USA Today - 27.03.2020

(Darren Dugan) #1

Quarantine hair care:


For some, it’s no joke


Salons are “nonessential businesses”?
Their clients would not agree. In Life

January 1967 March 2020
JIM SERGENT AND GEORGE PETRAS/USA TODAY; SOURCE Department of Labor

MARCH 28, 2009
665,

MARCH 26
3,283,

Weekly jobless claims


MARCH 21, 2009
661,

MARCH 7, 2009
660,

FEB. 21, 2009
655,

APRIL 4, 2009
653,

This week’s
claims are
almost equal
to the
worst
weeks

jobless claims

5th highest
week ever

Combined total

6th highest

7th highest

9th highest

10th highest

5
of the Great
Recession
combined.

Peak jobless claims
Oct. 2, 1982: 695,000 of Great Recession

700,

0

Previous high

3,294,


USA TODAY


THE NATION'S NEWS | $2 | WEEKEND | MARCH 27-29, 2020

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©COPYRIGHT 2020
USA TODAY,
A division of
Gannett Co., Inc.

Taking them out of the crowd
Major League Baseball isn’t kicking off
this weekend, with the season delayed
amid an effort to limit public gatherings.

50K

40K

30K

20K

10K

Average per-game
attendance in 2019
(top 10):
Dodgers

CardinalsYankeesCubs
AngelsRockies
Red SoxBrewersAstrosPhillies

SOURCE ESPN
AMY BARNETTE, DAVID ANESTA/USA TODAY


HOME DELIVERY
1-800-872-0001, USATODAYSERVICE.COM


Most auto dealers open


with ‘no contact’ service


Industry says sales, repairs are essential for
transportation to critical destinations. In Money

Home care


system


caught in a


quandary


In an already strained
industry, patients and
health workers alike
fear what the COVID-
spread means for them.
PHOTO BY JANET WALLACE Nation’s Health

Infections hit new highs

America led the world in coronavirus
cases Thursday with more than 82,
going into the weekend and more
than 1,180 deaths. New York remains
the epicenter with about 37,000 peo-
ple who have tested positive. Known
infections are almost guaranteed to
rise amid more testing. The global
death toll stood at more than 23,
and over 523,000 infections.
Markets rebound

U.S. stocks notched their first three-
day rally in six weeks in response to
progress on the stimulus package
while the outbreak in China showed
signs of containment. The Dow Jones
Industrial Average climbed 6.4% to
close at 22,552.17. The Standard &
Poor’s 500 added 6.2%. It was the
strongest three-day gain since 1931.
Waves of jail releases

Fearing that the virus could wreak
havoc in jails, counties across the USA
released hundreds of vulnerable in-
mates, an unprecedented action that
comes with risks of balancing public

health with community safety.

Risk to newborns
New guidance from the CDC and doc-
tors says pregnant women who be-
come infected or are exposed to the
illness may need to be separated from
their newborns for a week or more. It
is not known whether pregnant wom-
en are more likely to get sick from the
virus.

Trump's leadership
Americans are divided over President
Donald Trump's response to the crisis,
polls show. A Reuters/Ipsos online
survey of more than 4,000 Americans
found 49% approve of his handling of
the virus, while 44% disapprove,
largely along party lines.

No peanuts and Cracker Jack
Major League Baseball was supposed
to celebrate opening day Thursday.
Instead of it being the earliest open-
ing day in baseball history, the sea-
son's start date remains unknown, and
stadiums across America sit empty.

- Matt Leclercq


LATEST DEVELOPMENTS


WASHINGTON – The checks are
coming.
One-time payments of up to $1,
should start going out in the next three
weeks to most Americans who file indi-
vidual tax returns, Treasury Secretary
Steven Mnuchin says.
Those who file joint tax returns will
get up to $2,400.
The payments are part of a $2 trillion
recovery package negotiated by the
White House and congressional leaders
to help Americans – and the economy –


bounce back from the economic fallout
from the coronavirus pandemic. The
Senate passed the package Wednesday,
and the House is expected to approve it
Friday.
The payments will be sent via direct
deposit to Americans who already have
provided the Internal Revenue Service
with their bank account information.
For those who haven’t, the checks will
be mailed.
Some tax experts question whether
the government will be able to meet
its three-week timeline for distributing

See CHECKS, Page 5A

Americans could see checks in 3 weeks


Michael Collins
USA TODAY


People who get checks via mail may
have a longer wait. MATT ROURKE/AP

A secretive cache of medical sup-
plies to save Americans from deadly di-
sasters for years lacked the funding to
prepare for a pandemic as widespread
as the coronavirus, former managers of
the stockpile told USA TODAY.
Overseen by a cadre of scientists,
disease specialists and others at the
U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, the Strategic National Stock-
pile houses roughly $8 billion in inven-
tory for rapid deployment to anywhere
in the United States in under 12 hours.
But its inadequate supply of ventila-
tors, respiratory masks and other per-
sonal protective equipment will leave
critical shortages for U.S. hospitals
scrambling to respond to the mounting
coronavirus pandemic.
New York state requested 30,
ventilators, and New York City alone
asked for 15,000 of them, as well as for 3
million N95 masks. California has re-
quested 10,000 ventilators and 20 mil-
lion N95 masks.
The stockpile had just 16,600 of the
breathing machines and an estimated
12 million N95 masks at the start of the
pandemic – not enough for those two
states, much less the rest of the coun-
try.
Year after year, former managers
say, they were forced to choose be-
tween spending its annual budget –
which for the past six year has aver-

US failed to


keep medical


stockpile


well funded


Donovan Slack
and Dinah Voyles Pulver
USA TODAY

See STOCKPILE, Page 4A

USA TODAY INVESTIGATION


Layoffs are skyrocketing to unprece-
dented levels as the coronavirus upends
the U.S. economy.
The number of Americans filing ini-
tial applications for unemployment
benefits jumped nearly twelvefold to a
record 3.28 million last week, the Labor
Department said Thursday, offering the
most vivid evidence yet of the pandem-
ic’s widespread damage to the economy.
The total was well above the 1.5 mil-
lion claims economists forecast, ac-
cording to the median estimate of those
surveyed by Bloomberg. Workers file
claims for unemployment benefits
when they lose their jobs.
“A definite and unmistakable sign the


United States has entered a recession,”
Bank of the West Chief Economist Scott
Anderson wrote in a note to clients.
The pandemic has set off the most
abrupt near-shutdown of the economy
in history. Many restaurants, shops,
movie theaters, sports arenas and other
gathering spots across the country sud-
denly closed their doors or scaled back

CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC ECONOMY


Record 3.3 million file


unemployment claims


Economist concerned that ‘layoffs are just starting’


Paul Davidson, Josh Peter
and Charisse Jones

USA TODAY


See JOBLESS, Page 5A

Restaurants and other
businesses have closed
to contain the spread of
the coronavirus. GEOFF
BURKE/USA TODAY NETWORK

“Definite and unmistakable


sign the United States has


entered a recession.”
Scott Anderson
Chief economist, Bank of the West
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