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This humble blog was started to document our travels around the country during the summer of 2006, We have opted to continue updating it due to the requests from family & friends. Enjoy!

Monday, June 01, 2020

Oh the Places You’ll Go


June 1, 2020





 






 

Oh the Places You’ll Go

This year has to mark one of the strangest graduations ever for students completing whatever year of school achievement they are finishing. Actual attendance at school has stopped altogether for the past couple of months and all the activities, rituals and events associated with attending school including all sporting events, clubs, dances and proms, and graduation activities have been pushed aside with strange virtual classrooms replacing the standard education system. Current students have been deprived of the normal life events associated with school that many remember for the rest of their lives








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The Covid-19 pandemic continues to rage as we reached a grim milestone this week as deaths in the United States smashed through the 100,000 barrier and the current toll stands at 1,782,894 confirmed cases and 104,130 deaths in the United States with 108 cases here locally in Monroe County, 41 cases in Key West and 3 deaths. Even as the numbers rise, the Florida Keys are officially declared reopened as of today as the roadblock check points have come down today, hotels have reopened and visitors are welcome to return.



 





The TDC caused a bit of controversy when they released an ad campaign that quoted Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. that many, myself included thought was inappropriate and insensitive to say the least. Thankfully once public outrage was evident the ads were pulled and hopefully not too much lasting damage occurred. 

 







Key West and the Keys have been an isolated bubble, mostly free of any viral outbreaks today and the fear is that reopening will cause a surge in the number of cases as outsiders from around the globe return. Of course businesses are starved for customers and the large majority of people and businesses that rely on the tourist economy here are anxious to get funds flowing again. We will continue to have fairly strict regulations as far as wearing facial coverings being required in all businesses and limiting the size of crowds, but people tend to be complacent about following such rules and things could get ugly.







 



Certainly social distancing was not in evidence much at all among the Key West High School senior class who gathered this week for a vehicle parade that started and ended at Key West High and took a lap around the city so that supportive folks around the island could offer their congratulations to the class of 2020, who have gone through an experience unlike any previous class ever.











I walked the few blocks over from my house to watch and photograph the students as the parade of vehicles drove out of the high school parking lot and down Flagler Avenue in front of cheering friends and family who lined the streets, mostly respecting the social distancing policy. It was pretty inspiring I must say, these poor kids have endured a strange year to say the least, missed out on so much of what constitutes the high school experience and still have little clue about what will be happening in the near future as the uncertainty about whether they will be able to go away to college at all still hangs over them.









In spite of it all they remained upbeat, happy and anxious to move ahead and onward into whatever the future hold for them. Their parents and families are just as proud and excited as any before them and they too have been suffering the past few months and have little idea what the future holds for these students. 









Things have slowly been returning to a small sense of normal for us as well, we made our very first visit to someone else’s house this week as we spent an afternoon over at our friends Bonnie and Mike’s home. It was weird yet wonderful and we kept our distance but were happy to be able to interact with others in a new environment. We have had some people drop by our house during this, but it was the first time we ventured out and it was really enjoyable. You forget how much you need human interaction.











Kathy also volunteered this week at the Farmer’s Market collecting signatures to try and get ballot referendums on the upcoming election ballot concerning the size and quantity of cruise ships that visit Key West. There are three options that will potentially be included on the ballot that variously limit the size and scope of cruise ship visits to the island moving forward. Getting the referendums on the ballot is the first step to gauge the public interest in the limiting measures. 

 










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