Category: Coronavirus

Lawmakers: Coronavirus Could ‘Doom’ Much of Legislative Session

UPDATED — Alabama lawmakers are expected to be back in Montgomery March 31, but how long they’ll be able to work and what they’ll be able to do in the middle of a public health emergency is in question.

“I can’t say in the present situation we can pass budgets,” Senate President Pro Tem Del Marsh, R-Anniston, told Alabama Daily News on Monday. “The big question is, how long will this last? It’s one thing for a couple of weeks; It’s another if it lasts for months.”

As local and state governments try to stop the spread of the coronavirus and businesses slow or shutter temporarily, the impact on state revenue is expected to be significant. How bad that will be will depend on how long people are asked to stay home, state leaders said this week. Read more.

‘This Is a Matter of Life and Death,’ Jeffco Medical Officer Says in Ordering New Closures

UPDATED — Calling it a matter of life and death, the chief medical officer of Jefferson County called for the closure of most retail stores beginning at 5 p.m. today.

Those include furniture and home furnishing stores; clothing and shoe stores; jewelry; luggage and leather goods stores; department stores; sporting goods; hobby book and music stores; and florists. Read more.

Slam-Packed Stores and Ghost Towns Both Signs of Life Under COVID-19

Life under COVID-19 is a cognitive dissonance-inspiring trip on the merry-go-round

Scenes flashing by run the gamut from grocery stores that are swamped with people to isolated city streets where a lone person or two are walking.

“There are two parallel but different worlds happening,” a Facebook commenter said. “You have a lot of folks staying home and then there is another group still going to work and living life not that much differently.” Read more.

Crisis Highlights Digital Divide in Alabama

As the state grapples with education, government and industry closures in response to the coronavirus, the digital divide across the state is probably the most apparent it’s ever been. Much of rural Alabama doesn’t have the infrastructure to take broadband Internet into homes.

“You have one-fifth of the state population that doesn’t have access,” Sen. Clay Scofield, R-Guntersville, said.

The chasm is perhaps most evident in schools, where administrators are faced with decisions when some of the students can partake in online learning and some cannot. Read more.