Delaware Community Foundation
Delaware COVID-19 Strategic Response Fund awards $275K in new grants

Down Syndrome Association Delaware and the Mary Campbell Center are among the grantees in the sixth round of funding from the Strategic Response Fund administered by the Delaware Community Foundation. The money will support Down Syndrome Association of Delaware’s statewide virtual programming and fund personal protective equipment for staff at the Mary Campbell Center.

The Andover Rehabilitation and Subacute centers in Andover, Sussex County, New Jersey
Lack of details: States vary on reporting nursing home COVID-19 deaths, frustrating families

State and local health officials nationwide are facing increasing scrutiny over the collection and release of infection data for long-term care facilities. Delaware reports daily the number of new cases among residents and the number of deaths by facility, but does not report staff cases or deaths. Fifteen states do not release any information. Health care industry groups argue that a lack of transparency is unfair to relatives and prevents easy identification of which facilities need supplies or assistance.

Principal Kristina MacBury of Sarah Pyle Academy in Wilmington, Del., checks in with a student from her home office.
Schools struggle to meet students’ mounting mental health needs

The coronavirus pandemic has limited the ways school psychologists, counselors and other educational professionals can support the mental and emotional wellbeing of their students. The need is particularly dire now, as the dangers of COVID-19 and a reeling economy leave many children in a permanent state of fight-or-flight, which can lead to chronic traumatic stress, anxiety and depression.

Janie Desmond who has visual impairment and mild intellectual disability comes to the edge of her porch for a portrait in Durham, N.C.
Disability service providers struggling to stay afloat amid COVID-19

The American Network of Community Options and Resources (ANCOR), which represents disability service providers, has surveyed almost 700 provider organizations and found that two-thirds reported closing one or more of their offerings due to lost revenue and other challenges brought about by COVID-19. A majority of respondents also said they only have enough money to continue operating for five-to-six weeks. ANCOR says it hopes the U.S. Health Department will support providers with some of the funds appropriated by the March stimulus bill.

teenagers head toward the gym at Caddo Juvenile Detention Center in Shreveport, La.
Riots, escapes and pepper spray: Virus hits juvenile centers

Criminal justice advocates and parents of children in juvenile centers – a population which has disproportionately high rates of mental health conditions and learning disabilities – are pushing for children to serve the rest of their sentences at home. At least 150 children and more than 200 staff members have tested positive for COVID-19. As frustrations and fears increase, there have been reports that children who show symptoms of COVID-19 are experiencing near-total isolation. Detention centers in several states have seen riots or other violence.