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Thursday, April 30, 2020
Hawaii COVID Count: 539 Tests Uncover 5 New Cases, 10 Released
By News Release @ 6:21 PM :: 2741 Views :: COVID-19

Hawai‘i COVID-19 Cases

News Release from Hawaii DoH, April 30, 2020

On 4/30/2020, the Hawai‘i Department of Health reported 5 new positive cases for a cumulative total of 618 cases statewide (reported since 2/28/2020). Three (3) of the cases are on Hawai'i, one is on Maui, and one is a resident who is out of state.

A total of 30,296 individuals have been tested in the state. (539 new tests)

Detailed information and data about COVID-19 cases in Hawai‘i is available at:

Latest Cases in Hawai'iCurrent Situation in Hawai'i  | COVID-19 Data Dashboard

LATEST CASES IN HAWAI‘I

MORE DETAILS

Total cases:618 (5 newly reported)

Hawai’i County:73

Honolulu County:399

Kaua’i County:21

Maui County:116*

Pending:0

Residents diagnosed outside of Hawai‘i:9

Required Hospitalization:70† (one new hospitalization)

Hawaii deaths:16 (no new deaths)

Released from Isolation:526 (10 released today)

Cumulative totals as of 12:00pm, April 30, 2020

*One case is a Lanai resident who’s exposure is on Maui Island and who will be remaining on Maui Island for the interim.

†Includes Hawaii residents hospitalized out of state.

Positive cases includes presumptive and confirmed cases, data are preliminary and subject to change; includes Hawaii residents and non-residents. Note that CDC provides case counts according to states of residence. 

BIN: New Coronavirus Cases Emerge in Hawai‘i County After Days of Stable Numbers

  *   *   *   *   *

HAWAI‘I COVID-19 JOINT INFORMATION CENTER

DAILY NEWS DIGEST

April 30, 2020

Governor’s Office:

Hawai‘i Economic and Community Recovery and Resiliency Navigator Gives Update

On a Facebook Live today, Gov. David Ige and Alan Oshima, Hawai‘i’s Economic and Community Recovery and Resiliency Navigator, discussed plans to keep the community safe while beginning to reopen designated sectors. Oshima said his group is connecting with business and community representatives to gather input, share ideas, and provide ways we can create Hawai‘i’s “new normal.” The planning phases include stabilization (immediate health and economic needs), recovery (job growth and investment), and resiliency (restructuring for a stronger future). Both also emphasized the importance of seeing the entire chain of economic recovery - from agriculture and energy to tourism, non-profits and social services - and how to rebrand Hawai‘i as not just a pretty place, but a safe, healthy state that depends on residents and visitors alike acting responsibly. Learn morerecoverynavigator.hawaii.gov

Department of Health:

Five Additional COVID-19 Cases Reported

Five (5) new cases of coronavirus, including three (3) on Hawai‘i island, one (1) on Maui and one (1) Hawai‘i resident diagnosed outside of Hawai‘i have been reported by DOH. This brings the total of COVID-19 cases in Hawai‘i to 618 since Feb. 28, 2020. Four (4) cases are adults and one is a minor.

Hawai‘i COVID-19 Counts as of 12:00 noon, April 30, 2020

Island of Diagnosis

New Cases

Reported since

2/28/2020

(including new cases)

Total Released from Isolation

O‘ahu

0

399

364

Hawai‘i

3

73

58

Maui

1

114

84

Kaua‘i

0

21

20

Moloka‘i

0

2

0

Lana‘i

0

0

0

Residents Diagnosed outside HI

1

9

 

Unknown**

0

0

 

Total

5

618

 

Total released from isolation

 

 

526

Deaths

0

16

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

** Refers to positive cases that have an unknown county of diagnosis at the time of this report. As more information becomes available for these cases, they are assigned to the proper County of Diagnosis. A negative number indicates the number of previously unknown cases that have now been assigned to a county.

Laboratory* Testing Data

Total Number of Individuals Tested

by Clinical and State Laboratories

Positive

Negative

30,296**

616

29,665

*Electronic Laboratory Reporting       **15 test results were inconclusive.

For more tables please visit: https://health.hawaii.gov/docd/A screenshot of a cell phone

Description automatically generated

Hawai‘i Tourism Authority:

Hawai‘i Visitor Arrivals, Spending, Down 50 Percent

New research shows Hawai‘i visitor arrivals and spending is down more than 50 percent compared to a year ago. Flight cancellations began in February, initially affecting the China market. Then in March, a majority of the flights to the state were cancelled. Most cruise lines also suspended ship operations in U.S. waters on March 13. Overall visitor arrivals are down 53.7 percent in March 2020, year-to-year. Visitor spending is down 52.2 percent. 

Yesterday a total of 590 people arrived in Hawai‘i including 187 visitors and 220 residents. There was a total of 14 arriving flights. This table shows the number of people who arrived by air from out of state yesterday. The next table details interisland travel.

AIRPORT ARRIVALS FOR WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29, 2020

 

KONA

MAUI

O‘AHU

LĪHUʻE

TOTAL

Crew

 

2

95

2

99

Intended New Resident

 

 

62

2

64

Resident

 

46

162

12

220

Transit

 

 

20

 

20

Visitor

 

20

160

7

187

GRAND TOTAL

0

68

499

23

590

Flights

0

1

12

1

14

https://www.hawaiitourismauthority.org/media/4544/043020-passenger-count-press-release.pdf

https://www.hawaiitourismauthority.org/media/4543/march-2020-visitor-statistics-press-release-final.pdf

Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism

INTERISLAND AIRPORT ARRIVALS AND DEPARTURES FOR APRIL 27, 2020

Departing Airport

HNL

KOA

ITO

OGG

LIH

MMK

LNY

JHM

MUE

 

Total

Departing

Honolulu (HNL)

0

175

119

188

111

24

5

2

0

624

Kona (KOA)

37

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

37

Hilo (ITO)

124

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

124

Kahului (OGG)

  108

9

0

0

0

5

1

0

2

125

Līhuʻe (LIH)

64

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

64

Molokaʻi (MMK)

29

0

0

11

0

0

0

0

0

40

Lānaʻi (LYN)

2

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

3

Kapalua (JHM)

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Waimea (MUE)

0

0

0

11

0

0

0

0

0

11

Total Arriving

364

184

119

211

111

29

6

2

2

1,028

https://dbedt.hawaii.gov/economic/covid19/

Department of Transportation:

Identification Credentials, Safety Checks, and Vehicle Registration Updates

Driver’s licenses, instruction permits, and State Identification cards that expire between March 15 and May 31, 2020, are being granted a 90-day waiver. All State-issued credentials expiring during this date range will be considered valid for an additional 90-days from the end of Governor Ige’s 6th supplementary emergency proclamation on May 31, 2020. This extension is to provide enough time for people to obtain or renew credentials once face-to-face government services are reopened. Commercial Driver's License (CDL) holders with a CDL that expired between March 16, 2020 thru May 31, 2020, are allowed an extension of up to 90-days but the 90 days cannot go past June 30, 2020.

Safety check certificates and stickers expiring on or before May 31, 2020, will remain valid until August 31, 2020. All other safety checks that expire in 2020 will be valid for an additional 3 months after the 2020 expiration date. HDOT is extending the safety check waiver to minimize unnecessary face-to-face interactions and to provide enough time for PMVI stations, counties, and people to conduct and process safety checks once the stay-at-home order ends.

Motor vehicle registration fees and any applicable penalty fees for late registration have not changed. These funds are necessary to meet the local share of upcoming stimulus projects for road construction and maintenance. You can do renewals for registration by mail, online, or through available kiosks. For more information:

 https://hidot.hawaii.gov/blog/2020/04/30/hdot-covid-19-update-identification-credentials-safety-checks-and-vehicle-registrations/

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