The New Tri-State Defender – April 3-9, 2020

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April 9 - 15, 2020

VOL. 69, No. 15

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‘COVID-19’s heavy impact on African Americans probed by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell Special to The New Tri-State Defender

The suspicion that African Americans in Shelby County were being disproportionately hit by the spread of the coronavirus surfaced earlier, with concern mounting as data showed that such was the case in other metropolitan areas. Now there is local data – and confirmation. The Shelby County Health Department released a demographic breakdown of some confirmed cases on Wednesday. “Of the 267 cases we examined, 68 percent were African Americans, while 29 percent were white,” said Dr. Bruce Randolph, medical director for the Shelby County Health Department. As of Wednesday, Shelby County had 897 confirmed cases of coronavirus, with 21 deaths. Fatality percentages were not yet available. This week, concern about disparity accelerated nationally toward a clamor, with alarms sounded by the Congressional Black Caucus, the NAACP, the National Action Network and others. Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis, president/CEO of the National Newspaper Publishers Association, has declared a “State of Emergency for

For my son EJ Smith, this is a pleasant stroll on a sunny Spring day. For me, it’s part of an all-day strategy to wear the little guy out — so I can finally get some rest. (Photo: Lee Eric Smith) Answering the call...Dr. Ydell Ismon Sr., one of the prayer chairmen for the Memphis Baptist Ministerial Association, prayed in place at Branch of Christ Church, where the Rev. James Morganfield Jr. is pastor, on Wednesday afternoon in keeping with the association’s call for a day of prayer. He pastors Boston Baptist Church. (Photo: Tyrone P. Easley) Black America.” Those concerns confronted President Trump at Tuesday’s White House coronavirus update, with him alternately saying he was concerned, bewildered and that the results of more analysis were forthcoming.

Locally, activists have been viewing the Health Department’s ZIP code map and sounding alarms from multiple quarters about the fate of residents with historically poor access

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‘Trapped’ at home with a playful toddler, Job 1 is: wear him out by Lee Eric Smith lesmith@tsdmemphis.com

Testing, testing, 123 – the basics from community level by Karanja A. Ajanaku kajanaku@tsdmemphis.com

Dr. Reginique Green of Christ Community Health Services, Inc. openly values the flow of solid COVID-19 information, thinking that “we haven’t seen the worst of it” and knowing that “some people are still not believers.” Models projecting how many people could die in Shelby County have included the mind-boggling total of 20,000 to far, far less yet still numbing figures. The date and extent of the projected surge also has varied, with the City of Memphis now reportedly looking at April 15 as the peak date for the coronavirus here. That’s according to a model that suggests the peak gets here before it was projected earlier and that area hospitals would not be pushed beyond capacity. In conjunction with stay-athome orders, frequent handwashing and social distancing, testing is a huge part of the projection and preparation. Testing 1,000 a people a day is the reported goal of the Memphis-Shelby County COVID-19 Task Force, whose mission includes putting together a testing strategy that makes more testing available to so-called vulnerable populations and under-served. Green serves on the COVID-19 Task Force

Christ Community Health Services, Inc. began coronavirus testing by appointment on March 21, among the first to do so in Shelby County. (Courtesy photo) and is one of two people now handling coronavirus testing for Christ Community Health Services, Inc. (CCHS), one of the first to do so in Shelby County. Testing there is by appointment only, with Green adding that restriction is administered liberally. “It is only by appointment because we want to create social distancing. We want to control the environment. We don’t want any dense-

ly populated areas. People are staying in their cars,” she said. On Monday, CCHS increased its daily COVID-19 testing capacity to 200, up from 50 to 75. “You lower your window and there’s very minimum chance of you contaminating or in-

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For self-employed, getting stimulus relief requires dogged pursuit by Lee Eric Smith lesmith@tsdmemphis.com

People who work for themselves – those who file 1099s at tax time instead of W-2s – breathed a sigh of relief when President Donald Trump signed a $2 trillion stimulus package that included expanded unemployment benefits that would put $600 in their pockets. That was the good news. The bad news: In addition to being overwhelmed with an unprecedented avalanche of new unemployment claims, the Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development has no existing system for the self-employed to file for benefits – creating chaos, confusion and

Rep. Antonio Parkinson

anxiety for thousands of citizens in need of some cash. “The system for filing unemployment was not set up for those that are self-employed – and I understand that. I have no issue with that. I get it, ” said state Rep. Antonio Parkinson (Dist. 98 – Memphis), who has fielded numerous calls from constituents

about the problems. “The problem is that (Gov. Bill Lee) announced (the benefits) . . . and that lets ev-

eryone know that they can apply,” Parkinson continued. “Well, if they’re going to be able to apply, we need to be able to accommodate their applications.” Data posted at jobs.tn.gov show that for the week ending March 14, 2,708 people applied for unemployment. But by March 28, an additional 133,588 claims had been filed statewide. Regional data for the Greater Memphis area, which includes Shelby, Fayette, Tipton and Lauderdale Counties show that more than 12,000 applications had been filed in the week ending March 28. There’s no data posted on how many of those applicants are self-employed.

SEE RELIEF ON PAGE 2

My son is kicking my a$$. And it’s not even close. He’s 2, bursting with energy. I’m . . . okay, fine, I’m eligible for AARP. It’s not a fair fight. This was a manageable problem just a few months ago, when, y’know, I had a place to go during the day. What’s the word we used to use for it . . . WORK! Right! And the dynamo I lovingly call EJ was spending the majority of his day at daycare. Well, neither of those things are true now, for reasons we all know too well. Every single day now, I’m facing the perfect storm: Virtually uninterrupted time with an uncommonly muscular and insistent toddler who has discovered the word “no” – and likes to shout it at me at bedtime while physically keeping me from leaving the room. Like I said, I’m getting my A$$ kicked. I suppose it’s comforting to know I’m not the only one. Last night, after I finally getting the boy off to sleepy land, I was watching Stephen Colbert videoconference with Chance The Rapper. Colbert asked Chance who was winning, “Team Adults” (Chance and his wife, Kristen) or “Team Kids.” “It’s like a full-on, one-on-one or two-onone . . . all the time,” Chance said. “They are beating us up.” “I’ve said before,” Colbert chuckled, “they’re small but relentless opponents . . .” I glanced over at Ester to give her a knowing look, like “Baby, somebody gets it.” But when I looked over, she’s sitting motionless, her eyes closed, possibly snoring. Dead to the world. I get that too. It takes me back to my own childhood, back in Holly Springs, Mississippi. Me and the Maxwell brothers, Leroy and David, would be outside shooting hoops in the driveway. Leroy and I were 10; David was seven. My dad? AARP-Eligible and with a mini-keg instead of six-pack in the midsection. Anyway, my dad knew he’d never compete with us trying to run around with a bunch of

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