By Associated Press - Friday, May 22, 2020

AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) - Maine Gov. Janet Mills ordered flags lowered to half-staff Friday as she expressed appreciation for the state’s military veterans - and invoked their courage in the state’s current battle against an unseen enemy.

The governor spoke about Mainers who served in past military conflicts and said Mainers will rise up to the occasion in battling the new coronavirus, which had claimed 75 Mainers as of Friday.

She noted that at least 10 military veterans were among the victims of the new coronavirus in Maine.

“We are facing an enemy that is real but unseen, as sure a killer as any enemy we have ever fought in our national history,” she said. “We are all soldiers in this fight,” she added.

She encouraged Mainers to do their part. She said that includes wearing masks when social distancing isn’t possible.

Flags were being lowered from Friday through Sunday for coronavirus victims. They’ll remain lowered Monday to honor military service members who lost their lives in military service.

In other news related to the pandemic in Maine:

___

THE NUMBERS

Two more people have died and 71 others have tested positive for the new coronavirus in Maine, officials said Friday.

That brings the total number of deaths to 75 and the total number of people who’ve tested positive to 1,948, the Maine Center for Disease Control said.

For most people, the virus causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness including pneumonia, or death. The vast majority recover.

___

UNEMPLOYMENT RATE

Maine labor officials said Friday the state experienced its sharpest surge in unemployment in its history in April as companies shed jobs amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The state had a 10.6% unemployment rate in April, the highest on record, the Maine Department of Labor said. The 7.4 percentage point increase was also the largest for a one- or two-month period under the current methodology, which was adopted in the 1970s, department said.

The trends in Maine were similar to those around the country, which transitioned to widespread stay-at-home orders and social distancing measures in March and April. The U.S. unemployment rate was 14.7%.

The Maine labor department said in a statement the numbers still do not “fully reflect the magnitude of job loss that has occurred,” because the coronavirus pandemic has disrupted the labor market in many ways.

___

HOME SALES DOWN

Sales of single-family homes are also down because of the pandemic, but the value of the homes that sold actually grew last month.

All told, 194 fewer homes were sold in April compared to the previous year for a decrease of about 15%, but the median sales price grew 12% to $235,800 compared to the previous year, according to Maine Listings.

Most real estate transactions take 30 to 45 days to close, so contracts written before the pandemic have now been completed, said Tom Cole, president of the Maine Association of Realtors.

Buyers remain plentiful even though the current inventory of homes is down 19% compared to a year ago.

___

PRISON TESTING

More tests have been completed at the Maine Correctional Center, and a second inmate has tested positive, officials said Friday.

All told, nearly 600 tests have been completed for staff, inmates and contracted vendors, the Department of Corrections said. More than 100 tests were still pending.

Both inmates who tested are in isolation, and their units where they were living prior to be diagnosed were locked down.

___

MAINE CDC DATA

The Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention plans to begin providing more data on the coronavirus soon.

The agency “in the coming days” will begin providing information on new and active cases at the town level, or perhaps even on a more “granular” level than that, said Dr. Nirav Shah, the Maine CDC director. The state currently breaks down the testing data by county.

The agency also will begin posting daily negative test numbers, allowing the calculation of the positive test rate, Shah said.

___

AIR SHOW CANCELED

Organizers announced Friday that the Great State of Maine Air Show has been canceled.

Air show officials were eager to find a way to make the event work, but they were notified that the state’s ban on gatherings greater than 50 people would remain through August.

The air show featuring the Navy Blue Angels and other aerial acts had been scheduled for Aug. 15-16 in Brunswick.

___

This story has been corrected to show that the Maine Center for Disease Control revised the number of deaths to two, not three, for a total of 75, not 76.

Copyright © 2024 The Washington Times, LLC.

Please read our comment policy before commenting.

Click to Read More and View Comments

Click to Hide