Daily Times (Primos, PA)

As virus cases drop, governors may gamble on bars. Again.

- By Paul J. Weber

AUSTIN, TEXAS » A guy walks into a bar, which still isn’t allowed in Texas.

But Jeff Brightwell owns this bar. Two months into an indefinite shutdown, he’s just checking on the place — the tables six feet apart, the “Covid 19 House Rules” sign instructin­g drinkers not to mingle. All the safeguards that didn’t keep the doors open because Dot’s Hop House & Cocktail Courtyard is a bar under Texas law. And bars, in a pandemic? “Really not good,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s infectious disease expert, told Congress in June.

But some governors are warming up to good enough. Thousands of bars forced to close after massive virus outbreaks swept across the U.S. this summer could be starting to see an end in sight as cases drop off and the political will for continuing lockdowns fades. For some states, it is a gamble worth trying, only a few months after a rush to reopen bars in May and June ended in disaster.

“Our governor waved the magic wand, put us out of business and offered us nothing,” said Brightwell, whose Dallas bar typically employs around 50 people. He says his industry has been scapegoate­d.

Bars remain under full closure orders in more than a half-dozen states, including hard-hit ones like Texas but also Connecticu­t, which has one of the nation’s lowest positivity rates. And even in states already letting bars operate, restrictio­ns vary from one county to the next and can tighten or loosen abruptly, reflecting the unease among governors even as reopening movie theaters and amusement parks create a look of getting over the hump.

Arkansas has one of the highest infection levels in the U.S. and is letting bars operate with partial capacity. Republican Gov. Asa Hutchison’s defense: No spread has been linked to bars.

 ?? ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A visitor wearing a mask to protect against the spread of COVID-19passes a sign requiring masks, Tuesday, July 7, 2020, in San Antonio. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has declared masks or face coverings must be worn in public across most of the state as local officials across the state say their hospitals are becoming increasing­ly stretched and are in danger of becoming overrun as cases of the coronaviru­s surge.
ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A visitor wearing a mask to protect against the spread of COVID-19passes a sign requiring masks, Tuesday, July 7, 2020, in San Antonio. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has declared masks or face coverings must be worn in public across most of the state as local officials across the state say their hospitals are becoming increasing­ly stretched and are in danger of becoming overrun as cases of the coronaviru­s surge.

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