Friday, May 1, 2009

In Fort Worth, Tarrant, events fall victim to swine flu fears

By STEVE CAMPBELL and ELIZABETH ZAVALA - Fort Worth Star Telegram - May 1, 2009
The popular Mayfest festival was canceled right before it opened Thursday, and parents scrambled to cover child care as area residents adjusted to life in the epicenter of a national public health crisis.

The number of confirmed swine flu cases in Texas grew to 26 Thursday as health officials continued massive rounds of testing, said Williams Ayers, a spokesman for the Texas Department of State Health Services. No deaths have been reported since the one confirmed Wednesday.

In Tarrant County, confirmed cases rose from one to five, and there are 15 probable cases, the health department said Thursday afternoon. Two of the confirmed cases are in Euless and three are in Fort Worth, with patients’ ages ranging from 11 months to 37 years.

With the number of infected residents growing, Fort Worth officials canceled most city-affiliated public events, including the Cinco de Mayo celebrations in north Fort Worth, and county health officials issued orders aimed at limiting gathering places for schoolchildren.

Inside Fort Worth schools, which were ordered closed Wednesday night, crews began sanitizing 144 campuses that serve 80,000 students. Administrators spent much of the day determining what effect the districtwide closure would have on payroll, finances and academics.

Birdville school district officials announced that the Shannon Learning Center, the district’s alternative education program, would be closed though May 11 because an educational assistant is one of the confirmed cases of swine flu, said Mark Thomas, the district’s spokesman. All other campuses will remain open on their normal schedule.

Mayfest grounded

Fierce spring weather has never stopped the Mayfest festival — it was pounded by fist-sized hail that injured 90 people on May 5, 1995 — but the swine flu shut it down.

Organizers of the 37-year-old event were alerted shortly after noon via e-mail that the Fort Worth Parks and Community Services Department and Tarrant County Public Health were canceling it and other outdoor gatherings in the city to try to slow the spread of the flu.

Mayfest leases the park from the city, so organizers had no choice but to close.

"I guess everyone needs to go lock themselves in their homes," said Steve Morgan of Arlington, who, along with his partner, Tempie Rodgers, spent nearly three months working on Terror on the Trinity, a haunted house.

Organizers expect to lose about $500,000 with the cancellation. The event’s board expects to meet soon to discuss whether vendors’ fees will be reimbursed, said Elizabeth Basham, Mayfest’s executive director.

The reason for closures

After-school and sports programs at Fort Worth recreation centers are canceled until at least May 8, although the facilities will stay open, Mayor Mike Moncrief said at a news conference. Polling places for city and school board elections will also remain open.

Dr. Sandra Parker, the medical director for Tarrant County Public Health who recommended Wednesday that Fort Worth schools close, said most of the local cases have involved Fort Worth students. She said she advised canceling Mayfest and Cinco de Mayo events because "they’re identified with the population we’re concerned with."

"Social distancing" measures she ordered Thursday — advising that students stay away from malls and movie theaters — are aimed at places where young people are likely to hang out, she said.

She is discussing the situation with officials at the Fort Worth Zoo, Rangers Ballpark in Arlington and other gathering places, although they remain open.

Tarrant County Administrator G.K. Maenius said Thursday that the county’s public health department has not shut down schools or public events, but has recommended closures. Recommendations for school closures are also coming from the Texas Education Agency, he said.

"We recommended not holding organizing events like Mayfest or Cinco de Mayo or celebrations that are specifically designed to attract the attendance of Fort Worth ISD students, who as a group has been identified as an at-risk population," Maenius said.

Medical precautions

Local hospitals aren’t taking any chances.

Face masks are being distributed to patients at JPS Health Network clinics and hospitals, said JPS spokeswoman Jamie Brown. "Registration reps will provide patients a mask if someone is experiencing flulike symptoms," she said.

JPS is also working with Fort Worth school officials to keep its school-based clinics open, so children who have flulike symptoms can be seen by medical staff away from other patients to help prevent the spread of the flu.

Cook Children’s Medical Center canceled a neonatal intensive care unit reunion this weekend. About 500 families were expected to attend, spokeswoman Kristin Peaks said.

Arlington Mayor Robert Cluck said people should remain calm and take simple steps, such as washing their hands and avoiding sick people. "There is no cause for alarm," he said.

Cleburne Superintendent Ronny Beard said he was awakened by state health officials at 4:30 a.m. Wednesday telling him he should close the district’s schools. He said the state is following pandemic guidelines in urging schools with probable cases to close because it can take several days to know how many children have been exposed to the flu.

The city of Keller said it was sanitizing all of its public facilities, including buildings, playgrounds and parks. Commonly touched surfaces were being treated with antiseptic solution. Girl Scouts canceled their council-sponsored events in Fort Worth through May 10, including a dance party, a zoo overnight and a performance of Cinderella by the Fort Worth Opera.

Churches, too, are adjusting their routines.

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Fort Worth will not serve wine during Mass until further notice. Other churches are asking members not to shake hands or hug.

Major concert venues and museums throughout North Texas — including the Nokia Theatre at Grand Prairie, Billy Bob’s Texas, House of Blues in Dallas, Bass Hall, the Kimbell Art Museum and Amon Carter Museum — said Thursday that they would remain open. Both the Kimbell and the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth canceled children’s programs scheduled for the next week, however.

"An opera performance is not the same environment as a school, so we are not concerned at this time," said Darren Woods, general director of the Fort Worth Opera, which has performances scheduled at Bass Hall this weekend.

Six Flags Over Texas said it plans to have normal park hours Saturday and Sunday.

On the job

Fort Worth-based American Airlines, a major air carrier between the U.S. and Mexico, extended to May 31 changes in travel plans without penalty.

Doug MacHatton, a spokesman for Alcon Laboratories, said the firm’s 3,000 employees have had "no significant" absenteeism due to parents staying home with their children.

But the flu scare is letting the air out of at least one local business.

Jane Stiles, co-owner of All Star Party Service in Fort Worth, began getting cancellations on this weekend’s bounce-house party bookings immediately after the school district announced closings.

"We had our equipment up and they called up to come and take it down," Stiles said.

Contributing to this report were staff writers Alex Branch, Mike Lee, Anna Tinsley, Anthony Spangler, Susan Schrock, Eva-Marie Ayala, Diane Smith, Dianna Hunt, Gene Trainor, Bill Hanna, Lois Norder, Lee Williams, Susan Schrock, Tracy Shurley, John Austin, Andrea Ahles, Mitch Mitchell and Trebor Banstetter.
Read more in the Fort Worth Star Telegram

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