Friday, September 11, 2020

DeWine’s health director pick withdraws hours after selection

HEALTH

By Ohio Capital Journal Staff

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine named his choice for a new health director Thursday afternoon in a release at 3:30 p.m. By 8:30 p.m., DeWine had announced she had withdrawn from consideration.
“This evening, Dr. Joan Duwve withdrew her name from consideration for the position of Director of the Ohio Department of Health, citing personal reasons,” a news release Thursday evening announced. “The Governor’s administration will continue its search for a full-time Director of the Ohio Department of Health.”
Dr. Joan Duwve
DeWine had selected Duwve to fill the position after the resignation of Dr. Amy Acton in June. Acton became a household name in Ohio this past spring, appearing regularly with DeWine during his press conferences. While Acton enjoyed significant support and popularity, she was also the focus of intense criticism, including from Statehouse lawmakers. Protesters of coronavirus-related Ohio Department of Health orders repeatedly demonstrated outside her Bexley home.
Other news reports indicate that Duwve, an Ohio native and graduate of North Olmsted HS and The Ohio State University, was once a volunteer coordinator for Planned Parenthood. This tenuous connection to women’s choice, dating to 1984, was enough to galvanize the mobilization of abortion foes, making it questionable whether the appointment would have received confirmation from the Ohio Senate.
A spokesman for the Governor said that he was aware of the Planned Parenthood connection at the time of the appointment and that Duwve’s withdrawal  was for unrelated “personal reasons”.
Since Acton’s resignation, the department has been helmed in the interim by Lance Himes.
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This story is provided by Ohio Capital Journal, a part of States Newsroom, a national 501 (c)(3) nonprofit. Additional reporting by The Real Deal Press.See the original story here.

Thursday, September 10, 2020

Greater Cleveland Urban Film Festival opens today, runs through September 18

Nate’s Northcoast Notes

Annual Chalk Festival also set for this weekend

By Nate Paige

2020 Greater Cleveland Urban Film Festival (September 10-18)

Dreamhood examines life in the international village neighborhood of Cleveland.
Directed by Cigdem Slankard, it's one of dozens of feature films, documentaries and
shorts in this year's virtual GCUFF event.

The Ninth Annual Greater Cleveland Urban Film Festival (GCUFF) is going virtual this year, kicking off Thursday, September 10 and running through Friday, September 18.  The opening night film is “The Best of Enemies,” a period piece starring Taraji P. Henson and Sam Rockwell depicting the real-life story of civil rights activist Ann Atwater.  This year’s festival will showcase more than 80 films online. “We’re delighted that we can continue to share films from all over the world,” said GCUFF Executive Director Donna Dabbs.  “There’s also several free community events featuring films and projects from our youth and students!”
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, most of this year’s film lineup will be screened online, but on Friday, September 11 and Saturday, September 12, GCUFF goes retro with double-feature screenings of old- and new-school classics, including “Five on the Black Hand Side,” and the “Shaft” reboot  at Mayfield Road Drive-In Theater, 12100 State Rte. 322, Chardon.  See the Program Guide and purchase passes at www.gcuff.org.

Cleveland Restoration Society Community Luncheon Connection (September 11)

On Friday, September 11 the Cleveland Restoration Society will host a virtual version of its annual Community Luncheon Connection. This year’s keynote speaker is John G. Morikis, Chairman and CEO of Sherwin-Williams. In 2019, Forbes Magazine named Morikis as one of the nation’s most innovative leaders. Networking begins at 11:30 am; program at noon.  Single tickets are $75. To register, click here.  For more information, contact Stephanie Phelps at sphelps@clevelandrestoration.org.

Cleveland Museum of Art Virtual Chalk Festival (September 12, 13)


As Nature always finds a way, creativity will also manage to shine through, despite the circumstances.  The annual CMA Chalk Festival, September 12 and 13, is adapting to the new way of doing things by going virtual. This year’s theme is Community, and participants are encouraged to share their chalk drawings on Facebook and Instagram using the hashtag #CMAChalkFestival.  For details, and possibly inspiration from the Museum’s expansive collection, click here.
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Tuesday, September 08, 2020

Pandemic disrupting families in Cuyahoga County foster care system

COVID-19 delays visits, court for parents working to reunite with children in foster care
By Brie Zeltner and Rachel Dissell 

Lionel scooped up his daughter, Imari, and planted a kiss on the 1-year-old’s chubby cheek, then carried her to the car that would take the baby and her brothers away from him and back to their foster home. 
Trailing behind him was his partner, Carlitta, who held the hands of their chattering sons, 4-year-old Regis and 2-year-old Kenneth, as they walked across the parking lot of University Settlement’s Mead House in Slavic Village, where their weekly two-hour visits are held.
The 22-year-old mother helped tuck the boys into their car seats and waved goodbye, then turned to straighten her black shirt — “social distancing saves lives,” it read — and dab a tear from her eye. 
The end of the family’s visit is always hard. 
But it’s not as hard as the month long stretch when, because of the coronavirus, Lionel and Carlitta, whom ideastream agreed to identify only by their first names, couldn’t see their children in person. 
For the more than 3,000 Cuyahoga County children in foster care and their foster parents and families, the pandemic has made visitation, the reunification process and maintaining familial bonds far more complicated. Families and county workers must balance the need to maintain the ties between parent and child while protecting everyone in the system from getting sick. As of late August, 15 children in foster care had tested positive for the coronavirus; all have recovered. It’s unknown how many foster and biological family members have tested positive. 


With the county’s Juvenile Court mostly closed for the spring, parents eager to complete the required steps to reunite with their children have seen court dates pushed back. Some who were on the cusp of reunification are still waiting, months later, to finish the process. 
Foster parents who can’t work from home struggle to find day care and academic help for the children in their care. Some, particularly those without partners, have been forced to consider returning their foster children to the care of the county.
And many biological parents have gone months with only telephone and video visits, or no visits at all, which disrupts their ability to build and maintain a stable and nurturing relationship with their children during separation. That’s a particular problem for the more than 800 children under the age of 3 in foster care who are too young to benefit from the technology.
“It was hard because I really wanted to see them,” Carlitta said of the first time she and Lionel were forced to miss an in-person visit. 
“I’m telling you, I couldn’t even be around her,” said Lionel, 29.  “It was unbearable... She wanted to see her children.”

Visits go virtual
Though the Cuyahoga County Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) never banned in-person visits during the pandemic, virtual visits were encouraged whenever possible, said Jacqueline McCray, deputy director of the agency. Because DCFS partners with community organizations such as University Settlement to provide space for in-person visitation, and many of these partners shut down in March and April, about half of visits went virtual during that time, she said. 
Families used Skype, Facetime and other online video platforms when possible, or had telephone visits when video proved too difficult, McCray said. 
For many families in the Slavic Village area, though, virtual visits didn’t work out very well, said Karla Trammell, University Settlement’s system of care manager. 
“We had a lot of families that were not getting their virtual visitations,” said Trammell, whose Family to Family team contacted parents who usually had weekly in-person visits to make sure they were able to connect with their kids. “We've had families who have come back ...who didn't see their kids for two months.” 
University Settlement offered help to overcome the problem with access to technology,  but no one took them up on it, she said. Parents with children in different foster families also struggled with the logistics of scheduling multiple video calls each week with different foster families. 
And for the youngest children, the video visits were far from ideal. 
“There's not much you can really do for a newborn baby on Facetime besides see them,” Trammell said. 

Impact on bonding
For children 1 and younger who are still in the process of forming an attachment to their parents, loss of physical contact can be particularly damaging to the relationship. 
“It’s especially important to form good bonds at that age,” said Dr. Catherine Lipman, a developmental-behavioral pediatrician at University Hospitals who works with foster families. “It establishes social and emotional health then and how to have appropriate relationships … going forward.” 
One Cleveland-area foster mother, who asked to be anonymous, said that while the 1-year-old girl in her custody is getting regular video calls with her parents, she can see their relationship suffering.  “I feel like for our foster baby, that she’s missing out on having that connection with her family. I feel a lot of guilt for that.” 
Bonding — which happens when parents hold, comfort, cradle, talk to and feed their babies — helps to release hormones and other chemicals in the brain that calm and regulate mood and encourage brain growth, research shows. 
Recognizing this, DCFS has tried to maintain in-person visits as much as possible for this age group, McCray said. “Those are definitely the ones that we’ve really tried to make sure there’s some face-to-face contact.”  
It’s a difficult balance, DCFS officials said, as they try to safeguard the health of everyone involved, including county workers who usually conduct in-home visits with families. 
Beth Uchaker, a foster mother to a 2-year-old in Lakewood, said the thought of in-person visitation has been scary because she has medically fragile children in her home who may be more susceptible to the virus.
“You don’t know how the other families are going to take the precautions and … be careful, so you’re afraid,” she said. “The thing is that they’re entitled to see their child and they’ve got to be just as freaked out as I am.”
Uchaker worries that resuming visits for her foster child, who hasn’t seen his mother since the second week of February, will be difficult. “He’s so stable right now and is doing so well,” she said. “All of those changes and stresses affect them so deeply.” 

Reunification delays
For parents like Lionel and Carlitta, it’s been hard to get information on what will happen with their court cases since there have been no hearings, in-person or virtually, since February, according to the court’s docket. 
Custody hearings for children in foster care are held at the Cuyahoga County Juvenile Court, which closed except for essential staff on March 16, postponing hearings in most cases.
In May, a court order outlined procedures for virtual hearings, at the discretion of judges and magistrates. Since April, the court has allowed “essential” in-person hearings in cases involving juveniles who are incarcerated and an updated order eased restrictions further in June. 
Magistrates and judges have discretion whether to hold remote hearings. 
“And they are so backlogged that they have to … kind of try to catch up and still deal with the new cases that are coming before the court,” Trammell said.
The county took custody of Lionel and Carlitta’s three children in October of 2019, when police raided the home where Carlitta and the children were living. Workers said they found evidence of unsafe conditions, including illegal drugs and trafficking by other people who lived there. Both parents admitted to using alcohol and marijuana and county workers said they needed to work to create a safer environment for the children and to address one child’s developmental delays. 
Now, they live in their own home and Lionel has a job at a packing and shipping warehouse in Solon. 
Before the pandemic, they hoped to be reunited with their children by September 29th. Now, that date is uncertain, and the couple isn’t sure if they’ll be granted an extension should they fail to complete all of the court’s requirements before then. 
The pandemic has made each step seem harder, they said. Agencies that did drug-use assessments were shuttered for some time before going virtual. The process of applying and interviewing for a job often takes longer. 
“[I]t’s like [one] roadblock after another and I’m doing everything I can,” Lionel said, his voice breaking. 
“It’s hard because sometimes they do act like we not trying,” Carlitta added. “But it’s not our fault. It’s out of our control.”
Other parents who had visits at University Settlement have encountered obstacles to reunification, Trammell said. A father who was one court date away from being reunited with his son when the pandemic began was frustrated when his visits were halted and court hearings were canceled. Trammell said she hasn’t heard from him since. 
Still,  Lionel and Carlitta are grateful to be able to hold the kids and play with them again, even if they have to do so wearing masks. One-year-old Imari was afraid of Lionel when she first saw him in a mask, he said, and 4-year-old Regis is always trying to take his off.
“I love it, though,” Carlitta said, grinning. “It’s so fun seeing them.”  
“It would be better if they was at home,” Lionel said. 
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This story is provided by ideastream as part of special community coverage of COVID-19 and funded by Third Federal Foundation and University Settlement.

Monday, September 07, 2020

Essential Workers Deserve Special Thanks this Labor Day

FROM THE PULPIT TO PUBLIC SQUARE

By Marvin A. McMickle, Ph.D.

As Labor Day 2020 approaches I am thinking about the words “essential workers” that have been in the news so regularly since the onset of COVID-19. Labor Day is the time every year when our nation is invited to think about the men and women whose work and productivity serve as the engine of our national economy. However, Labor Day 2020 brings with it a special meaning, because it helps the nation focus on those workers whose efforts, often at great personal risk to themselves have served this country during this ongoing pandemic.

Who are the “essential workers” that deserve our thanks this year? Of course, any list of “essential workers” would include the medical professionals who have been treating COVID-19 patients in over-crowded and sometimes under-resourced emergency rooms and nursing homes across the country for the last six months. They were often the only ones who could be present when our loved ones breathed their last breath before they succumbed to the virus. How sad it is that many of those medical professionals contracted the virus themselves while attending to the needs of their patients. Sadder still, many more will die so long as we fail to respond appropriately to the danger this virus still poses to our nation.

What has become clear in recent months is that medical professionals are not the only “essential workers” in our fight against COVID-19. They may be getting most of the attention, but they are not the only ones risking their lives to keep our nation moving forward. This Labor Day let us be sure to salute all our “essential workers.” That would include other hospital workers, the ones who clean the rooms between patients, the ones who prepare meals for patients and staff alike, and the ones who do the demanding work of patient intake and transport. Let us thank the EMT workers and firefighters who have been bringing people to the hospital often while those people were in distressed conditions. Swift and careful transport from home to hospital has saved many lives from the virus.

Let us thank the funeral homes and cemeteries and their staffs that have been overwhelmed by this virus. Over one thousand persons per day have been dying from COVID-19 for the last three months. Bodies had to be claimed, families had to be consoled, funeral services involving social distancing had to be planned, and graves had to be prepared at a rate not seen in this country since the flu pandemic of 1918. Over 185,000 people have died in this country in the last six months. That is more than three times the number of American casualties during the fourteen years of the Vietnam War. All of these people have proven to be “essential workers” in 2020.

Then there are the people who had to go to work in other areas of our economy just to keep the country going. While many people could work from home in accordance with  stay-at-home guidance from public health officials, some people simply could not do their jobs from home. They had to leave home while many of us “sheltered in place.”  For them, it was either go to work in the face of the virus, or lose their jobs, their homes, their health care, and their future financial security. Bus drivers, truck drivers, food delivery drivers, farm workers, bank tellers, construction workers, and mail carriers could not work from home. Small business owners who were already facing a challenging economy could not operate their restaurants, dry cleaners, retail stores, and other service-related jobs from home. The home health care workers who need two or three jobs just to survive could not take care of their sick and elderly patients while staying in the safety of their own homes. And none of these “essential workers” could be sure that at the end of the day they were not bringing COVID-19 back home to infect their own families.

Now the nation faces the prospect of reopening schools in areas where the virus is still spreading. Surely our teachers, school administrators, school bus drivers, custodians, cafeteria workers, coaches and counselors must be counted among our nation’s “essential workers.” Will we provide all these workers with the Personal Protection Equipment they need to remain safe on the job? Will we provide them with the wages and the safe working conditions they all deserve? Or will we just turn Labor Day into another nation-wide super-spreader of COVID-19 fueled by people who refuse to wear masks or engage in social distancing? People who are often following the example of the President of the United States.

If we are not careful this Labor Day, we will end up making life and work harder for all our “essential workers.”
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The Rev. Marvin A. McMickle, pastor emeritus of Antioch Baptist Church in Cleveland, retired last year as president of Colgate Rochester Crozer Divinity School in Rochester, New York, where he had served since 2011.