- Joined
- Jan 14, 2018
Here we go again. Utterly disgusting. Glad I don't go many places.
BREAKING NEWS FROM THE CARMEL PINE CONE
November 2, 2021, 2:08 p.m.
STRANGE BUT TRUE — MONTEREY COUNTY MASK MANDATE STARTS FRIDAY
Dear Readers,
What time is it when the CDC says the coronavirus epidemic in Monterey County is twice as bad as state and county officials say?
Time to put on a mask, it turns out, because when the county board of supervisors voted in September to start requiring everyone to wear face masks indoors, they made the mandate dependent on the CDC's reporting of new cases in the county, with a threshold of at least 50 new cases per 100,000 residents per week.
Today, the CDC said that Monterey County had 85.7 new cases per 100,000 residents over the last week, well over the 50-case minimum, which means the county's mask mandate will begin Friday and stay in effect for at least 30 days. (For complete details about the new facemask rules, click here.)
However, there's a problem for anyone trying to understand why the mask mandate is needed, or for any journalist trying to explain it, because not only is the delta variant said to be receding across the country, the California Department of Public Health says Monterey County's rate of new cases is currently 5.1 per 100,000 residents per day, or 35.7 per week — less than half of what the CDC says. And the Monterey County health department says the rate is 4.8 cases per 100,000 residents per day, or 33.6 per week — which is only about 40 percent of the CDC number.
Meanwhile, all other metrics also indicate that, while there's been a slight uptick in cases lately, the county's epidemic is at a low level, with county health reporting only 11 Covid-positive patients among the county's 4 hospitals (there were more than 200 in early January), along with a 7-day test positivity rate in the county of 2.4 percent. Also, most zip codes in the county are reporting very low levels of new infections (see our Cases and Rates by Zip Code chart below).
Why does the CDC say we have much higher levels of new infections than other sources? And why did the county suddenly decide to make imposition of a new mask mandate dependent on CDC data, when it's always relied on local data before? We have tried to get answers to these questions, but no luck so far. (Fuck the CDC and fuck the Monterey County Board of Supervisors. Both utterly useless. - JS)
BREAKING NEWS FROM THE CARMEL PINE CONE
November 2, 2021, 2:08 p.m.
STRANGE BUT TRUE — MONTEREY COUNTY MASK MANDATE STARTS FRIDAY
Dear Readers,
What time is it when the CDC says the coronavirus epidemic in Monterey County is twice as bad as state and county officials say?
Time to put on a mask, it turns out, because when the county board of supervisors voted in September to start requiring everyone to wear face masks indoors, they made the mandate dependent on the CDC's reporting of new cases in the county, with a threshold of at least 50 new cases per 100,000 residents per week.
Today, the CDC said that Monterey County had 85.7 new cases per 100,000 residents over the last week, well over the 50-case minimum, which means the county's mask mandate will begin Friday and stay in effect for at least 30 days. (For complete details about the new facemask rules, click here.)
However, there's a problem for anyone trying to understand why the mask mandate is needed, or for any journalist trying to explain it, because not only is the delta variant said to be receding across the country, the California Department of Public Health says Monterey County's rate of new cases is currently 5.1 per 100,000 residents per day, or 35.7 per week — less than half of what the CDC says. And the Monterey County health department says the rate is 4.8 cases per 100,000 residents per day, or 33.6 per week — which is only about 40 percent of the CDC number.
Meanwhile, all other metrics also indicate that, while there's been a slight uptick in cases lately, the county's epidemic is at a low level, with county health reporting only 11 Covid-positive patients among the county's 4 hospitals (there were more than 200 in early January), along with a 7-day test positivity rate in the county of 2.4 percent. Also, most zip codes in the county are reporting very low levels of new infections (see our Cases and Rates by Zip Code chart below).
Why does the CDC say we have much higher levels of new infections than other sources? And why did the county suddenly decide to make imposition of a new mask mandate dependent on CDC data, when it's always relied on local data before? We have tried to get answers to these questions, but no luck so far. (Fuck the CDC and fuck the Monterey County Board of Supervisors. Both utterly useless. - JS)