According to a statement from Hays County Judge Ruben Becerra recently released included language that masks were mandatory and included a $1000 fine for businesses, their employees, and customers for each violation.
On Friday, June 19, Becerra walked back the threat of the fine against businesses.
If a positivity rate is too high, that may indicate that the state is only testing the sickest patients who seek medical attention, and is not casting a wide enough net to know how much of the virus is spreading within its communities. A low rate of positivity in testing data can be seen as a sign that a state has sufficient testing capacity for the size of their outbreak and is testing enough of its population to make informed decisions about reopening. The recommended positivity rate is 5% or below.The latest Executive Order GA-26 issued by Governor Greg Abbott stated there would be no civil or criminal penalty that will be imposed on individuals for failure to wear a face covering.
However, for individuals and businesses who cannot keep the 6-foot suggested social distancing, it is strongly suggested to wear masks.
On June 26, Governor Greg Abbott rolled back reopening efforts to “contain the spread of COVID-19.”
The executive order signed Friday morning included the following:
The decision came after the number of people testing positive for COVID-19 and the number of hospitalizations increased and the positivity rate in Texas increased above 10%, according to the Governor’s Office.
The rollback on reopening came one day after Gov. Abbott announced a temporary pause to additional reopening phases.
On Thursday, June 25, Abbott’s office announced businesses that were permitted to open under the previous phases could continue to operate at the designated occupancy levels and under the minimum standard health protocols provided by the Texas Department of State Health Services.
Abbott also issued an executive order Thursday, which immediately suspended all elective surgeries in four of Texas’s largest counties: Travis, Bexar, Dallas, and Harris.
The order is made in an effort to preserve hospital capacity as COVID-19 hospitalizations continue to rise.
*UPDATED ON THURSDAY, JULY 2, AT 5:00 PM
* Disclaimer: As this is a fast-moving situation, the information included below is provisional and subject to change.
Epidemiologist Eric Schneider said the County’s total of lab-confirmed cases includes 50 additional tests from the Texas Division of Emergency Management (TDEM).
NOTE: If residents were tested at a TDEM site, they will receive their results directly from that agency, not the Hays County Local Health Department.
JULY 1, 2020 | JULY 2, 2020 | |
TOTAL TESTS (includes pending cases) | ||
NEW DAILY TESTS (*estimated) |
176* | 341* |
TOTAL CONFIRMED (*estimated) |
|
|
ACTIVE (*estimated) |
2,434* | 2,549* |
NEW DAILY CONFIRMED |
|
|
TOTAL RECOVERED |
|
|
DAILY RECOVERED |
11 | 11 |
FATALITIES |
7 | 7 |
NEGATIVE (*estimated) |
|
|
HOSPITALIZATIONS TOTAL | 62 | 64 |
HOSPITALIZATIONS CURRENT | 17 | 18 |
*Hays County Public Health updates the following information Monday – Friday only
.
CITY | TOTAL CASES | ACTIVE CASES | RECOVERED | FATALITIES |
AUSTIN |
30 | 20 | 9 | 1 |
BEAR CREEK | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
BUDA | 337 | 272 | 64 | 1 |
CREEDMOOR | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
DRIFTWOOD | 20 | 18 | 2 | 0 |
DRIPPING SPRINGS | 43 | 34 | 9 | 0 |
HAYS | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
KYLE | 826 | 595 | 230 | 1 |
MANCHACA | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
MAXWELL | 6 | 5 | 1 | 0 |
MOUNTAIN CITY | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
NIEDERWALD | 10 | 8 | 2 | 0 |
SAN MARCOS | 1,726 | 1,558 | 165 | 3 |
UHLAND | 4 | 3 | 1 | 0 |
WIMBERLEY | 43 | 32 | 10 | 1 |
WOODCREEK | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
TOTAL |
3,050 | 2,549 | 494 | 7 |
*Note: Some Hays County residents have Austin and Maxwell addresses. Because of HIPAA laws, additional information about patients is not allowed to be shared.
*Hays County Public Health updates the following information Monday – Friday only
AGE RANGE | FEMALE | MALE | TOTAL |
0-9 YEARS | 40 | 38 | 78 |
10-19 YEARS | 114 | 82 | 196 |
20-29 YEARS | 741 | 733 | 1,474 |
30-39 YEARS | 248 | 226 | 474 |
40-49 YEARS | 174 | 156 | 330 |
50-59 YEARS | 136 | 115 | 251 |
60-69 YEARS | 84 | 57 | 141 |
70-79 YEARS | 37 | 29 | 66 |
> 80 YEARS | 23 | 17 | 40 |
TOTAL CONFIRMED CASES |
1,597 | 1,453 | 3,050 |
*Hays County Public Health updates the following information Monday – Friday only
ETHNICITY | FEMALE | MALE | TOTAL | PERCENTAGE OF CASES |
HISPANIC | 619 | 587 | 1,206 | 39.5% |
NON-HISPANIC | 302 | 279 | 581 | 19.1% |
NOT SPECIFIED | 676 | 587 | 1,263 | 41.4% |
TOTAL | 1,597 | 1,453 | 3,050 | 100% |
*Hays County Public Health updates the following information Monday – Friday only
RACE | PERCENTAGE OF CASES |
AMERICAN INDIAN | 0% |
ASIAN | 0.5% |
BLACK | 1.3% |
NATIVE HAWAIIAN / PACIFIC ISLANDER |
0% |
WHITE | 52.5% |
NOT SPECIFIED / UNKNOWN |
45.7% |
*UPDATED ON THURSDAY, JULY 2, AT 3:40 PM
Disclaimer: All Texas data below is provisional and subject to change. As this is a fast-moving situation, the information included below is provisional and subject to change.
* These numbers are an estimate based on several assumptions related to hospitalization rates and recovery times, which were informed by data available to date. These assumptions are subject to change as we learn more about COVID-19. The estimated number does not include data from any cases reported prior to 3/24/2020.
*If listed as N/A or TBA, the latest information has not been released by state agencies; the table will be updated when the data is available.
TOTALS | JULY 1, 2020 | JULY 2, 2020 |
TOTAL TESTED |
2,174,548
|
2,212,947
|
VIRAL TESTS |
1,921,948
|
1,975,803
|
ANTIBODY TESTS |
197,088
|
198,745
|
POSITIVITY RATE (as of July 1.) |
13.50%
|
13.32%
|
TOTAL POSITIVE CASES REPORTED |
168,062
|
175,977
|
ACTIVE *Estimated |
78,025*
|
82,732*
|
NEW CASES FROM PRIOR DAY *Estimated |
8,076*
|
7,915*
|
TOTAL RECOVERED *Estimated |
87,556*
|
90,720*
|
TOTAL RECOVERED OVER LAST 24 HOURS *Estimated |
2,738
|
3,164
|
HOSPITALIZATIONS *Estimate of Current hospitalizations |
6904*
|
7,382*
|
TOTAL FATALITY |
2,481
|
2,525
|
FATALITIES OVER LAST 24 HOURS |
57
|
44
|
COUNTIES REPORTING CASES |
244 of 254
|
244 of 254
|
COUNTIES WITH FATALITIES | 133 of 254 | 133 of 254 |
NOTE: Case and fatality information is updated daily at 1 pm and is compiled from information reported publicly by local health departments and through the DSHS public health regions. Counts are current as of that morning.
Because some jurisdictions report cases later in the day, local numbers may be more up to date. County case numbers may occasionally go down if the case investigation determines the person is a resident of another county or state.
Testing numbers show the number of test results for Texas residents reported to DSHS by public health and private labs. They do not include pending tests. Additional testing may be occurring by labs not yet reporting all results to DSHS. Unable to deduplicate total test numbers for private labs.
Demographic data comes from completed case investigations. The majority of cases in Texas are still under investigation.
Hospitalization and hospital capacity numbers are reported daily by hospitals through eight Hospital Preparedness Program providers that coordinate health care system preparedness and response activities in Texas.
*UPDATED ON THURSDAY, JULY 2, AT 2:50 AM
*Disclaimer: This data changes rapidly and might not reflect some cases still being reported.
CASES REPORTED | CASES PER 1M PEOPLE |
RECOVERED | FATALITIES | |
U.S. CASE OVERVIEW |
2,738,113
|
8,308 | 841,452 | 130,101 |
WORLDWIDE CASE OVERVIEW |
10,694,288
|
1,375 | 5,480,394 | 516,210 |
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The COVID hysteria is a testament to the blessings and curse of modern medicine. I doubt that had this happened in 1920, people would have even noticed. But because we have modern medicine, we are able to artificially extend life. And now, because of modern medicine, we are able to gnats-behind the cause of death. Had this been 1920, we might not have had ANY deaths from the 'Rona. According to Berkley, the average life expectancy was only 54 years old. Yet, now it is well into the 70s. And who is dying from the 'Rona? People 60+.
We should count our blessings. Modern medicine has performed miracles. But it has also led to a loss of perspective. We need to remember everyone eventually dies. The old and infirm will die sooner. Its sad but it is unavoidable. Thus, we need to make the most of our time here. Live a life worth living. Don't let your loss of perspective stand in that way. It will be okay. The sun is shining and the air is clean. Enjoy!
Mr. Holeman,
I am so glad you are here to set us all straight.
Bless your heart!
You're welcome. Fresh perspectives never hurt.
Happy Independence Day! Let today be the day that we show the world the amazing achievements we can all reach if we are afforded the opportunity. Let today be the day we honor our collective recognition that individuals, operating freely, are a blessing on everyone.
God bless the USA. God bless its history, marred as it may be, we have a 100% track record of getting it right.
*** YOU'RE DAMN STRAIGHT I ALREADY SAID THAT. AND I'LL KEEP SAYING IT. BECAUSE IT NEEDS TO BE SAID. ***
The COVID hysteria is a testament to the blessings and curse of modern medicine. I doubt that had this happened in 1920, people would have even noticed. But because we have modern medicine, we are able to artificially extend life. And now, because of modern medicine, we are able to gnats-behind the cause of death. Had this been 1920, we might not have had ANY deaths from the 'Rona. According to Berkley, the average life expectancy was only 54 years old. Yet, now it is well into the 70s. And who is dying from the 'Rona? People 60+.
We should count our blessings. Modern medicine has performed miracles. But it has also led to a loss of perspective. We need to remember everyone eventually dies. The old and infirm will die sooner. Its sad but it is unavoidable. Thus, we need to make the most of our time here. Live a life worth living. Don't let your loss of perspective stand in that way. It will be okay. The sun is shining and the air is clean. Enjoy!