 Five new county COVID cases confirmed, only 140 in the state, women and infant injured in rollover crash, SCIO announces farmers markets will open. These and other local stories are coming up on this edition of Community News Review. This is Community News Review, a service WSCS-TV news content, divided by WHBL. I'm Maddie Fister and this is Community News Review for Tuesday, June 2, 2020. Five new cases of COVID-19 have been added to Sheboygan County's tally of coronavirus victims, raising the running total to 96 cases since the pandemic began here. 14 of those cases are active and though none are hospitalized, 70 persons have recovered. In Sunday, 64 persons were tested with 59 of those negative. Age groups 20 to 39 and 50 to 79 accounted for 28 and 31 of the total cases respectively, while 24 have been between 40 and 59 years old. In Wisconsin, a prominent downward trend in tests conducted has been underway since reaching a high of 13,602 on Friday, May 29. By contrast, only 3,632 were tested since Sunday and 140 were positive. That's the lowest total positives in the last two weeks. Although that accounts for 3.9% of the tests, an uptick since yesterday's 3.9%, the 14-day trend is downward and for the first time, five of the six so-called gating metrics used to trigger the easing of restrictions recommended by the State Department of Health Services are green. Should a downward trend of health care workers contracting COVID-19 be established and all others remain good, the easing should take place. Two people were injured in a deer car crash on Monday night on I-43. The Sheriff's Department says it happened around 9.40 p.m. at mile marker 116 near Highway V. After hitting the deer, both the driver and the passenger complained of injuries and were both taken to the ambulance to St. Nicholas Hospital. This is a good reminder to keep a close eye out for deer as they are more active right now. They usually give birth between May or June. Alcohol is believed to be the cause of that rollover crash on I-43 that sent a mother and her daughter to the hospital on Sunday night. The Sheboygan County Sheriff's Department says 25-year-old Sabrina Walker was cited for operating while intoxicated, causing injury to a child after that rollover crash. These were called to I-43 of Highway 42 where Walker's car had left the road and heard the median rolled and ended up on its roof in the opposite lane of traffic. Walker and her one-month-old infant daughter were both airlifted from the scene. Mass community testing for COVID-19 was held this past Thursday, Friday and Saturday at the Sheboygan County Fairgrounds in Plymouth. The Wisconsin National Guard staffed the drive-through collection, which prepared to conduct as many as 400 tests each day. So far the only numbers reported were for Thursday by the Wisconsin Department of Military Affairs, which said over 100 specimens were collected. Daily reports from the Sheboygan County Division of Health Services displayed no unusual bumps in any statistics that could be tied to that testing. A 142 employee staff is down to just 21 as of this morning at Sheboygan Sockmaker-Wigwan Mills. The permanent mass layoff was announced in a letter to Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development and reported by local media and was blamed on the impact that COVID-19 has had on operations and sales. The announcement fell short of the 60-day advance notice required by federal and state law, but according to the letter, unforeseen adverse circumstances forced short notice. A fall in demand due to the closure of retailers over the past two months was blamed for pushing the situation beyond a tipping point. General Manager of Operations, Chris Cheesebro, said in the letter that Wigwan would work with lower-seniority union members to help them find other local jobs and hopes to provide a smooth transition from most. Cheesebro said the company is not done pointing to an uptick in e-commerce and that Wigwan intends to remain operating in Sheboygan even as some of the operations go elsewhere. There was more unrest in Madison on Sunday, including violent clashes with police. Madison PD and the Wisconsin National Guard tried to break up a crowd that threw rocks at officers. Law enforcement in riot gear used a chemical agent to disperse the group, and a large crowd violated a 9.30 p.m. curfew, refusing to leave the grounds of a state capital. A dumpster and at least one vehicle were set on fire and stores were looted for second straight night on State Street. There were several attempts to steal a police squad car and police say 15 people were arrested and one of the people in custody was armed with a handgun. There were also reports of shots fired at a demonstration in Green Bay. After a peaceful rally during the day on Sunday, a crowd gathered after curfew around 10 p.m. and looted a gas station on Walnut Street. After shots were heard, it appeared an ice machine was hit by bullets, and the police, SWAT team, and assault vehicle were sent to the area. The crowd was dispersed from assistance from the Wisconsin State Patrol around midnight. Farmers markets will not bow to the pandemic as several locations will begin operating this month. According to the Sheboygan County Interfaith Organization, COVID-19 has had its impact on operations, so social distancing and other measures have been taken into account. One adjustment is the establishment of the SCIO's drive-through pop-up farmers market that began operations May 23 in the first parking lot of the First Congressional Church at Third and Bluff Avenue. Though one operates each Saturday from 9.30 to 11.30 a.m., other markets will begin operating on Sheboygan's Fountain Park from 9 until one Wednesdays and Saturdays and in Plitmouth on Thursdays from noon until 5 in the Dairy Queen parking lot. The SCIO urges everyone attending to follow all social distancing guidelines and to stay away if you are ill. And finally, with temperatures forecast to peak near 90 degrees today, the Wisconsin Department of Transportation is advising motorists to be alert for buckling roadways and the crews sent to repair them. Pavement can buckle whether the weather quickly goes from cool to very hot, causing slabs of pavement to expand and push against each other. The DOT says predicting where it will happen is nearly impossible, but when is most likely this afternoon when drivers should pay extra attention to possible damaged pavements and road crews. Slow down and move over for the crews if you see buckled pavement. And the DOT says call 911 and report the location as accurately as possible. And that is our report for today. Join me again on Thursday for more local news and information on Community News Review. News content for this program provided by WHBL in cooperation with WSCSTB.