Tuesday, April 16, 2024
    
 
  Local News     Videos     Sports  
 
 
close
Officials Urge Calm as People’s Lives Get Put on Hold
Loading
It’s easy to achieve social distancing while snowshoeing. And you can get in your car, drive to the trailhead, get back in your car and drive home without touching a thing that someone else might have touched.
 
 
Click to Listen
Monday, March 16, 2020
 

STORY AND PHOTO BY KAREN BOSSICK

Hailey Mayor Martha Burke tried to reassure her community Sunday in the wake of news that two Blaine County women have tested positive for coronavirus.

Burke said measures being taken by the Blaine County School District to close schools were precautionary and should not cause alarm.

She was not the only official urging people not to panic.

Idaho State Police had to quell rumors that Idaho planned to close its borders to Washington and Oregon.

And Gov. Brad Little asked Gem State residents not to hoard food: “There is no shortage of food. And the water supply is clean and safe to drink.”

Little declined to close all schools in the state, as fellow governors in Oregon, Washington and elsewhere have done. But most Treasure Valley schools announced they would close for two weeks beginning today.

There was no new information on Sunday about the two Blaine County women who were revealed to have tested positive on Saturday.

One, in her 50s, experienced mild symptoms and is at home self-isolating. The other—in her 70s—was hospitalized but is recovering.

It is apparent that some valley residents are exercising more caution following the news of the positive tests. In several cases Sunday people could be seen practicing social distancing even while out taking walks.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, stressed how important social distancing is on Sunday as he made the round of Sunday morning TV shows. Young people in particular aren’t practicing it because they believe the risk to them is minimal and they don’t realize they can be carries to at-risk populations, he said.

State Epidemiologist Christine Hahn estimates that between 15 percent and 35 percent of Idaho’s population will contract the illness. Given what’s happened so far, about 80 percent of those should have mostly mild symptoms.

The average age of those who have died so far is 80; the mortality rate is 2.6 percent in the United States and 3.6 percent worldwide.

 

~  Today's Topics ~


The Liberty Theatre Unveils Upcoming Season
         
Metropolitan Opera to Screen La Rondine
         
Idaho Centennial Trail Presentation Looks at Some of Idaho’s Most Beautiful Country
 
    
ABOUT US

The only online daily news media service in the Wood River Valley. We are the community leader, publishing 7 days a week. Our publication features current news articles, local sports and engaging video content in Sun Valley, Idaho.

Karen Bossick / Michael Hobbs
info@eyeonsunvalley.com
208-720-8212


Leisa Hollister
Chief Marketing Officer
leisahollister@gmail.com
208-450-9993


P.O. Box 1453, Ketchum, ID 83340

© Copyright 2022 Eye on Sun Valley