https://www.oregonlive.com/coronavirus/2020/11/oregon-governor-orders-2-week-coronavirus-freeze-restricting-bars-and-restaurants-to-takeout-closing-some-businesses.htmlGov. Kate Brown on Friday announced the most extensive set of restrictions since her March stay-home order -- once again closing some businesses and restricting social gatherings -- in an attempt to slow the rapid spread of coronavirus across the state.
She will limit all bars and restaurants to takeout only, close all gyms, prohibit indoor and outdoor gatherings to no more than six people from two different households, limit capacity at grocery stories and pharmacies, and allow churches and faith groups to accommodate indoor crowds no larger than 25.
The statewide “freeze” will be effective next Wednesday and run through Dec. 2.
But during her news conference, Brown said that some counties, including Multnomah County, will remain in the freeze longer. The freeze for the Portland area will be four weeks, she said.
“I want to be honest,” Brown said, adding it was going to be hard.
“We are trying to stop this ferocious virus from spreading even more quickly and far wide, and to save lives.”
Comments
Nor is it four weeks.
Something is majorly off here.
Also, four weeks for Portland which means 12/16.
But during her news conference, Brown said that some counties, including Multnomah County, will remain in the freeze longer. The freeze for the Portland area will be four weeks, she said
For now...
No singing Christmas carols either. Bad. Very bad. Goes against Central Party Planning. Not even "Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer".
Walking around her nursing home Christmas Eve.....
But as for me and Grandpa we believe
She'd been drinking too much eggnog
And we begged her not to go
But she was under Govnah's orders
And she staggered out the door into the snow
When we found her Christmas morning
At the scene of the attack
She had hoof prints on her forehead
And donkey teeth marks on her back
Or great plagirism someone's shit fucko.
Oregon’s 747th COVID-19 death is an 82-year-old woman in Marion County who tested positive on Oct. 26 and died on Nov. 11, in her residence. She had underlying conditions. Average age of death, even with a 38 year old. As I've said, I'm assuming that anyone dying in residence was in terminal hospice with something else.
Oregon’s 748th COVID-19 death is a 77-year-old woman in Multnomah County who tested positive on Oct. 17 and died on Nov. 7, at Providence Portland Medical Center. She had underlying conditions.
Oregon’s 749th COVID-19 death is a 38-year-old man in Marion County who tested positive on Oct. 30 and died on Nov. 6, in his residence. He did not have underlying conditions.
Oregon’s 750th COVID-19 death is an 80-year-old man in Multnomah County who tested positive on Oct. 17 and died on Nov. 7, at Providence Portland Medical Center. He had underlying conditions.
Oregon’s 751st COVID-19 death is an 84-year-old woman in Benton County who tested positive on Oct. 30 and died on Nov. 11, in her residence. She had underlying conditions.
Oregon’s 752nd COVID-19 death is an 87-year-old man in Jackson County who tested positive on Nov. 6 and died on Nov. 10, at Asante Rogue Valley Medical Center in Medford. He had underlying conditions.
Oregon’s 753rd COVID-19 death is an 80-year-old man in Jackson County who tested positive on Nov. 3 and died on Nov. 10 at, Asante Rogue Valley Medical Center in Medford. He had underlying conditions.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.oregonlive.com/coronavirus/2020/11/what-gov-kate-browns-new-dining-freeze-means-for-oregon-restaurants-bars.html?outputType=amp
“This is going to be devastating,” said Katy Connors, the advisory board chair of the Independent Restaurants Alliance of Oregon and the operations director for the Thai restaurant Hat Yai’s two Portland locations. “There are going to be many, many restaurants that won’t be able to survive even a two-week closure.”
According to Connors, the Restaurant Alliance expects 80% of remaining restaurant and bar workers -- a group that once made up some 11% of the state’s labor force -- to be laid off again, this time with “no safety net. What ” Connors worries that a huge new influx of unemployment applications will once again cause significant delays with the Oregon Unemployment Department’s payout system, through which many workers are still waiting to receive checks from the original round of furloughs in March.