On March 25, 2020

Mayor Allaire declares state of emergency

Confirmed cases of COVID-19 grow exponentially

By Polly Mikula

On Monday, March 23, Mayor David Allaire declared a state of emergency for Rutland. The move gives him greater unilateral power to take action and move quicker to ensure the safety of Rutland City residents. While Allaire made no indication that he planned to use the power immediately, he said he felt it important to have the authority to do so if or when needed. Emergency declarations have been made in the past to deal with extreme weather events like Tropical Storm Irene.

The emergency declaration comes after three people in the Rutland area tested positive for the coronavirus over the weekend, and one more on Monday bringing  the total for Rutland County to five confirmed cases. By comparison, Windsor County had 15 confirmed cases as of Tuesday, which is second most to Chittenden County, which had 40. There were 95 statewide as of Tuesday morning, March 24 — 7 have now died in the state.

By law, the identities of those three people are protected. However, one was an employee of GE and another was a clinical staff member at Rutland Regional Medical Center.

GE Aviation, which employs 1,400 in the region, manufacturing commercial and military engine blades and vanes, announced it would temporarily close its facilities in Rutland after a plant worker tested positive for COVID-19.

The company reached out to employees Sunday, March 22, and told them not to report to work until Wednesday morning.

“We are partnering with public health officials on contact tracing and notification of impacted people at our site,” the company said in a statement late Sunday afternoon. “We continue to take all necessary precautions and prioritize safety.” The site will be cleaned and disinfected, the statement continued.

The company’s statement said that employee has not been at work since March 18.

“We are contacting employees who had close contact with this co-worker and asking them to self-quarantine,” the statement read. “This action is being taken in conjunction with public health officials and is consistent with CDC guidance.”

Rutland Regional Medical Center CEO Claudio Fort posted a video on RRMC’s Facebook page Monday night, in which he addressed the clinical staff member who had tested positive. “We have conducted contact tracing and have notified the Vermont Department of Health and we are providing information to patients and staff who have been in contact with this staff person,” Fort said. “I think this brings a lot of fear and anxiety into the community.”

Fort went on to implore folks watching to abide by the best practices laid out by the Center for Disease Control (CDC) and to contact their primary care doctor if they feel they have symptoms.

Tests are very limited, but testing won’t affect care protocol for most.

 

Rutland Mayor David Allaire

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Okemo Valley Holiday Express brings festive cheer to Vermont

December 18, 2024
Dec. 21 through 22 from 9 a.m to 6 p.m.—CHESTER—The Okemo Valley Regional Chamber of Commerce (OVRCC), in collaboration with Vermont Rail System, is launching the Okemo Valley Holiday Express, a new festive holiday train experience for families and visitors. Running on Dec 21 and 22, the excursion train offers a scenic journey through South-Central…

John Rodgers seeks to be a bridge between parties in his new role as Lt. Gov.

December 18, 2024
By Ekaterina Raikhovski Editor’s note: The following story was supplied by Community News Service, a University of Vermont journalism internship, originally produced for an assignment for the Winooski News. Grandchildren running around his 1840s farmhouse isn’t the only thing keeping John Rodgers’ hands full these days. There’s the masonry business the West Glover 59-year-old has…

Education funding: The three cliffs problem

December 18, 2024
Education spending saw its biggest jump in years in fiscal 2025, and school taxpayers are noticing the change in their bills. The increase this year was due to a lot of factors outside both schools’ and taxpayers’ control—inflation, healthcare costs, and the loss of pandemic-era federal support chief among them. All of that led to…

Vermont loosened Act 250 rules for housing, how are developers responding?

December 18, 2024
By Carly Berlin Editor’s note: This story, by Report for America corps member Carly Berlin, was produced through a partnership between VTDigger and Vermont Public. When 10 apartments at the new Armory House building just outside of downtown Vergennes opened in June, they all had tenants within two weeks. To Peter Kahn, the building’s developer, watching…