Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Rural areas bucking stay-closed orders

Local officials OK some businesses to open; approval of state leaders missing

- SCOTT SONNER AND JULIET WILLIAMS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by John Antczak of The Associated Press.

ALTURAS, Calif. — Defiance came with biscuits and gravy as a remote California county became the first to buck Gov. Gavin Newsom’s stay-at-home order.

Modoc County moved Friday to reopen hair salons, churches, restaurant­s and the county’s only movie theater. There haven’t been any confirmed cases of covid-19 among 9,000 residents, but the reopening came with strict social-distancing limits. Businesses could only have half the patrons, and customers must stay 6 feet apart.

The county is tucked into the far northeast near the Oregon border, hundreds of miles from the capital of Sacramento.

At the Brass Rail in Alturas, about a dozen customers were at the bar — the only portion of the Basque restaurant open so far. After a six-week shutdown, people were eager to be back among friends and neighbors.

“It’s been a long haul. We’re a small community,” owner Jodie Larranga said. “It’s not that we’ve been given permission, we’ve just had a belly full. People are fed up.”

Residents were putting their faith in local officials, not the state.

“Tex would never say it’s OK to be out in public if he didn’t truly feel it in his heart,” said Amber McCandles, 41, referring to Sheriff Tex Dowdy.

Local officials stressed the reopening followed Newsom’s phased plan to reopen the whole state, albeit earlier than he has approved.

“Our residents were moving forward with or without us,” Heather Hardwick, deputy director of emergency services, said in an email, adding that residents needed guidelines to do it safely.

At Country Hearth Restaurant and Bakery in the small town of Cedarville, manager Janet Irene served up breakfast orders of biscuits and gravy, sausage, hash browns, omelettes and chicken fried steak.

Irene said she’s been following “the guiding light” of county officials in keeping the small eatery she’s run for 35 years closed except for takeout during the lockdown and was relieved to welcome folks back inside.

Irene agreed that it was difficult for a law-respecting person to figure out what should be done when different levels of government are giving out different instructio­ns.

Newsom has declined to address Modoc County’s move directly and has not responded to a demand from six other rural Northern California counties to also be allowed to reopen.

He said Friday during his daily coronaviru­s briefing that he is paying attention to their pleas.

Also on Thursday, the New Mexico Supreme Court ordered the mayor of the small city of Grants to comply with a statewide public health order and stop nonessenti­al businesses from reopening. Martin “Modey” Hicks moved to let his city’s businesses open despite rising New Mexico covid-19 cases. One local business, a pawn shop, was notified of a possible $60,000 fine for remaining open.

In Arizona, warnings from police and health officials didn’t stop Debbie Thompson,65, from serving food Friday inside her small-town Horseshoe Cafe in Wickenburg, a town of 6,300 people west of Phoenix.

“They have just told me that I have to shut down. I am not. They will have to arrest me,” Thompson declared to the cheers and applause from several seated customers.

Though she was not arrested, Thompson later received a call from the state Department of Health Services telling her to stop violating Gov. Doug Ducey’s stay-at-home order.

In Maine, more than 100 people gathered Friday to dine at the Sunday River Brewing Co. in violation of executive orders by Gov. Janet Mills, which bars restaurant­s from offering inside seating until June 1.

The restaurant is in Oxford County, where there have been only 15 virus cases and no deaths.

Owner Rick Savage was undeterred after the health department took away his food license Friday evening. That meant an automatic liquor license revocation, as well.

Savage said Saturday he would be consulting with his attorney on Monday about the status of his federal license for making beer and if that license is not affected, he planned to reopen.

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