Baltimore Sun

Working people sacrificin­g to keep affluent virus-free

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The current shutdown is dividing the nation between the “haves” and the “have nots.” (“Maryland sees 20% increase in coronaviru­s recoveries as case count rises above10,700,” April16). The “haves” in broad terms are the wealthy, people with reliable incomes — salaried people, teachers, professors, people living off dividends, federal and state employees, elected officials, retirees with retirement income, most lawyers, accountant­s and medical profession­als (but not all). The “have nots” are hourly workers, small business owners and employees, office support staff, part-time workers, people paid on commission­s, and generally people at the lower end of the income ladder.

The haves are in no hurry for businesses to reopen until it is absolutely “safe,” which could mean several months or more. That would be absolutely devastatin­g for our country, in my opinion, with the greatest impact on the have nots. If grocery stores, pharmacies, liquor stores, farmers markets, Target and Walmart can remain open, then we have agreed to accept a certain amount of risk, independen­t of so-called “necessity.” Following smart protocols, establishm­ents with similar risks should be allowed to open including stores selling flowers, clothing, shoes, jewelry, books, music, crafts, toys, sporting goods, candy, computers, office supplies, home goods, thrift shops and similar low-risk establishm­ents.

Restaurant­s with 50% of the tables and other protocols could open. Customers will decide whether to come back. Arenas, movie theaters and venue spaces should remain closed for now. At this point, I suggest a more nuanced approach to opening now is called for than a virtual complete shutdown for the indefinite future.

David F. Tufaro, Baltimore

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