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appalachiablue

(41,124 posts)
Wed Apr 8, 2020, 07:50 PM Apr 2020

'People Are Fleeing To Appalachia To Escape Covid-19; That Needs To Stop'

Last edited Thu Apr 9, 2020, 12:40 AM - Edit history (1)

'People Are Fleeing to Appalachia to Escape Covid-19. That Needs to Stop.' Alison Stine, Yes! Magazine/Truthout, 4/7/20.

This week, West Virginia became the latest to issue a statewide shelter-in-place directive, ordering residents to remain at home unless they are gathering supplies, caring for ill family members, or working jobs deemed essential.

In issuing his order, which came on the same day as similar orders in states such as Michigan, Ohio, and Massachusetts, Gov. Jim Justice (R) cited a number of reasons the directive was needed to try to slow the spread of the coronavirus, including a new community transmission case. But unlike other states in Appalachia that have issued similar stay at home orders, including Ohio, Justice gave a specific reason for the need in his state: Non-residents were fleeing to West Virginia to try to escape COVID-19 — and they need to stay out.



The phenomenon of people from out of state escaping to West Virginia was documented in a March 20 article on DCist. Extolling the benefits of the mountain state (“West Virginia has emerged as something of an ideal destination for social distancing” the article reads), the piece quoted from D.C. residents interested in spending more time in the less-populous state and a rural West Virginia AirBnb host who noted the uptick and priced his rental accordingly. The article has since been revised to discourage such behavior, citing the concern from health experts that out-of-state coronavirus escapees could spread the virus, among other issues.

Why West Virginia? It was the last state in the country to report a confirmed coronavirus case, though this may be because of lack of testing capabilities more than anything else. Like some of the 13 other states that make up the Appalachian region, West Virginia is less populated, with 77.1 people per square mile, according to data from the 2010 census. The benefits of remote Appalachia in a pandemic are clear: fewer people, easier to socially distance. More space, easier to survive the isolation. Rural places, like parts of Appalachia, also offer agricultural benefits, with some of the population experienced in farming and homesteading, even or especially under difficult conditions.

But not all of Appalachia is rural. And remote doesn’t mean more.

Many places in the region are food deserts, which the U.S. Department of Agriculture classifies as a place lacking access to healthy foods such as fresh fruits and vegetables. Residents of more than 40 counties in West Virginia have limited access to food, according to West Virginia Public Broadcasting. With grocery stores already few and far between in places in the region, some Appalachians rely on gas station mini-marts for food. Even if out-of-state visitors went directly to their rentals, they would certainly have to stop for fuel and provisions, limiting an already limited supply, and increasing transmission of the virus through contact with patrons and store employees. Like much of the nation, Appalachia is experiencing food and household items shortages...Appalachia has little to no public transportation in some parts of the region, a reality that people from elsewhere may be unused to. The region has more physical space, in some areas, but in every other category, it has less. Less access to food and clean water, less affordable and safe housing, fewer households with consistent internet access (which makes working remotely difficult), and fewer roads that are maintained...Rural hospitals have been closing for years...

More, https://truthout.org/articles/people-are-fleeing-to-appalachia-to-escape-covid-19-that-needs-to-stop

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'People Are Fleeing To Appalachia To Escape Covid-19; That Needs To Stop' (Original Post) appalachiablue Apr 2020 OP
I have to admit I thought about going back to my birthplace. William769 Apr 2020 #1
Well, wannbe escapees have doubled the population of my state... 2naSalit Apr 2020 #2
Rumor has it Mark Sanford was spotted on one of their trails... Blue Owl Apr 2020 #3

William769

(55,144 posts)
1. I have to admit I thought about going back to my birthplace.
Wed Apr 8, 2020, 07:54 PM
Apr 2020

Bell County Kentucky. But I would have to get from S.W. Florida to S.E. Kentucky and that was just to big a chance for me. So I am sheltering in place.

2naSalit

(86,534 posts)
2. Well, wannbe escapees have doubled the population of my state...
Wed Apr 8, 2020, 07:59 PM
Apr 2020

Out here were nobody of note lives, including all the Indians who are in a high risk category. And we have too many Senators but nobody wants to talk about all the runaway who ended up here. Oh and a fair population of militia types too. They've been told to self quarantine but they aren't.

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