Connect to Care helps health professionals to find jobs

Connect to Care helps health professionals to find jobs

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: July 23, 2020

CONTACT: Bob Wheaton, 517-241-2112

LANSING, Mich. – As long-term care facilities look to hire additional health care workers due to demands created by COVID-19, the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) promotes the Connect to Care website where health professionals can quickly and easily find and apply for jobs.

The employment website matches job seekers in the health care field with licensed long-term care facilities that need to immediately hire for long- and short-term positions, including certified nursing assistants, registered nurses and licensed practical nurses.

Long-term care facilities also need direct care workers – also known as personal care assistants, paid caregivers, home health aides, personal care aides and nursing assistants – to assist people who are sick, injured, living with physical or mental disabilities, or who cannot care for themselves.

“Long-term care facilities in Michigan faced significant staffing challenges prior to the pandemic,” said Dr. Alexis Travis, senior deputy director of the MDHHS Aging & Adult Services Agency “While we recognize there are often staffing challenges within nursing facilities, we know that support is needed now more than ever.”

Connect to Care Jobs allows licensed long-term care facilities to identify gaps in specific staffing needs they have on particular days. At the same time, health care professionals who are licensed and/or trained for the various roles needed by these facilities can register their availability and willingness to fill shifts.

To help address this need, MDHHS has partnered with ADvancing States, a national nonprofit dedicated to supporting older adults, people with disabilities, and their caregivers. Michigan’s departments of Labor and Economic Opportunity and Licensing and Regulatory Affairs also are partners in this project.

Visit ConnectToCareJobs.com. It’s easy, fast and free for job seekers to use.

Information around this outbreak is changing rapidly. The latest information is available at Michigan.gov/Coronavirus and CDC.gov/Coronavirus.

$8.55 Million in COVID-19 Workplace Safety Grants

$8.55 Million in COVID-19 Workplace Safety Grants

Contact: Jason Moon 517-282-0041

July 23, 2020

With employers across the state working to keep their employees, customers and communities safe during the COVID-19 pandemic, the State of Michigan has launched Michigan COVID-19 Safety Grant Program. These grants will provide small businesses matching funds of – up to $10,000 – to decrease the risk of COVID-19 spread through safety and health-related equipment purchased and training in response to COVID-19.

The initial grant application window will be open from Monday, July 27 through Friday, August 7, 2020, with awards given shortly thereafter. Grants received after August 7, 2020 will be held pending a potential second phase, if funds remain available.

“Employers continue to do their part to ensure workers, customers and communities are safe from COVID-19,” Gov. Gretchen Whitmer said. “These grants will help make that job a bit easier, ensuring every Michigander returns home safe at the end of the day.”

Small businesses interested in applying must have fewer than 250 employees, provide a copy of their COVID-19 safety plan and description of how funds will help improve workplace safety for employees, customers and their communities. Additional information on grant funding can be found in the program brochure.

“These new grants support Michigan’s small businesses in efforts to protect Michiganders from coronavirus and keep our economy operating,” Michigan Labor and Economic Opportunity Director Jeff Donofrio said. “This is an extraordinary funding opportunity for Michigan employers to invest in measures that will help mitigate the spread of COVID-19 in workplaces.”

Examples of how grant funding may be utilized:

  • Purchasing engineering controls and other supplies/materials such as sneeze guards, physical barriers, face coverings and hand washing/hygiene stations.
  • Purchasing Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) including gowns, gloves and eye protection.
  • Training to educate employees about the spread and dangers of COVID-19.

To apply, businesses may complete the Michigan COVID-19 Safety Grant application.

Grants are provided through recent passage of SB 690 appropriation of federal CARES Act funding and will be awarded until grant funding is expended. This is a reimbursement program. Grant awards are limited to one per company.

Learn more about MIOSHA efforts to protect Michigan’s workforce during the pandemic and for information on the latest workplace safety guidance at Michigan.gov/COVIDWorkplaceSafety.

Information around this outbreak is changing rapidly. The latest information is available at Michigan.gov/Coronavirus and CDC.gov/Coronavirus.

First case of Acute Flaccid Myelitis confirmed in Michigan child

MDHHS banner with logo no names

Press Release


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: July 27, 2020

CONTACT: Lynn Sutfin, 517-241-2112, SutfinL1@michigan.gov

First case of Acute Flaccid Myelitis confirmed in Michigan child

­­­­­LANSING, Mich. – The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) has been notified by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that Michigan has a confirmed case of acute flaccid myelitis (AFM) for 2020. The confirmed case is a child from Macomb County.

Two additional suspected cases of AFM in Michigan remain under investigation.

As of June 30, the CDC had confirmed 13 cases of AFM in 10 states for 2020, mostly in children. Despite increases in cases across the country since 2014, the CDC estimates that less than one to two in a million children in the United States will get AFM annually. In 2018, Michigan reported five cases and one case in 2019.

“AFM is a rare but serious condition affecting the nervous system and can cause the muscles and reflexes in the body to become weak,” said Dr. Joneigh Khaldun, chief medical executive and chief deputy for health. “Most patients report having a mild respiratory illness or fever consistent with a viral infection before developing AFM.”

The cause or trigger for AFM is not yet known. However, most children had a respiratory illness or fever consistent with a viral infection before they developed AFM. You can decrease risk of getting viral infections by:

  • Washing your hands often with soap and water.
  • Avoiding touching your face with unwashed hands.
  • Avoiding close contact with people who are sick.

Healthcare providers are asked to report all patients they suspect of having AFM to their local health department.

For more information, visit the MDHHS Communicable Disease Information and Resources website or CDC.gov/AFM.

MPSC tackles next steps in customer protections

MPSC tackles next steps in customer protections

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE   July 23, 2020

Media Contact: Matt Helms 517-284-8300
Customer Assistance: 800-292-9555
Michigan.gov/MPSC
Twitter

Continuing its efforts to ensure appropriate assistance is available for Michigan’s energy and telecommunications customers during the COVID-19 pandemic, the Michigan Public Service Commission today reiterated the support available to help customers in need with bill payment assistance and flexibility payment terms and called on its staff, regulated energy companies and stakeholders to continue customer outreach, data collection, and program enhancements to provide adequate safeguards as Michigan’s economy cautiously reopens.

The Commission’s order today (Case No. U-20757) directs MPSC staff to continue to collaborate with energy and telecommunications providers as well as stakeholders on customer protection and affordability measures going forward as Gov. Gretchen Whitmer weighs how to reduce the spread of the virus. Staff reports are due later this year on the progress of these discussions and a framework for evaluating affordable payment plans. In addition, the Commission directs energy utilities to file reports on efforts to better align energy waste reduction programs with other assistance for low- and moderate-income households, with a Staff report to follow in February.

“There’s still a lot of uncertainty and economic challenges for Michiganders and the state’s businesses while we work through the impacts of the coronavirus,” MPSC Chairman Sally Talberg said. “The Commission remains committed to ensuring adequate protections and assistance are available for struggling families during these difficult times.”

Based on the Commission’s work with utilities amid the pandemic, 1,657 households that were shut off due to non-payment have had service restored as of July 9, and 1,899 households that were shutoff due to reasons other than non-payment also have been reconnected. With assistance programs, flexible payment plans and other help made available during the pandemic, most of Michigan’s investor-owned utilities, including the state’s two largest, DTE Energy and Consumers Energy, were reporting declines in the number of customers who are behind on their utility bills.

The order directs regulated energy utilities to file reports with the MPSC detailing data on disconnected service to occupied and unoccupied residences in their territories, with data on unpaid utility bills, and to update these reports monthly in this docket until directed otherwise. The Commission also directed Staff to devise a revised template for utilities to report data going forward.

In addition, the Commission rejected utilities’ recommendations to define, track, or defer COVID-19 related expenses beyond the deferral of uncollectible expenses, or bad debt, at this time. Utilities seeking to pursue recovery or accounting treatment for additional expenses must include specific information to be filed by November 2, 2020, to be considered by the Commission. The Commission indicated it would not consider incremental costs in isolation of potential savings by utilities through reduced labor expenses, travel, and lower fuel and operational costs.

Today’s order updates the MPSC’s ongoing efforts to address the impacts of the COVID crisis. The Commission has worked with energy providers and state and federal agencies to help coordinate and provide assistance to vulnerable customers across the state.

The MPSC urges customers facing COVID-related financial troubles to contact their utility right away to find out about available help options or call 211 or go to mi211.org for help. Utilities are promoting flexible payment plans and helping customers in financial difficulties find assistance available to low-income households. Assistance programs will vary by company.

Federal relief funding significantly boosted the available financial assistance for struggling utility customers in Michigan. The state received $162 million in Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) funds this fiscal year and was awarded an additional $35.1 million through the CARES Act federal pandemic stimulus. The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services shepherded $17.3 million in CARES Act LIHEAP funding to make direct payments on behalf of more than 40,000 Michigan households that owed past-due amounts to DTE Energy, Consumers Energy and SEMCO Energy. In addition, these three utilities forgave another 25% of past-due amounts on top of the CARES Act funding for these customers’ arrearages, amounting to more than $4.3 million. LIHEAP funding is still available for qualified customers needing assistance with their utility bills or propane costs.

That funding is in addition to the annual Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund, which raises up to $50 million a year for the Michigan Energy Assistance Program (MEAP) through a surcharge on customer bills; the surcharge was set at 92 cents a month last year, and MEAP assisted more than 61,000 households in 2019.  In a separate case approved today, the monthly surcharge has been reduced to 91 cents, with the expectation that this level will continue to fully fund the $50 million for MEAP for 2020-21.

To look up cases from today’s meeting, access the E-Dockets filing system here.

To watch recordings of the MPSC’s meetings, click here.

For information about the MPSC, visit www.Michigan.gov/MPSC, sign up for one of its listservs, or follow the Commission on Twitter.

DISCLAIMER: This document was prepared to aid the public’s understanding of certain matters before the Commission and is not intended to modify, supplement, or be a substitute for the Commission’s orders. The Commission’s orders are the official action of the Commission.

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Michigan wolf surveys show stable, healthy population

Michigan wolf surveys show stable, healthy population

Recent winter survey results point to a minimum estimated Upper Peninsula population of nearly 700 wolves.

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– DNR News –

July 27, 2020
Media contact: Cody Norton, 906-202-3023

Michigan wolf surveys show stable, healthy population

Recent winter survey results point to a minimum estimated Upper Peninsula population of nearly 700 wolves

trail cam wolf photoThe Michigan Department of Natural Resources said today that the state’s wolf population has remained relatively stable over the past nine years, with the most recent survey completed this past winter. DNR Wildlife Division staff who participated in this latest survey estimate there was a minimum of 695 wolves found among 143 packs across the Upper Peninsula. Pack size has remained stable and averages just under five wolves.

Dan Kennedy, acting chief of the Wildlife Division, said the DNR has surveyed wolves since 1989 when they began naturally recolonizing the U.P.

“The survey is important because it helps us monitor wolf distribution and abundance, answer research questions and evaluate progress toward state and federal recovery goals,” Kennedy said. “Our survey results continue to demonstrate that Michigan’s wolf population has recovered.”

The survey was conducted from December through March, before wolves had produced pups, when the population is at its lowest point in the annual cycle.

Bedded wolves“Once survey units have been identified for a given year, surveyors drive roads and trails in trucks and on snowmobiles looking for wolf tracks,” said Dean Beyer, a DNR wildlife research biologist who organizes the sampling and generates the wolf population estimate for the biennial survey. “Once they find wolf tracks, surveyors follow the tracks as long as is practical to determine the number of individual wolves that made the tracks.”

The wolf survey is completed by DNR Wildlife Division and U.S. Department of Agriculture Wildlife Services staff who search specific survey areas for wolf tracks and other signs of wolf activity, such as territorial marking or indications of breeding.

“Surveyors try to locate adjacent packs on the same day, to ensure they are not double-counting the same wolves,” said Beyer. State and federal wildlife staff also trap wolves in the spring and outfit them with GPS collars to help determine pack boundaries. This helps determine which tracks belong to each pack during the winter survey.

In 2019-2020, approximately 62% of the Upper Peninsula was surveyed.

After wolves returned naturally to the U.P. through immigration from Minnesota, Wisconsin and Ontario in the 1980s, the population rebounded remarkably over time. The pronounced long-term increase in wolf abundance is evident, despite human cause-specific mortality, such as poaching and vehicle collisions.

Over the past decade, Michigan’s minimum estimate has hovered between 600 and 700 wolves, which is indicative of a stabilizing population.

“Given the relatively consistent abundance estimates since 2011, it appears the wolf population has likely reached the carrying capacity of the Upper Peninsula,” said Cody Norton, a wildlife management specialist with the DNR’s bear, wolf and cougar program in Marquette.

Since the winter of 1993-94, combined wolf numbers in Michigan and Wisconsin have surpassed 100 wolves, meeting one of the federally established goals for delisting wolves in the Great Lakes states. In 2004, Michigan achieved its recovery goal of a minimum sustainable population of 200 wolves for five consecutive years, and wolves were removed from the state list of threatened and endangered species in 2009.

Wolves in Michigan remain a federally protected species and may be killed legally only in defense of human life.

More information about Michigan’s wolf population can be found at Michigan.gov/Wolves.


/Note to editors: Accompanying photos are available below for download. Caption information follows./

Trail cam: A DNR trail camera image, taken in August 2019, of a gray wolf in the Upper Peninsula.

Bedded wolves: Two gray wolves bedded down in the snow. Taken during a previous winter’s aerial wolf survey.

DNR COVID-19 RESPONSE: For details on affected DNR facilities and services, visit this webpage. Follow state actions and guidelines at Michigan.gov/Coronavirus.