A family awoke on New Year’s Eve Day to find a bullet that came close to striking one of their own.

The Herrons, who live in the Hitching Post community in Collier County, said they heard a lot of bangs and noise, but it wasn’t until Friday morning they noticed a bullet had made it close to striking their nephew.

“Me and Kenny were sitting here watching the fireworks go off and I stepped in the house to get something and we heard something hit the roof,” said Frances Herron, who is from West Virginia.

Her nephew Kenneth Roby, 65, said he heard what sounded like gunshots coming from the front of the house. Stuff landed on him.

The family wasn’t sure if it had been a stray bullet until Jackson Herron checked it out with his metal detector.

Roby said the bullet hit the ground right behind him.

“Gave me the shakes just how big it was,” Roby said.

When Frances Herron saw the bullet, it nearly blew her away.

“Kenny, you was lucky,” she said. “Very lucky.”

The Herron said they hear gunfire nearly every New Year’s they have spent in the neighborhood. They wonder whether it’s wise to continue watching fireworks outside or if they should move it indoors.

“Guess God was on my side this time,” Roby said.

His aunt agrees.

“We were lucky last night but that’s not to say we will be the next time,” she said.

Copyright ©2024 Fort Myers Broadcasting. All rights reserved.

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without prior written consent.

In the new year, as the vaccine rollout continues in Southwest Florida, health officials are hoping this will be a big step in controlling the pandemic.

Waves of emotion swept across SWFL a vaccines became available to those 65 and older and high-risk frontline health care workers.

Ellen and Bob Iverson say they were relieved. “It was just a big relief and we started feeling emotional just as the like started moving closer and closer,” said the Iversons.

Bob and Ellen Iverson are some of the lucky ones who were first to get vaccine doses in Lee County.

“Knowing that you’re going to survive it because we’ve been able to get the vaccine so just an unbelievable feeling,” said Bob.

Sandra Snyder says she’s been wanting to see her kids. “”We’re all concerned and we all want to see our kids and our grandkids,” said Snyder.

But now that she’s gotten the vaccine. “Didn’t feel a thing. I think the flu shot is worse than that,” Snyder said.

After about two weeks of vaccinations, nearly 12,000 doses have been administered.  But, that feeling of relief is shared by less than one percent of Southwest Floridians and falls short of what’s needed for herd immunity.

Dr. Stephen Kissler works with the Department of Immunology and Infectious Diseases at the Harvard School of Public Health.

Kissler says vaccine prioritization is key. “It really does seem to make a lot of sense to prioritize vaccines to those who are at highest risk of severe complications of the illness. So that clearly puts older people high on the list of people who you want to vaccinate,” he said.

“If the virus has a reproduction number of about three, so that infectious person is likely to infect three others,” said Dr. Kissler. “Then, that means that you need essentially two-thirds of the population to be fully protected.”

“The goal is to have even the least vaccinated communities to still have that high level of population immunity, which requires a really, really large amount of people to be vaccinated,” Dr. Kissler said.

There’s so much uncertainty surrounding how many more vaccine doses SWFL receive and when. Roger Desjarlais is the Lee County Manager. “The dates and times for additional vaccines…they’ll be coming from the state,” said Desjarlais.

Health officials and leaders  say we need to stay focused. Dr. Larry Antonucci is the President and CEO of Lee Health.

“The coronavirus is still spreading, and hospitalizations and deaths are still rising. People’s lives are at stake, and just because the vaccine brings hope does not mean we can let up now,” said Dr. Antonucci.

Eyes are also on Governor DeSantis and his team to keep us moving forward. “In the state of Florida, it’s a little bit unique because we recognize that the governor has really taken a front and center approach as to how the vaccination strategy is being rolled out,” said Dr. Oscar Alleyne.

In the state of Florida more than 211,000 thousand people have received their first dose of the vaccine, which again is less than one percent of the population.

Kristine Hollingsworth with the Florida Department of Health in Collier County says they will continuously be receiving the vaccine.

“We will be continuously receiving vaccine throughout the vaccine roll out. So this is not the only supply that we have,” said Hollingsworth.


COVID-19 VARIANT

Copyright ©2024 Fort Myers Broadcasting. All rights reserved.

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without prior written consent.

Congress has overridden President Donald Trump’s veto of a defense policy bill, a first by lawmakers since he took office nearly four years ago.

In an extraordinary New Year’s Day session, the Republican-controlled Senate easily turned aside the veto, dismissing Trump’s objections to the $740 billion bill and handing him a stinging rebuke just weeks before his term ends.

Trump had lashed out at GOP lawmakers on Twitter, charging earlier this week that “Weak and tired Republican ‘leadership’ will allow the bad Defense Bill to pass.″

Trump called the looming override vote a “disgraceful act of cowardice and total submission by weak people to Big Tech. Negotiate a better Bill, or get better leaders, NOW!”

The 81-13 vote in the Senate followed an earlier 322-87 override vote in the House of the widely popular defense measure. The bill provides a 3% pay raise for U.S. troops and guides defense policy, cementing decisions about troop levels, new weapons systems and military readiness, personnel policy and other military goals. Many programs, including military construction, can only go into effect if the bill is approved.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said before the vote that Congress has passed the National Defense Authorization Act every year for 59 years in a row, “and one way or another, we are going to complete the 60th annual NDAA and pass it into law before this Congress concludes on Sunday.”

The bill “looks after our brave men and women who volunteer to wear the uniform,” McConnell said. “But it’s also a tremendous opportunity: to direct our national security priorities to reflect the resolve of the American people and the evolving threats to their safety, at home and abroad. It’s our chance to ensure we keep pace with competitors like Russia and China.”

The Senate override was delayed after Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., objected to moving ahead until McConnell allowed a vote on a Trump-backed plan to increase COVID-19 relief payments to $2,000. McConnel did not allow that vote; instead he used his parliamentary power to set a vote limiting debate on the defense measure, overcoming a filibuster threat by Sanders and Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York.

Without a bipartisan agreement, a vote on the bill could have been delayed until Saturday night. Lawmakers, however, agreed to an immediate roll call Friday once the filibuster threat was stopped.

Trump rejected the defense measure last week, saying it failed to limit social media companies he claimed were biased against him during his failed reelection campaign. Trump also opposed language that allows for the renaming of military bases that honor Confederate leaders.

Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla., chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said he was “disappointed” with Trump’s veto and called the bill “absolutely vital to our national security and our troops.″

“This is the most important bill we have,″ Inhofe said. “It puts members of the military first.″

Trump has succeeded throughout his four-year term in enforcing party discipline in Congress, with few Republicans willing to publicly oppose him. The bipartisan overrides on the defense bill showed the limits of Trump’s influence in the final weeks of his term.

Earlier this week, 130 House Republicans voted against the Trump-backed COVID relief checks, with many arguing they were unnecessary and would increase the federal budget deficit.

The Democratic-controlled House approved the larger payments, but the plan is dead in the Senate, another sign of Trump’s fading hold over Congress.

Besides his concerns about social media and military base names, Trump also said the defense bill restricted his ability to conduct foreign policy, “particularly my efforts to bring our troops home.″ Trump was referring to provisions in the bill that impose conditions on his plan to withdraw thousands of troops from Afghanistan and Germany. The measures require the Pentagon to submit reports certifying that the proposed withdrawals would not jeopardize U.S. national security.

Trump has vetoed eight other bills, but those were all sustained because supporters did not gain the two-thirds vote needed in each chamber for the bills to become law without Trump’s signature.

Rhode Island Sen. Jack Reed, the top Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, called Trump’s Dec. 23 veto a “parting gift” to Russian President Vladimir Putin “and a lump of coal for our troops. Donald Trump is showing more devotion to Confederate base names than to the men and women who defend our nation.″

Copyright ©2024 Fort Myers Broadcasting. All rights reserved.

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without prior written consent.

The U.S. has started 2021 with a grim milestone: Within hours of the new year, the country surpassed 20 million reported cases of coronavirus, according to Johns Hopkins University, an increase of more than 1 million cases in a single week.

The U.S. has maintained the international lead for the number of cases and deaths for months. As of Friday, Johns Hopkins reported that more than 346,000 people in the U.S. have died from COVID-19.

India ranks second in the world for coronavirus cases. Despite having a population more than 1 billion people greater than the U.S., according to the World Bank, it has roughly half the amount of COVID-19 cases and less than half the number of deaths.

More than 83,752,00 people have been infected worldwide.

Several states in the U.S. have topped 1 million cases in the past two months, and more are on the verge of doing so. California became the first to top 2 million cases on December 23, and on Thursday, became the third state to surpass 25,000 COVID-19 deaths.

California hospitals have reported that 1 in 5 COVID-19 tests are coming back positive, and health care workers have told CBS News that “it’s just utter chaos.” Hospitals in the state have been seeing more patients who are in their 20s and 30s.

Dr. Tirso del Junco, Jr., chief medical officer at KPC Health Global Medical Centers, says that hospitals are “on the brink of really catastrophic moments.”

“When you have multiple patients that are going into cardiac arrest or code blues, not everybody can respond to those,” he said. “So they’re having to make a choice. Who do I respond to? Who do I not respond to?”

As states attempt to manage the surge, a new strain of COVID-19 scientists believe is more easily transmitted has been detected in the U.S. Colorado announced its first case of the strain Tuesday, and a case was detected in Southern California just one day later. The new strain, called B.1.1.7., is connected to a surge in the U.K.

Pfizer and Moderna have both said their vaccines will be effective against the new strain; however, COVID-19 vaccinations are far below the number that was promised for the end of 2020. The Trump administration had promised that 20 million people would receive vaccinations before 2021, but as of Friday, fewer than 3 million people in the U.S. have received a vaccination of the 14 million doses shipped.

Copyright ©2024 Fort Myers Broadcasting. All rights reserved.

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without prior written consent.

Con artists don’t take time off, nor should you when it comes to protecting your personal information. Whether it’s your phone, tablet or desktop, your email account or websites, the threat is not going away: There’s always a bad guy trying to get in.

“It’s very important to change your password once a year because hackers can use that information to take your photos, your address, even your credit card information because they are getting new ways to crack that information,” said Alex Pham, a cybersecurity expert.

According to the website Have I Been Pwned, hackers have hit more than 10 billion accounts. The information they steal by infiltrating your accounts includes:
Passwords, password hints, locations, usernames, employers, job titles, phone numbers, social media accounts and much more.

Many password managers have had security upgrades which can keep you safe and relieve the stress of remembering so many passwords.

“You can keep your passwords in a central location, update them and refer back to them in an easy, quick manner,” Pham said.

Changing passwords can take some time, but in the long run it’s worth it, because hackers won’t take a holiday. Hacker tools have advanced as well, which is why it’s important for you to use a complex password, not something simple like a birthday or 1-2-3-4-5-6.

Copyright ©2024 Fort Myers Broadcasting. All rights reserved.

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without prior written consent.

A Florida woman received a card maker from her son. And a project that began as making cards for her mother turned into so much more.

Rose Barchalk loves talking about her hobby. “My mom is 84 years young and she was the one who kind of started this because I’d send her some cards and she’d be elated that she got a card from me,” Barchalk said.

Knowing how much she loved it, her son sent her a card maker. “It just so happened this year, my son sent me a card maker,” she said.

That’s when Barchalk really got to work. She made a “Deck The Palms” card along with 500 others.

“They went to the cancer center, the children’s hospital and then I had other people who responded, who said can you send me some,” said Barchalk.

Her cards went international. They made it all the way to Australia, which is where her daughter lives.

“It’s created a greater purpose for me,” she said.

Barchalk’s already hard at work creating Valentine’s Day cards to hand out at Golisano’s Children’s Hospital.

She’s doing her best to live her life with her mom’s motto. “When you find somebody without a smile, give them yours,” Barchalk said.

Copyright ©2024 Fort Myers Broadcasting. All rights reserved.

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without prior written consent.

2020 brought changes and challenges to our daily lives, thanks to the coronavirus pandemic. A recent American Psychological Association study found 65% of adults say the amount of uncertainty in the nation causes them stress.

While no one can forecast exactly how 2021 will unfold, futurist Erica Orange, a partner with consulting firm The Future Hunters, shared some predictions with “CBS This Morning.”

Orange expects there to be permanent changes to industries and businesses, affecting supply chains, operations and workforces.

“It’s like we’re being shot through a cannon and almost overnight, global circumstances have changed dramatically and this is really setting the stage for everything that we see happening when it comes to the future of work,” she said.

The Future Hunters help clients in tech, pharmaceutical and government identify trends that could affect business. One of those trends the firm is closely watching is working from home.

“Even after we get the vaccine, people are still going to be nervous about going into a physical office,” said Orange. “Although at the same time, those that do have to report to a physical office, they’re going to need that space to be redesigned and reinvented.”

Research shows that COVID-19 is spread mainly through close contact between people. Companies and businesses in 2021 will have to keep this in mind as their employees return back to normalcy. Sophisticated technology such as self-cleaning elevator buttons could be seen in buildings in the upcoming months.

“This is going to be even more pronounced in the major cities where people are much more crammed together. We’re also going to be seeing many more people relying on automation,” Orange said.

Some tech giants such as Twitter have offered employees the choice to work from home indefinitely. Others are pushing back their reopening dates. Google has announced that it will keep employees home until at least September.

With empty office buildings in places such as New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles, Orange believes that major cities will have to adapt in more ways than in 2020.

“Just like how work is going to be completely reinvented and reimagined, we too have to reinvent and reimagine our physical cities. Transportation and infrastructure are going to go through tremendous changes,” Orange said.

This also includes local coffee shops and restaurants that are heavily affected by foot traffic and by the revenue employees of nearby office buildings bring.

“I see a lot of these proprietors having to reinvent how it is that they reach out to workers when they aren’t coming into a physical office. It’s why the entire supply chain is being disrupted,” she said.

The changes that the pandemic has brought is impacting the travel industry with both families and businesses seeking alternative ways to travel.

“It’s going to be different and I see it playing out on both ends of the spectrum. What I mean by that is we’re going to see the growth of high-tech travel and on the other end, we’re going to see the growth of low-tech travel,” she said.

High-tech traveling includes virtual reality and augmented reality. Experts predict that in 2021, travelers will look to technology to immerse themselves in places they cannot go.

But what experts believe is making a return to 2021 is nostalgic ways to travel. Cross-country trips with family and friends, visiting national parks and traveling via RV will likely be a popular option for the future of travel.

Orange says travelers “are kind of going back to basics and just engaging in much more simplistic acts of travel.”

Copyright ©2024 Fort Myers Broadcasting. All rights reserved.

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without prior written consent.

The Florida Department of Health in Collier County will administer the COVID-19 vaccine on Sunday at 3339 E. Tamiami Trail.

Vaccinations will be by appointment only.

Future vaccination dates will be announced.

Collier County made appointments available online on Wednesday and they filled up in minutes.

Those that got an appointment are asked to print their tickets and bring them to the site, along with a photo ID.

Vehicles are asked to enter on Glades Boulevard and proceed to Palm Drive. Once at Palm, go south to Harrison Road and turn onto the governmental complex.

Once on the complex, take the first right which will take drivers to the back of the Department of Health building.

Once the vaccination is completed, drivers will leave by way of the Department of Juvenile Justice and into the main parking lot where they can exit onto Airport Road.

The Collier County Sheriff’s Office will be providing traffic control.

 

Copyright ©2024 Fort Myers Broadcasting. All rights reserved.

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without prior written consent.

The Charlotte County Sheriff’s Office is investigating a shooting in Punta Gorda.

The law enforcement agency posted to Twitter that they received a call at around 1 a.m. about a shooting that injured one person in the Washington Loop area of Punta Gorda.

“There is no threat to the public as this is an isolated incident,” CCSO said.

No other information is known at this time.

Copyright ©2024 Fort Myers Broadcasting. All rights reserved.

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without prior written consent.

A 65-year-old pedestrian sustained critical injuries when she was struck by a vehicle in Immokalee.

The crash happened at 9:53 p.m. on New Year’s Eve, according to a Florida Highway Patrol news release.

Troopers say an SUV, driven by a 39-year-old woman, was southbound on North 1st Street just south of Roberts Avenue East when a woman walked into the vehicle’s path.

The woman was transported to Lee Memorial Hospital.

No other information is known at this time.

The Florida Highway Patrol no longer releases the names of individuals involved in a crash due to Marsy’s Law.

Copyright ©2024 Fort Myers Broadcasting. All rights reserved.

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without prior written consent.