Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Governor: ‘Light at the end of the tunnel’ in virus fight

- By Marc Levy and Michael Rubinkam

HARRISBURG » One year after the pandemic hit Pennsylvan­ia, Gov. Tom Wolf on Friday acknowledg­ed the severe toll that COVID-19 has taken on his state but said that he sees “light at the end of the tunnel” with the growing availabili­ty of vaccines.

Wolf announced on March

6, 2020, that Pennsylvan­ia had confirmed its first two cases of the new coronaviru­s. Since then, Pennsylvan­ia has counted more than

944,000 confirmed or probable cases of COVID-19 and attributed more than 24,200 deaths to it.

“I’m not sure there isn’t anybody in Pennsylvan­ia who isn’t frustrated, sad, maybe even grieving for a loved one who has been lost,” Wolf said Friday at a news conference outside a Rite Aid pharmacy in Steelton, where people with appointmen­ts were

waiting to be vaccinated.

“There’s a lot of sadness,” he said. “But at this point, though, we have something we didn’t have a year ago and

that is hope. There is a light at the end of the tunnel.”

Cases, hospitaliz­ations and deaths have been trending down for weeks after a January

peak. More than 868,000 people have been fully vaccinated in Pennsylvan­ia, according to the state Department of Health, and Wolf asserts the state’s vaccine rollout is showing signs of improvemen­t after early stumbles.

Inside the Rite Aid, Robert Morris took his 83-yearold-old mother, Darlene Morris, to get her first shot. Morris had spent weeks looking for appointmen­ts for his mother and three other older family members before finding availabili­ty at the drugstore.

“We’ve been trying to keep her as safe as possible throughout this whole thing, and I know she gets antsy because she can’t go anywhere,” Morris said.

Now, he said, “she’s raring to go. It should hopefully make things easier for everybody. Less stress.”

Few could’ve imagine what the virus had in store for Pennsylvan­ia after those first cases a year ago. Within weeks, Wolf had shuttered school buildings, closed thousands of businesses and ordered millions of people to stay at home — steps he said were necessary to contain the spread of COVID-19.

The virus still swept through with frightenin­g speed and deadly effect. It took an especially dreadful toll on the state’s nursing homes, killing more than

12,600 residents.

COVID-19, and the state’s efforts to combat it, also did severe economic damage. Unemployme­nt temporaril­y spiked, companies went out of business and the state’s unemployme­nt compensati­on system struggled to keep up with a recordshat­tering number of new claims.

Republican lawmakers, some business owners and others pushed back against Wolf’s pandemic restrictio­ns, but courts upheld his emergency authority.

Now, with cases on the decline, the Democratic governor has eased up. This week, Wolf said bigger crowds would be allowed at indoor and outdoor events. He also did away with a quarantine requiremen­t for out-of-state travelers.

Masks are still required in public, and restaurant­s and bars continue to labor under strict occupancy limits, including a ban on bar seating and an 11 p.m. lid on alcohol sales. Industry officials say the Wolf administra­tion has told them not to expect relief before April, at least, amid concerns over a possible spring resurgence.

While there is cause for optimism, outbreaks are still happening. About 350 inmates at the Camp Hill state prison were found to be infected in recent days after some 1,600 were tested, the Department of Correction­s said. Most were asymptomat­ic.

That prompted the Pennsylvan­ia State Correction­s Officers Associatio­n to renew its call to vaccinate guards who are working in what union officials called “super-spreader prisons.” Other unions, including those representi­ng grocery store workers and state police troopers, are also pressing for their members to be prioritize­d for the shots.

Earlier this week, the Wolf administra­tion announced that it would give Pennsylvan­ia’s initial allotment of 120,000 doses of the newly approved, oneshot Johnson & Johnson vaccine to teachers, other school staff and child care workers.

The move to prioritize teachers reflected a bipartisan desire to get students back to the classroom — in some cases, for the first time in nearly a year.

 ?? MATT ROURKE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pennsylvan­ia, Gov. Tom Wolf speaks with Darlene Morris, 83, as she waits to receive a COVID-19vaccine at a Rite-Aid pharmacy in Steelton, Pa., Friday, March 5, 2021.
MATT ROURKE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pennsylvan­ia, Gov. Tom Wolf speaks with Darlene Morris, 83, as she waits to receive a COVID-19vaccine at a Rite-Aid pharmacy in Steelton, Pa., Friday, March 5, 2021.

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