Coronavirus live updates: Here’s what to know in North Carolina on June 6

We’re keeping track of the most up-to-date news about the coronavirus in North Carolina. Check back for updates.

Daily cases hit record high

At least 33,294 people in North Carolina have tested positive for the coronavirus and 1,015 have died, according to state and county health departments.

The N.C. Department of Health and Human Services on Friday reported 1,289 new COVID-19 cases, marking the single-day high for the the second day in a row. The state reported 1,189 cases on Thursday.

Health officials reported completing 13,845 new tests for the virus on Friday, for a total of 482,147 tests. The percentage of positive cases was 9% for a second day in a row.

Hospitalizations reached a new peak on Friday with the state reporting at least 717 North Carolinians hospitalized from COVID-19, up 59 from the day before.

New nursing home outbreaks

At least three new outbreaks at nursing homes in the Triangle have been reported in the last week, state health department data show.

The outbreaks were reported at Pettigrew Rehabilitation Center in Durham, Barbour Court Nursing & Rehabilitation Center in Smithfield and HeartFields at Cary, bringing the total number of nursing home outbreaks to 20 in the Triangle.

At least 17 are ongoing, according to the health department.

North Carolina’s long-term care facilities have had 4,360 residents test positive for COVID-19, and 579 have died.

Cooper vetoes bill to reopen bars

Gov. Roy Cooper vetoed House Bill 536 on Friday, which would have allowed bars to reopen under Phase Two of the state’s three-phased reopening plan.

In a statement, he said the bill “would limit the ability of leaders to respond quickly to COVID-19 and hamper the health and safety of every North Carolinian.”

Cooper’s decision comes on the heels of nearly 200 North Carolina bar owners filing a lawsuit seeking to be allowed to reopen immediately. The lawsuit seeks a temporary restraining order from Executive Order 141 and argues the state’s line between bars and restaurants was arbitrarily drawn.

But Cooper has defended his authority and the reasoning behind business restrictions. During a Thursday news conference, he suggested bars could be allowed to reopen as part of “Phase 2.5.”

Sheriff will stop speedway crowds

Alamance County Sheriff Terry Johnson said he will keep crowds in check at ACE Speedway on Saturday night in compliance with Gov. Roy Cooper’s order restricting outside gatherings to 25 people.

He does not, however, agree with it.

“We will go issue the citations,” Johnson told The News & Observer. “However I disagree with issuing the citations simply because (Cooper) marched in the streets in Wake County in Raleigh with 2,000 people side-by-side with no mask on his face.”

Cooper briefly joined a group of people protesting George Floyd’s death at the hands of four Minneapolis police officers, the N&O reported.

ACE Speedway in Altamahaw has allowed thousands of spectators to attend its races over the last two Saturdays, prompting Cooper to send a letter to county commissioners “demanding the rules be enforced,” according to the N&O.

Hispanics missing from COVID-19 data

Data collected by the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services on the number of Hispanics who have been infected or died from the coronavirus is incomplete, Qué Pasa reported.

Only 16 of North Carolina’s 100 counties have made that data publicly available.

“Although the most populated counties such as Mecklenburg or Wake do have ethnic data, others do not, and it is very difficult to access them,” William Munn, a political analyst at the North Carolina Justice Center, told The N&O. “Consequently, it is difficult to advocate and inform audiences about the impact on communities.”

Doctors concerned over rising hospital numbers

The number of North Carolinians hospitalized with COVID-19 on any given day has jumped in the last two weeks to more than 600. It’s exceeded 700 four times since May 25, hitting a new high of 717 on Friday.

That’s concerning for some doctors, who say hospitalizations are a better measure of slowing the spread than case numbers.

“If we’re seeing people get sick enough to be admitted to the hospital, that’s telling you we have not flattened the curve,” Dr. David Wohl, an infectious disease physician at the UNC School of Medicine in Chapel Hill, told The News & Observer.

Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Mandy Cohen said the hospitals are well-equipped to treat coronavirus patients, but cautioned the numbers are worth monitoring.

“We continue to have capacity in our health care system to take care of people if they become seriously ill, so that is good,” she said. “But we would like to see this number declining, not increasing.”

Pandemic relief went to large hospitals

Federal funds set aside to help struggling hospitals as COVID-19 forced aside elective procedures went mostly to North Carolina’s largest and more financially stable systems, according to an analysis by the Charlotte Observer.

North Carolina was given $600 million from the federal Provider Relief Fund.

But the majority of it was allocated to Atrium Health, Novant Health, Duke Health and UNC Health Care — four of the state’s largest hospital chains with billions of dollars in combined reserves.

Funding was based on how much money hospitals received from Medicare and other sources last year, meaning “the rich will get richer — and the poor will get poorer,” Dr. Robert Berenson, an expert on health care finance with the Urban Institute, told the Observer.