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Everything we know about Austin's COVID-19 surge, hospital capacity and the plan to reopen Texas—or not

Austin's three major hospital systems are currently at 70% capacity. One epidemiologist said that at 80% surge plans come into play.
Three months into the pandemic, the long-anticipated COVID-19 surge has arrived.
Key indicators both in Austin and across Texas—a rising daily average of new hospital admissions, rising case numbers and a growing positive rate in COVID-19 test results—have spurred policy changes at both the local and state levels.
Here are some questions we can answer:
What steps has the government taken to address this surge?
Hospitalizations statewide over time.
Statewide hospitalizations have soared. (Texas COVID-19 dashboard)
A few:
- Texas Gov. Greg Abbott issued an executive order this morning that re-closes tubing businesses and bars and reduces permitted restaurant capacity from 75% to 50% on Monday in an effort to slow the spread of the coronavirus.
- Abbott also re-suspended elective surgeries and procedures in Bexar, Dallas, Harris and Travis counties yesterday to ensure hospital beds are available for COVID-19 and emergency patients.
- Locally, Austin Mayor Steve Adler and Travis County Judge Sam Biscoe issued orders requiring businesses to mandate masks among their employees and customers, after Abbott signaled that such a mandate would be legally permissible under his reopening plan. They took effect on Monday and expire Aug. 15.
- Biscoe issued a second order yesterday that prohibits outdoor gatherings in excess of 100 people through July 10, after the governor granted local officials the right to do so. Violators may be fined up to $1,000.
In a poll, nearly 60% of Austonia readers said the city and state should shut down again, given the surge.
How many beds are available at area hospitals?
Hospital capacities by region in Texas with the top of the chart, 1, representing full capacity. Each region represents a separate Trauma Service Area, which are used to analyze how different parts of the state are affected by the spread of the coronavirus and other hospitalizations. (UT Health)
Hospital capacities by region in Texas with the top of the chart, 1, representing full capacity. Each region represents a separate Trauma Service Area, which are used to analyze how different parts of the state are affected by the spread of the coronavirus and other hospitalizations. (UT Health)
Dr. Mark Escott said he is not worried about available hospital capacity this week or next during a virtual press conference on Wednesday, but he is concerned about what happens after that.
Projections by the COVID-19 Modeling Consortium at the University of Texas at Austin show that Travis County's caseload could double by mid-July, overwhelming area hospitals.
Currently, 227 people are hospitalized with COVID-19 in Travis County, of whom 88 are in the ICU and 34 are on ventilators. This is a fraction of the available capacity, but non-COVID patients continue to require care.
Austin's three major hospital systems—Ascension Seton, Baylor Scott & White Health and St. David's HealthCare—reported that they have 2,470 staffed beds between them, 71% of which were occupied on Wednesday.
University of Texas Health epidemiologist Katelyn Jetelina told Austonia that when hospital occupancy cracks 70% public health officials begin to worry. When it reaches 80%, surge centers come into play.
The systems can increase their capacity to 3,250 beds by adding beds to single-occupancy rooms and drawing in nursing staff from other cities, among other interventions.
What if hospitals fill up?
Austin metro seven-day moving average hospitalizations.
Austin metro seven-day moving average hospitalizations. (Key indicators dashboard)
The city released a three-stage surge plan in early April. Once hospitals maximize their available bed space, the second stage is to expand care to "Type 2" facilities, such as outpatient surgical centers and former hospital buildings. The city has identified six such buildings that can serve 50-100 people but has not named them.
In the last stage, the city will open "Type 1" venues—field hospitals that could serve low-acuity patients, such as those who need an IV or supplemental oxygen. The city has declined to identify these venues, but in the Wednesday press conference, one local physician indicated the Austin Convention Center is being prepared.
Who is getting COVID and who is dying of it?
Over 70% of our new cases since June 8th have been in the 20-39 age group. The same age group is experiencing incre… https://t.co/BKxt08YQ8E— Dr. Mark E. Escott (@Dr. Mark E. Escott) 1592932946.0
The vast majority—70% of new cases reported June 8-23—were in the 20-39 age group, according to Austin Public Health data.
This increase in infections among young people may be contributing to a lower mortality rate—for the time being—given their better chances at recovery.
However, despite improvements in treatment and increased testing, the disease remains deadly for some—especially for older patients and nursing home residents.
Patients over 60 account for 86% of Travis County's COVID-19 deaths, per APH data.
What can I do to stay safe?
(Charlie L. Harper III)
(Charlie L. Harper III/Austonia)
Abbott and local officials are united in their advice: stay home, wear a mask when you're out, socially distance and wash your hands.
"It's crunch time for now, over the next week to 10 days," Adler said during a video update posted to his Facebook page on Thursday evening. "We really need to see what we can do to turn this thing around."
What is behind this surge?
The state positivity rate has risen above 10%. (Texas COVID-19 dashboard)
Local health officials attribute the spike to a combination of factors: the state's reopening, which began on May 1 and has scaled up since then; Memorial Day festivities and other mass events; rising case numbers among young people, who may be more likely to socialize; and loosening adherence to masking, social distancing and other precautions.
Specifically, data shows cases began to rise when the state moved into the second phase of its reopening plan, which allowed restaurants to increase capacity to 50% and bars and salons to open, Jetelina told Austonia.
During a virtual press conference on Wednesday, Dr. Escott and local physicians implored Austin residents to stay home when possible and to stay vigilant when not.
"If the situation doesn't improve in the next week to two weeks—I'm going to have to make a recommendation to the mayor and the [county] judge that we shut down," Dr. Escott said. "And I don't want to do that."
How does this compare to what is happening nationally?
This trend is not limited to Austin. Twenty-six states have seen their caseloads increase over the past week, with the most substantial changes in Arizona, Michigan, Texas and Florida.
New York, New Jersey and Connecticut announced Wednesday that they would require travelers from Texas to quarantine for 14 days—a reversal of roles from earlier in the pandemic.
Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said Thursday that the number of people who have been infected with COVID-19 in the U.S. is likely 10 times the number of confirmed cases, which is hovering around 2.4 million.Are schools still opening in August?
So far, yes.
Abbott announced last week that students will return to Texas public schools for the new school year. Austin ISD returns to the classroom on Aug. 18 and is planning on a hybrid model that combines in-person instruction with distance learning for those families who choose it.
Education Commissioner Mike Morath issued a statement saying it was safe for students to return, that schools would not be required to mandate face masks or screenings and that the TEA would provide more detailed guidance this week, which has yet to arrive.
What does this mean for area businesses?
(Karen Brooks Harper/Austonia)
Businesses are already struggling to make money while observing capacity limits and dealing with the economic fallout of the first shutdown.
Last week Adler urged restaurants to reduce their capacity in light of the mounting surge, prior to the governor's mandate that they do so.
Local attorney Kareem Hajjar, who represents hundreds of restaurants in Austin and across Texas, told Austonia that heeding the mayor's advice would be devastating.
"At this point, I don't have a single client that is going to close again or lower their capacity," he said. "It would wipe them out."
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Popular
(Paxton Smith/Instagram)
Paxton Smith’s 2021 valedictory speech at Lake Highlands High School in Dallas wasn’t the same speech she had previously shared with school administrators. She dropped the approved speech and made a case for women’s reproductive rights after lawmakers passed the Texas "Heartbeat Bill.”
Her advocacy made news on NPR, YouTubeTV and in The Guardian. Just over a year later, the “war on (women’s) rights” she forewarned has come to a head as the U.S. Supreme Court voted Friday morning to overturn Roe v. Wade, ending constitutional protection for abortion access.
“It is up to the people to show up and show the courts and the politicians that we won’t sit back and let this happen,” Smith told Austonia Friday morning. “We will show up, we will fight back. Before, we were scared of them, now they should be scared of us.”
Now a University of Texas sophomore and abortion rights activist, 19-year-old Smith said she wanted to give the same speech in the “the most public way possible” to reach “as many people as possible who don't agree that I deserve this right.”
However, she says the response was “actually overwhelmingly positive” and supportive of her cause. According to a recent UT poll, 78% of Texas voters support abortion access in most cases.
The speech opened up further opportunities for activism: she advocated for reproductive rights at the International Forum on Human Rights in Geneva, interviewed with Variety magazine and spoke to tens of thousands at Austin’s Bans Off Our Bodies protest at the Texas Capitol in May.
Smith also serves on the board of directors for the Women’s Reproductive Rights Assistance Project, a national nonprofit organization that helps fund abortions or medication abortion—like Plan C pills—in all 50 states. Most recently, Smith has been attending protests in Washington, D.C. leading up to the ruling.
“This is land of the free. This is where you get to choose how you live your life,” Smith said. “Overturning Roe v. Wade violates everything that we have come to believe about what it means to live in this country. I think a lot of people aren't willing to accept that this is a human right that is most likely just going to be gone for over half of the country within the next couple of weeks.”
Bracing for the next steps, Smith gave some tips for supporters:
- Find a protest to attend.
- “I would say invite somebody to go to those protests with you, invite a couple of friends, invite people into the movement,” Smith said.
- Talk about the issue on social media—use the platform you have.
- “Have these kinds of conversations where people can just talk about their fears and then find ways to go and advocate for yourself,” Smith said.
- Volunteer at a nonprofit near you.
“I feel like a lot of the reason things have gotten as bad as they have within the abortion rights world is that people are not making a scene, not protesting, not putting the effort into ensuring that the government doesn't take away this right,” Smith said. “I want to emphasize that if you're not doing anything, don't expect the best scenario, expect the worst because that's the direction that we're going in.”
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(Council Member Chito Vela/Twitter)
The U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, the landmark ruling that guaranteed a constitutional right to an abortion, Friday morning. Moments later, Austin City Council set a special meeting for next month to pass a resolution aimed at decriminalizing abortion.
The GRACE Act, which stands for guarding the right to abortion care for everyone, is a twofold plan submitted by council member Jose “Chito” Vela. It recommends that city funds shouldn’t be used to surveil, catalog, report or investigate abortions. It also recommends that police make investigating abortion their lowest priority.
Council Member Vanessa Fuentes, who co-sponsored the resolution along with council members Paige Ellis, Kathie Tovo and Mayor Steve Adler, said the importance of the GRACE Act cannot be overstated.
“By introducing this resolution during a special session, City Council is doubling down on fighting back for reproductive health,” Fuentes said. “Items like the GRACE Act will promote essential healthcare while enabling individuals to exercise their bodily freedom.”
The act takes an approach similar to when former council member Greg Casar moved to decriminalize the possession of small amounts of marijuana. Ultimately, state law doesn't allow city officials to order police chiefs to adopt specific enforcement policies so the resolution would be a request to Police Chief Joe Chacon. In May, Politico reported that Vela is having "ongoing conversations" with Chacon about the proposal.
Austonia contacted Attorney General Ken Paxton for comment on the GRACE Act but did not hear back by time of publication. On Friday, Paxton celebrated the overturning of Roe and announced an annual office holiday on June 24 in recognition of the high court's decision.
In a press release, Vela said the Texas state government has a history of overturning municipal protections of human rights. Thirty days after the Supreme Court’s ruling, Texas will ban all abortions, with exceptions only to save the life of a pregnant patient or prevent “substantial impairment of major bodily function.”
Still, Vela expressed hope for the GRACE Act’s longevity. Council’s special meeting on it is set for the week of July 18.
“We know this resolution is legally sound, and Austin is not alone in this fight,” Vela said. “We are working with several other cities who are equally horrified by the prospect of an abortion ban and want to do everything they can to protect their residents.”
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