Here’s a roundup of today’s COVID-19 news in Maine and New England, as of 6 p.m. To read all of our coverage, click here.
— Another eight cases of the new coronavirus were reported in Maine on Friday, bringing the overall total to 56. That includes 44 confirmed cases and 12 presumed positive.
— Three cases involving non-residents in the state have been transferred to other states’ health departments. A fourth case initially tested positive at an outside laboratory, but the Maine CDC later determined it to be negative.
— On Thursday, the Maine CDC reported a case had been detected in Hancock County. But that case, diagnosed by a health care provider there, was determined to involve a Penobscot County resident and added to that county’s total.
— There’s a silver lining to the long lines and empty shelves at grocery stores: Supermarkets desperately need workers immediately to stock goods, drive trucks and select orders in their stores and warehouses.
— The Maine CDC set up a coronavirus hotline. The hotline is available by calling 211 or 866-811-5695. It can also be reached by texting your zipcode to 898-211 or emailing info@211maine.org.
— California, New York and Illinois have all issued stay-at-home directives for their residents, meaning they can only go outside for essential jobs, errands and exercise.
— Throughout the rest of New England, Massachusetts has 328 confirmed cases, Connecticut has 194, Rhode Island has 44, New Hampshire has 44 and Vermont has 22, according to The New York Times.
— Nationwide, there are 15,650 cases and 202 deaths from the coronavirus as of Thursday evening, according to The New York Times.