Trick-or-treating, costume masks and Halloween parties discouraged by CDC this year

KITV4
By Shelby Lin Erdman, CNN

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has issued its first guidance for the holidays, including Halloween, amid the raging coronavirus pandemic in a new posting on its website Monday night.

Door-to-door trick-or-treating and costume masks and parties are discouraged this year due to the pandemic, the CDC said.

“Many traditional Halloween activities can be high-risk for spreading viruses,” the agency said in its posting. “There are several safer, alternative ways to participate in Halloween.”

The new guidance lists “low-risk, moderate and higher risk activities” for celebrating All Hallow’s Eve.

Low risk Halloween activities

Low risk activities include carving pumpkins and decorating your home, outdoor scavenger hunts, virtual costume contests and hosting a movie night with household members.

The CDC suggests, “Doing a Halloween scavenger hunt where children are given lists of Halloween-themed things to look for while they walk outdoors from house to house admiring Halloween decorations at a distance,” as a fun event for children.

“Having a Halloween movie night with people you live with,” is another low risk idea.

Moderate risk events

Moderate risk things to do include so-called “one-way trick-or-treating” by exchanging goody bags placed at the end of a driveway or the edge of a yard, having a small group outside for an “open-air costume parade” where participants are at least 6-feet apart or attending an outdoor costume party where masks are worn and people social distance.

A note here about Halloween masks. “A costume mask (such as for Halloween) is not a substitute for a cloth mask,” the CDC said. “A costume mask should not be used unless it is made of two or more layers of breathable fabric that covers the mouth and nose and doesn’t leave gaps.”

The agency is discouraging the use of costume masks this year, saying they are not a substitute for cloth masks. It is also warning against wearing a costume mask over a protective cloth, pointing out it’s dangerous because it might make it hard to breathe.

Other moderate risk activities include “an open-air, one-way, walk through (a) haunted forest where appropriate mask use is enforced, and people can social distance.

“If screaming will occur, greater distancing is advised,” the agency urged.

Pumpkin patches or orchard visits and outdoor Halloween movie night with local family friends are OK in this category.

Higher risk activities should be avoided

The CDC is warning higher risk activities should be avoided. These include door-to-door trick-or-treating, attending crowded, indoor costume parties, visiting indoor haunted houses or going on hayrides or tractors rides with strangers.

“Having trunk-or-treat where treats are handed out from trunks of cars lined up in large parking lots,” should be avoided, too.

“Traveling to a rural fall festival that is not in your community if you live in an area with community spread of COVID-19,” should also be avoided.

In fact, the health agency recommends tailoring all Halloween activity based on whether coronavirus infections are spiking in a given area.

Day of the Dead

That goes for Day of the Dead celebrations, too.

“Many traditional activities can put you at higher risk for exposure to COVID-19. There are several safer, alternative ways to celebrate Día de los Muertos,” the CDC said.

Health officials suggest making traditional family recipes for family and neighbors and delivering them in a non-contact manner, playing music in your home that your deceased loved ones enjoyed, making and decorating masks, setting out pillows and blankets in your home for the deceased and joining virtual celebrations as the lowest risk way to celebrate Day of the Dead.

Moderate activities include an open-air parade where people remain 6 feet apart, visiting and decorating the graves of loved ones with family members or hosting/attending small outdoor dinners with local family and friends.

Large indoor celebrations with singing or chanting are considered higher risk events that should be avoided, as are crowded indoor gatherings, large dinner parties with people from different households and travelers from other locations.

“When planning to host a holiday celebration, you should assess current COVID-19 levels in your community to determine whether to postpone, cancel, or limit the number of attendees,” the CDC warned.

The agency said the new guidelines are not meant to replace any local or state mandates on the pandemic.

Hawaiian Airlines: Relief May Finally Be on the Way

NASDAQ
Adam Levine-Weinberg The Motley Fool

While 2020 has been an awful year for every major airline, it has been especially bad for Hawaiian Holdings (NASDAQ: HA). In late March, the Hawaii state government countered the threat of the COVID-19 pandemic by imposing a 14-day mandatory quarantine on everyone arriving in the state. Naturally, this obliterated tourist demand: Hawaiian Airlines’ main source of traffic.

Hawaii now plans to relax the quarantine in mid-October for travelers who test negative for COVID-19 shortly before arriving in the state. This could finally enable demand to return to a meaningful level in the months ahead.

The pre-travel testing plan gets delayed

Three months ago, the state of Hawaii announced that it would start allowing travelers to skip the 14-day quarantine if they got tested for COVID-19 within 72 hours of departure and received a negative result from a certified lab. Hawaiian Airlines quickly made plans to resume service on most of its North America routes in August to capitalize on leisure travel demand in the last month of the summer travel season.

The pre-travel testing program wasn’t expected to be a perfect solution. COVID-19 tests aren’t 100% accurate, and someone could always get sick in the period between getting tested and boarding a plane for Hawaii. However, given that the pandemic seemed to be getting under control in the U.S. in June, the risk seemed manageable — and worth accepting, given how much Hawaii’s economy depends on tourism.

Unfortunately, almost as soon as Hawaii revealed its plan, COVID-19 case numbers skyrocketed in much of the U.S. — including California, the biggest source of tourist travel to Hawaii. The resulting jump in testing demand and lab bottlenecks made it impossible for most people to get tested and receive results within 72 hours. And Hawaii itself experienced a surge of COVID-19 cases beginning in late July and peaking near the end of August.

As a result, Hawaii delayed the start of its pre-travel testing program again and again, forcing Hawaiian Airlines to similarly postpone its plans to restore capacity to its system. That has made it hard for the leisure airline to generate revenue and keep its employees busy. Earlier this month, Hawaiian estimated that its capacity would decline 87% year over year in the third quarter.

Let’s try that again

With testing wait times improving and the pandemic easing in Hawaii and many other states, Hawaii Governor David Ige announced last week that the pre-travel testing program will launch on Oct. 15.

The general outline of the program is similar, although some of the details have changed over the past few months. Travelers who want to skip the 14-day quarantine period must get a nasal swab test no more than 72 hours before they arrive in Hawaii and present evidence of a negative test result. CVS and Kaiser Permanente will serve as initial “trusted testing partners” for the program, and the state plans to add more testing options over time.

Once again, Hawaiian Airlines is planning a significant expansion of its long-haul services that lines up with the loosening of the quarantine restrictions. However, management is understandably taking a cautious approach. The start of the pre-travel testing program has been delayed before, and it could be postponed again.

A crucial milestone

If the new Oct. 15 date sticks, it could unlock a meaningful amount of pent-up demand for travel to Hawaii, particularly during the major holiday periods later this year. Hawaiian Airlines may benefit from a big uptick in ticket sales over the next couple of months, just as ticket sales jumped in June for its mainland competitors as they sold tickets for summer travel.

Such an influx of cash wouldn’t come a moment too soon. Hawaiian Airlines has been burning about $3 million a day recently, a substantial sum for a smallish airline. It needs to reduce that level of cash burn pronto in order to avoid emerging from the pandemic overwhelmed by debt.

Hawaiian Airlines has already begun implementing staff cuts that will temporarily reduce its workforce by 2,501 positions (34%). Management warned in early September that without a resumption of tourism — which clearly depends on the pre-travel testing program — even more job cuts may be necessary.

Clearly, Hawaiian Airlines and its employees have a lot riding on the return of Hawaii tourist demand. If everything goes smoothly, Hawaiian Airlines’ cash burn will slow significantly next quarter, and cash flow could turn positive again in 2021. However, the airline sits in a tenuous position. If additional waves of the pandemic force Hawaii to clamp down on travel again, Hawaiian Airlines could find itself back at square one at any moment.

Maui farmers frustrated over delay in COVID-19 grant distribution

KITV4 Island News
by 'A'ali'i Dukelow

Maui County has promised $2.5 million in grant money for small farms facing financial hardship during the COVID-19 pandemic. Funding was approved in the budget back in June for the 2021 fiscal year starting July 1.

Since then, farmers have been left wondering why the funding has not been dispersed yet.

Niles James, co-owner of Ho'omakua Farm in Kula, said he is frustrated by what he sees as a lack of clarity from the county.

"No body was really giving me defined answers, or the answer was kind of contradictory to what was being said," James said.

To make up for the staffing he can no longer afford, James said he has been forced to work 12-days, seven days a week.

"It's been exhausting, but the support of the community has been absolutely wonderful, and has shed a new light to may be what agriculture can be here in Hawai'i," James added.

According to James, his restaurant clientele has been cut by about half, but his farm has been selling 6-times more produce boxes to local residents. To keep up the momentum, he says he needs the grant money the industry's been promised.

"It's kind of frustrating that it was promised, it would be beneficial, and I think, that in the sense of being 2,500 miles in the middle of no where on an island community and that food security would be one of our highest priorities especially with Young Brothers increasing their shipping rates," James said.

Maui County Councilmember Keani Rawlins-Fernandez introduced the microgrant program, and in a statement to KITV-4 today said, "During budget session, April through June, council received public testimony nearly everyday, requesting microgrants for small, local farmers." Rawlins added that the pandemic, "...underscored the urgency of growing more food locally."

Maui Mayor Michael Victorino said the county was forced to wait until tax collection was completed at the end of August, to make sure funding was still available. Today, he said the county is closing up loopholes to ensure they can track the money.

"This is county money. This is taxpayer money and I wanted to make sure it was done right," Victorino said.

Victorino noted he hopes the grants will be distributed by the middle of October.

Do Traders View Alexander & Baldwin Inc (Hawaii) (ALEX) Stock’s Current Trend Positively?

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More About Alexander & Baldwin Inc (Hawaii)
Alexander & Baldwin Inc operates in the real estate sector. It functions through three segments namely Commercial Real Estate, Land Operations, and Construction. The Commercial Real Estate segment owns and manages retail, industrial and office properties in Hawaii and on the Mainland, thereby accounting for most of the company’s revenue. The Land Operations segment actively manages the company’s land and real estate-related assets and makes optimum utilization of these assets. The construction segment represents the company’s sale of asphalt and concrete. It also manages asphalt related construction services on a contract basis. Geographically, the activities are carried out across the United States.

Three things to watch as farm aid floodgates reopen

POLITICO Weekly Agriculture
By RYAN MCCRIMMON

WELCOME TO WEEKLY AGRICULTURE! We hope everyone enjoyed some football and fall weather this weekend. Today marks the start of another round of stimulus checks to farmers and ranchers, up to $14 billion in total, as Washington continues flooding the agriculture industry with record levels of taxpayer aid. So let’s step back and look at three major economic and political implications of what’s become a defining feature of federal farm policy in recent years:

Even before the new batch of payments, government spending was projected to account for more than a third of all farm income this year, driven by the historic coronavirus relief programs. But the rapid rise in subsidies precedes the pandemic: Agricultural aid has grown every year of the Trump administration, including a roughly 65 percent increase in two consecutive years — a trend that concerns some ag economists.

— If you look past the topline numbers, plenty of producers say the money hasn’t reached their corner of the sprawling farm industry. In response, the Agriculture Department expanded the stimulus program to new sectors — including growers of tobacco, winegrapes and certain wheat varieties — that weren’t included in the first round of aid.

— House Ag Chairman Collin Peterson (D-Minn.) said there are “some good things” in the new program, but he still wanted USDA to deliver aid to ethanol producers, contract growers, certain textile mills and livestock farmers that were forced to euthanize animals when slaughterhouses shut down.

ON THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL, President Donald Trump continues touting the coronavirus relief and trade bailout payments as proof of his commitment to farmers and ranchers, who are some of his most loyal voters.

— “Any farmers in this group? Because you’ve got to love Trump. I gave you $28 billion dollars,” Trump said at a rally last week in Mosinee, Wis. “Did everybody get that money? You had a very good year. The farmers have had a very good year.”

Democratic nominee Joe Biden has tried to blunt Trump’s appeal to agriculture by highlighting the financial fallout from his tariff fight with China. For example, a Biden campaign ad earlier this year features an Iowa farmer blasting Trump’s trade bailout as an effort to “screw you over and pay you off with somebody else’s money.”

MEANWHILE ON CAPITOL HILL, debate over the farm rescue payments is spilling over into high-stakes negotiations over a stopgap spending bill to avert a government shutdown next week, a potential snag that we flagged for readers earlier this month.

ICYMI, the White House asked Congress to ensure that USDA has enough spending authority to keep farm payments flowing when the new fiscal year begins Oct. 1. But Democrats aren’t eager to give Trump a “blank check to spread political favors,” especially when he keeps dangling the money in front of farmers at campaign rallies, as one Democratic aide told POLITICO’s Caitlin Emma and John Bresnahan.

The farm aid standoff, which also tangled up September spending talks last year, forced congressional leaders to miss their own deadline to release a continuing resolution on Friday. (They’re now aiming to publish the measure today.) Before the delay, there appeared to be a deal to include the White House request along with an extra $2 billion to help families with school-age children afford groceries.

Bottom line: As farm payments have blown past historic records, political debate over the aid programs has bubbled up into a hot-button topic on the campaign trail and in closed-door congressional negotiations. Those debates are now coming to a head, with nine days until the next shutdown deadline and just 43 days until the Nov. 3 elections, when several farm states will play an outsize role in picking the next president.

HAPPY MONDAY, SEPT. 21! We’re back with your weekly look-ahead. And speaking of looking ahead, your host looks forward to writing about Martian farms one day. Send tips to rmccrimmon@politico.com and @ryanmccrimmon, and follow us @Morning_Ag.

POLITICO’s Energy Podcast, sponsored by Chevron: Check out our daily five-minute brief covering the latest in energy and environmental politics and policy, must-know stories, and candid insights and analysis from POLITICO’s 10-person energy team. Subscribe for free and start listening today.

Planning Department opposes wedding business in Holualoa’s coffee farming region

West Hawaii Today
By Nancy Cook Lauer

The county Planning Department is recommending the Leeward Planning Commission deny an after-the-fact permit for a wedding venue in the coffee-growing region of Holualoa.

Douglas and Kathryn Hickey have grown coffee at Sunshower Farm for the past seven years, and for the past three, were supplementing their agricultural income by offering the farm for weddings.

The combination of businesses allowed the couple to boost the agricultural value of their farm product in addition to making enough extra money to keep the farm solvent, said planning consultant Zendo Kern, who represents the couple.

The property, in the state agricultural district, is located at 76-1297 Waiono Ranch Road, about 1. 5 miles east and mauka of the Mamalahoa Highway-Waiono Ranch Road intersection. The 2.25-acre lot is part of a 20-acre condominium property regime unit which is part of Waiono Meadows subdivision, an 11-lot subdivision created in 1987 with lot sizes ranging from 38 to 1,068 acres.

In a 14-page proposed “Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law,” the Planning Department said the wedding business is contrary to the objectives laid out in state land use law. The department also raised concerns about traffic on the one-lane Waiono Ranch Road, flooding, liability and neighbors’ concerns about noise and lights.

“It is highly likely the income from the proposed use will exceed income generated by the existing coffee farming activities on the remainder of the property,” the Planning Department report stated. “Having the event venue be the primary income-generating use of the CPR Unit is not consistent with the intent of the State land use laws or the County Zoning Code for lands in the Agricultural District and County agricultural zoning district.”

The commission is scheduled to meet virtually at 9:30 a.m. today.

The meeting can be viewed at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAFoRMb3rfWLQMPd6TAkEGA.

Kern said the couple learned they needed a special permit to conduct weddings on the property when they started the process of building an extra structure so they could move the wedding business out of their home. The new venue structure would be, to be located south of the existing farm dwelling, would be 3,500 square feet and include a large covered deck, a large foyer, kitchen, two rooms for wedding preparation, a storage room and restrooms.

The farm doesn’t host overnight guests.

“They’re legitimate farmers doing legitimate farming and have been doing weddings with no complaints,” Kern said. “They just want to be able to do weddings on their farm.”