An additional five residents are in quarantine for potential exposure, the Health Department said Thursday.
The Health Department reported one fewer active positive than on Aug. 26.
The public comment period is currently open on the EPA's proposed $48 million chemical plant cleanup.
The town's case count has fluctuated in the single digits since hitting 10 cases on Aug. 10.
The town's case count has remained at 10 or below so far, despite hundreds of people returning from trips out of state.
The town's case count has fallen back down after rising to 10 on Aug. 10.
The town's confirmed caseload is in double digits for the first time in two months.
The public will be able to submit written comments from Aug. 26 to Sept. 25, ahead of the agency's final decision.
The town has one fewer confirmed case than the last update, July 30.
The case count increased by one from the last update, July 21.
The AG's office has received over 1,000 complaints, including four about Wilmington businesses, since it began collecting them in May.
The environmental protection agency will take comments ahead of formalizing its remediating plans with Olin.
The town is back down to five active cases, as of Monday, the Health Department reported.
None of the active cases are at long-term care facilities, Health Director Shelly Newhouse said.
The Health Department is reporting a new upswing of cases, with seven cases Sunday after dropping to just one active case in June.
Robertson is working on ensuring personal protective equipment and desk sneeze guards are available for schools in the fall, he said.
The population in quarantine for potential exposure has dropped to zero, the town said.
The town made multiple unsuccessful attempts to hire enough lifeguards before determining the beach cannot be opened.
Nearly 2,000 tests have been conducted on Wilmington residents, the town said, for a 16.9 percent positive rate.
Most town recreation facilities reopened as part of the state's phase two reopening, beginning Monday.
All three outbreaks at long-term care facilities are under control, and the community outbreak is at its lowest point in months.
WIlmington's case count has continued to decline after peaking in the 70s in April.
Two Wilmington facilities passed their first round of state infection control inspections.
The town reported three more deaths at CareOne over the last week, Tuesday.
Allergy sufferers beware, as high rates of tree pollen are expected in Wilmington in the coming days.
The town had three outbreaks at long-term care facilities. The third outbreak, at Windsor Place, is over, as of Tuesday.
Chief Joseph Desmond said the department will need to devote its resources to emergency services.
The last time the Health Department distributed masks, they went through 500 in 45 minutes.
No "swim at your own risk" will be permitted at the Town Beach at Silver Lake.
Outside of long-term care facilities, the town's active case count is down to the level on April 1, after peaking at 79.
How many cases? Where can I get tested? Do I need a mask? You asked, we answered.
Two factors explain the coronavirus experience in nursing homes, writes CareOne executive Lizzie Straus.
There are 15 active coronavirus cases at the Windsor Place assisted living facility, the Wilmington Health Department reported Monday.
Data released by the state Wednesday shows that nearly one in every hundred residents has tested positive for the virus.
The Wilmington Health Department noted an uptick of "symptomatic residents" at the assisted living facility in its case update Monday.
The plan to convert the nursing home into a coronavirus hospital was announced March 31, before a coronavirus outbreak was found days later.
AdviniaCare has only 12 active cases now, after 32 residents died and 43 recovered. CareOne has 36 active cases.
Over a quarter of the residents of WIlmington's AdviniaCare nursing home have died.
The Board of Selectmen and town officials discussed the situation at the nursing home
Twenty Wilmington residents have died of the new virus, including 12 at AdviniaCare and five at CareOne.