BPU to stop utility cutoffs

The Kansas City, Kansas, Board of Public Utilities is suspending disconnections, according to an announcement today.

According to BPU officials, the BPU will not disconnect utility service for non-payment as customers and communities are facing potential hardship from the COVID-19 coronavirus. This temporary moratorium includes residential and business customers, according to a spokesman.

David Mehlhaff, BPU spokesman, said the BPU made the decision Friday.

Utilities throughout the Kansas City area are implementing similar policies, he said.

Mehlhaff said they don’t know yet how long the disconnect suspension will last.

“This is new territory and new ground for everyone,” he said.

He said that customers do not have to call to request that they not be disconnected; it will be automatic for residents and businesses. However, customers may call to set up other payment arrangements if they are affected.

He said he hoped people would try to stay as current as they can on their bills, even though they won’t be cut off, because their bill will keep accumulating. He did not want them to get in a bad situation down the road.

The BPU also is trying to implement social distancing. The BPU is offering a lot of alternatives for customers to pay bills other than walking into the BPU lobby at 5th and Minnesota, he said.

The BPU has just eliminated the $2 service fee to use grocery store kiosks to pay the BPU bill, he said.

While the BPU lobby will remain open, he said the BPU is encouraging customers to use other methods, such as online payments at www.BPU.com, payments by phone at 1-855-278-2455 using a credit card or checking or savings account, automatic check withdrawal available by calling 913-573-9190, or sending the BPU payment by mail, using a return envelope provided with the bill.

There is a self-service payment kiosk and payment drop box inside the BPU lobby at 540 Minnesota Ave.

There are grocery store pay site kiosks in the Greater Kansas City area, including five in Wyandotte County grocery stores. Their locations are listed at https://www.bpu.com/portals/0/pdf/billing-kiosk-locations-charts-vers-2.pdf.

If anyone has any BPU billing or customer service questions, customers may call 913-573-9190 and a utility representative will assist. Residential customers who are financially impacted by the COVID-19 outbreak can set up payment arrangements by calling 913-573-9145.

BPU has also undertaken a number of steps to combat the spread of COVID-19, including increased cleaning and disinfection of public facing spaces, which includes BPU’s main Customer Service Lobby located at 540 Minnesota Ave. in Kansas City, Kansas, according to the announcement. These efforts also include making available hand sanitizer at the entrance to the facility as well as hand sanitizing wipes near lobby workstations so both visitors and employees can keep these areas continuously cleaned.

The BPU also is sharing information on the importance of undertaking individual efforts to stop the spread of COVID-19, including handwashing and staying home if sick. The BPU stated it is closely following the Centers for Disease Control’s (CDC) guidelines and recommendations on the steps it can take to help prevent the spread of the virus. BPU will continue to closely monitor this situation and do all it can to protect its customers, employees, and the public, according to the statement.

Gov. Kelly issues order limiting gatherings to stop spread of COVID-19

Gov. Laura Kelly today issued an executive order requiring Kansas to immediately adopt CDC guidelines to stop gatherings of 50 or more for eight weeks.

The response to the COVID-19 outbreak was one in a series of steps the governor has taken in recent days, including declaring a state of emergency and strongly advising public schools to close schools this week.

She said she was meeting later today with representatives of the hospitality and restaurant industry, and business representatives to discuss the situation.

The governor mentioned that some restaurants are implementing new strategies, such as “grab and go” meals, where customers pick up food and then eat at home.

The governor said she also has asked the Kansas Corporation Commission to suspend utility disconnections until April 15. This covers electric, gas and telecom. In the Kansas City area, Evergy already has announced it will suspend disconnections. She said she also is asking other utilities not regulated by KCC to suspend disconnections.

The Kansas City, Kansas, Board of Public Utilities also announced it was suspending disconnections today, for those facing hardship as a result of the coronavirus. The BPU also encouraged customers to use methods other than face-to-face to pay their bills, such as mail, by phone, automatic withdrawals and online payments. There are self-service kiosks located at the BPU lobby and in grocery stores.

The steps the state is taking are designed to flatten the curve of the rise of the COVID-19, the governor said. She encouraged residents to use good handwashing and stay home when they are sick.

Dr. Lee Norman, Kansas health secretary, said there are now 11 COVID-19 patients in Kansas, including three new positive cases last night. So far there have been 342 negative tests, for a rate of about 4.7 percent positive, he said. There are about 150 to 200 tests being done per day by the state.

The three most recent positive cases were people who were exposed to one Johnson County person who was identified as a positive case last week, Dr. Norman said. They were at a social gathering, he said. Johnson County now has eight COVID-19 cases, according to its website.

Dr. Norman said staff members at a nursing home in Wyandotte County where there was a COVID-19 patient all tested negative for COVID-19, and the staff there should be commended for being attentive to safety precautions and practicing good hygiene.

When asked about 125 or more people gathering in the Capitol on a regular basis, Gov. Kelly said the rule applies to people who are congregating together and standing close together. She also urged the Kansas Legislature to get its work done quickly and go home, so that the question is a moot point.

Schools that return to classes next week or after the end of the month will implement more spacing between students, limiting large gatherings. The procedures are in the process of being worked out.

KDHE has a website for more information on COVID-19, at http://www.kdheks.gov/coronavirus.

The Wyandotte County website on COVID-19 is at https://www.wycokck.org/COVID-19.

The CDC also has a COVID-19 website at https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-nCoV/.

More information from the news conference is available from a video on the governor’s Facebook website at https://www.facebook.com/GovLauraKelly/videos/209628907013943/?tn=%2Cd%2CP-R&eid=ARAzcC6SjTj-_03_YaAeP7SD1f9OQPy-WUo_Qo_IVhM4CRKTZpc8nlpC6AD2k3cuB1PWScJD3ez0moSR .

Staff and patients at KCK nursing home test negative for COVID-19

Eighty-five tests on staff and patients at the Life Care Center of Kansas City, the Kansas City, Kansas, nursing home where a COVID-19 patient lived, have come back negative, health officials said today during a virtual news conference held by the University of Kansas Health System.

Dr. Allen Greiner, chief medical officer for the UG Health Department, said during the news conference Monday morning that there also are an additional 25 tests pending at the state health lab.

There has been no link found as of now between the nursing home in Kansas City, Kansas, and other nursing homes in the state of Washington, owned by the same chain, where there were COVID-19 cases reported, Dr. Greiner said.

“We’re still conducting that intensive investigation and we don’t know how that patient was exposed to the virus at all,” Dr. Greiner said. “Because all 85 have now tested negative, we’re looking further for contacts, but there is no reason to believe there is a connection with the Washington facility.”

The patient, who was in his 70s, was at the nursing home, then was transferred to Providence Medical Center last Tuesday for other medical issues, and died there Wednesday. No other COVID-19 cases were reported in Wyandotte County.

Dr. Greiner said some new sites will be coming online with private testing soon, with at least four private labs offering tests.

He added there were 20 individuals in Wyandotte County currently under a 14-day quarantine, and they are being monitored by the Health Department.

The Johnson County Health Department today reported more cases of COVID-19, bringing cases there to eight.

Tammy Peterman, chief operating officer at the University of Kansas Health Systems, outlined several steps taken at the hospital to reduce the spread of COVID-19, including banning all business travel, screening employees returning from travel, expanding work at home and restricting visitors. They are convening a group of hospital leaders to learn from one another.

U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kansas, participated in the news conference, and said it was “likely” that he will vote for a bill that the Senate is considering to provide funding for citizens and employees who are facing economic hardship because of the pandemic. The bill passed the House on Saturday.

He said that there needs to be resources for those who are unable go to to work and are caring for children, and for health care workers. There needs to be a different way to meet the needs of small business workers, he added.

Sen. Moran also said the USDA has told the Senate that it will provide food to schoolchildren who may be receiving meals under the low-income programs, and a process was being developed for the food to be delivered or picked up if school is not in session.

The CDC has stated that crowds should be limited to no more than 50 people in a place, and Dr. Steven Stites of the University of Kansas Health System said that whether or not the state cancels events of more than 50, individuals should take the social responsibility and not go to those events.

“Don’t wait on the government to tell you,” he said.

Dr. Greiner agreed.

“We want folks to avoid crowds,” he said.

He encouraged people to stay more than 6 feet apart, wash their hands, cough into their elbows and avoid crowds.

More information from this video news conference is available online at https://www.facebook.com/kuhospital/videos/894235634348062/.

KDHE has a website for more information on COVID-19, at http://www.kdheks.gov/coronavirus.

The Wyandotte County website on COVID-19 is at https://www.wycokck.org/COVID-19.

The CDC also has a COVID-19 website at https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-nCoV/.