News & Notes 21/03/11

Covid-19 updateAs of March 1As of March 1
Total cases statewide75,58875,588
Total current infections statewide2,3632,363
Total deaths statewide1,1701,170
New cases1,923 (Feb. 23 to March 1)1,923 (Feb. 23 to March 1)
Current infections: Hillsborough County692692
Current infections: Merrimack County163163
Current infections: Rockingham County533533
Information from the New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services

Covid-19 news

On March 1, Gov. Chris Sununu issued Emergency Order No. 86, an order authorizing certain retired health care workers to administer Covid-19 vaccines in the state. Any retired or inactive physician, physician assistant, registered nurse or licensed practical nurse who was previously licensed and in good standing within the last five years is permitted to administer doses of the vaccine, provided he or she completes the CDC’s vaccine training modules. This follows a similar order that was issued in January allowing registered and certified pharmacy technicians to give vaccine shots under certain conditions.

State officials in their weekly public health update on March 4 reported that there have been about 200 to 250 new infections of Covid-19 on average, “a slow decrease over past weeks,” state epidemiologist Dr. Benjamin Chan said. State hospitalizations, test positivity rates and deaths also continue to trend downward, while the amount of vaccine doses administered is increasing each week. As of March 4, 17 percent of the state’s population has received one dose, with 8 percent fully vaccinated, according to Dr. Beth Daly, Chief of the Bureau of Infectious Disease Control of the New Hampshire Department of Health & Human Services.

Later during the same press conference, Sununu announced that the state will likely be moving into Phases 2A and 2B of its vaccine administration plan ahead of schedule “well before March is over.” Phase 2A includes K through 12 teachers, school staff and child care workers — beginning March 12, the state’s regional public health networks will begin scheduling vaccination clinics in partnership with school officials. “For those who choose and can organize it, we can actually provide the vaccinations right there in a closed pod clinic atmosphere,” Sununu said. For communities where this isn’t possible, Sununu added that registration for vaccine appointments through the state-run scheduling system will begin on March 17.

People in Phase 2B, which includes those over the age of 50, will be able to register starting March 22, with the first appointments to begin on March 25. “If we get more and more vaccine, there is still an opportunity for some of these dates to change, to even move up further,” Sununu said.

On March 5, Sununu issued Executive Order 2021-4, extending the state of emergency in New Hampshire due to the pandemic for another three weeks through at least March 26. With this new extension, New Hampshire has now been in a state of emergency for more than a year.

House appeal

On March 2, Democratic members of the New Hampshire House of Representatives filed an appeal in federal court seeking remote access to House sessions for disabled House members, according to a press release. The appeal asks the court to overturn U.S. District Court Judge Landya McCafferty’s ruling that Republican House Speaker Sherman Packard does not have to use remote technology and that Packard is immune from the Democratic lawmakers’ suit. The House met in person for a two-day session last month at the NH Sportsplex in Bedford. “We have appealed because we believe the Courts should be available to protect the disabled from discrimination, especially when discrimination is used to gain an unfair political advantage by robbing 100,000 citizens of representation in what should always be the people’s House,” Deputy Democratic Leader David Cote (D-Nashua), one of the plaintiffs in the appeal, said in the press release.

Resignations and nominations

New Hampshire’s United States Attorney Scott W. Murray resigned from his position effective March 6, according to a press release, in response to President Joe Biden’s call to replace nearly all remaining presidentially appointed and Senate-confirmed U.S. attorneys. Murray was nominated by President Donald Trump and was sworn in on March 5, 2018, after serving his fourth term as Merrimack County Attorney. First Assistant U.S. Attorney John J. Farley will serve as Acting United States Attorney until a new presidentially appointed U.S. Attorney takes office, according to the release.

On March 3, Gov. Chris Sununu nominated John Formella to serve as the state’s next attorney general, according to a press release. Formella currently serves as Sununu’s legal counsel, a position he has held since Sununu first took office in 2017. A confirmation vore is expected at the March 24 Governor and Council meeting, the release said.
Formella will replace Gordon J. MacDonald, who served as New Hampshire’s attorney general from April 13, 2017, until March 4, according to another press release that announced MacDonald as the new chief justice of New Hampshire. MacDonald was sworn in by Sununu during a ceremony in the Supreme Court’s courtroom on March 4.

Approximately 7,800 people received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine at the state’s first mass vaccination site at the New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon on March 6 and March 7, with an additional 3,800 expected to receive the vaccine on Monday, according to a report from WMUR. According to the report, there were some technological issues on Saturday that created long wait times for some, but those problems were resolved and the process was much smoother on Day 2.

A free online training safety program for all servers and food preparers called NH Promise is now available through the NH Lodging & Restaurant Association and the Community College System of New Hampshire, according to a press release. The two organizations joined forces to help eateries certify that their staff has been trained in the latest Covid-related safety precautions, in part to reassure the public that restaurants are safe spaces. According to the release, an event announcing the program was scheduled for March 9 at the Common Man in Concord, where staff was the first to be certified.

Makin’ It Happen and the City of Manchester have launched a comprehensive harm reduction strategy with the goal of moving people who are struggling with a substance use disorder toward treatment and recovery, according to a press release. The strategy is funded by the Governor’s Office for Emergency Relief & Recovery and includes initiatives like connecting people to primary care and mental health services; providing access to Naloxone (Narcan) and training to prevent overdose deaths; and offering screening and vaccinations for the treatment of sexually transmitted diseases.

The Reference Room

Most folks probably scanned past the news item that recently reported the imminent closure of the 450-year-old “Lamb and Flag” pub in Oxford, England. This venerable gathering place on St. Giles Street has served clients local and visiting, famous and ordinary, and even the likes of me. The pub not only held fond memories for me, it also indirectly affected the upbringing of my children.
In the early ’70s, while doing research for my doctoral dissertation in the Bodleian Library nearby, I would repair to the Lamb and Flag at the end of the day for well-earned refreshment. My favorite seat in the pub — if it were available — was at an ancient and worn oak round table situated in a corner and flanked by two tall bookcases.
On my first visit to the pub, that space caught my eye because it was occupied that afternoon by an Oxford don and three of his students. I sat close enough to them to engage in my favorite pastime, namely eavesdropping. They were discussing a poem and each had their book open in front of them along with a pint of bitter. Behind them, the two tall bookcases were filled with Oxford University Press reference books. From time to time, I noticed, one of the group would turn around, take down a book, and look up a reference. I was fascinated by the ritual, not to mention the novelty that a pub would keep so many shelves of reference books. Thereafter, I sat at that table every time I could and I too would turn and look something up from one of the books.
Twenty-five years later, my family and I moved into a house in southern Oregon. A feature of the house that attracted me immediately was a little corner dining nook that had two tall bookshelves behind it. Ah ha! I decided to fill it with all of my reference books, from the Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music, Dictionary of Ancient History and Fowler’s Modern English Usage, to The Oxford Dictionary of Modern Slang. There were tomes of history, books on world religions, collections of poetry and language dictionaries.
Before long, our family had its own ritual. We had many of our meals together at that round table in the nook. Whenever a question of fact or definition arose, someone would say, “Let’s look it up” and would reach around to find the appropriate reference work. Tedious? Yes, I am sure our son and daughter felt that way many times. Nevertheless, we sorted out a number of homework assignments, not to mention settled disputes.
So, yes. I shall miss the Lamb and Flag, almost as much as I miss those family gatherings around our own reference table. With Google readily available now, we don’t need those any more. Do we?

Summer Camp!


Summer Camp!
Get excited about summer camp! Most of the usual summer camps will be back in business, in person, this year. Find the perfect camp for your kid — there are options for blooming artists, sports fans, music lovers, nature enthusiasts and more.

Also on the cover, A new space for community art classes has opened on Hanover Street in Manchester, p. 22. The new Hotbox eatery in Manchester will be serving up Latin soul and street foods, p. 30. And beer columnist Jeff Mucciarone shares a few random beer selections for the random month of March, p. 34.

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Ready for St. Patrick’s Day?

Ready for St. Patrick’s Day?
It’s been just about a year since restaurants were ordered to close, or to offer only takeout or delivery, interrupting many plans for St. Patrick’s Day. Since then, eateries have adapted in all kinds of ways. Find out how local restaurants have adapted, and what their plans are for this year’s St. Paddy’s Day and beyond.

Also on the cover, maybe it’s time to try a Big Boo Boo, p. 23. The Jordan Tirrell-Wysocki Trio celebrate St. Patrick’s Day with a virtual show, p. 28. If you’re looking for live music, find it in our Music This Week listing, starting on p. 30.

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Green Again

Enjoy St. Patrick’s Day music virtually

A year ago Jordan Tirrell-Wysocki was heading into his busy season and primed to play traditional Irish music across the region. Following a St. Patrick’s Day weekend kickoff show, the Jordan TW Trio, including Matt Jensen on guitar and bass player Chris Noyes, would play its biggest gig of the year, to a sold out Saturday night crowd at Bank of NH Stage.

It was Friday the 13th, however. In 2020, that cursed day delivered misery like never before.

“As we stepped off stage, I took out my phone,” the fiddler said in a recent phone interview, “and found out that we’d been canceled from that point on.”

Though Tirrell-Wysocki would resume a fairly busy schedule later that spring Zoom lessons with cabin-fevered students were a silver lining during the pandemic on March 17 the jigs and reels were streamed from his home on Facebook Live.

This year he’ll finally take the stage in downtown Concord. Alas, apart from a camera operator and sound engineer, his trio will play to an empty room.

He calls the situation “weirdly ironic” but is pleased nonetheless. “I’m grateful that the Capitol Center has figured out how to present quality livestream content. … I think it’s going to be a lot of fun.”

The March 12 show is one of four Irish-themed virtual events offered by the venue. On March 13 a late afternoon show offers We Banjo 3: Live From Ireland. An indie band with Celtic roots, they most recently performed a virtual Christmas show.

That’s followed later in the evening by the concert/travelogue Virtual Ireland with Michael Londra. A prerecorded live concert experience featuring world-renowned step dancers and musicians, Rhythm of the Dance debuted in February and will run two more times in March.

An “intermission” from live events imposed late last year has been challenging, Capitol Center Executive Director Nicki Clarke said recently. Federal CARES Act money and donations have sustained them financially.

“We’ve been taking it literally month by month, saying, ‘We’re just going to pause and look again, and pause again,’” she said.

Socially distanced standup comedy from Juston McKinney was set to resume in-person shows on March 27, but “the board decided to stay in our ‘pause’ state,” Clarke wrote in a Feb. 25 email, so the event is postponed, with no new date confirmed. A May 14 Adam Ezra Band show is still listed on the venue’s website; everything before that is off or virtual, and the Ezra show is not certain either, Clarke said.

“Our board weighs in on the pause question the second Thursday of each month for the following month,” she said. “This means the call to go or re-schedule again will be made on or around April 8.”

Some silver linings emerged from the dearth of live events. Necessary stage repairs could be made, for example.

“In some ways being closed was a good thing, because we can get that done right,” Clarke said.

Still, livestreamed shows are no substitute for the real thing money-wise.

“We might be making like $2 for every ticket that we sell; it’s really for the benefit of giving people something to watch,” she said. “This mud season is going to be tough. We’ve got to get through March and April, then hopefully we’ll be outside and able to join up with each other.”

Tirrell-Wysocki is also willing to wait.

“As much as I’m looking forward to being able to work in a normal capacity again, I don’t want to rush it,” he said. “I have been offered indoor shows, and I honestly feel weird. I don’t blame anyone who’s willing to perform inside with distance guidelines and all of that, but a huge part of my job as an independent musician is filling a room, and I just can’t really in good conscience do that. … I want to be sure we’ve waited long enough to do it safely and feel good about it. If that means livestreaming for now, then that’s what we’re going to do.”

Jordan Tirrell-Wysocki Trio Livestream
When
: Friday, March 12, 8 p.m.
Where: online
Tickets: $20 at ccanh.com

Featured photo: Jordan TW Trio. Courtesy photo.

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