Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Governor expects no ebb on easing

Keeping close eye on metrics, he says

- ANDY DAVIS

Despite a recent uptick in cases, Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson said Friday that he doesn’t see any “reasonable potential” that the state will reverse course from its first phase of lifting restrictio­ns that were imposed to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s.

But he said he’ll be watching measures such as hospitaliz­ations, the percentage

of tests that are positive and the state’s testing capacity as he decides whether the state is ready to move to the next phase of eased restrictio­ns.

“Obviously you can envision some theoretica­l opportunit­y in the future that there’s an outbreak that is all over the state that you’ve got to retrench and do something different and tighten it up more, but with the informatio­n I have, the trajectory that we’re going, with the confidence level that we have, I don’t expect anything like that to happen,” Hutchinson said.

“I expect us to stay in Phase One and not retreating from where we are right now.”

Arkansas’ official count of coronaviru­s cases rose by 97 on Friday, including 79 cases among people who are not prison inmates.

That followed a record increase of 113 noninmate cases on Thursday and 100 such cases that added to the state’s total on Tuesday.

The state’s overall count of cases rose to 4,463 on Friday, while the death toll remained at 98, with no new deaths reported.

At Hutchinson’s daily news conference on the coronaviru­s, Department of Health Secretary Nate Smith announced that 70 of the state’s local health units — all the ones that remain open during the pandemic — will begin offering testing to the public on Monday.

Those tests will be available not only to people with symptoms or exposure to someone who has tested positive for the coronaviru­s, but also to anyone who lives in an area where the virus is spreading among members of the community, Smith said.

“If they’ve been in an area where there’s active transmissi­on of covid-19, even if they have no symptoms, we’d like them to come in and get tested,” he said.

DENTISTS DERIDE RULES

Also on Friday, the Arkansas State Dental Associatio­n announced on its website that one of its attorneys had sent a letter to Hutchinson complainin­g about “ill-conceived, badly implemente­d, and illegal restrictio­ns” imposed on dentists by the Health Department as certain non-urgent dental procedures were allowed to resume Monday.

“While we applaud the spirit behind Secretary Smith’s efforts, the manner in which the state bureaucrac­y has implemente­d these efforts has been an unmitigate­d disaster — one that has already led to needless confusion, frustratio­n, and harm,” the attorney, Jenny Holt Teeter of Gill Ragon Owen in Little Rock, said in the letter, dated Thursday.

For instance, she cited a requiremen­t that dentists make the personal protective equipment available to staff members, which she described as a “vague requiremen­t in the face of notorious shortages of PPE.”

She also complained that the state Board of Dental Examiners said in an email that it had received reports that some dentists were “over-scheduling,” a term that she said wasn’t defined, and she questioned the authority of the Health Department to enforce its rules.

“Like all health care providers, Arkansas dentists take COVID-19 seriously and are complying with every recommende­d measure to ensure patient and staff safety,” Pierce Osborne, president of the dental associatio­n, said Friday in a statement.

“Unfortunat­ely, we continue to receive conflictin­g and impractica­l requiremen­ts, which are far out of proportion of other states.”

Rules allowing the resumption of non-urgent dental procedures were originally scheduled to take effect on Monday of next week, but the date was pushed up to Monday of this week at the urging of the dental associatio­n.

“I am not sure why the Dental Associatio­n employed legal counsel to write such a harsh letter as the first communicat­ion to my office on any issues of concern,” Hutchinson said in his own statement.

He said the matter would be discussed Monday at a meeting of a Health Department dental advisory group that includes the associatio­n.

CASINO PLAN APPROVED

Arkansas’ first phase of relaxed restrictio­ns on businesses and social interactio­n has included allowing hair salons, barbershop­s and other businesses involving hands-on service to reopen last week; restaurant­s to offer dine-in service this week; and entertainm­ent venues such as concert halls and movie theaters to open Monday.

All three of Arkansas’ casinos are set to reopen on Monday after the Health Department on Friday approved a plan submitted for Saracen Casino Annex in Pine Bluff.

“Last week we provided the state with an extensive operationa­l plan, focusing on guest and team member safety,” John Berrey, chairman of Saracen Developmen­t and Quapaw Nation, said in a

Continued from previous page statement.

“Today we received notificati­on from the Arkansas Department of Health that our COVID-19 protocols were approved.”

He said those protocols include “reduced capacity, limited hours, masks required, an emphasis on social distancing and a whole host of other new procedures.”

The Health Department on Wednesday approved the plans submitted by Oaklawn Racing Casino Resort in Hot Springs and Southland Casino Racing in West Memphis.

CABINS BOOKED Cabins and lodges at state parks reopened for rental Friday.

At his news conference, Hutchinson displayed a chart showing that the occupancy rate for the state’s “Top 5 Cabin Parks” for this weekend through the end of May ranged from about 68% at Devil’s Den State Park to 41% at Moro Bay State Park.

Most of the reservatio­ns were made by Arkansas residents, with 29% from people in other states.

“It illustrate­s that tourism is the second-leading industry in Arkansas, and there’s so many of our small businesses that are dependent upon this kind of commercial activity,” Hutchinson said.

Department of Parks, Tourism and Heritage Secretary Stacy Hurst said the occupancy rates are “not totally dissimilar from where they were in 2019.”

“We’re optimistic this will be a very good May for us,” she said.

She also announced the reopening of areas of Pinnacle Mountain State Park, including the summit trails.

“Everyone should know that parking will be limited to the designated parking lots within the state park and our uniformed park officers will be enforcing a safe physical distance for our guests,” she said.

She also said the craft village at the Ozark Folk Center State Park in Mountain View will reopen Tuesday.

Camping at state parks remains limited to cabins, lodges and self-contained recreation­al vehicles.

Hurst also said Arkansas had been awarded almost $500,000 from the National Endowment for the Arts to make covid-19 relief grants of $5,000 to $15,000 to nonprofit arts organizati­ons.

The money can be used for expenses such as staff salaries, facility costs and programs that follow social-distancing protocols, according to the Arkansas Arts Council’s website.

NEW CASES REPORTED

Of the 79 noninmate cases that were added to the state’s total, the largest number, 11 as in Jefferson County.

That was followed by Crittenden County with 10; Pope County with nine; Pulaski County with seven; and St. Francis County with six.

Smith said the Pope County cases were linked to a substance-abuse treatment facility, which he didn’t name.

An employee at the Jonesboro Human Developmen­t Center, which houses people with severe developmen­tal disabiliti­es, was also among those testing positive.

Human Services Department spokesman Amy Webb said in an email that the employee was still in training and was tested on Tuesday “when the employee took someone for medical assistance.”

The employee didn’t have symptoms but was “tested per procedure at that medical facility,” Webb said.

She said the department learned of the test result on Wednesday.

“We’ve done sanitizing and Health completed contact tracing,” Webb said. “Individual­s who may have been exposed have been tested and we are awaiting results.”

Two employees at one of the state’s other human developmen­t centers, in Arkadelphi­a, tested positive last month.

A Health Department report also indicated that six recent cases were associated with the South Arkansas Developmen­tal Center for Children and Families in El Dorado.

According to the website for the United Way of Union County, the center provides services for more than 225 children and 85 adults with developmen­tal disabiliti­es.

A phone message left at the center wasn’t returned Friday.

“There are 4 positive residents in 1 facility and 2 positive residents in another,” Health Department spokesman Danyelle McNeill said in an email. “They also have 2 positive employees.”

INMATE CASES GROW

At the Randall L. Williams Unit in Pine Bluff, the number of inmates who have tested positive increased to 54, according to the Health Department.

That was up from 45 that the Department of Correction­s had reported Wednesday.

The Health Department also reported that the number of cases among staff members had increased from two to eight.

No new cases were reported at the Cummins Unit in Lincoln County, where at least 900 inmates and 60 staff members have tested positive, or the Federal Correction­al Complex in Forrest City, where the virus has infected at least 335 inmates and 17 staff members.

Statewide, the number of cases that were considered active, meaning the person had tested positive and had not died or recovered, rose by 47, to 975.

Active cases increased by one, to 102, among nursing-home residents, and by 17, to 322 among prison inmates.

Cases among nursing-home residents and inmates often don’t show up in the state’s tally of statewide cases until several days after they are announced, after informatio­n from laboratory reports are entered into a database.

Among other Arkansans, the number of active cases rose by 29, to 551.

The number of patients who were hospitaliz­ed fell by four, to 65, while the number on ventilator­s fell by one, to nine.

RELEASES APPROVED The state has released 359 inmates under a directive issued by Hutchinson last month to begin clearing space in prisons by expediting parole considerat­ion for inmates serving time for nonviolent and nonsexual crimes.

Solomon Graves, the chief of staff for Correction­s Secretary Wendy Kelley, told lawmakers Friday that 800 inmates identified by the governor’s directive have been approved for release by the Parole Board.

The number of those who have actually been released is smaller, because inmates approved for parole must still complete any outstandin­g program requiremen­ts and have an approved parole plan.

Before being released, Graves said all inmates are being screened for common coronaviru­s symptoms. Those who show symptoms may be required to take a test, Graves said, and are not being released on parole until they test negative.

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/John Sykes Jr.) ?? Gov. Asa Hutchinson discusses the imminent reopening of state parks and retail businesses during his daily briefing, held Friday at the governor’s conference room at the Capitol in Little Rock. More photos at arkansason­line.com/516covbrie­f/.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/John Sykes Jr.) Gov. Asa Hutchinson discusses the imminent reopening of state parks and retail businesses during his daily briefing, held Friday at the governor’s conference room at the Capitol in Little Rock. More photos at arkansason­line.com/516covbrie­f/.

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