Community Corner

Kansas Names Businesses, Schools, Churches, Long-Term Care Facilities With COVID-19 Outbreaks

The list includes seven Greek houses at Kansas State University, plus eight other universities and colleges.

(Kansas Reflector)

By Sherman Smith, The Kansas Reflector

-

Sept. 9, 2020

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TOPEKA — The Kansas Department of Health and Environment on Wednesday released for the first time the names and places associated with active outbreaks of COVID-19 across the state.

The list includes seven Greek houses at Kansas State University, plus eight other universities and colleges, more than two-dozen long-term care facilities, four religious gatherings, two public schools and six sports teams.

Find out what's happening in Across Kansasfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

KDHE also reported 495 Kansas residents have died from the novel coronavirus, an 8% increase from last week. Health officials have documented 47,410 cases since the virus was first detected in Kansas in early March.

Gov. Laura Kelly’s office last week announced the decision to begin naming the locations connected to five or more confirmed cases of COVID-19. For private businesses, the threshold for being named publicly is 20 cases.

“One of the things we’re sensitive to is we want to grow business,” KDHE secretary Lee Norman said during last week’s briefing. “We want to help businesses thrive and be safe places for people to do commerce. That’s why we set that for private businesses.”

The agency reported the Amazon Fulfillment Center in Kansas City has 42 active cases, and eight businesses where food is handled are associated with hundreds of cases. They include 594 at Cargill and 647 at National Beef meatpacking plants in Dodge City.

Norman said public identification of hot spots will give residents information they need to make decisions about their own safety. But it’s a departure from the first five months of the pandemic, when officials considered the information to be classified.

In June, the Kansas City Star first reported on a secret internal document that detailed every active outbreak. The document was made available through an open records request by Columbia University’s Brown Institute for Media Innovation.

Kansas Reflector has submitted an open records request seeking the name, location and number of cases for any business associated with an active cluster of any size.

KDHE identified clusters associated with religious gatherings at Faith Chapel Assembly of God in Louisburg (21), Faith Tabernacle Apostolic Church in Junction City (7), Hannah’s House in Independence (9) and Plevna Church in Plevna (14).

The largest cluster among higher education institutions is at Benedictine College in Atchison, where there are 98 active cases. There are also outbreaks associated with Emporia State University, Fort Hays State University, Pittsburg State University, Dodge City Community College, Hutchinson Community College, Bethel College and Hesston College.

KDHE’s report says 31 cases in Cherokee County are associated with the Maranatha Church Camp in Everton, Missouri, and nine cases are associated with the We Buy BlaKCK event in Kansas City.

The largest outbreak at a long-term care facility is at Holiday Resort in Emporia, where there are 88 cases.

The USD 384 school board meeting in Randolph is listed with five cases, and USD 443 in Dodge City has 27 cases.


The Kansas Reflector seeks to increase people's awareness of how decisions made by elected representatives and other public servants affect our day-to-day lives. We hope to empower and inspire greater participation in democracy throughout Kansas.

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