President is wild card as shutdown fears grow

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Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle are wondering if they can trust President Trump to sign legislation to keep the government funded and avoid a shutdown before the end of the year.

Republican and Democratic lawmakers say a government shutdown is not off the table and see Trump, who has refused to concede the election, as the main wild card.

White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, who met with Senate Republicans on Wednesday, said the president wants to keep the government funded. But he’s not ruling out the possibility of a year-end shutdown. Continue reading.

Trump Must Go, But He Plans To Kill Grandma First

Team Trump is trying to force our nation’s low-income elderly, blind and disabled out of their own homes and into death trap nursing homes during the coronavirus pandemic.

Joseph Hunt, who has since left the Justice Department, represented the Trump administration in a California lawsuit over Trump efforts to weaken working conditions for low-paid aides who help our nation’s elderly and disabled stay in their homes. The workers, mostly female, do chores like cooking meals, changing adult diapers and helping with baths.

Hunt asked federal Judge Vince Chhabria to throw out the lawsuit brought by California and five other states. Chhabria, an Obama appointee, heard arguments on the case in February but has not yet ruled. Continue reading.

America’s 250,000 covid deaths: People die, but little changes

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Most everybody in town knows that Gladys Maull has been battered this year: Her father, her sister, an aunt, a great-aunt, all dead from covid-19. Maull keeps a sign on her front door: “Please do not come in my house due to covid-19. Thank you.”

Some people just step on in, maskless.

They mean no harm, but masks never caught on in rural Lowndes County, which has Alabama’s highest rate of coronavirus infections. In a place that gave 73 percent of its vote to Joe Biden, the sheriff and the coroner agree that although cases are spiking and deaths are rising, most people share President Trump’s view that masks are a matter of personal choice and that the end of the pandemic is just around the corner. Continue reading.

Capitol’s COVID-19 spike could be bad Thanksgiving preview

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Congress is experiencing a spike in COVID-19 cases among lawmakers while doing exactly what Americans are being warned not to do for Thanksgiving this year: gathering together after traveling from all over the country. 

In the last week alone, seven members of Congress have tested positive for COVID-19, with three others quarantining after exposure. 

Three of those lawmakers with COVID-19 cast floor votes alongside their colleagues this week before learning they had the virus, underscoring the risks for everyone on Capitol Hill when cases in the U.S. are spiking rapidly.

What you need to know about Minnesota’s COVID-19 restrictions

The governor has implemented everything from mask mandates to caps on gatherings to slow the spread of COVID-19. 

Since March, Gov. Tim Walz has issued sweeping executive orders to slow the spread of coronavirus in the state, from business and school closures to a statewide mask mandate required in public indoor spaces and businesses in Minnesota. 

The governor has started to slowly ease restrictions on businesses, schools and Minnesotans’ movements during the public health crisis, but he’s not yet ordered a full reopening of the state. (This FAQ was updated Nov. 18.)

What does Walz’s order say?

The governor let his stay-at-home order — which went into effect on March 28 — expire on May 18. That original order directed Minnesotans to stay home except for essential needs and services or if they worked in critical sectors. Continue reading.

If Congress doesn’t act, 12 million Americans could lose unemployment aid after Christmas

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Deadlines set by Congress early in the pandemic will result in about 12 million Americans losing unemployment insurance by the year’s end, according to a report released Wednesday — a warning about the sharp toll that inaction in Washington could exact on the economic health of both individual households and the economy at large.

According to the report from unemployment researchers Andrew Stettner and Elizabeth Pancotti, those Americans will lose their unemployment benefits the day after Christmas — more than half of the 21.1 million people currently on the benefits — due to deadlines Congress chose when it passed the Cares Act in March amid optimism the pandemic would be short-lived.

Another 4.4 million people have already exhausted their benefits this year, according to Stettner and Pancotti, who wrote the report for the Century Foundation, a public policy research group. Continue reading.

Adopting mask mandates, some GOP governors give up the gospel of personal responsibility

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A growing number of Republican governors, including some who had written off mask mandates as unenforceable or unacceptable to freedom-loving Americans, are now requiring people to cover their faces in public — a response to escalating coronavirus outbreaks overwhelming hospitals across the country.

After eight months of preaching personal responsibility in place of mandates, these governors have brought their states in line with much of the world by instituting the simple requirement backed by science but, in the United States, shot through with politics.

Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, who once dismissed mask mandates as “feel good” measures, issued a limited order this week, as her state topped 2,000 coronavirus deaths. The state’s senior U.S. senator, 87-year-old Charles E. Grassley, said Tuesday he tested positive for the virus but reported “feeling good.” And a bipartisan group of Midwestern governors, in a joint video address, stressed that widespread distribution of a vaccine was a long way off and advised their constituents that returning to normal sometime next year first required surviving the holidays. Continue reading.

Pfizer: COVID-19 vaccine testing shows 95 percent efficacy, emergency use application planned ‘within days’

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Pfizer on Wednesday announced that final data on its coronavirus vaccine candidate showed it to be 95 percent effective, adding that the company would be applying for Federal Drug Administration (FDA) emergency authorization “within days.” 

Pfizer said that the vaccine candidate, developed with German company BioNTech, is 95 percent effective “against COVID-19 beginning 28 days after the first dose.” 

The company last week said that interim data revealed its vaccine to be 90 percent effective.  Continue reading.

Rep. Zack Stephenson (HD36A) Update: November 19, 2020


Dear Neighbors,

A big thank you to everyone for allowing me to continue working for our Champlin and Coon Rapids communities for another two-year term. Working together-regardless of party affiliation- to find common ground for our families is my top priority. Now more than ever, we need to make this commitment to Minnesotans, especially as we’ll once again be the only divided state legislature in the country. Our to-do list is large, and the Legislature must find solutions to address public health and economic relief. Hospitals are under enormous strain, homelessness is increasing, Minnesotans are struggling to afford their mortgages and rent, and small businesses continue to struggle during a global pandemic. The Legislature will also be tasked with balancing a state budget. Your feedback is critical in these endeavors.

Here is an update from the Capitol:

Continue reading “Rep. Zack Stephenson (HD36A) Update: November 19, 2020”

Rep. Andrew Carlson (HD50B) Update: November 19, 2020

Dear Neighbors,

I hope you and yours are staying safe and healthy as Minnesota experiences its most dangerous days yet in the COVID-19 pandemic. The surge in cases and deaths have taken place across the midwest, and indeed the country, with many states reverting to the measures we saw last spring. Though the promising news of effective vaccinesgives us hope, the facts are that we still have months to go before they could be distributed in a best-case scenario, and until then measures must be taken to ensure our community stays healthy. 

New COVID-19 Restrictions

Yesterday, following the guidance of the state’s top public health officials, Governor Walz announced the return of familiar measures:

Continue reading “Rep. Andrew Carlson (HD50B) Update: November 19, 2020”