Again I don't necessarily think that she meant theme parks specifically. I think she/he was just speaking in general terms.Actually, it's movement between the states that is covered. Attending Theme parks oddly didn't make the list.
Again I don't necessarily think that she meant theme parks specifically. I think she/he was just speaking in general terms.Actually, it's movement between the states that is covered. Attending Theme parks oddly didn't make the list.
Freedom of assemblyActually, it's movement between the states that is covered. Attending Theme parks oddly didn't make the list.
Freedom of assembly
how convenientThere is, in fact, a right to freedom of assembly. It is, as a matter of law, retractable in times of public emergency--and was thoroughly litigated during the Spanish flu.
Again I have hard time understanding the fear so many have over a disease with as of today they say has a 98.54 % survival rate. I was always under the impression the original stay at home to slow the spread was to gain control so hospitals would be prepared. All info points that we are at the point so it's time to resume normal life.
When the peak date moves out it means Florida is better at flattening the curve. The good news is we won’t have more ICU patients at peak than we have ICU beds. The bad news is our peak moves out.Might have something to due with Florida once again moving it's peak date, this time back from April 21st to May 6th?https://www.wfla.com/news/by-the-nu...s-peak-resource-date-moved-back-to-early-may/
I hope I'm wrong but I have a feeling Florida will be studied for years on how not to handle a Pandemic.
Well, the Declaration of Independence gives us the right to Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness, which means the Happiest Place of Earth is a civil right. (I am aware of the two technical issues with my statement)
The 3 phase plan specifically discusses the small percentage of vulnerable people and ask for them to remain safe and at home. Sometimes what is good for the group is good for the individual.The questions have currently shifted from hospitals being prepared and ventilator supplies to moving on with having proper testing protocols. It won't be time to return to any sort of normalcy until there is rapid and accurate testing available in sufficient amounts. The fear of this virus is unique based on its' potential high infection rate even while people may be asymptomatic. Even with a high survival rate, without proper testing in place across the country (not state by state), someone could visit WDW, contract the virus and spread it back home being asymptomatic. Meanwhile the small percentage of vulnerable people who were unknowing infected could end up on ventilators a or potentially die. I'm sure people done't want to intentionally put others at risk with this virus, but without proper testing in place at airports and back home (not just at WDW) that's just what could happen. It's not the high percentage of people who can weather this virus, it's the vulnerable who can catch this due to no fault of their actions.
I'm not saying things need to stay closed forever, but large places like WDW should probably stay closed until we have proper testing protocols set up in all areas people will be travelling from ... and that may be a long while off.
There is not a strict two-week timeline, but there is a possible two-week timeline. That is encouraging.The guidelines don’t recommend a strict two-week, two-week, two-week timeline. Rather, Phase I is the opening of places where social distancing can be enforced by the venue; i.e., restaurants can space tables far apart, movie theaters can sell every other seat in every other row. After beginning Phase I, the State is then recommended to stabilize the inevitable rise in COVID cases, re-flatten the curve, and after cases start to fall again and decline for two more weeks, then they can start Phase II. Phase II is the opening of essential services where social distancing cannot practically be strictly enforced, such as schools and daycares. Then again, the State manages the rise in cases, flattens the curve, and waits for two weeks of decline. Only then should Phase III start, which includes nonessential mass gathering venues where enforced social distancing is impractical; so, Disney.
I think it is extraordinarily unlikely that following this plan, there is a straight-line, week-over-week reduction in cases that gives Disney the confidence to reopen in June. I’m not an epidemiologist and don’t have a crystal ball, but I think the best case scenario is 6-10 weeks between phases because managing a surge and destabilizing between each phase is part of the plan. So sometime August-October if Phase I starts May 1 everything goes really well.
ETA: Places like Disney Springs could conceivably be Phase I, especially the restaurants. I would think the resorts could be Phase II with reduced capacity. So the parks themselves would be Phase III.
Well then, let me pursue it!It doesn't guarantee happiness. Just the pursuit of it.
And what better place to do it!!Well then, let me pursue it!
There’s so much talk about the phases, but not a word about the gating criteria required in order to move into each phase. It’s not an automatic start at phase one and run through the phases.. states must meet the criteria and hold the criteria in order to progress.
Where some states will fall short of even attaining phase one will be the ability to test both symptomatic (already being done) and asymptomatic persons - then doing contact tracing/tracking for all who test positive. In many places contact tracing has been hit or miss and will need to be tightened up on. I’m not saying it’s impossible - far from it.. but there is still work to be done if phase one is to be rolled out May 1st
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The 3 phase plan specifically discusses the small percentage of vulnerable people and ask for them to remain safe and at home. Sometimes what is good for the group is good for the individual.
There is no better placeAnd what better place to do it!!