INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indiana health officials are dropping the state’s color-coded map that rated each county’s risk of COVID-19 spread in favor of relying on a different federal rating system.
That is one of the significant changes the Indiana Department of Health announced Wednesday for its online COVID-19 dashboard.
Indiana's risk map was based on the number of new COVID-19 cases per capita and the percentage of tests confirming infections.
The map updated last week shows 87 of the state’s 92 counties at the lowest risk level.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s national risk map is based on COVID-19 hospitalizations. It showed all Indiana counties at low-risk levels as of Wednesday.
Latest Stories
-
Economist weighs in after Governor Braun signs property tax relief bill into law
Governor Braun signed Senate Bill 1 into law Tuesday after lawmakers. Find out what this could mean for your property tax billIndy DPW: 157,000 potholes filled so far this year, working on thousands more
Indy's Department of Public Works said crews are working ten-hour shifts this week and next week— weather permitting— to make roads smoother.Execution date set for man convicted of killing Beech Grove Officer
Benjamin Ritchie is scheduled to be executed on May 20, 2025 for the 2000 murder of officer William Toney."Swerve, duck and dodge': Haughville residents say potholes plague neighborhood
Haughville resident say potholes are interfering with their daily commutes. Indy DPW said the department has received around 8,200 more pothole reports this year, compared to this time last year.