Georgia nears 5,000 COVID-19 deaths since pandemic began

A police officer directs cars into a coronavirus testing facility at Georgia Tech Monday, April 6, 2020, in Atlanta. The testing is by appointment only and requires a referral. (AP Photo/John Bazemore) (John Bazemore, Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

The Georgia Department of Public Health reports 94 additional COVID-19 deaths on Friday, bringing the state’s total to 4,998. Two of those deaths were in Glynn County and one was in Charlton County. GDPH’s data shows Charlton County has the highest concentration of cases per 100,000 population and ranks it as one of its counties with the most cases per capita in the last two weeks.

The state reported 2,989 new COVID-19 cases in the last 24 hours, bringing the state’s total to 249,630 -- 94 of those in the six counties News4Jax tracks in Southeast Georgia.

Recommended Videos



On Wednesday, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp delivered a fiery response to his administration’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic after a report from the White House coronavirus task force said Georgia led the nation last week in new cases per capita.

The White House report, dated Aug. 16, recommended several steps to curb the virus that Kemp has declined to take, including closing bars and issuing mask mandates in counties with 50 or more active cases.

Kemp was among the first governors to ease earlier restrictions this spring, and while infections declined for weeks afterwards, they began to rise in June and peaked in late July.

First reported by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the report says “Georgia’s small gains are fragile and statewide progress will require continued, expanded, and stronger mitigation efforts, including in all open schools.”

Kemp insisted Wednesday that other markers he’s watching paint a different picture.

“Right now, our hospitalizations are down 18.8% since our peak on July 30. That’s the lowest level since July 13. Our seven-day average of new cases reported are down 26% since our peak on July 24, and they’re the lowest since July 8,” Kemp said.

“If we’re the highest percent capita in the state right now, that’s because Texas and Florida and Arizona and some of the other states that were peaking a week or two ago are on the downclimb, just like we are,” the Republican governor said. “But that is not the only number that Georgians need to look at.”

The report from the White House coronavirus task force says that last week Georgia had 216 new cases per 100,000 residents, compared to the national average of 112 new cases per 100,000 residents.

The White House report comes as Georgia in recent weeks has become a lightning rod in a national debate over when and how schools should reopen amid the pandemic.

One of the state’s biggest school districts — Cherokee County — has temporarily closed three large high schools after the virus led to the quarantines of more than 2,000 students in the district.

Asked about the recent closure of the Cherokee County high schools, Kemp said the spread of the virus “didn’t happen in the schools for the most part. It happened because people came back to school and they already had the coronavirus.”

“So is that the government’s fault? Is that the school’s fault? No, it is not,” Kemp said.

In Southeast Georgia, Brantley County where school resumed Aug. 6, Hoboken Elementary was closed through Aug. 24 after several staff members tested positive. A Folkston Elementary School student tested positive earlier this month, but schools remain open in Charlton County. Ware County schools, which the school year started Monday, said several staff members have tested positive for COVID-19. The district said no students were exposed and schools remain open.

Glynn County has not reported any coronavirus cases connected to its schools and students returned to classrooms on Thursday.

Meanwhile, a north Georgia school system that refused to provide its latest update on the coronavirus to a local newspaper now says 85 of its students are being quarantined after 10 students and nine employees tested positive for the virus.

The superintendent of the Lumpkin County School System had refused to give out the coronavirus numbers in time for them to be included in the weekly print edition of The Dahlonega Nugget amid a dispute with the paper over its coverage, the newspaper reported.

In an email Monday to school board members and the newspaper, Superintendent Rob Brown accused the paper of spreading fear in the community.

“The last time we shared data with The Nugget directly, the data was used for an online article with a headline that created unnecessary fear and panic,” Brown wrote in the email, referencing an Aug. 7 story with the headline, “Numerous Lumpkin teachers test positive for COVID-19 as first day approaches.”

In an earlier email, Brown suggested his own headlines for the newspaper.

“A headline such as ‘LC Schools Closely Monitoring COVID Data’ or ‘Less than 5% of the 540 LC Employees Impacted by COVID’ could have shared the same information without causing undue fear and concern,” Brown wrote.

The school system, which began its school year on Aug. 10, serves about 3,830 students in the county about 60 miles north of Atlanta.

It’s in the same county where hundreds of young people gathered recently for a party near the University of North Georgia’s Dahlonega campus. Video of the party made national news and caused alarm in Georgia.


Recommended Videos