COVID Outbreak Among Migrant Apple Pickers Contained
COVID Outbreak Among Migrant Apple Pickers Contained
Vermont's top public health official said Tuesday the outbreak of COVID-19 among apple pickers in Addison County has been contained and there is no threat to the public.

Vermont’s top public health official said Tuesday the outbreak of COVID-19 among apple pickers in Addison County has been contained and there is no threat to the public.

Speaking at the state’s regular virus briefing, Health Commissioner Dr. Mark Levine said the total number of people infected in the outbreak is now 27, up one case from Monday.

But the latest case came from the same batch of tests that detected the first 26 and does not represent an increase in the size of the outbreak.

Contact tracing has been completed and at this time the outbreak has been contained to the site, Levine said.

He emphasized there is no known risk to the public.

There is also no risk of eating apples or any other products that were grown or produced from the orchards, he said.

The migrant apple pickers at Champlain Orchards in Shoreham arrived in Vermont on Sept. 14 and were at the end of a 14-day quarantine when one of them tested positive.

We dont believe this was acquired in Vermont, he said. It came with the person.

Officials have not said where the workers are from, but state Deputy Agriculture Secretary Alyson Eastman had previously noted that that many foreign apple pickers in Vermont are from Jamaica.

Levine said one of the farm workers was hospitalized, although he did not know Tuesday if that person was still in the hospital.

He said the state and the orchard are working to ensure the farm workers have everything they need.

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UNEMPLOYMENT CLASSIFICATION CHANGE

A change in a federal classification of the states unemployment rate could end up hurting needy Vermonters, Vermont Labor Commissioner Michael Harrington said.

Harrington made the comments Monday after the U.S. Department of Labor ruled Vermont will be removed from the High Extended Benefits Program, which provides benefits for 20 weeks. Now, certain Vermonters are eligible for only 13 weeks of benefits.

The program will end Oct. 10.

In August the states unemployment rate dropped to 4.8% from 8.3% in July.

This change in benefit eligibility comes at a very difficult time for many Vermonters, Harrington said in a statement.

The data used to determine the unemployment rate is a compilation of a household survey administered by the U.S. Census Bureau. Harrington said it does not take into consideration the flexibility in unemployment eligibility or actions taken by Vermonters to protect themselves and their loved ones.

There are more people receiving unemployment benefits than what is reported, highlighting the disconnect between the federal government and what is happening on the ground in Vermont, he said.

‘Because of this calculation method, critical benefits will be cut short for many Vermonters, Harrington said.

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NUMBERS

The Vermont Department of Health on Tuesday reported four new cases of the virus that causes COVID-19, none were part of the Addison County outbreak involving apple pickers.

Of the four cases, two were in Windsor County with one each in Chittenden and Windham counties.

The number of deaths from COVID-19 remains at 58. Vermont has not seen a COVID-19 fatality in over two months.

The travel data updated weekly by Vermont Commissioner of Financial Regulation Michael Pieciak showed the smallest number of people who can travel to Vermont without quarantining since a system was set up in June to determine who can safely visit.

Now about 2.9 million people from counties across the Northeast whose counties have rates of COVID-19 of 400 active cases per million or less are eligible to visit the state without quarantining. When the system was set up in June about 11.5 million people were eligible to visit the state.

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