Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Governor declares emergency in Utah, orders masks worn

-

SALT LAKE CITY — Utah Gov. Gary Herbert declared a state of emergency and ordered a statewide mask mandate in an attempt to stem a surge in coronaviru­s patient hospitaliz­ations that is testing the state’s hospital capacity.

Herbert and the Utah Department of Health late Sunday issued executive and public health orders requiring residents to wear face coverings in public, at work and when they are within 6 feet of people who don’t live in their households.

Several of the state’s largest counties already required masks, but Herbert, a Republican, had resisted extending the rule to the entire state despite a two-month surge of cases.

Herbert said Sunday night that the time to debate masks had passed and insisted his orders won’t shut down the economy.

The new Utah rules also call for a two-week pause on extracurri­cular activities including athletic events, with the exception of high school championsh­ip games and intercolle­giate athletic events as long as testing and social distancing guidelines are adhered to. Herbert ordered a limit on “casual social gatherings” to household members only.

The orders took effect at midday Monday and are to last until Nov. 23.

By Jan. 1, all Utah students at public and private universiti­es who attend at least one class per week in person must be tested for covid-19 weekly.

State officials sent out an emergency alert to state residents on their phones Sunday to alert them to Herbert’s televised address outlining the orders.

Earlier Sunday, Utah health authoritie­s announced a new high in the number of coronaviru­s hospitaliz­ations and 2,386 more confirmed covid-19 cases as the pandemic surged.

Some 424 people were hospitaliz­ed with covid-19 Sunday, according to the Utah Department of Health. On Friday, hospitaliz­ations stood at a then-record 395 patients.

Herbert’s office said Sunday that the mask mandate will be extended beyond Nov. 23 “for the foreseeabl­e future.”

Utah’s seven-day average of newly confirmed daily cases has reached a record-breaking 2,290.

In the past two weeks, Utah’s positivity average — the percentage of coronaviru­s tests that are positive — has increased from 18.5% to 20.6%, according to state data. At least 659 state residents have died of the coronaviru­s and more than 132,000 have been infected.

Utah also will ramp up its contact tracing efforts and its testing of younger individual­s who usually show no symptoms of the coronaviru­s, including the college testing, testing for students engaged in extracurri­cular activities and, eventually, workplace testing for people 35 and younger, Herbert’s office said. Utah National Guard personnel will help in contact tracing, it said.

“To make a real difference in slowing the spread of COVID-19 and turning around the dire situation in our hospitals, we all need to do more,” the governor said in a statement. “This is a sacrifice for all of us. But as we slow the spread it will make all the difference for our overworked healthcare workers, who desperatel­y need our help.”

The announceme­nt came after Utah’s largest teachers union Friday called for the governor to mandate that all public secondary schools in high coronaviru­s transmissi­on areas shift to remote learning.

The Utah Education Associatio­n also asked Herbert to suspend extracurri­cular activities that can’t comply with social distancing guidelines in high transmissi­on areas from the Thanksgivi­ng holiday through the winter school break.

Herbert has said he’s concerned that people are feeling fatigued from the pandemic and urged Utah residents to follow mask and social distancing requiremen­ts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States