 Evers loses, loosens restrictions on more non-essential businesses. State faces backlog of unemployment claims. No one hurt in Sunday morning house fire in Elkhart Lake. These and other local stories are coming up on this edition of Community News Review. This is Community News Review, a service WSES TV news content provided by WHBL. I'm Maddie Fister and this is Community News Review for Tuesday, April 28, 2020. In Monday's daily report by the Sheboygan County 8 Division of Health Services, numbers are changing slowly but notably in the numbers recovered from COVID-19. The total number of positive test results remains at 48 out of the 867 tested so far and all 13 tested in the last day were negative. Another three persons have recovered, leaving six cases currently active. The lowest number since March 31st. As of today, all connected to the sunny ridge outbreak have recovered except for the two fatalities. The only such recorded in the county and no one in the Sheboygan County is currently hospitalized with the coronavirus. Across the state, another 170 persons have tested positive, raising the badger total to 6081. The 170 new cases makes Monday the second consecutive day of declines. In the COVID-19 like illnesses, 14 days are needed to satisfy the rules of Governor Evers' Badger Bounceback Plan to reopen the state. Also require our 14 consecutive days where flu-like illnesses shows a downward trend. Those numbers were not available. However, concerning the third requirement, that being 14 consecutive days of percent of new positive cases relative to total numbers tested, was down for the second consecutive day at 7.6 percent. Governor Evers signed emergency order number 34 yesterday called the Interim Order to Turn the Dial. This in response to offer new businesses new opportunities to get back to work and progressively find ways to loosen other restrictions on the public without raising the burden on the health system. The order allows more curbside drop-offs of goods or animals for purposes of service, repair or care. Outdoor recreational rentals including but not limited to kayaks, boats, canoes, paddle boats, golf carts, snowmobiles and ATVs will be allowed. Also entirely automatic car washes and self-service car washes may open for service. The Badger Bounceback and Safer at Home Orders are still in effect but modified by the Turn the Dial measures outlined today. And more on those restrictions, Wisconsin's governor Tony Evers says he is turning the dial to allow more non-essential businesses to resume minimal operations through new executive order issued Monday. Again, according to a news release, non-essential businesses can now do curbside drop-offs of goods and animals which will allow businesses like dog groomers, small engine, repair shops, upholstery businesses and others to safely open. All of those businesses must be able to cooperate and operate without direct contact with the customers by taking payments online or over the phone. The businesses operations must also be performed by only one person. The order takes effect on Wednesday morning and the release comes two days after the Evers extended Safer at Home order which took effect which allowed some small businesses to reopen with minimal services and allowed golf courses to open with modified procedures in place. Working smoke detectors can be credited with helping save a home in Elkhart Lake over the weekend. The Elkhart Lake Fire Department was called shortly after five o'clock on Sunday morning after getting a 911 call about a fire at a home on Rhine Road in the town of Rhine. When deputies arrived, they were able to put the fire out before firefighters had arrived. The family says they were alerted by working fire alarms, got out safely, then called 911, and there were no injuries. The cause of the fire is still being investigated. A two-year-old child from Portage is seriously injured from what appears to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Police were called to the child's home on Sunday afternoon to find a parent applying treatment to the child's leg, saying the child had accidentally discharged the weapon. The child was taken to a nearby hospital and later flown to UW-Madison Hospital for treatment. An update on their condition has not been given. Police did find a gun at the scene, which was taken in as evidence. The Department of Workforce Development is dealing with a backlog of unemployment claims due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Around 400,000 people in Wisconsin have filed for unemployment benefits since March 1st, and the unemployment office says all claims have been processed, but until DWD can hire more people to do the actual processing, they will be playing catch-up. The state has already pulled more than 100 staff members from other departments, and they are now reviewing applicants to hire another 200 people. The state has already waived a one-week waiting period for the newly unemployed, and those who have lost their jobs are also eligible for up to $600 per week in additional federal benefits. And finally, UW-Green Bay, which includes the Sheboygan campus, announced on Friday that 227 staff members will be placed on furlough on May 22nd through May 31st, in a move designed to protect the future of the institution. All administrators above an annual salary above $100,000 are also taking voluntary furlough. Interim Chancellor Cheryl Van Grunis-Ven said in a memorandum to faculty and staff that although the institution's financial health is not in jeopardy at this time, the reality is that we lost $3 million in revenue in just the past month, and we must navigate risk until we can find some level of normalcy. Furlough's staff members received notice from their supervisors beginning last Thursday morning, and furloughs allowed members of the campus community to retain their benefits, yet still be eligible for unemployment compensation. And that is our report for today. Join me again on Thursday for more local news and information on Community News Review.