Kaua`i today was
confirmed to have its first active cases of COVID-19, in a tourist couple who
are being kept in isolation.
The couple is at an
undisclosed site overseen by Kaua`i County and being monitored by the state Department
of Health. The case is being managed according to protocols set up in advance
in anticipation of the event.
The confirmation, which was announced in a mass email from Kaua`i County a couple of hours after midnight, was
based on testing of the couple performed yesterday (Friday, March 13, 2020).
Meanwhile, the stateʻs
epidemic rumor mill continues to churn.
One of the most active
rumors, that cargo to the island is being disrupted, has spawned new runs on
supplies.
"I have never
seen Costco so full. They had lines snaking away from the checkout counters,
some of them all the way back to the pharmacy," one friend told me Friday
afternoon.
At Safeway, two women
asked me whether it was true that Young Brothers barges have been blocked from
coming. Others reported rumors that the harbors have been closed.
None of that is true.
I talked to store officials, who insist their supply lines are intact, and harbors
and shipping officials. Food and toilet paper are still making their ways to
the island.
What the panic buying and hoarding has done is move supplies from
store shelves, where people can get them as needed, into peoplesʻ home larders,
where excess supplies are not available to people in need.
Matson took the step
of issuing a press release in response to the rumors:
“Matson intends to
maintain all service schedules as normal with three arrivals a week to Honolulu
and twice a week calls to each neighbor island port.
Young Brothers, the
inter-island barge service, issued its own statement:
"There are currently NO changes to sailing
schedule or cargo acceptance at all ports. YB will continue to monitor COVID-19
and its impact to the State."
© Jan TenBruggencate 2020
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