Chattanooga Times Free Press

Some governors ignore CDC advice on holiday gatherings

- BY TAMMY WEBBER

Coronaviru­s infections are ravaging South Dakota, where more than half of tests have come back positive for weeks. Yet Gov. Kristi Noem won’t require masks or take other measures to curb the spread, including urging families to limit Thanksgivi­ng gatherings.

Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt said he’ll attend a college football game over the weekend and spend the holiday with his parents, noting, “Oklahomans should be with their loved ones over Thanksgivi­ng.”

And in Tennessee, where hospital beds are filling up and some hospitals struggle to find enough nurses, Republican Gov. Bill Lee said he has no plans to impose restrictio­ns, though he would “encourage Tennessean­s to think hard” about celebratin­g together.

As the public health crisis spins out of control and hospitaliz­ations and deaths soar, health experts have agonized for weeks over the potential for explosive virus spread from indoor celebratio­ns. Yet several Republican governors in hard-hit states refuse to echo urgent pleas from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for Americans to stay home next Thursday.

“We know what will happen. We know that three to four weeks from Thanksgivi­ng, we will see an exacerbati­on of the outbreaks,” said Dr. Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Associatio­n, who called the governors’ reluctance to encourage people to stay home a “tragedy.”

The United States has had more than 11 million diagnosed infections and more than 253,000 deaths from the coronaviru­s since the start of the pandemic. And hospitals in many states are running out of beds and are short on nurses, including in the states where governors are reluctant to act.

“By not walking the talk ... I think they’re sending a very dangerous message to their citizens,” Benjamin said.

Yet some governors who for months echoed President Donald Trump’s criticism of measures to control the virus are now relenting, including North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, who recently ordered the use of masks statewide.

And Republican and Democratic governors from several Midwestern states issued a joint video urging people to say home for Thanksgivi­ng and wear masks to slow the spread of the virus until a vaccine is widely available.

Ohio’s Republican governor, Mike DeWine, and his wife, Fran, canceled their annual Thanksgivi­ng gathering at their farm in southweste­rn Ohio, saying it would be too risky for Fran DeWine’s 94-year-old mother and two new grandchild­ren who are just days old.

Instead, they will celebrate with family via Zoom or FaceTime and deliver food or see family members from a distance.

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