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Friday, April 24, 2020 7:35:46 AM

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THINGS TO KNOW
By Press Release | Posted on Apr 22 2020
Tag: BECQ, ID, USDA
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As of April 21, 2020. All information may change without prior notice. For corrections and additions to this list, send an email to editor or chevy_alipio, or call 235-6397 or 235-2440.

Saipan municipal ID renewals

Effective April 27, 2020 the Office of the Mayor of Saipan’s ID section will be providing an online submission and scheduled curbside pick-up service for municipal ID renewals. Get more information by clicking the link at www.saipantribune.com.

PUA Fact Sheet

Fact sheet on Pandemic Unemployment Assistance for the CNMI. For more information on the PUA program, review Unemployment Insurance Program Letter (UIPL) No. 16-20 at https://wdr.doleta.gov/directives/corr_doc.cfm?docn=4628. See FACT SHEET at link on www.saipantribune.com.

BECQ continues to provide services

The Bureau of Environmental and Coastal Quality is be providing limited services to the public during the COVID-19 pandemic. Get more details by clicking on the link at www.saipantribune.com.

USDA aid for rural residents, businesses, communities

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Rural Development has taken a number of actions to help rural residents, businesses and communities affected by the COVID-19 outbreak. To learn more, go to https://www.rd.usda.gov/sites/default/files/USDA_RD_SA_COVID19_CUMULATIVEUpdate04152020.pdf

WHO UPDATE

Advice on the use of masks in the context of COVID-19. See link at www.saipantribune.com.

BANK HOURS

• Bank of Hawaii: Monday to Friday – 9am to 1pm (Saturdays closed)
• Bank of Guam Chalan Kanoa: Closed temporarily
• Bank of Guam Garapan: Monday to Friday – 9am-1pm; Saturday closed
• First Hawaiian Bank Oleai: Monday to Friday – 9am- 1pm; Saturday closed
• First Hawaiian Bank Gualo Rai: Monday to Friday – 9am- 1pm; Saturday closed

U.S. POSTAL SERVICE

• USPS Chalan Kanoa: Monday to Friday – 8:30am-4pm; Sat 9am-12pm
• USPS San Vicente: Monday to Friday – 12pm-5:30pm; Sat 12pm-3pm

SUPERMARKETS

For a list of the status of open and closed stores and those with limited hours, see link at www.saipantribune.com.

RESTAURANTS

For a list of the status of open and closed restaurants and those with limited hours, see link at www.saipantribune.com.

OTHER BUSINESSES:

For a list of their business operations status, see link at www.saipantribune.com.

MEDICAL SERVICES

For a list of the status of open and closed medical services and those with limited hours, see link at www.saipantribune.com.

HOTELS

For a partial list of the status of open and closed hotels and those with limited hours, see link at www.saipantribune.com.

ONLINE RESOURCES

Demystifying the CARES ACT: A primer for businesses. Plus Saipan Chamber of Commerce updates. See https://myemail.constantcontact.com/De-mystifying-the-CARES-ACT-and-Local-Updates.html?soid=1129193858340&aid=0EXsNhZzzis
Commonwealth Health Care Corp. services. See link at www.saipantribune.com.
Frequently-asked-questions about direct assistance under CARES Act. See link at www.saipantribune.com.
Needing mental health tips? S See link at www.saipantribune.com.
Avoid COVID-19 scams: Attorney General Edward Manibusan issues alert of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) scams. See link at www.saipantribune.com.
Source: Compiled by Saipan Tribune/Chevy Alipio

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News under Press Release are official statements issued to Saipan Tribune giving information on a particular matter.
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SAIPAN
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC LANDS
P.O. Box 500380
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Tel. No.: (670) 234-3751/52/53/54
Fax No..: (670) 234-3755
Email: dpl

 

TINIAN
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC LANDS
San Jose Village
Tinian, MP 96952
Tel. No.: (670) 433-9245
Fax No.: (670) 433-0599
Email: dpltiq

ROTA
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC LANDS
P.O.Box 813 Songsong
Rota, MP 96951
Tel. No.: (670) 532-9431
Fax No..: (670) 532-9430
Email: dplrota

Lockdown unconstitutional

government can’t enforce state lockdowns. Contain the coronavirus, but protect our rights, too.
Medical science teaches us the need for social distancing. But distancing ourselves from the Constitution and the rule of law is no remedy at all.

Social distancing matters. Here is how to do it and how it can help curb the COVID-19 pandemic.

President Donald Trump recently floated the idea of an “enforceable” quarantine of New York, Connecticut and parts of New Jersey. He backed off the idea and settled, this time, for a travel advisory issued by the Centers for Disease Control discouraging people in those states from traveling domestically. But could he have done that? Could he have locked down 32 million people with a stroke of his pen?

While America hasn’t experienced anything like the coronavirus pandemic in living memory, infectious disease epidemics were all too common in the first half of the 20th century. Polio, typhoid, influenza, measles and diphtheria all presented major health threats at one time or another. Vaccines and improved public health standards have made these diseases a matter for historians. Nonetheless, the lessons learned about controlling these outbreaks remain embedded in our laws.

And they barely involve the federal government at all. In most states, the first line of defense is the county public health officer. While that is typically a non-controversial position, when there is an infectious disease outbreak like COVID-19, county public health officers become the most powerful officials in the government. They have enormous authority to take steps they deem necessary to control the outbreak.

If the county public health officer decides schools need to be closed, the schools are closed. If the county public health officer decides businesses need to shutter and public events need to be canceled, then that’s what happens. In some states, the state public health officer can issue similar orders, if necessary.

‘Cheerleader’ federal government
County public health officers also have a great deal of authority to isolate those who have the disease and, in order to prevent its spread, quarantine people who may have been exposed to it until the risk of them developing the infection has passed. Experience teaches that these decisions need to be made and enforced by people who understand the situation on the ground in their communities rather than on a one-size-fits-all basis.

Which brings us to the federal government. During an epidemic, the federal government’s role is cheerleader in chief. Its main responsibilities are coordination and communication. Rather than taking charge, it is supposed to be ensuring that health care providers and state and local officials have the resources and the information they need to treat the sick and make wise decisions. What little direct power the federal government does have is found in the Public Health Service Act. The federal government’s quarantine powers are limited to preventing the spread of a disease across the U.S. border and to preventing its interstate spread.

A member of the Rhode Island National Guard Military Police stops car with New York license plates at an I-95 checkpoint in Hope Valley, R.I. on March 28, 2020.
DAVID GOLDMAN, AP
But these powers can only be applied on an individual basis. The statute and the overly-expansive regulations that go with it make it clear that the federal government can only order quarantines on an individual basis and based on a reasonable belief that the person in question is likely to become infectious. The government must then provide some rudimentary due process to the quarantined individual who can contest his or her status.

Social distancing works: San Francisco is beating the coronavirus odds — so far. What can other places learn?

What the federal government cannot do is order millions of people locked down based solely on the state in which they live. Not only would that be unconstitutional, there is neither statutory nor regulatory authority for doing such a thing – and the federal government wrote the regulations itself.

Be careful with our basic freedoms
A crisis like the coronavirus pandemic is always a dangerous time for civil liberties. When governments become habituated to exercising powers, it can be difficult to get them to relinquish them once the crisis has passed. In the words of Judge Alex Kozinski, “Liberty — the freedom from unwarranted intrusion by government — is as easily lost through insistent nibbles by government officials who seek to do their jobs as by those who sole purpose it is to oppress; the piranha can be as deadly as the shark.” Trump’s casual assumption that he had the power to control the lives of over 30 million people, even if he had the best of intentions, is a perfect example of what Judge Kozinski warned us about.

He does it so you don’t have to: Why I watch Trump’s daily coronavirus briefings (and no, it’s not because I’m a masochist)

Worse, it’s part of a pattern. The Trump administration is also using this crisis to propose sweeping new government powers during an emergency. These include allowing people to be held indefinitely without ever coming before a judge and authorizing mandatory “private arraignments” by video conference in criminal cases even when there is no emergency.

The pandemic now gripping America is one of the gravest challenges most of us have faced in our lifetimes. But in a few months or a year, it will pass. And unless we are mindful now, the damage done in the name of expediency to some of our most basic freedoms could last far longer than that. There is no need to let that happen. Medical science teaches us the need for social distancing. But distancing ourselves from the Constitution and the rule of law is no remedy at all.

Aj

Torres announces $4M in COVID-19 assistance
Man charged with ‘terroristic’ threat after posting video
Daily Post Staff
6 hrs ago

Aziz P. Mettao

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About 11:20 a.m. Friday, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands Department of Public Safety began receiving numerous complaints of an individual who allegedly issued a threat of violence toward another person in a video posted online.

"Authorities began investigating after becoming aware of the video and quickly identified Aziz P. Mettao as the suspect," DPS stated. "Authorities immediately began looking for Mettao in an effort to intercept him before he could make his way toward the individual’s home. Authorities found Mettao in his vehicle at his home."

About 11:33 a.m., Mettao was placed under arrest on suspicion of terroristic threatening in violation of the commonwealth code. He was escorted to the Department of Corrections, where he was booked and detained.

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Charged
Aziz P. Mettao is charged with terroristic threatening.

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