Lethbridge Herald

Two U.S. states ease COVID-19 lockdowns

Death toll from virus in U.S. passes 50,000

- Russ Bynum and David Crary

Even as the confirmed U.S. death toll from coronaviru­s rose past 50,000, salons, spas and barbershop­s reopened Friday in Georgia and Oklahoma with a green light from their

Republican governors, who eased lockdown orders despite health experts’ warnings.

Though limited in scope, and subject to social-distancing restrictio­ns, the reopening marked a symbolic milestone in the debate raging in the United

States — and the world — as to how quickly political leaders should lift economical­ly damaging lockdown orders.

Similar scenarios have been playing worldwide and will soon proliferat­e in the U.S. as other governors wrestle with conflictin­g priorities. Their economies have been battered by weeks of quarantine-fuelled job losses and soaring unemployme­nt claims, yet health officials warn that lifting stay-at-home orders now could spark a resurgence of COVID-19.

The coronaviru­s has killed more than 190,000 people worldwide, including — as of Friday — more than 50,000 in the United States, according to a tally compiled by John Hopkins University from government figures. The actual death toll is believed to be far higher.

New cases are surging in Africa and Latin America as outbreaks subside in some places that were hit earlier.

In Oklahoma, Gov. Kevin Stitt authorized personal-care businesses to open, citing a decline in the number of people being hospitaliz­ed for COVID19. Those businesses were directed to maintain social distancing, require masks and frequently sanitize equipment.

Still, some of the state’s largest cities, including Norman, Oklahoma City and Tulsa, were opting to keep their bans in place until at least the end of April.

Amy Pembrook and her husband, Mike, reopened their hair salon in the northwest Oklahoma town of Fairview after it had been shuttered for about a month.

“We’re super excited about going back, but we have caught a little flack from people who say it’s too early,” Amy Pembrook said. “We just said we can live in fear for a long time or we can trust that everything is going to be OK.”

With deaths and infections still rising in Georgia, many business owners planned to stay closed despite Gov. Brian Kemp’s assurance that hospital visits and new cases have levelled off enough for barbers, tattoo artists, massage therapists and personal trainers to return to work with restrictio­ns.

Kemp’s timeline to restart the economy proved too ambitious even for President Donald Trump, who said he disagrees with the fellow Republican’s plan.

On Friday, Trump signed a $484-billion bill to aid employers and hospitals under stress from the pandemic — the latest federal effort to help keep afloat businesses that have had to close or scale down.

Over the past five weeks, roughly 26 million people have filed for jobless aid, or about one in six U.S. workers.

Without a tried-and-tested action plan for how to pull countries out of coronaviru­s lockdown, the world is seeing a patchwork of approaches. Schools reopen in one country, stay closed in others; face masks are mandatory in some places, a recommenda­tion elsewhere.

Kids still attend soccer practice in Sweden while they are not even allowed outside in Spain. As government­s and scientists fumble around, still struggling with so many unknowns, individual­s are being left to take potentiall­y lifeaffect­ing decisions.

In Georgia, David Huynh had 60 clients booked for appointmen­ts at his nail salon in Savannah, but a clothing store, jewelry shop and chocolatie­r that share a street corner with his downtown business, Envy Nail Bar, remained closed.

“The phone’s been staying ringing off the hook,” Huynh said. “We’ve probably gotten hundreds of calls in the last hour.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada