Chicago Sun-Times

Oregon, New Mexico order lockdowns as other states resist

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PROVIDENCE, R.I. — The governors of Oregon and New Mexico ordered near-lockdowns Friday in the most aggressive response yet to the latest wave of coronaviru­s infections shattering records across the U.S., even as many of their counterpar­ts in other states show little appetite for reimposing the hardline restrictio­ns of last spring.

“We are in a life-or-death situation, and if we don’t act right now, we cannot preserve the lives, we can’t keep saving lives, and we will absolutely crush our current health care system and infrastruc­ture,” Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham of New Mexico said in imposing a two-week stay-at-home order.

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown ordered a twoweek “freeze” starting Wednesday, under which all businesses will be required to close their offices to the public and mandate work-from-home “to the greatest extent possible.”

While most Oregon stores will remain open, gyms, museums, pools, movie theaters and zoos will be forced to close, and restaurant­s and bars will be limited to takeout. Social gatherings will be restricted to six people.

Both states had lockdowns earlier in the year, but the coronaviru­s is coming back with a vengeance across the country. The scourge is blamed for 10.7 million confirmed infections and almost a quarter-million deaths in the U.S.

Still, there is little will among many governors and other elected officials for going back to the kind of lockdowns and large-scale business closings seen last spring. Some governors also continue to resist issuing statewide mask rules.

Among the reasons given: public fatigue, fear of doing more damage to already-crippled businesses, lack of support from Washington, and the way efforts to tame the virus have become fiercely politicize­d.

“I think that governors and mayors are, again, in a really tough spot. The American population is emotionall­y and economical­ly exhausted,” Dr. Megan Ranney, an emergency physician and professor at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island.

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