Wall Street sinks again as worries about economy weigh

Wall Street sinks again as worries about economy weigh
By STAN CHOE AP Business Writer
Stocks are falling in another erratic day of trading on Wall Street Wednesday. The market has been wavering the last couple weeks after coming off its best month in a generation, as optimism about reopening the economy collides with worries about the dangers of lifting restrictions too soon. The S&P 500 was down 2.3% in afternoon trading with the sharpest losses coming for stocks that most need a healthy economy for their profits to grow. Trading was volatile, and the index went quickly from an early loss of 1.1% to a gain of 0.1% and back to more losses.

Wall Street is falling in another erratic day of trading Wednesday, weighed down by worries about a slow recovery for the economy.
The market has been wavering the last couple weeks after coming off its best month in a generation, as optimism about reopening the economy collides with worries about the dangers of lifting restrictions too soon.
The S&P 500 was down 2.3%, as of 12:18 p.m. Eastern time, with the sharpest losses coming for stocks that most need a healthy economy for their profits to grow. Trading was volatile, and the index went from an early loss of 1.1% to a gain of 0.1% and back to more losses, all in the span of 90 minutes.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 576 points, or 2.4%, at 23,188, and the Nasdaq composite was down 2.6%.
Treasury yields were also lower in another sign of pessimism about the economy and inflation, after Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell warned about the threat of a prolonged recession. He said the U.S. government may need to pump even more aid into the economy, which is bleeding millions of jobs every week.
But Powell also said that the Fed is not considering taking interest rates below zero, as some investors have been speculating recently.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 0.64% from 0.69% late Tuesday.
Oil companies and other energy producers had the sharpest losses in the S&P 500, down 4.7%. Financial stocks were also among the market’s weakest, down 3.5%. Those two areas of the market have been some of this year’s biggest losers this year on expectations that a coronavirus-ravaged economy will mean less demand for oil and more defaults on loans.
Earlier in the day, strength for technology stocks had helped to steady the market momentarily. Tech stocks have been among the market’s few clear winners this year, as investors pile into companies that can make money regardless of whether people are hunkering at home in hopes of containing the virus. .
The volatile day echoes Tuesday’s action, when the S&P 500 was close to flat for much of the day before a sudden slide in the last hour of trading left it down 2.1%.
Analysts say they expect the market to remain in a wait-and-see approach for weeks as investors gauge how economic reopenings underway in areas around the world are going. Many countries and U.S. states have begun lifting restrictions on businesses that were meant to slow the spread of the coronavirus outbreak but have also sent the economy into a severe recession.
Hope that the reopenings will allow growth to resume later this year have helped drive the S&P 500 up 26% since late March, but worries have been rising recently that premature liftings of lockdowns will cause resurgent waves of infections.
On Tuesday, the top U.S. infectious diseases expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, warned that if the economy reopens too soon, it could cause a backtrack in the “road to try to get economic recovery.”
In China, where the virus first surfaced, authorities announced seven new cases on Wednesday. Six were in Jilin province, in the northeast, where alert levels were raised and rail connections suspended. South Korea reported 26 additional cases of the coronavirus over the past 24 hours amid a new spike in infections linked to nightclubs in Seoul.
Worries about a resumption in trade tensions between the United States and China have also weighed on markets around the world recently.
If Wednesday’s loss holds, it will be the first back-to-back loss of 2% for the S&P 500 since its rally began on March 24.
In Europe, Germany’s DAX lost 2.6%, and France’s CAC 40 dropped 2.9%. The FTSE 100 in London lost 1.5%.
In Asia, Japan’s Nikkei 225 slipped 0.5%, the Hang Seng in Hong Kong lost 0.3% and South Korea’s Kospi rose 0.9%.
A barrel of U.S. oil to be delivered in June fell 1.2% to $25.48 per barrel. Brent crude, the international standard, slipped 1.6% to $29.51 per barrel.
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AP Business Writer Elaine Kurtenbach contributed.

AG Shapiro: We Are Investigating Pennsylvania Nursing Homes For Criminal Neglect

AG Shapiro: We Are Investigating Pennsylvania Nursing Homes For Criminal Neglect

PA Attorney General’s Neglect Team Launches Public Reporting Email During COVID-19

 

HARRISBURG, PA – Today, Attorney General Shapiro announced that over the past several weeks his office opened criminal investigations into several Pennsylvania nursing homes and reaffirmed that the Office of Attorney General will investigate any nursing home engaging in criminal neglect of patients and residents. While the Pennsylvania Department of Health has primary regulating and licensing authority of nursing homes throughout the Commonwealth, the Attorney General’s Care-Dependent Neglect Team, within the Medicaid Fraud Control Section, has jurisdiction on matters of criminal neglect.

“Protecting seniors and our most vulnerable in the care of others, is one of the core responsibilities of my office and we’re stepping up to protect older Pennsylvanians during this crisis. We will hold nursing facilities and caretakers criminally accountable if they fail to properly provide care to our loved ones. While we salute and appreciate nursing home staff on the front lines during this pandemic, we will not tolerate those who mistreat our seniors and break the law,” said Attorney General Shapiro. “Active criminal investigations are already underway and we encourage people to share relevant complaints with us on our special tip line so we can best protect people in nursing homes.”

Under Pennsylvania law, Neglect of a Care-Dependent Person occurs under a high threshold of certain circumstances when the caretaker of a person fails to properly provide for their health, safety, and welfare.  The Attorney General’s Neglect Team reviews allegations regarding specific instances of mistreatment of care-dependent adults who are endangered or suffer injury resulting from caretaker neglect to determine whether criminal charges are appropriate, and if so, prosecutes such cases. The Office of Attorney General receives referrals for criminal investigation from local officials, the Department of Health, and members of the public.

The Pennsylvania Attorney General’s office is launching a public email for criminal complaints and reports of neglect in nursing home communities at neglect-COVID@attorneygeneral.gov. For concerns relating to wellness checks, adequate PPE, or COVID-19 testing within a facility, please contact Department of Health at 1-800-254-5164.

For emergencies involving immediate danger to the person, people should contact 911 or 1-877-PA-HEALTH.

Counterfeit masks reaching frontline health workers in US

Counterfeit masks reaching frontline health workers in US
By JULIET LINDERMAN and MARTHA MENDOZA Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — Counterfeit face masks that provide inadequate COVID-19 protection have been distributed to frontline health care workers across the country. An Associated Press investigation has tracked the masks to a U.S.-certified factory in China where legitimate medical masks are made. Adding to the confusion, millions of masks now considered inadequate for medical protection entered the U.S. and are now in use because of the federal government’s relaxed standards. Meanwhile state and local governments, hospitals, private caregivers and well wishers have spent hundreds of millions of dollars on the flawed masks. Before the pandemic, N95 masks sold for about 60 cents each. Today they’re priced as high as $6 apiece.

“Incompetence” – Josh Kail’s One Word Description For The Wolf Administration.

Story and photos by Mark Peterson

(Beaver, PA) Concise and clear. That was definitely the case for the talk that PA State representative Joshua Kail (R-15th district) gave during a noon time press conference held Friday in court room 1 at the Beaver County court house.  The fact is, the state rep only used one word, and its meaning was very clear to describe how he felt PA Governor Wolf and the Wolf administration had handled and responded to issues concerning the COVID 19 crisis. That word was “incompetence.”

Kail’s word was used eight times in his four minute and nineteen second address.  His dissertation was one of many segments during Friday’s presentation that also included speeches from Beaver County Commission Chairman Daniel Camp, County Commissioner Tony Amadio,  County Commissioner Jack Manning, State Representative Jim Marshall, State Senator Elder Vogel and Beaver County District Attorney David Lozier.   The reason for the mass eloquence from Beaver County’s chosen leaders was to gather in solidarity to voice their displeasure toward PA Governor Wolf’s decision to single out Beaver County and make it the only county in southwest PA not to have COVID 19 shut down restrictions eased.

Video from Josh Kail’s speech on Friday May 8, 2020.

The focal point of the press conference was to announce that Beaver County officials will move forward anyway and allow certain local businesses to re open, even though state wide restrictions remain in place. That was made possible by getting the affirmation from District Attorney David Lozier that he would not prosecute any business or business owner who had a complaint filed against them.  The guidance suggested by Lozier and the other elected officials for re opening was in effect the same businesses that would have been allowed to open if Beaver County had been given the “Yellow Phase” designation. That phase  mainly allows retail shops, child care centers and gatherings of up to 25 people to open or happen.  Bars, restaurants, hair salons and other enterprises that are regulated by the state would not receive the same special “look the other way” privileges as promised by Lozier for the local establishments.

Officially, Beaver County continues to be listed as a “Red Phase” county with only life sustaining and essential businesses, along with a few added exceptions, allowed to operate until the next proposed deadline of June 4, 2020.

Other video segments from Friday’s press conference are available at the BCR Radio Youtube Channel.

Do The Math . . . According To The Numbers, Beaver County Should Re-Open. A Lesson In Arithmetic From Commissioner Manning.

Story and photos by Mark Peterson

(Beaver, PA) For people who like statistics and data, this story will win a Pulitzer Prize. On Friday, Political proletariat from Beaver County held a  closed press conference in court room number 1 of the Beaver County Courthouse to unleash their disdain for a recent decision by Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf not to re open Beaver County after seven week shut down to slow down the spread of the  COVID 19 virus.

After County Commission Chairman Daniel C. Camp set the tone with strong oratory in his opening statements, he turned the program over to the analytical thinker of the bunch, Commissioner Jack Manning.  For the next three minutes and forty five seconds, the gathered media were going to hear just exactly why Beaver County should have been included in the the re opening process,  along with every other county in southwest Pennsylvania. The basic gist of Manning’s diatribe was that only a fool could have come to the conclusion that Beaver County should remain closed after taking a closer look at the data.  Data that he was more than willing to share. Here is a video of Jack’s segment:

 

The conclusion was a simple one. Open Beaver County up anyway, regardless of what the governor had decided.  Jack Manning, along with fellow commissioners, Tony Amadio and Dan Camp, state representatives, Jim Marshall and Joshua Kail, state senator, Elder Vogel and district  attorney, David Lozier, banded together in solidarity and announced that local Beaver County businesses were permitted to open up, in the same fashion as those in other counties, in spite of restrictions in place from Harrisburg. This was accomplished by getting assurances from Lozier, that no business or business owner, who had complaints filed against them by local law enforcement, would be prosecuted.  However, businesses having state regulated licenses, such as hair salons, restaurants and bars would not be able to open up under the rogue moment announced by Manning and his cohorts on Friday.

For now Beaver County will “officially” remain closed, according to the Governor’s list, anyway, until at least June 4, 2020.

 

Business Open In Beaver County? Sort of . . .District Attorney Promises Not To Prosecute Businesses That Re-open.

Story and photos by Mark Peterson

(Beaver, PA) Beaver County District Attorney David Lozier was the final person to speak from the podium in court room 1 in the Beaver County Courthouse at a press conference on Friday May 8, 2020.  Lozier backed up what other county leaders had proclaimed earlier to media personnel in attendance at the closed forum.   Lozier clarified and summed up the press conference by closing his segment with “I will not prosecute a business or a business owner who has a complaint against them under these orders. ”

Beaver County Commission Chairman Dan Camp, along with fellow commissioners Tony Amadio and Jack Manning joined State Representatives Jim Marshall and Joshua Kail and State Senator Elder Vogel , set the stage prior to Lozier’s final confirmation. The collection of county and state officials all offered commentary at Friday’s press conference. The event was scheduled as a forum to voice the group’s displeasure with Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf’s recent decision to not ease COVID 19 closure restrictions on Beaver County, leaving it the only county in the south west region under full lock down.  In a rather bold maneuver, the group stood in solidarity and announced Friday that Beaver County businesses will be encouraged to re open regardless of statewide closure mandates still in place, under the same conditions as the “yellow  phase” of business reopening  scheduled to begin on May 15th in neighboring areas.  Assurance was given that businesses will not face potential legal problems from local law enforcement if they do open their doors.

Beaver County District Attorney, David Lozier, speaking at Friday’s press conference.

The strong reaction from Beaver County officials came on the heels of being surprised.  Much of the rhetoric at Friday’s presser centered around a feeling of Beaver County seemingly being duped by, and then spurned by Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf.  Local officials proclaimed that the dialogue between The Governor and the county had been positive and that the Governor’s office was even praised the efforts  and progress made in fighting and containing the COVID 19 virus.  According to County Commissioner, Tony Amadio,  “We were told for the past six weeks that we were doing a good job. We were doing a great job, and that the southwest corner was going to be able to move forward into the yellow.  And the we found out last night, that they put a wall around Beaver County.  It was just, as I said, totally disheartening.”

Beaver County Commissioner, Tony Amadio, speaking at Friday’s press conference.

Officially, Beaver didn’t pass muster for having the COVID 19 closure restrictions lifted because the number of on going corona virus cases reported on a per capita basis weighted with total population wasn’t low enough.  Though very few residents outside of long term care facilities have contracted the virus, a high concentration of COVID 19 cases and deaths have occurred in with a couple local facilities.  A couple of isolated outbreaks  in those facilities made it impossible for Beaver County to meet the Governor’s threshold for re opening.

“The Board Of Commissioners Can No Longer Stand Here On Mute” – Commission Chairmen Leads Charge Against Governor’s Decision.

Story and photos by Mark Peterson

(Beaver, PA)  There were actually two prominent news stories on Friday concerning Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf potentially lifting stay at home restrictions in Western Pennsylvania. The obvious angle was the fact that Beaver County was the only county in the entire southwest region of the state to not be scheduled for re classification into the lesser restrictive “yellow phase” of the COVID-19  shut down orders that began back on March 16, 2020.   The reason given from Governor Wolf and his team was that Beaver County’s per capita infection rate from the virus was still too high.  Sad news for sure for many residents who were hoping to be able to go out and shop at local merchants again starting on May 15, when the other areas will begin easing restricting.  Officially, at least, Beaver County will continue to be Full shut down mode for the time being until at least June 4, 2020.  The other story, and perhaps the more interesting one that surfaced from the same issue on Friday, was the fact that Beaver County’s leaders stood in solidarity and thumbed their noses at Governor Wolf’s bad news for the area.

Beaver County political leaders Jim Marshall, Joshua Kail, Jack Manning and Dan Camp at Friday’s press conference in courtroom #1.

County Commission Chairman Dan Camp was the opening speaker at a noontime press conference held at the Beaver County Courthouse, and much like the kid who didn’t get picked to play on the school yard pick up team until last, vowed to make the ones doing the selecting pay for their oversight.  Camp announced that businesses would be welcome and encouraged to open anyway, regardless of the fact that the restrictions would still still in place. He assured the gathering of media types in attendance that District Attorney, David Lozier, would not be pursuing any potential future cases  brought against  merchants by local law enforcement officials for opening their shops. Lozier later on in the meeting confirmed the fact.

Dan Camp’s Opening monologue segment of the press conference.

The 37 minute press conference featured words of the same ilk from the other Beaver County commissioners, state representatives and Lozier himself.

 

Gov. Wolf Responded to Beaver County Questions During today’s Press Conference

Harrisburg, Pa.   Pa. Governor Tom Wolf and Health Secretary Dr. Rachel Levine held a press conference on Friday afternoon to announce 13 more counties moving from a red phase to a yellow phase next Friday, May 15, 2020. Beaver County was not included on that list and Political figures throughout the area are not happy with the decision.

During the Press conference Gov. Wolf was asked why not Beaver County? Press the play button below to hear what he said:

Pa. Rep. Rob Matzie questions governor’s decision to keep Beaver County closed

Matzie questions governor’s decision to keep Beaver County closed
Says excluding county from others moving to ‘yellow,’ open status May 15 makes ‘zero sense’

AMBRIDGE, May 8 – State Rep. Rob Matzie, D-Beaver/Allegheny, issued the following statement in response to Gov. Tom Wolf’s announcement today that Beaver County will remain in the “red,” closed status, when surrounding counties – including Allegheny County – move to the “yellow,” open phase of the state’s reopen plan on May 15.
“Beaver County remaining in COVID red status, due to inflated numbers from one nursing home, makes zero sense. I’ve been urging the administration, for over a month, to intervene in the dire situation at Brighton Rehab. I directly informed the Department of Health of my concerns about the lack of transparency with residents, families and the public.

 “So now, a facility that is responsible for nearly 70% of our county’ total cases, is being used as a reason to hold us back? It’s unacceptable.

 “We took the directive – stay calm, stay home, stay safe – to heart. We social distanced, wore masks and gloves.

 “Our businesses suffered; our workers suffered. But we did it to help protect the health and well-being of our friends, families and neighbors. And while far too many of our people tragically died, that tragedy could have been far, far worse. We are ready to move forward. We are ready to start our recovery. We must continue to utilize necessary safeguards to protect ourselves and those we may be in contact with for the foreseeable future. We are ready to safely and responsibly move to the yellow phase.   

 “I’ve already asked privately, so now I’ll make the request publicly. Governor Wolf and Secretary Levine, it’s time to move Beaver County to yellow status.”

 

Pa. Gov. Wolf Press Conference Today at 2:00 PM today on Beaver County Radio

(Beaver Falls, Pa,) Tune into 1230 WBVP, 1460 WMBA, 99.3 FM, and beavercountyradio.com at 2:00 p.m. today for a virtual press conference with  Governor Tom Wolf and Secretary of Health Dr. Rachel Levine. They will provide an update on the coronavirus known as COVID-19 and efforts to mitigate the virus in Pennsylvania. Governor Tom Wolf  is also expected to announce more counties moving from the red phase to yellow phase starting next Friday May 15, 2020

We will have full coverage of the Governor’s Press Conference at 2:00 p.m. Courtesy of Common Wealth Media Services.