Worcester Business Journal

Economic Forecast 2021

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www.wbjournal.com • Worcester Business Journal • 2021 Economic Forecast 23 Leaving Money on the Table? Let Our Team Analyze Your Prior Year Business and Personal Tax Returns in a Free Consultation. Tax Strategists . Forensic Accountants . Business Valuators DMCLARENCPA.COM . Shrewsbury . (508) 842-0459 Our checking account helps small businesses in a big way. Open your Entrepreneur Checking Account today. Visit baystatesavingsbank.com/entrepreneur_checking to learn more. Worcester County again sets new record for weekly coronavirus cases Originally published on Nov. 30. Read the full version on WBJournal.com. For the second straight week, Worces- ter County has set a new mark for the highest number of new coronavirus cases in a week, this time beating the record by 10%. Worcester County recorded 2,365 new weekly cases, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health reported Friday, a slightly less steep week-to-week increase than earlier in November but nonetheless the highest seven-day num- ber of cases yet recorded. Massachusetts also set the same high mark, with 17,766 new weekly cases. e state's total now stands at 207,284, the state reported Friday. Worcester County has had 23,611 cases since the pandemic began. Worcester County's COVID death toll now stands at 1,261, with 33 newly re- ported deaths in the past week. Deaths, typically a lagging indicator a few weeks behind a spike in cases, has not risen to nearly the same levels as during the spring peak, with health officials credit- ing a better knowledge of how the virus works as well as a generally younger demographic getting the virus that's less likely to have pre-existing conditions. Statewide, deaths rose in the latest seven-day stretch by 200 to hit 10,635. Across Central Massachusetts, 19 cities and towns had two-week rates of new cases exceeding the state average of 34.9 per 100,000. at includes a rate of 153.3, one of the state's highest, in Shir- ley, which includes the town's houses of correction. Patients waited outside the Mercantile Center in Worcester for coronavirus tests. Through mid-December, more than 9.6 million such tests were conducted across the state. PHOTO/GRANT WELKER W

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