Dayton Daily News

Governor in ‘vanguard of state leaders across the U.S.’ during crisis.

- By Laura A. Bischoff

— When public health experts sounded the alarm on coronaviru­s, Gov. Mike DeWine listened and started to move aggres- sively, even before Ohio had its first confirmed case.

Well before other governors or big city mayors, DeW- ine asked colleges and universiti­es to suspend in-per- son classes, closed K-12 schools, shut down bars and restaurant­s to dine-in customers and put a limit on mass gatherings.

Other states soon followed Ohio’s example.

DeWine, 73, has spent five decades in public offices and has made decisions and directed the state to take action often two or three steps ahead of the rest of the country.

There are two reasons why.

No. 1, his focus has long been on health and safety of families and children, which made a looming pandemic something he was inclined early to focus on and attempt to address. No. 2, he is being given significan­t credit for taking counsel from Dr. Amy Acton, whom he appointed in February, 2019, to lead the 1,100-employee Ohio Department of Health.

“I think it’s because of Amy. I think he’s the type of leader — and I related to this — you hire really good peo- ple and you trust them,” said Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley, a Democrat. She added, “That still takes leadership, it’s still really hard. You come out on Sunday night and close all the bars, that’s really hard.”

“Clearly our governor has been in the vanguard of state leaders across the U.S. on this issue,” said Greg Robinson, a Republican running for Ohio Senate. “Gov. DeWine has had a long career in public service, and one defining quality of good public servants is their ability to listen to others and take advice. He appears to be doing just that, for the benefit of Ohioans.”

Meryl Justin Chertoff, director of the Georgetown Project on State & Local Government Policy and Law, said Acton is Ohio’s version of Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

He added: “Gov. DeWine himself is handling this extremely well. Besides relying on expert advice, he is using facts to make his case, he is not politicizi­ng the crisis, and he is reaching across the aisle. As a former U.S. senator, he also understand­s the limits of what federal government can do in an emergency like this, and how important it is for governors to step up.”

Each day, DeWine, Acton, Lt. Gov. Jon Husted and a constellat­ion of guests have held press briefings at the Ohio Statehouse. They have often unloaded bombshells of news: closing schools, shutting bars, banning mass gatherings. The briefings are in-depth — often lasting 90 minutes — so that they can explain their rationale, the ever-evolving facts, and pandemic control methods. And the speakers repeatedly express empathy and understand­ing that many of their decisions will be brutal on Ohio families and the economy.

The briefings are carried live on public radio and TV stations as well as live- streamed on OhioChan- nel.org. The briefings have racked up more than 125,000 views on OhioChanne­l alone. C-SPAN, the national broadcaste­r that typically focuses on the federal government, asked to start carrying them live.

Whaley said DeWine has a clear understand­ing of what levers in government he can pull to blunt the impact of the pandemic in Ohio. She praised him for using his authority. “The one place where it got really messy is where he didn’t have author- ity. And that was the election.”

Up until March 16, DeW- ine, Acton and Ohio Secre- tary of State Frank LaRose urged voters to cast their bal- lots absentee or in-person on March 17. LaRose made a plea for new poll workers to step up, expecting that many of the 35,000 workers — often people in their 60s, 70s and 80s — would drop out. Boards of Elections dispatched kits with latex finger covers, gloves, alcohol wipes and other supplies to polling place managers to disinfect voting equipment.

But advice from the Centers for Disease Control shifted, suggesting the mass gathering threshold drop to 50.

Less than 24 hours before the polls were to open LaRose and DeWine pivoted, recommendi­ng that in-per- son voting be suspended until June 2 and absentee by mail voting be continued until then. They said in the press conference in which they announced their recommenda­tions that they didn’t have the authority to change the primary date. But when a lawsuit was hastily filed to request an injunc- tion on in-person voting, a Franklin County judge later that night rejected it. That led Acton to use Ohio public heath law to issue an order to shut down the state’s 3,650 polling locations.

The abrupt shutdown triggered a slew of lawsuits and protests. The Ohio Demo- cratic Party filed suit in the Ohio Supreme Court against LaRose, who issued a directive setting June 2 as the new primary date. Voting rights groups are demanding that the registrati­on deadline be extended. And legislator­s are expected to meet this week to determine the next steps on the primary election.

DeW i ne’s actions are being contrasted by national commentato­rs with some of the statements by President Donald Trump in the early stages of the outbreak. In early March, President Trump downplayed the seriousnes­s of the virus at the same time DeWine and Columbus Mayor Andrew Ginther ordered that the popular Arnold Sports Festival in Columbus be closed to spectators.

Acton has said that on the front end of a pandemic, public health experts look like alarmists and on the back end they’re criticized for not doing enough.

Acton, a former assistant professor of public health at Ohio State University, strikes a balance between medical expert and relatable friend as she breaks down the pan- demic curve, the coming surge of cases, the push to collect all available personal protective equipment. She offers a dose of hope at every briefing, assuring Ohioans that we’ll get through this together.

Husted, the former Dayton Chamber of Commerce exec- utive, has been calling banks and credit unions and other business leaders, assuring Ohioans that the food supply chain is strong, and working to shore up the unemployme­nt compensati­on system. He also urged employers to send home sick workers and step up disinfecti­on efforts.

“This can be done right and employers need to own this and take the responsibi­lity for it so that we don’t have to take further actions. If people act responsibl­y, if employers act responsibl­y and their employees follow that guidance, we will get through this healthier and more economical­ly sound,” Husted said at a recent briefing.

Still, the decisions to close businesses and restrict gath- erings isn’t supported by all.

“I don’t have access to all the same health informatio­n that all the government officials do but it does seem to me that we need to bal- ance the other risks to people’s lives, such as shutting down the economy, caus- ing people to lose their jobs and their health care, not be able to maintain their housing or feed their children, all of which will endanger people’s lives,” said Democrat Richard Cordray, who lost the 2018 gubernator­ial race to DeWine.

OSU College of Public Health Dean Amy Fairchild said DeWine is trusting the advice from medical, scientific and public health experts.

“He’s embracing the science. He is listening to some- body who is telling him hard truths in the face of uncertaint­y, who is helping him navigate the situation and helping him react every single day,” she said. Fairchild described Acton as someone who has the communicat­ion skills and “intellectu­al and scientific punch” to direct the Ohio Department of Health.

DeWine praised Acton for her background — a medical degree with residencie­s in preventati­ve medicine and pediatrics as well as a master’s in public health — and her ability to explain complex public health issues in plain language.

DeWine said this week that he believes an outcome of this pandemic will be a renewed emphasis on public health.

“I’ve felt for a long time that we have not paid enough attention to public health. When I look at the problems that we face in Ohio, so many of the challenges that we face have to do with health issues. So I think it’s going to make us look really hard at that,” he said.

He also predicts that there will be a national assessment on what America needs to be able to produce without relying on other countries, including medical gear and personal protective equipment.

Acton predicted that the pandemic will bring a baby boom beginning nine months from now; and longer term, the country will see a decrease in common infectious diseases as protocols are improved.

“Public health is so vitally important. We go through these cycles through history with this field. I’ve always talked about how the fact that we live 30 years longer ... almost two-thirds of that came from this vast field we call public health and it’s an evolving field. The epidemics we face today are things like suicide and opiate addiction,” Acton said.

The field is evolving and shows how everyone is interconne­cted.

“We have to face the fact that human and economic developmen­t are inextricab­ly linked. They just are. When we doing the kind of policy making that we are doing now, it’s like every single thing is inter-related. That is a profound thing,” she said.

Contact this reporter at 614224-1624 or Laura. Bischoff@coxinc.com.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States