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Thursday, October 15, 2020

Does It Have To Be This Hard? - Honolulu Civil Beat

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It really doesn’t have to be this hard.

Our response to the COVID-19 threat thus far has led to mass confusion, created resentments and exposed some serious institutional shortcomings.

I’ll say it again: It doesn’t have to be this hard.

Sure, in the beginning we were swimming in a void of ignorance. What were the real dangers of the virus? Who did it target and how? How could we best protect ourselves? Just where was the infection?

So, yeah, the strong initial reaction – lockdown – was probably in order. And initially, we all did really well.

But at that point, a critical order of business should have been collecting data. Learn as much as possible about the virus: how it transmits, where it’s rooted and where it’s spreading.

With solid data in hand, a coordinated response could have been crafted that protected the maximum number of people while doing the minimum amount of harm to economic and social institutions.

Aina Haina residents enjoy a game of pickleball with protective masks at Waialae Iki Park in Aina Haina, HI, Tuesday, July 15, 2020. Invented in 1965 in Washington State, pickleball can be played on a traditional tennis court with smooth paddles and a plastic hole-filled ball. (Ronen Zilberman photo Civil Beat)

Aina Haina residents enjoy a game of pickleball with protective masks at Waialae Iki Park in Aina Haina.

Ronen Zilberman/Civil Beat

At the same time, our leaders should have been sharing information as they got it and inviting input on creative ways to create a safe response to this outbreak.

Instead, they immediately assumed the patronizing posture of knowing what’s best for us peasants – even to the extent of spending a quarter of a million of the dollars designated for emergency response to hire a damn marketing agency to make sure we got the message.

Of course, it was way too much to ask that those dollars be used to strategically pinpoint trouble areas, then address them quickly and effectively.

Sure, if you have hard data showing the virus spreads in large groups, then limit large gatherings. Better still, if you know that most cases are happening in certain neighborhoods, then apply restrictions and educational efforts intensively to those areas.

But as soon as you cherry-pick exemptions (religious gatherings, family-based gatherings, workplace training classes), you invalidate the effort. And when you refuse to share data, your credibility is down the crapper.

If you don’t want people touching communal items or using close communal space, then restrict it. But once again, don’t fall victim to glaring hypocritical political exemptions (gyms open but restaurants closed, the ocean is open but the forest is closed, Walmart is open but Homeworld is closed, you can’t go to school but church is OK, you can buy flowers at Home Depot but not at a florist, etc.).

I’m just sayin’ that a more “surgical” approach would have been to let “life” resume but enforce a two-week shut down for any entity that is a demonstrated transmission location. So, if it appears you have a hot spot at one gym, for example, you can close that one down for a couple of weeks while you educate the patrons and clean the premises.

Would that encourage the business owner to clean the equipment better, enforce mask wearing and insist on social distancing? Theoretically, yes. Especially if the competition is allowed to stay open.

As you develop a more robust data base, you can impose surgical restrictions and target so-called hot spots without trashing the whole economy.

Of course, if you don’t have the data, you can’t have competent analysis – and if you don’t have an enforcement team, it’s all just farting in the wind. So, let’s just assume for the argument that you have good data, a core of good analysts and some muscle. I mean, you’ve got a whole lot of smart but unemployed people. Why not spend some of your federal dollars to employ them to temporarily help solve the problem?

This whole discussion is particularly relevant as the tourism market reopens.

Let’s skip the discussion on the ham-handed roll-out of testing protocols and ask the core question: What happens if infection rates skyrocket after the tourists start to fill up Waikiki and the neighborhood vacation rentals?

Do you shut down the whole tourism industry again? Or do you identify the infection hot spots and just close down those establishments?

Do you shut down all travel again, or do you identify the offending carrier and stop that route?

As you identify infected visitors, do you embrace them with warm aloha, or send them back where they came from – post-haste?

If you have the data, you can create an incredibly strong motivation for airlines, hotel hosts, restaurants and tour companies to make sure their tourists are infection-free.

Parks Closed along Waikiki Beach, covered benches along Kalakaua Avenue have yellow tape during COVID19 surge in Honolulu. August 12, 2020

Parks were closed along Waikiki Beach and benches covered earlier this summer.

Cory Lum/Civil Beat

How much would it gall a hotel to have to close down for deep cleaning while the competition across the street was still operating and turning good revenue? How about a tour company that had to stop operations because a bus was contaminated?

How would it feel if your bar was forced to close while the others down the street were still open?

If you have good data, good monitoring, good tracing and good analysis – and the political will to identify and enforce closure – this whole shut-everything-down (with exceptions) would not have to happen. The color code response and the tier systems would be passé.

You would not be less vigilant, but more vigilant. But instead of enforcing with a sledgehammer, you’d use a scalpel.

This surgical enforcement model can be applied to just about any institution: schools, churches, restaurants, hair salons, markets, stores, community centers, etc.

It’s not too late for our so-called leaders to stand up straight, take a deep breath and start acting like they have a clue. A couple of them are already auditioning to be the next governor. So far, nobody’s been really impressive. But that can change. Can’t it?

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October 15, 2020 at 05:04PM
https://www.civilbeat.org/2020/10/does-it-have-to-be-this-hard/

Does It Have To Be This Hard? - Honolulu Civil Beat

https://news.google.com/search?q=hard&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

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