overcoming the public health crisis that has threatened so many and altered our way of life.”

Residents or businesses with questions or comments about the Road to Recovery document may contact 311 or visit the ReStart WyCo Hub at wycokck.org/COVID-19.

  • Wyandotte County information from UG Health Department

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

The Kansas COVID-19 website is ahttps://covid.ks.gov/.

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

Information from the CDC is at https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-nCoV/.

Rep. Davids backs bill requiring transparency on small business loan recipients

After calling for the release of the list of businesses that have received emergency small business loans through the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids, D-3rd Dist., and Andy Kim, D-N.J., are introducing a bill to require the Small Business Administration to make that information public.

Rep. Davids and Kim are both members of the House Small Business Committee.

Congress has allocated nearly $700 billion in taxpayer money to help small businesses pay their workers and stay afloat through the PPP. But several reports of large, publicly traded companies receiving these loans ahead of deserving and suffering small businesses have surfaced. Some have even already borrowed funding from their own executives.

“There is no reason why Kansas small business owners should be struggling to access relief loan programs while large corporations with deep pockets have no problem. We should be requiring the SBA to be transparent and make information on businesses receiving these funds public, so Congress can conduct proper oversight and ensure these loan programs reach smaller and less advantaged businesses. Companies that can’t withstand public scrutiny of their businesses dealings while receiving federal taxpayer-funded loans shouldn’t be receiving them at all,” Rep. Davids said in a news release.

“We all know that the SBA’s efforts to help small businesses has been broken, and we won’t be able to fix it until we have enough transparency to see how deep the problems go. This is an important step in making sure the hundreds of billions meant to help keep our small businesses afloat and people in their jobs do just that, instead of enriching publicly traded companies who don’t need the help. I look forward to working with Congresswoman Davids to get the job done for our small business owners,” Rep. Kim said.

The bill will require SBA to publish information on any businesses that receive loans over $1 million, including recipient name, business type, and amount of the loan. It will also require them to publish how much of that loan is forgiven, once that determination is made. More than 20,000 loans for over $1 million have been made so far through the Paycheck Protection Program.

Highest monthly unemployment rate announced since Depression era, and Kansas reports 6,501 COVID-19 cases

Kansas today reported 6,501 positive COVID-19 cases, according to the KDHE. (KDHE map)
New Kansas cases are in blue, while total cases are in yellow in this chart. (KDHE chart)
New COVID-19 hospital admissions in Wyandotte County, by date, through May 2. (KDHE chart)
Wyandotte County disease spread, by date, through May 2. (KDHE chart)

With national unemployment rates at highs not seen since the Great Depression, Gov. Laura Kelly today urged Kansans who have lost their jobs because of the COVID-19 pandemic to file for unemployment.

The worst monthly jobs report since the Great Depression showed 20.5 million jobs lost in April, with a 14.5 percent unemployment rate nationally.

“In the two short months since the coronavirus turned our lives upside down, it’s not only become the leading cause of death in the United States, it has wiped out an entire decade of job growth,” Gov. Kelly said.

A federal unemployment compensation plan provides an additional $600 per week to those who have lost their jobs in the pandemic, she said. The Kansas Department of Labor has paid out over 200,000 of the $600 payments, she said. They began processing on May 6.

Gov. Kelly urged Kansans who are unemployed because of the pandemic, are qualified and have not yet applied, to apply at www.getkansasbenefits.gov/ on certain days: A through G on Sunday, H through M on Monday, N through S on Tuesday and T through Z on Wednesday.

Gov. Kelly also announced an $8.9 million federal grant has been received by Kansas to be used to strengthen early childhood education programs. Funds will be used to keep up the current early childhood educational system, for children from birth to age 5, she said. The pandemic has caused an unprecedented amount of stress in children’s lives, she said.

Dr. Lee Norman, Kansas secretary of health, said Kansas today reported 6,501 COVID-19 cases, an increase of 357 since Thursday, and 152 deaths, an increase of five since Thursday.

Dr. Norman said the state is monitoring 76 clusters of cases, including 31 private companies, 378 cases with four deaths; 22 long-term care facilities with 540 cases and 85 deaths; eight churches with 111 cases and eight; six meatpacking plants with 1,082 cases and two deaths; three group living situations with 41 cases and zero deaths; three correctional facilities with 687 cases and two deaths; and three health care facilities with 22 cases and zero deaths.

Dr. Norman said testing of inmates at Lansing Correctional Facility is now complete, and it appears less than 50 percent have tested positive for COVID-19.

With adequate testing across the state, persons who have symptoms should reach out to their health care providers to get tested, Dr. Norman said.

Dr. Norman said the Batelle device is now at Forbes base in Topeka for reprocessing N95 masks. It is free and open to Kansas health care persons who wear masks as part of their health care work, he said. Hospitals, long-term care facilities, first responders and state agencies may use the reprocessing service. They would go through the county emergency management agency for information.

He said he hoped 10,000 masks a day could be processed.

Dr. Norman also said KDHE and University of Kansas School of Engineering have joined forces to see if COVID-19 can be detected in wastewater. They used a system that had been tested in Massachusetts and the Netherlands.

They took samples from wastewater from small and large cities in Kansas, including Lawrence and Topeka, and detected genetic material in wastewater, matching it with genetic markers for COVID-19. The virus itself does not survive in wastewater and is not a means of transmission, he said.

The testing can be used to see how widespread COVID-19 is in a community, Dr. Norman said.

Disinfection by all Kansas public water suppliers inactivates the virus and drinking water will remain safe for consumption, according to state officials.

State case counts in counties

Wyandotte County reported 1,000 positive COVID-19 cases on Friday, an increase from Thursday. In Wyandotte County, there have been more than 4,300 tests, many at outbreak sites, with a 26 percent testing rate per thousand, according to KDHE.

On Friday, according to the KDHE, Leavenworth County reported a total of 907 confirmed and probable cases, an increase of 20 cases. In Leavenworth County, more than 3,500 persons were tested after an outbreak at the state prison with a testing rate of 42.9 per thousand.

Johnson County reported 583 confirmed and probable cases, an increase of 23, according to the KDHE. There were more than 8,500 persons tested in Johnson County, with a testing rate of 14.2 per thousand.

Eighty-two counties reported confirmed and probable positive cases on Friday, according to KDHE, and some of them included: Ford County (Dodge City area), 1,027; Seward County (Liberal area), 668; Finney County (Garden City area), 677; Sedgwick County (Wichita area), 438; Lyon County (Emporia area), 323; and Shawnee County (Topeka area), 146.

More than 2,600 persons were tested in Ford County, where there are meatpacking plant outbreaks, with a testing rate of 79 per thousand.

In Shawnee County, more than 3,600 persons have been tested, with a testing rate of 20.8 per thousand.

Douglas County (Lawrence area) reported 56 cases, and Riley County (Manhattan area) reported 56 cases, according to the KDHE.

To view the governor’s news conference, visit https://www.facebook.com/GovLauraKelly/videos/728967931256339/?v=728967931256339.

The ReStart WyCo plan is at https://www.wycokck.org/WycoKCK/media/Health-Department/Documents/Communicable%20Disease/COVID19/RestartWYCOGuidanceDocument043020.pdf.

Several Wyandotte County pop-up testing sites are listed at https://wyandotte-county-covid-19-hub-unifiedgov.hub.arcgis.com/pages/what-to-do-if-you-think-you-have-covid-19.

To view the Thursday night UG Commission special session, visit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHutbMMTFN8.

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

The Kansas COVID-19 website is ahttps://covid.ks.gov/.

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

Information from the CDC is at https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-nCoV/.