In an interview with The New York Times today, Dr. Anthony Fauci, head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, was asked at which point it became clear to him that the coronavirus was going to be of an entirely different scale. He responded it was some time in the middle of January when, “It became clear to me that we could potentially be dealing with a global catastrophe.” / Also Part of May 8 FB post
In Kentucky, preparations for this catastrophe began 2 months later, despite the President’s unwillingness to recognize COVID-19 as a serious threat.
Today, nearly three weeks after Kentuckians began practicing social distancing, Kentucky lost eleven people to COVID-19. They were someone’s cousin, someone’s parent, someone’s life partner, someone’s friend. We hold them in our memory and we grieve for them.
Today, red tulips blossomed at an elementary school in Lexington. They were planted by the fourth-graders back when it was still winter and all the kids had to wear boots and jackets.
Isa, Maria, Tomas, Catalina, and Dave
04.01.2020
4:10 PM
Maria Labreveux is Executive Director of the Kentucky Science & Engineering Foundation
Carla With Max
03.31.2020
3:05 PM
Carla and Max are spending a lot of time on their perch.