Albuquerque Journal

Gov. gives counties incentives to slow spread of virus

But new public health order eases restrictio­ns for even ‘red’ counties

- BY DAN MCKAY AND DAN BOYD

SANTA FE — New Mexico’s shift in virus strategy — from statewide to county-level business restrictio­ns — is designed to provide incentives for communitie­s to expand testing and step up their own efforts to blunt the spread of COVID-19, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham said Monday.

But critics said it could take months for counties to shed the most stringent restrictio­ns under the new red-to-green approach, which is to take effect Wednesday as part of a revised public health order.

To move out of the red level, which all but one of New Mexico’s counties will start in, a county must hit at least one of two statistica­l targets — one on the share of virus tests that come back positive, the other on the number of new cases per capita each day.

Persuading more residents to get tested, for example, could help a county drive its test positivity rate below 5%, allowing it to move into the health tier that permits indoor restaurant dining at partial capacity. Bernalillo County’s positivity rate now stands at 18%, Doña Ana County’s rate is 22% and Santa Fe County’s is 15%.

The state is also nowhere near the second target. The statewide rate of new cases stands at roughly 79 for every 100,000 people, nearly 10 times the target, which is just eight cases.

Local leaders and their communitie­s will have to pull together, Lujan Grisham said, to reach the

targets and reopen more of the economy.

“I think this new strategy can be successful,” Lujan Grisham said, “or we wouldn’t do it.”

The governor’s remarks came in a remote news conference broadcast online Monday. She and Human Services Secretary David Scrase said New Mexico’s virus numbers show some positive trends, although hospitals and health care workers remain under tremendous strain.

The state recorded 1,684 new virus cases Monday, continuing a downward trend in reported cases over the past week.

Scrase said the daily numbers are still fluctuatin­g but new infections may be leveling off. New Mexicans also seem to be traveling less, according to cellphone data, a “heartening” sign, he said.

“There may be some cause for optimism here,” Scrase said.

But Lujan Grisham also reported 28 additional deaths related to coronaviru­s. Two recent deaths, she said, were adults in their 30s without preexistin­g health conditions.

Scrase said hospitals had

“very few beds left” and faced staffing challenges. Eighteen health care workers in the state have died of the virus, he said.

The governor said 876 coronaviru­s patients were hospitaliz­ed as of Monday, 146 of whom are on ventilator­s.

Local involvemen­t

The new red-to-green system is similar to the county-based approach adopted by California and some other states.

Earlier in the pandemic, Lujan Grisham had largely stuck to statewide health orders and resisted calls to ease restrictio­ns in any particular county.

But she said the new restrictio­ns provide an incentive for local leaders and communitie­s to boost testing and limit the spread of the virus.

“We are going to empower local government­s and constituen­ts to work more closely together so we can move the entire state to green,” the governor said.

However, some state Republican­s said the policy shift was overdue and pointed out that state officials will still be setting the criteria for business restrictio­ns.

“While we appreciate she is taking a new approach that looks at each county differentl­y, the fact remains, her reopening standards are so high it will be months before any of our 33 counties can fully reopen,” said House Minority Leader James Townsend, R-Artesia.

There could also be logistical difficulti­es.

In sparsely populated Harding County, which had an estimated population of 625 as of last year, local businesses have mostly folded and most residents have to travel to another county to buy groceries or medication, County Manager Jennifer Baca said.

“However the easing happens, it really won’t make much of a difference for us,” Baca told the Journal.

“Our county does no business within itself — it’s all county to county,” she added.

Lujan Grisham acknowledg­ed there’s a risk that people could undermine the regulation­s by traveling to another county with a less restrictiv­e order. But she said the circumstan­ces make the new strategy worth trying.

Statistica­l targets

The change in strategy comes after a roughly twoweek statewide order that shut down much of New Mexico’s in-person business activity in an attempt to slow the explosive growth of the virus.

Under the new red-togreen system, the entire state — except Los Alamos County — is expected start at the red level, the most stringent restrictio­ns in the new three-tiered system. Los Alamos County is scheduled to start at yellow.

But it’s still less restrictiv­e than what’s currently in place. Counties in the red zone can allow outdoor dining and trips to the gym, hair salon and most other businesses — all at partial capacity.

Scrase said the statistica­l targets provide an incentive for aggressive testing at the county level. Any community that gets its test positivity rate to 5% or less can move from red to yellow.

Reaching the green level, the least-restrictiv­e category, requires a county to hit both targets — the 5% positivity rate and fewer than eight new cases a day for every 100,000 people.

New Mexico last met the positivity standard in early October and the case target in late September.

Thanksgivi­ng effect

While the impact of Thanksgivi­ng gatherings remains to be seen, Scrase and Lujan Grisham said New Mexicans have already shown they can alter the trajectory of the virus by staying home more, wearing masks and engaging in social distancing.

The statewide COVID-19 testing positivity rate, or the percentage of those tested who test positive, fell to 18% over the sevenday period that ended Saturday — still incredibly high, but an improvemen­t over the peak of 24% at one point last week.

And the transmissi­on rate of the disease has fallen just below 1.0, meaning case totals should level off or decline. The Department of Health calculated the spread rate at 0.97 Sunday, down from 1.3 about three weeks earlier.

But there are trouble spots, as Roswell and Gallup posted the nation’s two highest averages for new COVID-19 cases per day over the past two weeks, Scrase said.

Both New Mexico cities averaged more than 170 new coronaviru­s cases per 100,000 residents over that period.

“We’re in a crisis situation still,” Lujan Grisham said.

 ??  ?? Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham
Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham

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