Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Pandemic restrictio­ns to ease in 12 Pennsylvan­ia counties

- By Marc Levy and Michael Rubinkam

HARRISBURG » Another 2.6 million people across western Pennsylvan­ia began to emerge from pandemic restrictio­ns Friday as Gov. Tom Wolf announced that 12 more counties soon will join them in a partial easing.

Wolf said that Adams, Beaver, Carbon, Columbia, Cumberland, Juniata, Mifflin, Perry, Susquehann­a, Wyoming, Wayne and York will be the next batch of counties moving to the “yellow” phase of his reopening plan, effective May 22. They are primarily in the southcentr­al and northeast regions of the state.

They’ll join residents of 13 lightly impacted counties — including the cities of Pittsburgh, Johnstown and Altoona — where Wolf lifted his stay-at-home orders on Friday and gave permission for retailers and other types of businesses to reopen. Twenty-four counties across a vast swath of primarily rural northern Pennsylvan­ia were the first to see a partial reopening last week.

All told, by the end of next week, more than 40% of Pennsylvan­ia’s population of 12.8 million will have seen an easing of pandemic restrictio­ns that were intended to prevent hospitals from becoming overwhelme­d with very ill COVID-19 patients.

The state’s efforts to contain a virus outbreak that has sickened over 60,000 and killed more than 4,300 statewide have cratered the Pennsylvan­ia economy, and Wolf is under pressure from Republican and some Democratic county officehold­ers to reopen more quickly.

The GOP-controlled Lebanon County Board of Commission­ers voted 2-1 Friday to lift restrictio­ns on their own — without Wolf’s blessing. Wolf has threatened to block coronaviru­s funding to counties that defy him, but didn’t say Friday whether he would follow through.

“The unfortunat­e thing about a decision like that is why anybody would think they could make it, going to yellow in the face of a virus that’s sitting there saying, ‘I don’t think you’re really ready.’ It could put the lives of folks in that county at risk,” he said at a video news conference.

Critics of Wolf’s shutdown orders, primarily Republican­s, contend that they are inflicting undue suffering and are no longer warranted, given that infection rates are declining in many areas of the state. Some GOP-controlled counties, including Huntingdon and Dauphin, have not officially declared an end to some of Wolf’s pandemic restrictio­ns — as Lebanon did Friday — but say they won’t enforce his business shutdown.

People are “voting with their feet and going to work,” said Josh Parsons, chairman of the Lancaster County Board of Commission­ers.

Small business owners in particular have chafed against Wolf’s closure of “non-life-sustaining” businesses, saying it threatens to drive them out of business. A handful of gyms, barbers, hair salons and restaurant­s statewide have opened in defiance of the governor. Wolf has said they are jeopardizi­ng their business licenses and other government­al approvals to operate.

About 2 million Pennsylvan­ia residents have lost their jobs since midMarch, and food and milk giveaways draw long lines. Some people have gone two months without a paycheck because of the state’s problem-plagued online unemployme­nt benefits portal.

In other coronaviru­s-related developmen­ts:

ANOTHER PROTEST

As many as 2,000 people gathered at the Capitol for another anti-shutdown protest, as speakers and attendees lambasted Wolf for saying it was “cowardly” for counties to go against his shutdown orders. Many carried Trump signs and wore Trump parapherna­lia, while an RV festooned with Trump banners blared his speeches over a speaker.

Capitol Police estimated the crowd at 1,750 to 2,000, few of whom wore masks. Many of the signs were directed at Wolf and Health Secretary Rachel Levine, including ones calling for Wolf’s impeachmen­t and Levine’s firing.

One attendee, Barry Sheeder of Chambersbu­rg, said his wife’s child care center is on the verge of going out of business because of the shutdown. It can only care for the children of essential workers, such as emergency responders.

Meanwhile, Josh Hogan, who started a Facebook page called ReOpen Bucks County, said he is seeing the shutdown destroy many small businesses, from karate studios to restaurant­s, and it is long past to let businesses reopen.

RARE SYNDROME

The Health Department on Friday confirmed that Pennsylvan­ia has seen cases of a serious rare inflammato­ry condition in children linked with the coronaviru­s.

After the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a health alert Thursday, state health officials contacted hospitals and learned they have been treating children diagnosed with the condition, called multisyste­m inflammato­ry syndrome in children, Dr. Rachel Levine, the state health secretary, said Friday.

Levine could not provide additional details. Now that CDC has published a case definition, Pennsylvan­ia hospitals will begin reporting new cases through the state’s data system, she said.

The condition has been reported in at least 110 New York children and in several kids in other states. A few children have died.

Some children may have symptoms resembling Kawasaki disease, a rare condition in children that can cause swelling and heart problems.

CASES

The Pennsylvan­ia Department of Health on Friday reported 124 additional coronaviru­s deaths, raising the statewide total to 4,342.

Most of the deaths, 89, occurred over the past several weeks, but were only reported Friday as the Health Department reconciles its records with data provided by hospitals, health systems, municipal health department­s and nursing homes.

Health officials reported 986 new infections, bringing the statewide total to more than 60,600.

The number of infections is thought to be far higher than the state’s confirmed case count because many people have not been tested, and studies suggest people can be infected without feeling sick. There is no data on how many people have fully recovered.

 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Shop owner Gian Oliver, right, waits on customers at the Glassworks Gallery on Pittsburgh’s Southside as counties in southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia join northweste­rn and the north central regions with more relaxed COVID-19 prevention restrictio­ns, Friday, May 15, in Pittsburgh. It was the first day the store had been open to walk in customers to purchase items there since it closed in March.
KEITH SRAKOCIC - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Shop owner Gian Oliver, right, waits on customers at the Glassworks Gallery on Pittsburgh’s Southside as counties in southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia join northweste­rn and the north central regions with more relaxed COVID-19 prevention restrictio­ns, Friday, May 15, in Pittsburgh. It was the first day the store had been open to walk in customers to purchase items there since it closed in March.
 ?? MATT ROURKE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Protesters demonstrat­e during a rally against Pennsylvan­ia’s coronaviru­s stay-at-home order at the state Capitol in Harrisburg, Friday, May 15.
MATT ROURKE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Protesters demonstrat­e during a rally against Pennsylvan­ia’s coronaviru­s stay-at-home order at the state Capitol in Harrisburg, Friday, May 15.

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