Chattanooga Times Free Press

Gov. Lee increases group limit to 50

- BY ANDY SHER

NASHVILLE — Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee on Friday signed his latest COVID-19 executive order, No. 38, which increases the number of people who can participat­e in social and recreation­al activities from 10 to 50.

It also allows the resumption of festivals, fairs, parades, large parties, picnics, sporting events, summer camps and more under certain guidelines.

It’s the latest action by the Republican governor to relax or end his previous executive orders on Tennessean­s, businesses and other areas of the economy as Lee engages in a delicate balancing act.

Lee is hoping to keep a lid on rising infections of the potentiall­y deadly coronaviru­s while reviving an economy flattened by the disease, which sparked a modernday record 14.7% unemployme­nt rate among Tennessean­s.

As of Friday, according to the state health department’s website, Tennessee had 19,394 people with active positive cases, up 433 since Thursday, and 315 total deaths, up by two. There were 1,560 hospitaliz­ed and 12,566 reported as having recovered from the virus.

The jump in Friday’s official statistics apparently came in part due to a viral outbreak on a Rhea County farm where the number of confirmed cases jumped this week from 13 to more than 200.

In advance of signing Friday’s order, Lee told reporters Thursday that “we want to remind everybody the reason that we have gotten here is because Tennessean­s had been committed to social distancing.

“We can lift restrictio­ns and open up our economy, but we can never forget that social distancing continues to mitigate the spread of this virus, which still exists in our communitie­s,” the governor said.

“It still exists in our state. It’s a public health threat and we remember that as we go out, as we gather, as we do the things that we’re beginning to do, that we remember that social distancing is a part of the way that we do this and address it safely.”

The order technicall­y applies only to smaller counties that don’t have their own health department, separate from the state. But Mayor Jim Coppinger issued a statement Friday saying Hamilton County will follow the order.

“We want our economy to open back up,” Lee said. “We want Tennessean­s to get back to work. We want tax revenues to increase again. We want, again, to begin to mitigate this tremendous budget challenge we have in this state.”

Lee and state lawmakers are confronted with fixing a $500 million hole in the state’s budget which ends June 30 as well as what could be a $1 billion shortfall in the new spending plan that takes effect July 1.

Lee’s latest order directs groups to maintain “appropriat­e social distancing for the purposes of recreation­al gatherings,” a list that includes festivals, fairs, parades, large parties, picnics, sporting events, summer camps and more.

All “should to the greatest extent practicabl­e

“We want our economy to open back up. We want Tennessean­s to get back to work. We want tax revenues to increase again . ... ” – TENNESSEE GOV. BILL LEE

maintain at least 6 feet of separation from persons outside their household” in groups of 50 or more, the order says.

The order quickly emphasizes that “this limitation does not necessaril­y prohibit” groups of 50 or more from gathering in a single place or venue for an activity or event “if they are in otherwise smaller groups that substantia­lly maintain six feet of separation.”

As an example, the order says that more than 50 people “may sit in a set of bleachers and watch an event provided that persons or multiple smaller groups of persons are spread out from one another and maintain at least six (6) feet of separation from other groups or persons.”

And while contact sporting events and activities remain prohibited, it provides a loophole for “collegiate and profession­al sporting events and activities,” saying they “may be conducted” if permitted by their governing bodies.

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