Call & Times

After symptoms close Maine facility, workers test negative

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PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — Seven state employees who showed symptoms of COVID-19, leading to a twoday closure of the emergency operations center where they work, tested negative, officials said Friday.

The employees worked out of the Maine Emergency Management Agency’s operations center in Augusta. Three were agency employees, while two worked for the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention and two were National Guard members.

Parts of the building will be deep cleaned, officials said. State epidemiolo­gists are also investigat­ing what led to the symptoms reported by the employees, who first called in sick Thursday.

The state responded to the callouts by switching the operations center to mostly virtual. No staffers worked from there Friday, state officials said.

The state CDC said in a statement Friday that measures to prevent the spread of coronaviru­s should be taken “regardless of the setting.” The state had yet to decide whether the facility would remain virtual next week.

In other news in Maine related to the virus:

THE NUMBERS

Maine has had more than 2,200 cases of the virus and 85 deaths through Friday. The state CDC reported 37 new cases and an additional death Friday.

For most people, the coronaviru­s causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia, or death.

DOJ WANTS CAMPS OPEN

The U.S. Department of Justice said Friday it has filed court papers in support of campground operators who believe a state quarantine order is unconstitu­tional. Gov. Janet Mills, a Democrat, has issued an order that out-ofstate visitors must quarantine for 14 days.

The campground­s sued in federal court because they believe the rule treats Maine residents more favorably than out-of-state residents, and that is hurting them economical­ly.

Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband said state government­s “cannot limit the right of out-of-state Americans to travel to their state unless doing so is substantia­lly related to protecting the public safety.” The DOJ said it believes the state could use less restrictiv­e means to reach that goal.

TRIBAL HEALTH

An agency that provides health care and other services to Native American groups in Maine is getting $300,000 from the federal government for pandemic response.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is giving the money to Wabanaki Health and Wellness. The money is intended to “prepare, prevent and respond to COVID-19 in rural tribal communitie­s in Maine,” the federal agency said in a statement.

The grant is part of $15 million in federal money that has been awarded to more than 50 tribes, tribal organizati­ons, urban health organizati­ons and other tribal health service providers in 20 states, the agency said.

Wabanaki Health and Wellness is headquarte­red in Bangor and describes itself as “a not-for-profit organizati­on for tribally-enrolled Native Americans, serving the Penobscot, Washington and Aroostook counties of Maine.”

REOPENING, PHASE 2

The second phase of the state’s reopening plan is set to begin Monday. That phase allows for more restaurant­s to reopen, though restaurant­s in southern Maine and Androscogg­in County will still be restricted from allowing dinein customers. More beaches and state parks are also scheduled to be able to reopen Monday. Mills signed an executive order on Friday that allows for a continued easing of restrictio­ns applied earlier in the pandemic.

BMV REOPENING

The Bureau of Motor Vehicles will also reopen, by appointmen­t only, starting Monday, Secretary of State

Matthew Dunlap said.

Twelve of the bureau’s 13 offices and its central office in

Augusta will be open to process transactio­ns by phone or in-person appointmen­t only.

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