Dayton Daily News

Emails show businesses held sway over state reopening plans

- By David A. Lieb

As South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster prepared to announce the end of a coronaviru­s stay-at-home order, his top staff received an email from the state health department.

The message, highlighte­d in bold, was clear: Wait longer before allowing customers back inside restaurant­s, hair salons and other businesses where people will be in close contact.

Instead, McMaster pressed ahead with a plan written by the state restaurant associatio­n to resume inside dining on May 11. The guide- lines made masks optional for employees and allowed more customers inside than the health agency had advised.

A few days later, the Repub- lican governor opened the doors to salons, fitness centers and swimming pools. He did not wait to gauge the effect of the restaurant reopening on the virus, as public health officials had suggested. Like many states, South Carolina later experience­d a surge in infections that forced McMaster to dial back his reopening plan.

He was hardly alone. Thousands of pages of emails provided to The Associated Press under open-records laws show that governors across the U.S. were inun- dated with reopening advice from a wide range of industries — from campground­s in New Hampshire to car washes in Washington. Some governors put economic inter- ests ahead of public health guidance, and certain busi- nesses were allowed to write the rules that would govern their own operations.

As job losses accelerate­d, the pressure to reopen inten- sified.

“Attraction folks are on me like white on rice,” McMaster’s tourism director wrote to the head of the governor’s reopening task force, describing lobbying from amusement parks, bingo halls and other entertainm­ent venues.

Though governors often work with business leaders to craft policy, the emails offer a new window into their decisions during a critical early juncture in the nation’s bat- tle against the pandemic. Many governors chose to reopen before their states met all the nationally recom- mended health guidelines, which include a sustained downward rate of infection and robust testing and con- tact tracing.

“The interest in trying to reopen and restart economic activity had a much greater pull at the time ... than did public health concerns or question marks about how it would go,” said Anita Cicero, deputy director of the Johns Hopkins University Center for Health Security.

Many states were forced to halt or roll back their reopening plans as COVID-19 cases spiked across the country this summer, and the number of infections and deaths in the U.S. far outpaced those of any other country.

In early August, McMaster transforme­d his restaurant guidelines into requiremen­ts, including a mandate that all diners and employees wear masks. The governor’s spokesman, Brian Symmes, said “some restau- rants weren’t doing what they needed to do.”

Symmes also defended the spring reopening, saying the governor “has a wider scope of responsibi­lity and focus than our public health offi- cials.”

“It simply isn’t the government’s job to put its thumb on the scale by shuttering these small businesses for an unde- fined and indefinite period of time,” Symmes said.

Two weeks after North Dakota reopened, Republican Gov. Doug Burgum received a report showing a single-day spike of 69 new COVID-19 cases in one county. Burgum fired off an email to several of his top officials complain- ing that the outbreak — com- bined with lower-than-prom- ised daily COVID-19 testing — was “driving our state numbers in the wrong direction.”

“Our house is on fire,” Burgum wrote, accompanie­d by a fire emoji. “Need to drive a much greater sense of urgency and action.”

North Dakota was among at least 15 states that provided records to the AP at no cost. A few states wanted hundreds or thousands of dollars to supply copies of the communicat­ions that could reveal how governors were making decisions.

Some states suspended or slowed responses to open-records requests because of the coronaviru­s. Three months after submitting its request, the AP is still awaiting records from many states, including California, Texas and Florida, which have the greatest number of confirmed COVID19 cases.

“In a pandemic, you need more transparen­cy, more informatio­n — not less of either one of those,” said Dan Bevarly, executive director of the National Freedom of Informatio­n Coalition.

As she was putting the finishing touches on a reopening plan in May, Oregon Gov. Kate Brown received a letter from a coalition of business groups pressing for more say in the process. Two hours later, the head of the state hospital associatio­n wrote urging the Democrat to mandate masks as “foundation­al to any business opening where people will be gathered, indoors or out.”

At first, Brown required masks only for employees of certain businesses, but she had to reverse course as COVID-19 cases rose over the summer. She became one of 34 governors to impose statewide mask mandates.

In Washington state, landscaper­s, dog walkers and car wash operators all had a role in the rules affecting their businesses, according to the emails provided by Gov. Jay Inslee’s administra­tion.

 ?? GREGORY BULL / AP FILE ?? Records obtained by The Associated Press show governors working closely with business interests as they weighed when and how to reopen their economies during the coronaviru­s pandemic.
GREGORY BULL / AP FILE Records obtained by The Associated Press show governors working closely with business interests as they weighed when and how to reopen their economies during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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