Orange County Health Department

COVID-19 Updates: July 9, 2020

Know your risk during COVID-19

Know your risk during COVID-19


This infographic is from the Texas Medical Association (TMA), and highlights the risk of contracting COVID-19, based on certain activities. Read TMA's message from their webpage below:

The chart is intended as a guide, prepared by physician experts, to help Texans make smart and educated choices of activities to pursue amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

The TMA COVID-19 Task Force and the TMA Committee on Infectious Diseases. Please assume that participants in these activities are following currently recommended safety protocols when possible.

The chart is also available in a
 Spanish-language version.



Orange County Food Distribution Sites

Orange County Food Drive

Orange County Department of Social Services will be hosting two food distribution events on the following dates:


July 9 (9:30am-11am) 
Cedar Ridge High School
1125 New Grady Brown School Rd, Hillsborough, NC 27278

July 23 
(9:30am-11am) 
Carrboro High School

201 Rock Haven Rd, Carrboro, NC 27510




Dear white people:
Being an ally isn’t always what you think

How to Ally

Originally posted by The Daily Hampshire Gazette, Deepti Hajela and Leanne Italie, June 16, 2020 

In one video clip, a black man kneels in front of a line of police, then one by one young white men move in as shields, human barriers between him and the law.

In another, a black woman yells at two white women spray-painting a Starbucks shop with “BLM,” — Black Lives Matter — telling them to stop, that vandalism isn’t helping.

Variations of both scenes have played out around the country many times in the protests following the killing of George Floyd by police on May 25. They raise the issue:
For white people wanting to be part of an anti-racist movement, what does it mean to be an ally?

As a new generation steps up, activists and historians believe there’s important work to be done for white people: Listening to black voices and following rather than trying to lead, for one, and undertaking the deep introspection required to confront unconscious bias and the perks of privilege that come just from being white.

How to Ally

White people have played necessary roles in racial justice movements through time, from abolition to the civil rights era of the 1950s and ’60s, said Mark Warren, a professor of public policy and public affairs at the University of Massachusetts in Boston.

But “unfortunately, most white people still don’t have any extensive or real experience in multiracial organizations and settings that are led by black people in their lives,” he said. “So now they want to show up as allies, which is terrific, but are coming into that situation with not a lot of experience about how to act.”

Much has been made of the multiracial crowds that have surged into the streets around the country and the globe after video surfaced of the handcuffed Floyd face-down on a Minneapolis street under the knee of a white police officer, along with the recent deaths of Ahmaud Arbery in Brunswick, Georgia, and Breonna Taylor in Louisville, Kentucky.

How to Ally

While the diverse crowds have made for good television, some activists are skeptical that the show of support will produce long-term commitment among many white people, and they question whether surface-level activism and how it plays out on social media does more harm than good.

Ernest Owens, a 28-year-old black journalist, questions the concept of whites as “allies.”

While many have good intentions, he said true allyship — supporting black businesses, deeply exploring personal bias and ferreting out ways that white privilege contributes to persistent racism — must happen in order to genuinely stand in solidarity with the marginalized and oppressed.

How to Ally

That, Owens said, requires more empathy and compassion, more accountability and a more humble approach.

“I really don’t think allies and the self grandeur is useful for conversations around racial change,” he said.

Tanya DePass, 47, the black founder of an organization that promotes diversity in the video gaming industry, posted a Twitter thread with tips for white people looking to help that was retweeted more than 19,000 times. Among them: “Educate yourself before you engage.”

How to Ally

DePass pointed to something other African Americans have noted amid the recent unrest: White acquaintances suddenly popping up, ostensibly to check on them, then engaging in conversations about how bad “they” feel.

That, DePass said, puts the onus on her to deal with their emotions.

“Stop making it into a white guilt thing,” the Chicago resident told The Associated Press. “I’ve gotten a lot of messages of ‘I’m so sorry, I know you’re scared,’ and this is from people I haven’t talked to in a few years. And it’s like what is driving this sudden reach out? ... I feel like they’re a step away from saying, ‘I’m sorry I’m white.’“

How to Ally

She added: “Stop apologizing for being white. That doesn’t do anything except re-center us back on having to convince, ‘No, no, no, you’re an OK white person.‘”

Carla Wallace, who is white, doesn’t like the term “ally.” She’s a co-founder in Louisville, Kentucky, of Showing Up for Racial Justice, an activist organization focused on mobilizing whites to work for an end to racism and white supremacy.

She’s been doing the work for a decade. Since protests began after Floyd’s death, she has heard from thousands more white people looking to get involved.

“In this moment, white silence is the greatest impediment to those in power making the changes that are needed,” Wallace said. “I don’t use the word ‘ally’ because that tends to create a situation where I’m helping someone else.”

It’s not her help that’s needed, she said.

How to Ally

“It’s about me joining whatever power I have with the power that black and brown people have. It’s about, what is our mutual interest in working for a different society? ... We must move from it being something that we do when we have time on a Saturday to something that we do because our lives depend on it.”

For 37-year-old Amanda Alappat in New York, her journey to rooting out bias within herself started two years ago when she was scrolling through Instagram and ran across the 28-day Me and White Supremacy Challenge aimed at fostering a better understanding of privilege.

“I married a brown man. I have a mixed-race child. I have black friends. I don’t feel racist, so I thought I was excused,” said Alappat, who is white and married to an Indian man. “I functioned 35 years of my life without even a glimpse into my own privilege. I benefited. I was complicit.”

Alappat now seeks out black businesses to support and plans to give a portion of her earnings as a yoga instructor to a black cause.

“We can’t proclaim ourselves as allies,” Alappat said. “It’s really up to black people to decide, ‘Yes Amanda is an ally. I see her as that.’”

How to Ally

The outpouring of protests in recent weeks on just about every continent are evidence that systemic racism and inequality does not begin and end at the U.S. borders.

Holiday Phillips, a sociologist in London, recalls the days after Arbery’s Feb. 23 shooting death and how the arrests of a white father and son more than two months later were heralded as a win for the power of social media after video of the attack on the black man surfaced.

“Looking through my feed, I wanted to say to my white friends, ‘You’re here now, but where are you the other 364 days a year when anti-racism isn’t trending? When racism isn’t tucked safely behind the screen in your hand, but right there in front of your face?’” she wrote on Medium, a popular blogging site.


True commitment means calling out your boss when he routinely mixes up your two Indian colleagues, or taking on a racist relative, Phillips said. It also means acting with your wallet, asking friends about their experiences of racism and sincerely listening.

“You can’t just say stuff,” she said, “and tick your activist box.”

How to Ally




Orange County Arts Commission:
2020-2021 Arts Grant Cycle Announcement

Orange County Arts Commission

The OCAC is excited to announce it's 2020-21 Arts Grants Cycle. Artists and nonprofit organizations may apply to the Grassroots Arts Program and Artist Project Grant programs beginning July 15 (a separate grant cycle for schools will take place later this fall).

The Arts Educator Grant Program, which supports professional development training for local arts educators, will open August 1.

A new Artist Support/Emerging Artist Grant Program, in partnership with the NC Arts Council and Durham Arts Council, will open this fall. 

Artists interested in learning more about this new program, as well as the OCAC Artist Project Program, can register for a virtual training session on July 21 at 6pm. 

For more information, please visit the OCAC webpage.




North Carolina COVID-19 Cases


The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services (NCDHHS) reports 79,349 COVID-19 cases, 1,461 deaths, and 1,034 hospitalizations, as of July 9, 2020. For more information regarding live updates (NCDHHS updates the site every day at noon), please visit the NCDHHS website. 

Orange County Health Department
 also has a COVID-19 dashboard webpage, with information on COVID-19 data in the county. The dashboard will be updated every Tuesday and Thursday.

There are currently 892 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Orange County, and 42 deaths.

Social Distancing




COVID-19 Community Resources

For more information on COVID-19 community resources in the county, please visit our webpage. Resources on specific topic areas, such as food access, education, housing, and others, are all accessible on our website, or at the links below.

Food Info
Community Resources
Multilingual Services
Myths Vs. Facts
How to Help
Testing
Pets
Long Term Care Facilities
Social Distancing




Contact Information


For general questions (not urgent) about 2019 Novel Coronavirus, contact NCDHHS at: ncresponse@dhhs.nc.gov or 1-866-462-3821 to address general questions about coronavirus from the public.

If you are an individual or a medical practice with questions about COVID-19, call the Orange County Health Department at (919) 245-6111 to leave a message. This phone number is being actively monitored by staff Monday through Friday and they will promptly return your call.

Contact Todd McGee, Orange County Community Relations Director, at:
(919) 245-2302 or (984) 220-5412 
tmcgee@orangecountync.gov

Orange County Health Department:
Web: www.orangecountync.gov/coronavirus
Phone: 919-245-2400
Email: covid19@orangecountync.gov
Facebook: Orange County Health Department
Instagram: OrangeHealthNC
Twitter: Orange Health NC
Youtube: OCHDNC

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300 W Tryon St, Hillsborough, NC 27278

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