Instead of vaccinating essential workers after doctors, nurses and people in nursing homes, the governor ordered people 65 and over to be next in line.

Florida Department of Health in Lee County told us it has the vaccine Thursday, and it’s working on a plan to start vaccinating those in the age bracket for COVID-19. More details are expected from DOH-Lee Monday.

What won’t be in the plan are shots for people who work in grocery stores or law enforcement officers.

We’ve watched the doctors and nurses get their shots, same with people who live in nursing homes.

The governor has gone against CDC guidelines — which calls for seniors and essential workers to be vaccinated next — in his decision to order only those 65 and older to be eligible for vaccines in Florida next.

“Makes no sense for someone that is 42 to jump someone who is 72,” DeSantis said. “Data is clear. If there’s one dose left, give it to an elderly person.”

The data DeSantis points to comes from a study done by Harvard’s School of Public Health and the University of Colorado. Researchers found vaccinating younger people slows the transmission of the virus. Focusing on older people prevents more deaths.

Doctors on the front lines understand the governor’s decision, and they urge patience.

“I get that it’s going to take time to get to the population,” Dr. Andrew Pastewski said. “I hope the population is smart enough to take it because we only really get over this in 2021 if everyone wears their mask while they get the vaccine.”

Dr. Larry Antonucci, the president and CEO of Lee Health, said, once his doctors and nurses and staff members who deal with COVID-19 every day get their shots, the system will make plans to help vaccinate the general public who are 65 and older first.

“We’re beginning to put that together now, again, waiting for guidance from the federal and state officials as to what we’re permitted to do,” Antonucci said. “We were permitted to do it. Do they want to do it here onsite, outside? So we’re working through those details right now.”

We also checked in with Florida Department of Health in Collier County about whether it’s working on a plan to vaccinate seniors who are 65 and older, but we did not get a response on Christmas Eve.

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A Florida lawmaker wants to make it illegal for you to touch your phone while driving.

Under current law, it is already illegal to talk on the phone or text when driving through a school or construction zone.

Last year Florida made it illegal to text while driving.

This new bill would make it illegal for anyone to hold a phone in their hand while behind the wheel. It was filed by State Rep. Emily Slosberg, D-Boca Raton, last week for the next legislative session which starts in January.

“Cell phones are now the number one cause of distraction for drivers,” said Slosberg, who has helped toughen Florida’s driving laws due to her sister’s death in a 1996 crash. “I think the most important thing we can do is focus on the road and not hold the phone in our hands.”

The Wireless Communications While Driving Law took effect in July of 2019. It was also sponsored by Slosberg. It allows law enforcement to stop and cite motorists who are texting and driving. It also makes it illegal for a person to use their phone in a handheld manner while in a school or work zone, according to Florida Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles.

The National Safety Council reports that driving while using a cellphone leads to about 1.6 million crashes each year. A University of Utah study found drivers who are on the phone are comparable to drunk drivers, calling them both dangerous to themselves, their passengers and everyone else on the road.

Some Florida residents say they would support a”hands-free” bill. Slosberg said the bill has bipartisan support.

“I think that’s great, having two girls myself, 22 and 16 years olds, we’re huge advocates of no no no texting,” said Rich Castiano, of Fort Myers.

 

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As of 2 p.m. Thursday, there have been 1,247,546 positive cases of the coronavirus recorded in the state. The case count includes 1,226,530 Florida residents and 21,016 non-Florida residents. There are 20,995 Florida resident deaths reported, 300 non-resident deaths, and 61,100 hospitalizations at some point during illness, according to the Florida Department of Health.

*Numbers are released by the DOH every afternoon.

STATEWIDE NUMBERS

Total number of recorded cases: 1,247,546 (up from 1,234,399)
Florida resident deaths: 20,995 (up from 20,874)
Non-resident deaths: 300 (up from 299)
Total deaths in state (Fla./non-Fla. residents combined): 21,295 (up from 21,173)

  • 13,147 total new cases reported Thursday
  • 121 new resident deaths reported Thursday
  • 1 new non-resident deaths reported Thursday
  • Percent positive for new cases in Fla. residents: 7.84%
    • This percent is the number of people who test PCR- or antigen-positive for the first time divided by all the people tested that day, excluding people who have previously tested positive. 

SOUTHWEST FLORIDA NUMBERS

Total recorded cases in SWFL: 73,302 (up from 72,533)
Deaths: 1,299 (up from 1,294)

  • 769 total new cases reported Thursday
  • 5 new deaths reported Thursday

Lee County: 38,288 cases (up from 37,909) – 646 deaths (1 new)
Collier County: 21,428 (up from 21,213) – 325 deaths (3 new)
Charlotte County: 6,854 (up from 6,742) – 217 deaths
DeSoto County: 2,816 (up from 2,791) – 52 deaths (1 new)
Glades County: 759 (up from 750) – 11 deaths
Hendry County: 3,157 (up from 3,128) – 48 deaths

Click HERE* for a case-by-case breakdown – updated daily.

*If not linked, the final report has not yet been made available.

TESTING DATA

Effective Oct. 27, the Florida Department of Health ceased releasing data showing overall testing numbers. Their statement: “The Florida Department of Health is making adjustments to the COVID-19 dashboard and daily report to provide clear, accurate information for Florida families. Moving forward, the daily report will focus on the number of tests reported to the state by day and the corresponding positivity rate by day. The previously reported cumulative number did not reflect the current status of the pandemic in Florida. This change is in line with the CDC recommendation that calculation of percent positivity [is] applied consistently and with clear communication, will allow public health officials to follow magnitude and trends effectively, and the trends will be useful for local public health decision making.”


RESOURCES

NOW HIRINGSWFL companies adding jobs

FOOD PANTRIES: Harry Chapin mobile food pantry schedule, week of Dec. 21

REPORT COVID-19 DIAGNOSIS/TEST: International self-reporting system

VACCINES: State of Florida’s COVID-19 vaccine reports


IF YOU FEEL SICK:

The Florida Department of Health has a 24-hour COVID-19 Call Center at 1-866-779-6121. Questions may also be emailed to covid-19@flhealth.gov. Email responses will be sent during call center hours.

LINKFlorida Department of Health COVID-19 updates

*The map is best viewed on a desktop computer. If you don’t see the map above tap HERE for a fullscreen version.

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The biggest question this time of year is wondering where you can get a last-minute gift or recipe ingredient during the holidays.

This year, most stores are closed for Christmas Day, and many chain restaurants will be open nationwide, but make sure to check your local store or restaurant for hours because it does vary by location.

STORES OPEN ON CHRISTMAS

CVS
Walgreens
Most convenience stores

CHAIN RESTAURANTS OPEN ON CHRISTMAS

Check ahead to verify as not every location may be open.

Perkins
Domino’s
McDonald’s
Burger King
Ruth’s Chris steakhouse
Sonic
IHOP
Waffle House
Denny’s
Starbucks
Panda Express
TGI Fridays

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Children of the world can rest easy. The global pandemic won’t stop them from tracking Santa Claus’ progress as he delivers gifts around the globe on Christmas Eve.

The North American Aerospace Defense Command has announced that NORAD will track Santa on Dec. 24, just as it has done for 65 years. But there will be some changes: Not every child will be able to get through to a volunteer at NORAD’s call center to check on Santa’s whereabouts, as they have in years before.

Normally, 150-160 volunteers crowd into a conference room at Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado Springs, taking two-hour shifts to answer the phones as eager children call to see if Santa and his sleigh have reached their rooftops. Altogether, 1,500 people over 20 hours have participated in the call center in the past, fielding more than 130,000 phone calls, beginning at 6 a.m. Eastern time on Christmas Eve.

WATCH: Click here to see Santa’s track

This year, due to safety restrictions forced by the COVID-19 pandemic, the number of volunteers has been drastically cut to what NORAD expects will be fewer than 10 people per shift.

“We understand this is a time-honored tradition, and we know undoubtedly there is going to be some disappointment,” said NORAD spokesman Preston Schlachter. “But we’re trying to keep it safe for everyone involved.”

So, some callers may be able to once again get through to a member of the military or other volunteer when they dial the NORAD Tracks Santa toll-free number, 1-877-Hi-NORAD. But others will get a recorded update on Santa’s current location.

DOWNLOAD: The tracking Santa apps are also available on Google Play and the Apple App Store.

FILE – In this Dec. 23, 2019, file photo a playbook sits next to a telephone set up in the NORAD Tracks Santa center at Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado Springs, Colo. The North American Aerospace Defense Command has announced that NORAD will track Santa on December 24, just as it has done for 65 years. But there will be some changes: Not every child will be able to get through to a volunteer at NORAD’s call center to check on Santa’s whereabouts, as they have in years before. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File)

Schlachter said NORAD will largely be limiting volunteers to people who already work there and their immediate families. But that could be expanded a bit as the time gets closer. He said that this year volunteers will answer health questions and have their temperature checked when they arrive, and a cleaning crew will wipe down surfaces throughout the day. There will be wipes and other supplies available, and between shifts the entire calling area will be sanitized before the next group comes in.

Faced with concerns about the virus, officials at NORAD have worked for weeks to figure out a way to ensure that the much-beloved tradition could go on.

The military command has been fielding calls since 1955, when Air Force Col. Harry Shoup — the commander on duty at NORAD’s predecessor, the Continental Air Defense Command — fielded a call from a child who dialed a misprinted telephone number in a newspaper department store ad, thinking she was calling Santa.

A fast-thinking Shoup quickly assured his caller that he was. And the tradition began.

Today, most early calls come from Japan and Europe, and as the day goes on the callers from the U.S. and Canada climb.

Besides the call center, the NORAD Tracks Santa website — noradsanta.org — as well as social media pages, Amazon Alexa, Onstar and a new mobile app will still be available with up-to-the-minute details on Santa’s location. A social media team will operate from a separate conference room at the base.

 

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Gift card sales are way up, more than double what they were in the previous quarter of 2020.

One of those cards may be a gift for you during the holidays. But that means more opportunities for people to swipe your money. Gift cards make it easy to purchase items from home, but it’s important to know their value. When you find that card and wonder how much is it still worth, cybersecurity expert Carrie Kerskie says to be careful.

“Go to the website listed on the back of the gift card,” Kerskie said. “Don’t do an internet search for ‘check my balance’ because you could end up on a bad guys website where the intention is just to steal the funds you have on that card.”

A few other tips to keep your gift cards safe:

  • Buy from reputable outlets — off-brand websites may be scams
  • Check the back of the card — it may be scratched off and already used
  • Research policies — things like returns may be different
  • Treat them like cash

Be wary: Gift cards lose value over time. No one wants their gift to become worthless.

The Better Business Bureau and AARP have some resources on avoiding these scams.

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A huge surge in online shopping during the pandemic has been a savior for retailers, but it comes at a price.

Shoppers are expected to return twice as many items as they did during last year’s holiday period, costing companies roughly $1.1 billion, according to Narvar Inc., a software and technology company that manages online returns for hundreds of brands.

Retailers don’t want the returns, but they do want shoppers who may not feel safe going to stores to be comfortable buying things they haven’t seen or tried on in person.

People have been doing so much online buying since March that carriers like UPS and FedEx were already at full capacity before the holiday shopping season. And online sales just keep soaring. From Nov. 1 through Tuesday, they spiked 32% to $171.6 billion, compared with the year-ago period, according to Adobe Analytics. The massive challenges of shipping COVID-19 vaccines in the weeks and months ahead could put further pressure on the system.

That means shoppers who return items may not get refunds until two weeks after they’re sent back to the store, said Sara Skirboll, shopping expert at deals site RetailMeNot.

Many companies are offering more locations where customers can drop off returns, which cuts down shipping costs and gets refunds to shoppers more quickly.

Last year, Kohl’s began allowing Amazon returns at all of its 1,000 stores – customers drop off items for free, with no box or label needed. This year, Amazon customers can also return items at 500 Whole Foods Market stores. That’s in addition to Amazon’s deal with UPS to allow similar drop-offs at UPS stores.

Happy Returns, a Santa Monica, California-based startup that works with about 150 online retailers like Rothy’s and Revolve, has increased its number of drop-off locations to 2,600, from more than 700 last year. That includes 2,000 FedEx locations.

“It’s a great time to be in the returns business. Every day, there’s a record,” said David Sobie, CEO and co-founder of Happy Returns, noting he’s processed 50% more returns in December than November.

Walmart, the nation’s largest retailer, announced earlier this week it will pick up items shipped and sold by Walmart.com from customers’ homes for free through a new partnership with FedEx. The service will continue beyond the holiday shopping season.

A growing number of retailers are asking shoppers to not even bother sending back certain rejected items.

When Dick Pirozzolo wanted to return a too-small jersey he bought for $40 on a website called Online Cycling Gear, he was pleasantly surprised with the response. The site told him to keep it, discard it, or give it to a friend or charity – and it will send him the right size for an extra $10.

“I was fine with that,” said the 77-year-old cycling enthusiast from Wellesley, Massachusetts. “I did a good thing for a friend, and I got a new shirt.” The experience, he says, has given him confidence to buy more online this holiday season.

David Bassuk, global co-leader of AlixPartners’ retail practice, says stores are increasingly making it easier for shoppers to feel less guilty about returning items.

“If they’re not sure of their size, they order both sizes,” he says. “If they’re not sure which color, they order both colors. And if they’re not sure which item, they order them all. But it’s costly to the retailers, and the retailers are not well-positioned to handle all the cost.”

On average, people return 25% of items they buy online, compared with only 8% of what they buy in stores, according to Forrester Research’s online analyst Sucharita Mulpuru. For clothing, it’s even higher, about 30%.

But not all rejected items are the same and have varying levels of depreciation, experts say. After an item is sent back to the retailer, the company must assess its condition and decide whether to resell it, send it to a liquidator or the landfill.

Optoro, a return logistics company, estimates the value of fashion apparel depreciates by 20% to 50% over an eight-to-16-week period. That’s why it’s so critical to get rejected items back and on sale again quickly.

Returns are also complicated this year because retailers pushed people to buy holiday gifts early to avoid shipping delays and crowded stores, meaning the return window may be closed by the time Christmas rolls around.

Amazon is allowing customers to return items until Jan. 31 for items shipped between Oct. 1 and Dec. 31, giving customers more time to decide. Last year, the policy didn’t include items shipped in October.

Rachel Sakelaris, 25, of Newport Beach, California, bought her boyfriend a waterproof backpack on Black Friday, then realized there was a 30-day return policy. She decided to move up the gift exchange to last weekend so he had time to return if he didn’t like it.

Buying too early can come with other hazards.

Sarah Huffman, 40, of Chesapeake, Virginia, wanted to get a jump start on the holiday season and spent $600 on Amazon on gifts, including a $60 pair of pajamas and a $90 Xbox game for her five children, in May.

But then her husband, a disabled veteran, quit his job because he felt his boss was too lax with COVD-19 safety protocols. Now, her family is struggling to put food on the table, and she can’t return some of the gifts she bought because the return window has lapsed.

“I was trying to take away the stress of the pandemic by buying early,” she said. “I didn’t realize that basic life choices would find a new low.”

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A Christmas miracle could be in store for one little boy in Southwest Florida.

Eight-year-old Jakobe “Kobe” Washington is battling leukemia and chemo isn’t working. His life is now in the hands of someone who has the right bone marrow.

WINK News first introduced you to Kobe last week as the family issued a plea to find a bone marrow donor to save the Charlotte County boy’s life. Kobe is Black, which makes the chances of finding the right donor even slimmer. African Americans seeking a bone marrow transplant have about a 23 percent chance of finding donors, compared to 41 percent for people who are Asian and Pacific Islander, 46 percent for Hispanic or Latino people and 77 percent for white people.

Photo courtesy of family

But a “swab” drive-up was held Thursday to hopefully find Kobe’s match – and save his life.

His family was ecstatic with the turnout; more than 400 people signed up online for the drive, and the people running it said they were expecting to swab more than 500 people.

Sheriff’s deputies and others started lining up early at Charlotte County Sports Park to try and “Be the Match.” The drive was scheduled for 10 a.m. to noon, but cars were still pulling in as the drive’s end neared.

While Kobe stayed home Thursday, his parents and extended family were at the drive – and the turnout, for them, was beyond belief.

“This is amazing; like I prayed for this, but I couldn’t imagine it would be this many people that came out to support. Like the line is to the road at all times, it’s been like this since we started this morning,” said Imeria Price, Kobe’s mom.

“Everybody that’s here for us, it really opens your eyes and lets you know that there is people out there, good people out there that’s here for you and that means a lot to us, you know, me and my family,” said Jordan Washington, Kobe’s dad.

“What Kobe did by inviting his community to come out and register for his life is going to change how African-Americans see the registry,” said Debiann McIntosh, community engagement specialist with Be the Match, which matches patients with donors who can give lifesaving bone marrow.

And while everyone who showed up Thursday was there for Kobe, they could end up helping other people if they can’t match with Kobe.

So many people suffering, so many people need help, right? And the only way we’re gonna get things back right is lending our hand to each other,” said Gerald Anderson, who was among those getting swabbed at the event.

Kobe and his parents are making the most of every day, praying that they’ll have their Christmas wish come true.

“I believe in a miracle, I believe there’s miracles out there, and I believe that, you know, my son is going to be the living witness of a miracle,” Washington said.

If you weren’t able to make it to the drive to be swabbed, you can also go to bethematch.org to register to potentially save Kobe’s life or the life of anyone who is looking for a match.

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A 40-year-old woman struck by a vehicle on US-41 near Harper Road on Dec. 23 died a week later.

According to a Florida Highway Patrol news release, the woman was taken to the hospital with serious injuries but later died on Dec. 30.

FHP made the announcement on Friday.

Troopers report a 38-year-old man, of Fort Myers, was traveling northbound on US-41 when the woman attempted to cross the US-41 travel lanes.

The front left of the SUV collided with the woman.

The crash investigation is ongoing.

FHP does not name the people involved in traffic crashes, citing Marsy’s Law.

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Saving our environment and construction don’t typically go hand in hand, but for architect David Corban, one of Gulfshore Life Magazine’s Men of the Year, it’s a perfect mix.

“My father is a retired forest ranger, so… just having a real respect for the natural environment,” Corban said.

His father’s mark is benefiting all of us through Corban’s approach to buildings.

“Buildings are one of the largest users of fossil fuels in the world,” Corban said.

That’s why Corban conceives every project to make it fit the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design standards.

“It has to do with using recycled and rapidly renewable materials,” Corban said. “And then also energy conservation.”

One of his current projects incorporates a window large enough to let natural light illuminate an office space while also using glass that keeps heat out and the air conditioning bill low. That outside feel has other benefits for the people inside.

“Architecture can positively impact people’s lives by the way we design it,” Corban said.

He’s known for projects like Celebration Park in Naples, but he also does a lot of building for non-profits like Grace Place, which took eight years.

“I think it’s more fulfilling for us to do work that positively influences those that might not otherwise get to be in a nice building,” Corban said.


Read the full Gulfshore Life story below:

David Corban
The Environmentalist Architect

If you were to picture a nonprofit human-service organization’s building, you might conjure the image of a rather humdrum, budget-conscious complex. We wouldn’t fault you for that, but we’d point out that you certainly don’t know architect David Corban of Naples, who has created stunning spaces (fiscally responsible ones, of course) that honor nonprofit organizations’ missions, staffs and, critically, their clients.

Take Grace Place for Children & Families in Golden Gate and its contemporary facade and airy classrooms. “A well-designed school makes students pay more attention, and it makes teachers enjoy their day more,” he says. Or the Shelter for Abused Women & Children’s new Shelly Stayer Shelter, where Corban eschewed institutional-feeling hallways for apartment “pods” that give women a greater sense of ownership and the warmth of home.

His philosophy has nonprofits knocking at his door. Other clients include the Holocaust Museum & Cohen Education Center, Catholic Charities’ Judy Sullivan Family Resource Center and Friends of Fakahatchee, which contracted Corban to make their longtime dream for a new boardwalk and interpretation center come true.

“I think architects can help with improving the social good,” Corban says. “I think we owe it to (nonprofits and their clients) to give them our best effort—to give them the best space we can provide.”

He’s done plenty of commercial work, too, including the acclaimed Celebration Park, a waterfront bar and food truck venue, for which he received the coveted Honor Award of Excellence in the New Work category from the American Institute of Architects Florida chapter earlier this year.

Regardless of project type, environmental consciousness pervades Corban’s work. Grace Place is the first LEED-certified campus in Collier County; the under-construction Lutgert Professional Center is being built to LEED standards as well. Corban’s own self-designed home on Halderman Creek is considered one of the county’s greenest and was listed among the “top 100 buildings built in Florida in the past 100 years” by the AIA. “Buildings are right up there with transportation and industry as the biggest burners of fossil fuels,” Corban says. “Architects have a huge responsibility to be part of the solution for climate change.”

By Jennifer Reed, Gulfshore Life

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