The Barry-Eaton District Health Department board called an emergency meeting for 8 a.m. Thursday.
The meeting is in response to a rising number of COVID-19 cases in the district, Health Officer Colette Scrimger said in a news release.
On Wednesday, the health department website incorrectly reflected that COVID-19 had claimed a fifth victim in Barry County. Community Health Promotion Specialist Sarah Surna said that numerical error on their website was caused by the state Department of Health and Human Services and it has been corrected, she said.
“In addition to looking at the raw number of cases, we are also concerned by the rates of cases in each county,” Scrimger said. “Rates are calculated by taking the number of cases in a jurisdiction, dividing by the number of people who live there, and then multiplying by 'per' number. In this case, 1,000,000 people.
“The rate in Barry County now is five times as high as it was in early September.”
Scrimger added that “Eaton County’s rate is increasing significantly, from an average of about 20 new cases per day per million to about 97 new cases per day per million people.
“Even though Barry County has a bit more than half the population of Eaton County, the rate is higher, meaning that COVID-19 is taking a worse toll on people who live there.”
Surna said they are seeing large increases in numbers of cases – particularly among adults in their 30s and in their 70s.
Part of the rise is due to increased interactions between people, she said.
State Rep. Bill Huizenga, R-Ottawa County, tweeted Wednesday afternoon that he had tested positive for COVID-19 before he was scheduled to appear with Vice President Mike Pence at a Trump campaign rally in Grand Rapids Wednesday.
Almost half of all cases are attributed to people catching the virus from someone in their own household, Surna said.
“Over the summer, it was typical for the health department to handle 5 to 10 new cases a day,” Scrimger said. “Over the past week, it has been about 20 to 30 new cases a day. While some of these cases are associated with college or small K-12 school outbreaks, the majority are 'community' cases, often in adults who are working-age or retired.”
County Commissioner Jon Smelker of Freeport said he could not attend Tuesday's board of commissioners meeting because he and his wife are under quarantine.
“We're all right,” Smelker said. “We can in contact with someone who tested positive. I am quarantined for 14 days. I'll be back Oct. 19.”
Contact tracing conducted by the local health department in July showed people with COVID-19 had an average of 1.9 daily close contacts with other people.
In September, that number jumped to 5.7.
A close contact is defined as being within 6 feet of another person for at least 15 minutes, regardless of whether masks are worn or not.
In Middleville, two students and a staff member at Thornapple Kellogg Schools have tested positive for the COVID-19 virus. A high school student and middle school student, who are from the same family, tested positive for the virus Oct. 7, while the staff member also tested positive at the same time.
Last Sunday, district officials contacted the families of students who may have been exposed to the individuals who tested positive and requested that they be placed in quarantine through Oct. 21, 14 days after the positive tests were revealed.
A total of 59 students and one staff member are affected by the quarantine request, district administrative assistant Erica Dudik said.
According to the health department, the students did not contract the virus in school. Face-to-face instruction is continuing in the district at this time.
Maple Valley Schools had its first experience with the virus last week.
“We have confirmed two COVID-19-positive individuals attended an after-school event as a result of the health department's tracking and tracing processes,” Maple Valley Superintendent Katherine Bertolini said Wednesday. “They are not considered a transmission risk to anyone in the district currently.”
“We have had no incidence of COVID spread in our buildings as of today,” she added. “So far, our mitigation efforts are working.”
Bertolini also mentioned numbers released by the health department, showing a number of recent cases in Vermontville and Nashville.
“The virus is definitely on our doorstep and we have to be even more vigilant to keep our protocols effectively in place,” Bertolini said.
Hastings Area Schools Superintendent Dan Remenap reported that there are no current positive cases, but four people are in quarantine due to close contact with someone who tested positive for COVID-19.
To date, Remenap said four people from the school district have tested positive for COVID-19, three at the high school and one at the middle school.
Lakewood Public Schools completed its seventh week of in-person and remote instruction Friday.
To date, one person, a remote-learning student, has tested positive. No staff members have tested positive for COVID- 19, school officials said.
Ten students have been quarantined as a precaution since they were identified as being in close contact with individuals who have tested positive. None of the 10 students have tested positive or shown symptoms, Superintendent Steve Skalka reported Friday.
Delton Kellogg Schools, to date, have had no positive cases of COVID-19 in any staff or students.
Superintendent Kyle Corlett said one staff member and one student is quarantined. Another staff member is in self-isolation.
“We've had some kids get sick and go to the doctors out of a precaution, but the bottom line is we have no positive cases,” Corlett said.
Irving Township was not expected to have a quorum for its meeting Wednesday night, according to Township Clerk Sharon Olson. Olson is ill and was tested for the COVID-19 virus, but the test came back negative. Township Treasurer Lynnette Wingeier is in quarantine because of an exposure to COVID-19, Olson said.
The meeting is likely to be rescheduled for next Wednesday, Olson said.
Two staff members at Thornapple Manor tested positive for COVID-19 during routine testing last week, but Administrator Don Haney said they are believed to have been false positives.
Since the positive test, both staff members have each had a rapid test and two nasalpharyngeal tests, all of which came back negative.
Haney said neither staff members have symptoms, or a known history of contact with someone with COVID-19.
“We are about as positive as we can be that this is a false positive,” Haney said.
Technically, they can only be recorded as false positives if the lab that performed the tests conducts another test with the same sample with a negative result, Haney said. With the amount of tests labs are handling, Haney said it would be unlikely they would have the time to go back and find the original sample, and conduct a second test.
Regardless, Thornapple Manor treated the cases as if they were positive, and put visitations on hold while they awaited further tests.
“Given the increase in cases in the state and Barry County, it would be very prudent to treat them as positives,” Haney said. “We are starting to see the inklings of a second wave – it certainly appears to me anyway.”
State health officials said Michigan hospitals treated the most COVID-19 patients since late May; and reported 30 new confirmed coronavirus deaths.
Those death figures were the highest since June.
The rising death toll comes as 1,011 patients were treated in Michigan hospitals for confirmed or suspected COVID-19, the most since May 28.
By comparison, the state had as many as 4,000 COVID-19 patients in April.
The state reported 1,237 new confirmed coronavirus cases on Tuesday, pushing the seven-day average to over 1,100.
They reported 1,809 new confirmed coronavirus cases for Sunday and Monday, keeping the daily average over 1,000.
And for the past three days of testing, the positive test rate exceeded 4 percent, the first time since late May it has been above 4 percent for three consecutive days.
Case counts remain elevated in the western Upper Peninsula but also in western and southwestern Michigan, with Kent, Barry, Calhoun and Kalamazoo
counties seeing higher counts and the rate of daily cases per 100,000 in population.
Hospitalizations rose again, with 941 patients of confirmed or suspected COVID-19 now being treated in hospitals across the state. That’s a slight increase since 927 were reported last Thursday.
Seven new deaths were reported as well, bringing the total to 6,898 confirmed COVID-19 deaths.
“This pandemic has been going on for a really long time; we're all feeling it, too,” Surna said. “It's so easy to get frustrated and keep up with the rapid pace of news coming out.”
“We do really appreciate that that can cause a lot of fatigue, but now is more important than ever to stay safe,” she said.
Surna encouraged people to continue wearing masks, washing hands and social distancing.
Each effort alone may not make a person completely safe, but together they create a strong barrier against COVID-19.
Surna said, “We can't emphasize enough how important these strategies are.”
Bridge Magazine contributed to this report.