Chattanooga Times Free Press

Savannah reimposes mask mandate as virus cases rise

- BY JEFF AMY

ATLANTA — The largest city on Georgia’s coast has reimposed a requiremen­t that people wear masks in public, citing a “steep and alarming rise” in cases of COVID-19.

Savannah Mayor Van Johnson made the announceme­nt at a news conference Monday, saying people now must wear masks any time they are indoors with people who are not members of their immediatel­y families.

Johnson said his order does not apply to schools and colleges, but called on them to do the same, saying rates of COVID-19 have roughly tripled in Chatham County in the last two weeks.

The county saw a big spike in new cases at the end of last week, according to state Department of Public Health data, pushing transmissi­on rates to levels last seen in March. Reported new cases are roughly nine times where they were when they bottomed out in late June.

Statewide case rates in Georgia are almost five times as high as they were in late June.

Johnson said the delta variant of COVID-19, low vaccinatio­n rates and large gatherings over the July 4 holiday may be contributi­ng to the rise.

“Many people have just let their guard down,” Johnson said. “They’ve stopped masking, they’ve stopped social distancing

regardless of vaccinatio­n status.”

Savannah was the first Georgia city to impose a mask mandate last year. In May, it dropped the requiremen­t but advised unvaccinat­ed people and medically vulnerable people to keep wearing masks.

“None of us want to take a backward step in our return to normalcy, but wearing a masks is the simple, easy, most inexpensiv­e thing we can do to protect ourselves and those around us,” the first-term mayor said.

For now, Johnson said the city will allow large outdoor events to continue, as long as organizers take safety precaution­s.

The Harlem Globetrott­ers are scheduled to perform Wednesday in Savannah’s Martin Luther King Jr. Arena. The show will go on, but masks will now be required for anyone who attends as well as staff members, said Yasmeen Badich, vice president of marketing for the arena.

As of Thursday, 46% of Chatham County residents had received at least one dose of a vaccine, just above Georgia’s 45% rate. People 12 and older are eligible to be vaccinated.

 ?? AP PHOTO/RUSS BYNUM ?? St. Patrick’s Day revelers in masks wait in line outside to get into a bar in Savannah, Ga., on March 17.
AP PHOTO/RUSS BYNUM St. Patrick’s Day revelers in masks wait in line outside to get into a bar in Savannah, Ga., on March 17.

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